Once again, I feel compelled to respond to a legal opinion offered by
the Journal Sentinel's editorial board. In this case, the board
believes that the case that I and my colleagues at the Wisconsin
Institute for Law & Liberty on behalf of Sen. Ron Johnson should be
dismissed. Although it will leave the "legal particulars" to the court
(good call), the board thinks that Members of Congress and their staff
"should" receive employer provided health insurance.
So do I.
But
Congress did not.
It decided that Members and their staff should be in
the same position as those most affected by the new Affordable Care Act.
It decided that this would help Members and staff to understand the
impact of the ACA and provide credibility to both Congressional
proponents and opponents of the law. So it repealed federal health care benefits for Members and staff and said they may only be provided with insurance on exchanges. People who purchase in individual exchanges (the only ones that Members and staff qualify for) can't get tax free employer contributions.
When it came time to walk the walk, a minority of Members objected. They asked their colleagues to change the law and give back the benefits they had taken away. Congress refused. Unable to change the law, these Members asked the administration to bail them out and they did - writing a rule that undoes the law that is actually on the books.
Judge Griesbach will
decide if Senator Johnson has standing to challenge the blatantly
illegal rule that rewrites this mandate of equal status. I've been
doing this too long to think I can predict the outcome of a case like
this. But we believe that he does and , not as the board suggests, because
of a generalized desire to see the law enforced.
Rather, the Senator has standing because it harms
his relationship with his constituents and the ability to manage his
personal staff in accordance with the law.
Rightly or wrongly, Congress decided that being in the same boat with those most affected by the ACA was important. Each Member
is now entitled to insist on that status and is injured by the
government's blatantly illegal rewrite of the law to evade it. (A Member can decline benefits for herself, but not for her staff.) In
addition, each Member has an unavoidable legal responsibility to take
certain steps to comply with the illegal "workaound" the law that
Congress passed. This too supports standing.
The editorial board
dismisses this interest in equal status as mere government "hypocrisy"
and suggests that nothing should be done about that. What it
doesn't understand is that a federal court is unlikely to dismiss what a
co-equal branch of government has done as a mere stunt or meaningless
act of political masochism. If Congress has a reason to do what it did,
then Members of Congress - the very people affected by what it did -
have a reason to insist on it.
But whatever comes of the standing argument (something that we knew would be raised), the
outcome of the case should not turn on whether it is "good" for Members
and staff to get federal health benefits. Congress decided that they
should not. If that decision was wrong, Congress itself controls the remedy. It can repeal the mandate of equal status that it adopted.
But
so far it hasn't. In a nation of laws, it is not for the Executive
Branch or the judiciary to do it for them. To say that Senator Johnson,
for insisting on fidelity to the law, is engaged in a "political stunt"
is quite disappointing. I would have not have thought we'd come to the point where convenience trumps the rule of law.
Cross posted at Shark and Shepherd home page
18 comments:
Yah, well, this hasn't been a "nation of laws" since Obama was elected.
Which shows what little you know, Daddio. Americans have never been more free than under His administration.
I'm sure my deranged anony stalker will be by in 3, 2, 1.
Word Of Caution--There will be a deranged anony poster who will take my screen name and link to unseemly sites and/or trash talk commenters who respond to my posts or respond to anyone who posts here first. He/she/it engaged in the same conduct at Dad29 that led to comment moderation there. He/she/it also tried to pretend to be the "professor" in a feeble effort to "ban" me.
And there he/she/it is at 7:10 p.m.!
Dad29, Mitchell's joke aside, we haven't been a Nation of Laws for decades.
Another clueless righty heard from. America is a lot more free under Him than under Ronnie Ray-Gun, or the Bush Crime Family.
Deranged anony stalker strikes again at 10:02 a.m.
"we haven't been a Nation of Laws for decades."
From those on the far right and right, they would of that inclination. For those moderates, i.e. average Joe and Jill, the law works despite their machinations.
I love rubbing one out to Michelle's big bare arms.
Deranged anony stalker is mentally ill at 1:20 p.m., 1:22 p.m., and 1:23 p.m.
Deranged anony stalker at 4:26 p.m.
You care, that's why you commented!
Keep digging yourself the grave, deranged anony stalker at 6:19 p.m.!
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