The Obama administration may be alarmed over the dismal number of people signing up for Obamacare, the rising health-care costs for Americans, the legal challenges to the religious discrimination embedded in the law and other problems.
But all of that would be of no consequence if a lawsuit in federal court in Washington succeeds. It alleges senators overstepped their authority in creating the Affordable Care Act and the law, therefore, is null and void.
The case argues that since the U.S. Constitution
requires that revenue-raising measures originate in the U.S. House and
Obamacare was created in the Senate, the law is unconstitutional. The case is
headed toward the Supreme Court.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., who
has been leading the Obamacare charge since its inception, took a House-passed
bill, deleted its contents and then substituted the Senate’s 2,000-page bill.
Now dozens of members of
the U.S. House of Representatives are signing onto the battle,
claiming the Senate didn’t have the authority to pass the bill.
That requirement is so important, according to
the members of Congress, that the Constitution never would have been adopted
without it.
According to a brief dozens of House members
have filed in the case, the principle “behind the Origination Clause –
sometimes phrased as ‘No Taxation Without Representation’ – was the moral
justification for our War of Independence.”
“With this war for freedom and liberty in mind,
the Origination Clause of our Constitution was written; and without it at the
core of the ‘Great Compromise of 1787,’ the 13 original states would never have
agreed to ratify the Constitution,” the brief states.
“The primary dividing issue between the
delegates to the Constitutional Convention of 1787 was the question of how to
resolve the method of representation in the upper chamber. The small states
preferred to retain the equal representation they had enjoyed under the
Articles of Confederation, while the large states wanted to shift the national
legislature to a proportional representation of the American population. No
disagreement threatened the success of the convention and the new Constitution
more than this one. After a month of heated debate and threats of secession,
the delegates finally agreed to the Great Compromise of 1787; a bicameral
legislature with equal representation of states in the upper branch, and
proportional representation of the nation in the lower branch. That Great
Compro0mise was only made possible by agreement of both sides to restrict the
upper branch from originating money bills.”
It continues: “The power of the purse was
unquestionably reposed in the People’s House, and it has remained in that
chamber throughout our history. If the Senate can introduce the largest tax
increase in American history by simply peeling off the House number from a
six-page unrelated bill which does not raise taxes and pasting it on the
‘Senate Health Care Bill’ and then claim with a straight face that the
resulting bill originated in the House, in explicit contravention of the
supreme law of the land, then the American ‘rule of law’ has become no rule at
all.”
The brief was filed by attorneys representing
Reps. Trent Franks, Michele Bachmann, Joe Barton, Kerry L. Bentivolio, Marsha
Blackburn, Jim Bridenstine, Mo Brooks, K. Michael Conaway, Steve Chabot, Jeff
Duncan, John J. Duncan, Jr., John Fleming, Bob Gibbs, Louie Gohmert, Andy
Harris, Tim Huelskamp, Walter B. Jones, Jr., Steve King, Doug Lamborn, Doug
LaMalfa, Bob Latta, Thomas Massie, Mark Meadows, Randy Neugebauer, Steve
Pearce, Robert Pittenger, Trey Radel, David P. Roe, Todd Rokita, Matt Salmon,
Mark Sanford, David Schweikert, Marlin A. Stutzman, Lee Terry, Tim Walberg,
Randy K. Weber, Sr., Brad R. Wenstrup, Lynn A. Westmoreland, Rob Wittman and
Ted S. Yoho.
Their argument notes that at the 1787
convention, George Mason explained why the Senate was not allowed to raise
taxes.
“The Senate did not represent the people,
but the states in their political character. It was improper therefore
that it should tax the people … Again, the Senate is not like the H. of
Representatives chosen frequently and obliged to return frequently among the
people. They are chosen by the Sts for 6 years, will probably settle themselves
at the seat of Govt. will pursue schemes for their aggrandizement – will be
able by weary[ing] out the H. of Reps. and taking advantage of their impatience
at the close of a long session, to extort measures for that purpose.”
U.S. senators originally were selected by state
legislatures, not a direct vote of the people. That was changed by the 17th
Amendment in 1913.
The challenge to
Obamacare based on the Origination Clause was brought by the Pacific Legal Foundation.
