This story comes from our partner
All of Washington is breathlessly awaiting the Supreme Court’s imminent decision on the Obama health care overhaul. Rumors circulate almost daily that the decision is ready for release. As usual, those rumors are perpetrated by people who know nothing, but the decision is expected by the end of this month.
The near hysteria is partially about politics: Congressional Republicans hate the bill, and some see President Obama’s chance at a second term hinged to the fate of the law. But constitutional scholars know there is much more at stake here than an individual election. Just how much is illustrated by the legal history of the Commerce Clause of the Constitution.
It gives Congress the power to “,” and it authorizes Congress to “make all laws which shall be necessary and proper” for achieving that goal. The Founding Fathers’ purpose was to put an end to the interstate rivalries that balkanized the country after the American Revolution. But the words of the Commerce Clause are pretty general, and it is the Supreme Court that for more than 200 years has interpreted what they mean.
Early Decision: Broad Power
The court’s first major Commerce Clause decision came in the 1824. The great Chief Justice John Marshall, who was himself one of the Founding Fathers, wrote in  that the Commerce Clause gives Congress broad power to regulate commerce and that this power is mainly limited by the power of the people to deny their representatives re-election if they don’t like what Congress does.
The decision infuriated the likes of Thomas Jefferson, who viewed federal power as far more limited under the Constitution, but the ruling stood as the guiding light on commerce questions for about 70 years.
A Country Transformed
The next landmark case came in 1895, during the rise of great national corporations and concentrations of wealth. When the U.S. government, using the antitrust law, sought to block the leading sugar refining company from acquiring 98 percent control of the industry, the company fought back and won. In , the Supreme Court ruled that since sugar refining took place before shipments of the product crossed state lines, Congress was powerless to regulate the industry.
Federal appeals court Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson, author of a  on constitutional theory, notes that this was a period of profound change in America. The country was being transformed by massive industrialization, coupled with changes in communication and transportation.
The question facing the court, Wilkinson explains, was whether the Congress could deal with these changes. Could it regulate them? “And the court gave a preliminary answer: No.”
Hostility To Regulation
Over the next 40 years, the court used a variety of standards to determine which regulations were permissible and which were not. Did the activity have an indirect or direct effect on commerce? A substantial or insubstantial effect? Was it more like manufacturing or more like trading? The standards were vague and the court’s decisions inconsistent, unpredictable and subjective.
At the same time, the court, citing the fundamental right to make private contracts, was striking down state legislation aimed at regulating wages, hours and working conditions. It was a one-two punch.
The court’s hostility to regulation became even more aggressive at the height of the Great Depression, when Congress, at the behest of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, enacted New Deal legislation to set rules for everything from banks to agriculture, all of which were on the brink of disaster.
Repeatedly, the court struck down legislation enacted by huge congressional majorities. “The conservative majority started with the proposition that laissez-faire economics was good and that any intrusion by the state or the federal government was necessarily suspect,” says New York Law School professor James Simon, author of  about the court and the New Deal.
“The conservative courts of that era really put their collective thumb on the scale on behalf of property at the expense” of the rights of workers, says Jeff Shesol, author of another  about that era.
Roosevelt, Court-Packing And Change
The ultimate setback for the New Deal came in 1936, when the conservative court, by a 5-4 vote, struck down a new federal law designed to regulate wages, hours and working conditions in the coal mining industry. In , the court said that coal production, like sugar refining, did not constitute commerce among the states and thus could not be regulated by the federal government.
That decision turned out to be Roosevelt’s last major defeat at the court. Months later, after winning a landslide re-election, he announced what came to be known as his court-packing plan: He proposed to add six new justices to the court.
The announcement may have provoked the court into rethinking the confrontational path it had undertaken. After all, as Wilkinson observes, the New Deal had huge popular support, and the court, increasingly, did not. “The Supreme Court itself appeared to sense the gravity of the situation, and to back off,” Wilkinson says.
Indeed, just two months later, with the switch of one vote, the justices this time upheld a critical piece of New Deal legislation regulating labor conditions in the steel industry.
Historians agree that the court in  ushered in the modern Commerce Clause doctrine. After that, the court deferred to Congress on economic regulations almost entirely.
The Modern Doctrine
The high point of the new era was a 1942 case called , a challenge to the Agricultural Adjustment Act. The law was aimed at stabilizing agriculture prices, which were in free fall. It paid farmers not to grow certain crops on some of their land. A farmer named Roscoe Filburn went to court, claiming that Congress had exceeded its power when it tried to bar him from growing crops on his own land for his own use. The Supreme Court, however, ruled that if Filburn could exceed his growth allotment, so too could others, and in the aggregate, that activity would undermine the goal of stabilizing prices. Even an entirely local activity like Filburn’s, the court held, may fall under Congress’ reach “if it exerts a substantial economic effect on interstate commerce.”
Filburn’s case sealed the deal. No piece of economic regulatory legislation was struck down for the next half-century.
