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."