“This support from members of the House is
especially significant because PLF’s lawsuit defends the constitutional
authority of the lower chamber, the legislative body that is closest to the
people. We argue that Obamacare was enacted in a way that deprived the House of
its authority to ‘originate’ new taxation. By extension, taxpayers were
deprived of a core constitutional protection against reckless and oppressive
use the federal taxing power.”
PLF’s challenge focuses on the individual
mandate, which requires nearly all Americans to buy a federally prescribed
health insurance plan or pay a penalty to the federal government – a charge
that the U.S. Supreme Court identified as a “tax” in its 2012 ruling on
Obamacare.
The foundation explained that because
Obamacare’s “individual mandate is a tax – and, indeed, Obamacare includes more
than $500 billion in new taxation, in all – the law should have been initiated
in the House, where Article I, Section 7, of the Constitution says new taxes
must “originate,” in order to keep the taxing power close to the people.”
“However, in defiance of this constitutional
requirement, Majority Leader Harry Reid launched the law in the Senate, by
taking an entirely unrelated House bill on housing for veterans, stripping it,
and inserting the language that became Obamacare.”
Beard said the “current attempts to roll out
Obamacare are frankly a fiasco.”
“These chaotic problems are symbolic of how,
from the first, this law was foisted on the American people in a rushed and
arbitrary way that ignored the careful and considered process laid down in the
Constitution. The Constitution’s requirement that new taxes must start in the
House is not a dusty formality. It’s an important safeguard for taxpayers, and
for care and deliberation in the enactment of new taxes. Because this mandate
was violated so flagrantly with Obamacare, and because the individual mandate
is so central to Obamacare’s structure, our suit argues that the entire law
must be struck down.”
The case is on behalf of Matt Sissel, a small
business owner who chooses to pay for medical expenses on his own, rather than
buy health insurance. He objects on financial, philosophical and constitutional
grounds to being ordered by the federal government to purchase a health care
plan he does not need or want, on pain of a penalty tax.
“I’m in this case to defend freedom and the
Constitution,” said Sissel. “I am grateful for support from members of the
House in this important litigation. I strongly believe that I should be free –
and all Americans should be free – to decide how to provide for our medical needs,
and not be forced to purchase a federally dictated health care plan. I’m very
concerned that Obamacare was enacted in violation of the constitutional roadmap
for enacting taxes, because those procedures are there for a purpose – to
protect our freedom.
Beard said then that the Supreme Court was not
asked about, and did not address, Obamacare’s constitutional failure.
“The question of whether the Constitution was
obeyed needs to be litigated, and PLF is determined to see this important issue
all the way through the courts,” he said.
Sissel’s case was filed before the Supreme Court
ruled last year that Obamacare was constitutional because the individual
mandate was a tax.
The plaintiffs in the original Supreme Court
case alleged that a mandate to buy insurance was a violation of the
Constitution’s Commerce Clause, and the Supreme Court agreed. But Chief Justice
John Roberts’ opinion simply changed the “penalty” as it was enacted by
Congress to a “tax” and deemed it constitutional for that reason.
His logic was that while Congress did not have
the power to require citizens to buy insurance, it could require them to pay a
tax.
That, however, raised the issue of the
origination clause.
The members of the House noted how the American
public held House members responsible for the Obamacare taxes.
“In 2010 the party that did not cast a single
vote in the House in favor of the ACA in 2009 gained the largest seat change
for a midterm election since 1938. The entire House was up for reelection. The
Senate, by contrast, enjoyed having two-thirds of its members insulated from
popular accountability for the measures they had passed.”
They continued: “Since the 2010 elections, the
people’s immediate representatives have voted some 40 times to repeal or defund
the ACA, but the senators, who sit for six years unchallenged, have never
agreed. The Framers exact fear of taxation without adequate representation has
materialized due to the complete disregard of the mandates of the Origination
Clause by the U.S. Senate.
“What is most alarming and dangerous about this
case, is that the senators knew exactly what they were doing in circumventing
the Origination Clause. As explained by Sen. Reid’s own ‘senior health
counsel’: ‘Basically, we needed a non-controversial House revenue measure to
proceed … so that is why we used the Service Members Home Ownership Tax Act. It
wasn’t more complicated than that.’”
A House resolution adopted this year confirmed
that “the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2009 did not originate
in the House of Representatives.”
Source: World News
Daily, November 17, 2013, by Bob Unruh http://www.wnd.com/2013/11/will-this-court-case-destroy-obamacare/#3PaKqQAbcwtPsS3x.99
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