In 1995, that streak came to an end when the Supreme Court rejected a federal law that banned the possession of guns within 1,000 feet of a school. A five-justice majority in  said that the statute was a bridge too far, because the law did not regulate any economic activity. A second case of this sort followed five years later, but in hindsight, neither did much to change the overall deference given to Congress on regulating the economy.
Enter The Health Care Law
Now comes the Obama health care overhaul, known as the ACA, the Affordable Care Act, a law under full assault by the modern conservative movement. Some, like Georgetown Law Center professor Randy Barnett, the architect of the challenge, say openly that they believe many of the New Deal cases were wrongly decided.
“They are well-settled precedents and are not likely to be revisited in my lifetime,” Barnett says. “But I do think that according to the original meaning of the Constitution, they were wrongly decided.”
Barnett is similarly skeptical of some conservatives’ insistence that judges defer to popularly elected legislatures. “I don’t think the court should simply defer to what Congress wants, especially when the issue is the scope of Congress’ own power,” Barnett says.
Barnett argues that the health care law can be struck down without undoing 75 years of judicial precedent. “Nothing about existing Supreme Court doctrine needs to change for us to prevail in this case,” he insists.
But his critics, including George Washington University law professor Jeff Rosen, contend that Barnett’s claim is disingenuous, and that the real goal here is to achieve what has not been achievable even by conservative Republican presidents and Congresses: rolling back major economic regulation.
“Let’s not pretend that this is just a modest case of applying existing precedents,” Rosen says. “The question is: Are you going to reverse decades of judicial deference in economic matters?”
Another Turning Point?
Other scholars agree that the ACA presents a watershed, a potential breaking point with the legal framework that has undergirded our modern economy. “The expansive understanding of the Commerce Clause has been the basis of minimum-wage legislation, of workplace safety legislation, of economic protections, and in fact of our civil rights laws,” notes Shesol. “The conservative legal establishment has been very open about its interest in undoing the New Deal at the constitutional level,” and “this would be the first great success of the movement.”
Nonetheless, Shesol cautions that comparisons to the 1930s can be overblown. Roosevelt and his allies really believed that if they could not enact major reforms to deal with the Depression, “there would be a total economic collapse that would make the Depression look like a cakewalk, and that conditions would be paved for the rise of a dictator,” Shesol explains. “They were watching what was happening in Europe, and they really believed that if they couldn’t get these pieces of legislation through the Supreme Court, that the whole thing might come crashing down.”
Then, as now, advocates on both sides thought the very survival of democracy was at stake.
ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about .This <a target="_blank" href="/news/health-care-decision-commerce-clause-npr/">article</a> first appeared on <a target="_blank" href="">KFF Health News</a> and is republished here under a <a target="_blank" href=" Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License</a>.<img src="/wp-content/uploads/sites/8/2023/04/kffhealthnews-icon.png?w=150" style="width:1em;height:1em;margin-left:10px;">
<img id="republication-tracker-tool-source" src="/?republication-pixel=true&post=23189&ga4=G-J74WWTKFM0" style="width:1px;height:1px;">]]>This story comes from our partner
If the U.S. Supreme Court term opening Monday were a Broadway show, all eyes would be on the stars waiting in the wings.
The constitutional challenge to President Obama’s health care overhaul almost certainly will be decided this term, but at this point it has not formally made it onto the docket. Also making their way to the court are cases involving almost every hot-button issue in America: immigration; affirmative action; gay marriage; and the constitutionality of the Defense of Marriage Act, the federal law barring federal recognition of gay marriage even in states where it is legal.
A Challenge To State-Enacted Medicaid Cuts
Although these star cases are still backstage, as it were, there are plenty of important cases already center stage. In the spotlight Monday is a case testing when and whether doctors, hospitals and patients can challenge state-enacted reductions in Medicaid payments that violate federal law. It is a case with huge implications for cash-strapped states desperate to cut costs, and for patients desperate for care guaranteed by federal law — and paid for in large part by the federal government.
The federal Medicaid law establishes a cooperative federal-state program in which the federal government assists states to furnish medical help for the poor, elderly and disabled. The federal government contribution varies from state to state but is a majority of the total tab. The program is voluntary, but if a state participates, it has to comply with federal requirements, which include paying enough to health care providers that patients can get access to care. And the state, before cutting fees to health care providers, must get approval from the federal agency that runs the program.
In 2008 and 2009, the California Legislature cut fees for hospitals, doctors and other providers by as much as 10 percent. The changes went into effect without being submitted to the federal Medicaid agency as required by law, and when they were submitted, the cuts were not approved. When California went ahead with the cuts anyway, hospitals, doctors and patients sued to stop them.
Dr. Ruth Haskins, an obstetrician-gynecologist who practices in Southern California, has 4,500 patients, about 15 percent of them Medicaid, or Medi-Cal, as the program is known in California. She and other doctors worry that they will simply have to stop taking Medicaid patients.
