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Home » News » Politics

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Health bill faces constitutional challenge

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Deal for votes, mandates eyed

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  • PHOTOGRAPHS BY ALLISON SHELLEY/THE WASHINGTON TIMES
"What we've done is, we've drawn a line in the sand and said this is unacceptable, and it's unacceptable for all states as well," Sen. Ben Nelson, Nebraska Democrat, said about states having to cover expanded state Medicaid costs under the health care reform bill.
  • ALLISON SHELLEY/THE WASHINGTON TIMES
STILL FIGHTING: From left, Republican Sens. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, Jon Kyl of Arizona and Lamar Alexander of Tennessee talk to the press Tuesday.
  • Sen. Max Baucus, Montana Democrat, said Congress has the power to regulate health insurance because it is sold nationally or regionally, therefore making it subject to the Interstate Commerce Clause of the Constitution. But in a 1994 analysis, the Congressional Budget Office said an individual mandate would be unprecedented.

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By Stephen Dinan

With their procedural options in the Senate exhausted, Republicans are looking to the Constitution for a way to fight the Democrats' health care reform bill.

South Carolina's attorney general said Tuesday his office was exploring whether the horse-trading used to secure the last few Democratic votes for the bill violates the Constitution; now a separate challenge is headed for a vote on the Senate floor on Wednesday.

Sen. John Ensign, Nevada Republican, has raised a constitutional point of order, arguing that the founding document does not give Congress the right to insist that Americans buy health insurance, nor to punish them with a tax if they don't.

"Most people around here don't like to talk about whether something's constitutional. We just want to do what feels good, because we think we're helping people," he said. "But our Founders set forth in the enumerated powers limits on what this body and this federal government could do."

Democrats only need 50 votes to reject the point of order, and they are certain to muster that tally Wednesday as they rush to pass the bill. The current schedule has a final vote on passage set for early Christmas Eve.

With Senate passage virtually certain, Democrats and Republicans began to look toward the upcoming effort to square the Senate bill with the version that passed the House.

Moderate Democrats are looking to ensure the concessions they won on issues such as abortion and a government-sponsored public option won't be erased. Liberal Democrats are trying to erode some of those concessions, and Republicans are expecting a public outcry over some of the sweetheart deals to further weaken the Democrats' hand.

One new hurdle is South Carolina Attorney General Henry McMaster's announcement he's examining whether those deals violate the Constitution. He singled out a provision that exempts Nebraska from having to cover expanded state Medicaid costs - an effort to win the vote of Sen. Ben Nelson, Nebraska Democrat.

"I have instructed my attorneys to begin looking into the constitutionality of this provision and exploring the options that may be available to South Carolina and other states to defend taxpayers should this provision ultimately become law," Mr. McMaster, a Republican, said in a statement, arguing that federal laws should treat all states the same.

Mr. Nelson rejected the claim he got special treatment, and said that over the next decade, every other state will have the chance to come back and ask for similar treatment.

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