Health care law (including regulatory and compliance issues, public health law, medical ethics, and life sciences), with digressions into constitutional law, statutory interpretation, poetry, and other things that matter
Monday, April 27, 2020
A Victory for the ACA in the Supreme Court
The government suffered a loss today in its on-going battle to undo the Affordable Care Act through its "death by a thousand cuts" strategy. The case is MAINE COMMUNITY HEALTH OPTIONS v. UNITED
STATES. (N.B. There is something strange and sad to say that the ACA won in the on-going war this administration has been waging to gut a law -- not a perfect law but nonetheless a transformative one that made health insurance available to millions of individuals and families formerly priced out of the system.) The issue was a fairly technical one, but it was decided on a basis that most first-year law students would grasp immediately: "shall" means "shall" and implied statutory repeals are highly disfavored. Only Justice Alito dissented, and that was on a totally separate ground: Assuming the Court was right in its statutory-interpretation analysis, it was wrong to conclude that a private right of action exists to allow insurance companies who lost money through their participation in the ACA marketplaces to sue the United States for a "bailout."
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