(The Wall Street Journal) – On
Monday, Jan. 6, I am filing suit in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern
District of Wisconsin to make Congress live by the letter of the health-care
law it imposed on the rest of America. By arranging for me and other members of
Congress and their staffs to receive benefits intentionally ruled out by the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, the administration has
exceeded its legal authority.
The president and his congressional
supporters have also broken their promise to the American people
that ObamaCare was going to be so good that they would participate in
it just like everyone else. In truth, many members of Congress feel entitled to
an exemption from the harsh realities of the law they helped jam down
Americans’ throats in 2010. Unlike millions of their countrymen who have lost
coverage and must now purchase insurance through an exchange, members and their
staffs will receive an employer contribution to help pay for their new plans.
It is clear that this special
treatment, via a ruling by the president’s Office of Personnel Management, was
deliberately excluded in the law. During the drafting, debate and passage
of ObamaCare, the issue of how the law should affect members of Congress
and their staffs was repeatedly addressed. Even a cursory reading of the
legislative history clearly shows the intent of Congress was to ensure that
members and staff would no longer be eligible for their current coverage under
the Federal Employee Health Benefit Plan.
The law states that as of Jan. 1,
2014, the only health-insurance plans that members of Congress and their staffs
can be offered by the federal government are plans “created under” ObamaCare or
“offered through an Exchange” established under ObamaCare.
Furthermore, allowing the federal
government to make an employer contribution to help pay for insurance coverage
was explicitly considered, debated and rejected. In doing so, Congress
established that the only subsidy available to them would be the same
income-based subsidy available to every other eligible American accessing
insurance through an exchange. This was the confidence-building covenant
supporters of the law made to reassure skeptics that ObamaCare would live up to
its billing. They wanted to appear eager to avail themselves of the law’s
benefits and be more than willing to subject themselves to the exact same
rules, regulations and requirements as their constituents.
Eager, that is, until they began to
understand what they had actually done to themselves. For instance, by agreeing
to go through an exchange they cut themselves off from the option of paying for
health care with pretax dollars, the way many Americans will continue to do
through employer-supplied plans. That’s when they went running to President
Obama for relief. The president supplied it via the Office of Personnel
Management (OPM), which issued a convoluted ruling in October 2013 that ignores
the clear intent and language of the law. After groping for a pretext, OPM
essentially declared the federal government a small employer—magically
qualifying members of Congress for coverage through a Small Business Health
Options Program, exchanges where employers can buy insurance for their
employees.
Neat trick, huh? Except that in
issuing the ruling, OPM exceeded its statutory jurisdiction and legal
authority. In directing OPM to do so, President Obama once again chose
political expediency instead of faithfully executing the law—even one of his
own making. If the president wants to change the law, he needs to come to
Congress to have them change it with legislation, not by presidential fiat or
decree.
The legal basis for our lawsuit
(which I will file with a staff member, Brooke Ericson, as the other plaintiff)
includes the fact that the OPM ruling forces me, as a member of Congress, to
engage in activity that I believe violates the law. It also potentially
alienates members of Congress from their constituents, since those constituents
are witnessing members of Congress blatantly giving themselves and their staff
special treatment.
Republicans have tried to overturn
this special treatment with legislation that was passed by the House on Sept.
29, but blocked in the Senate. Amendments have also been offered to Senate
bills, but Majority Leader Harry Reid refuses to allow a vote on any
of them.
I believe that I have not only legal
standing but an obligation to go to court to overturn this unlawful executive
overreach, end the injustice, and provide a long overdue check on an executive
that recognizes fewer and fewer constitutional restraints.
Source: http://www.teaparty.org/senator-sue-healthcare-subsidy-congress-32833/
Jan 6 2014 and http://online.wsj.com See more at: http://www.teaparty.org/senator-sue-healthcare-subsidy-congress-32833/#sthash.T2wxlkWQ.dpuf
Comments:
U.S. Senator Ron Johnson (R) WI has
weighed in on Obama’s overreach. That’s
encouraging. The Rand Paul, Ted Cruz,
Jim Inhofe, Jeff Sessions crowd need more visible company. I have no use for collegial, bipartisan, horse-trading,
timid, politically correct Republican Senators who “see no evil” in order to avoid
exposing it.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party
Leader
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