Some have argued that because much of Obamacare constitutes
“mandatory” spending—namely, new entitlements such as the massive Medicaid
expansion and exchange insurance subsidies—Congress is powerless to defund the
entire law as part of its annual appropriations bills. These claims are false.
Congress
routinely enacts changes to mandatory spending programs as part of its annual
appropriations process. The non-partisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO)
recognizes these changes when analyzing spending bills and scores them as
CHiMPS—changes in mandatory program spending.
In February
2011, the House of Representatives passed H.R. 1—legislation intended to reduce
federal spending by $100 billion, consistent with House Republicans’ “Pledge to
America.” CBO found 23 pages’ worth of CHiMPS in the House-passed version of
H.R. 1. These reductions in mandatory spending ran the gamut from $26 million
in savings over one year, and $74 billion in savings over ten years, achieved
by reducing the maximum Pell Grant award (Section 1831), to $30 million in
savings achieved by reducing mandatory appropriations to the Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau (Section 1517).
Congress has
already defunded mandatory programs within Obamacare—and done so through
appropriations measures. Section 1857 of the continuing resolution Congress
enacted in April 2011 (P.L. 112-10) “permanently cancelled” $2.2 billion in
mandatory funding to Obamacare’s co-op health insurance program.
Congress has
also defunded elements of health care entitlements for decades. Every year
since 1976, Congress has enacted the Hyde Amendment, which bans federal funding
of abortion. This provision, enacted as part of discretionary appropriations
legislation, prohibits abortion coverage in the Medicaid entitlement program.
Historically,
Congress has used the “power of the purse” broadly to make key policy
statements through defunding. For instance, in 1982 Congress acted to block the
Reagan Administration’s policy for supporting the Contra forces opposing the
Nicaraguan government. As part of Public Law 97-377, Congress prohibited both
the Department of Defense and the Central Intelligence Agency from furnishing
military equipment and support to any group for the purpose of overthrowing the
Nicaraguan government. Even though defense spending is not funded through
mandatory appropriations, the example demonstrates that defunding has been—and
remains—a powerful tool Congress can use to affect public policy.
Given the
examples above, and numerous others, it is beyond dispute that Congress can use
its power of the purse to defund Obamacare—both its mandatory and discretionary
spending—in appropriations legislation this fall. The lone remaining question
is whether Congress can summon the political will to do so.
Source:
Heritage Foundation 8/14/13
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