Saturday, October 5, 2013
To be a legitimate tax measure, Obamacare would have to have complied with all the Constitution’s conditions for the imposition of taxes. Because Democrats stubbornly maintained that their unilateral handiwork was not a tax, its legitimacy vel non as a tax has not been explored. Indeed, it is because Obamacare’s enactment was induced by fraud — a massive confiscation masquerading as ordinary regulatory legislation so Democrats could pretend not to be raising taxes — that the chief justice was wrong to rebrand it post facto and thus become a participant in the fraud.
Tax legislation has to originate
in the House; the health-care law didn’t.
October 5, 2013
Of all the fraud perpetrated in the passage of
Obamacare — and the fraud has been epic — the lowest is President Obama’s
latest talking point that the Supreme Court has endorsed socialized medicine as
constitutional. To the contrary, the justices held the “Affordable” Care Act unconstitutional
as Obama presented it to the American people: namely, as a legitimate exercise
of Congress’s power to regulate interstate commerce.
To sustain this monstrosity, Chief Justice John Roberts had to shed his
robes and put on his legislator cap. He rewrote Obamacare as a tax — the thing
the president most indignantly promised Americans that Obamacare was not. And
it is here that our recent debate
over the Constitution’s Origination Clause — the debate in which Matt
Franck, Ramesh
Ponnuru, Mark
Steyn, and yours
truly have probed the historical boundaries of the “power of the purse”
reposed by the Framers in the House of Representatives — descends from the airy
realm of abstraction and homes in on a concrete violation of law.
It is not just that the intensely unpopular Obamacare was unconstitutional
as fraudulently portrayed by the president and congressional Democrats who
strong-armed and pot-sweetened its way to passage. It is that Obamacare is
unconstitutional as rewritten by Roberts. It is a violation of the Origination
Clause — not only as I have expansively construed it, but even under Matt’s
narrow interpretation of the Clause.
It is worth pausing here briefly to rehearse an argument
often made in these pages before the Supreme Court ruling two summers ago. The
justices’ resolution, whatever it was to be, would in no way be an endorsement
of Obamacare; it would merely reflect the fact that our Constitution, designed
for a free people, permits all manner of foolishness. “Constitutional” does not
necessarily mean “good.” What Obamacare always needed was a political
reversal in Congress. Thus, it was unwise for Republicans to become
passive while hoping the justices would do their heavy lifting for them —
both because it was unlikely that this Supreme Court would invalidate Obamacare
and because a ruling upholding it would inevitably be used by the most
demagogic administration in history as a judicial stamp of approval for
socialized medicine.
Contrary to Obama’s latest dissembling, the Supreme Court’s
decision is far from an imprimatur. The president insisted that Obamacare was
not a tax, famously upbraiding George Stephanopoulos of the Democratic-Media
Complex for insolently suggesting otherwise. Yet, the narrow Court majority
held that the mammoth statute could be upheld only as an exercise of Congress’s
power to tax — i.e., contrary to Obama’s conscriptive theory, it was not within
Congress’s commerce power to coerce Americans, as a condition of living in this
country, to purchase a commodity, including health insurance.
Note the crucial qualifier: Obamacare could be upheld only as a
tax. Not that Obamacare is necessarily a legitimate tax. To be a
legitimate tax measure, Obamacare would have to have complied with all the
Constitution’s conditions for the imposition of taxes. Because Democrats
stubbornly maintained that their unilateral handiwork was not a tax, its
legitimacy vel non as a tax has not been explored. Indeed, it is
because Obamacare’s enactment was induced by fraud — a massive confiscation
masquerading as ordinary regulatory legislation so Democrats could pretend not
to be raising taxes — that the chief justice was wrong to rebrand it post facto
and thus become a participant in the fraud.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.