“I have a quota already … because the reimbursement is just too low to meet my overhead,” Haskins says.
She notes that 56 percent of Medicaid patients in California at this point cannot find a primary care doctor, and hospital administrators tell horror stories about unmet medical needs.
After a federal appeals court ruled that the cuts were illegal and halted them, California appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court. The state, backed by the Obama administration, contends that health care providers and their patients have no right to sue to enforce the Medicaid law.
California Solicitor General Manuel Medeiros says these cuts amount to a contract dispute between the United States and the state, and the health care providers don’t get to horn in on that dispute by taking the state to court.Â
“There was no expectation that we were going to have to be administering this multibillion-dollar program by ad hoc litigation, where courts can substitute their individual judgment for the views of an expert administrative agency that has worked out the problems with the state administrative agency, balancing the competing state and federal interests and policy objectives,” says Medeiros.
Countering that argument, lawyer Carter Phillips, representing the health care providers, contends that if California had in fact been able to show how it was balancing competing interests, there would have been no case. But, he maintains, it didn’t do that.
“California has a budget problem, and that is all that animated California’s actions in this case,” he says. “There was no effort made to determine whether or not these cuts would have any impact on services.” The state just said, “We want to save money, we’re doing it this way, we’re done.”
The lower court said that was illegal and ordered the state to stop the cuts, citing a long line of cases that bar state officials from defying federal law. But the state contends that Congress did not specifically authorize this kind of lawsuit, and that even if the state did act illegally, the only remedy would be for the federal government to cut off all federal Medicaid funds — a process that would take years and has never been done because the consequences are so dire.
Interestingly, this dispute pits Democrats against Democrats. Though the case started during the tenure of Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, it is being carried on by Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown.
And while the Obama administration is supporting Brown and the state, the Democratic leadership in Congress, including key California Democrats, has filed a brief on the other side, supporting the rights of the providers to sue to enforce the Medicaid law. The Democratic congressional leadership says the Obama administration has, in essence, formed an unholy alliance with the states to undermine the minimums set out as conditions for the federal government giving billions of dollars to the states.
The state’s Medeiros responds ruefully. “These are peculiar times,” he says. “The states and the federal government are operating under a very severe fiscal crisis, and everybody is trying to manage their financials the best they can.”
Other Cases On The Docket
Later this week, the court will hear another thorny constitutional question testing whether the federal Americans with Disabilities Act applies to parochial schoolteachers whose primary job is teaching nonreligious courses like math and history.Â
Like all civil rights laws, the ADA bars not just discrimination, but also retaliating against an employee who threatens to sue to enforce his or her rights under the law. In the case before the court, a Lutheran church school contends that the law violates its religious mandate to resolve disputes internally.
Also on the docket next week is a case testing whether the Constitution allows local jailers to automatically strip-search even those arrested for minor offenses, including traffic violations. And later in the term, the justices will examine a case testing whether government investigators have to get a warrant before putting a GPS tracking device on a car.
The term also features a variety of cases pushing conservative causes, a property rights challenge to EPA enforcement of the Clean Water Act, and a free-speech challenge to union dues collected from all state employees. And there are a wide variety of criminal law cases that could have significant repercussions.
On the more entertaining side of the docket is a case brought by Fox TV and backed by other broadcasters testing the constitutionality of a Federal Communications Commission ban on expletives, nudity and other “indecent content” on TV and radio.
At issue in the case are fines imposed on Fox for excretory and sexual expletives uttered by celebrities at the Billboard Awards ceremonies broadcast live by the network. A lower court ruled that the ban on indecency is so vague as to be unconstitutional, meaning nobody would know what is and isn’t legal. Now the case is at the Supreme Court, along with a lot of other cases with sex appeal, both real and figurative.Â
ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about .This <a target="_blank" href="/health-industry/supreme-court-to-take-on-medicaid-case-npr/">article</a> first appeared on <a target="_blank" href="">KFF Health News</a> and is republished here under a <a target="_blank" href=" Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License</a>.<img src="/wp-content/uploads/sites/8/2023/04/kffhealthnews-icon.png?w=150" style="width:1em;height:1em;margin-left:10px;">
<img id="republication-tracker-tool-source" src="/?republication-pixel=true&post=28080&ga4=G-J74WWTKFM0" style="width:1px;height:1px;">]]>This story comes from our partner
All of Washington is breathlessly awaiting the Supreme Court’s imminent decision on the Obama health care overhaul. Rumors circulate almost daily that the decision is ready for release. As usual, those rumors are perpetrated by people who know nothing, but the decision is expected by the end of this month.
The near hysteria is partially about politics: Congressional Republicans hate the bill, and some see President Obama’s chance at a second term hinged to the fate of the law. But constitutional scholars know there is much more at stake here than an individual election. Just how much is illustrated by the legal history of the Commerce Clause of the Constitution.
It gives Congress the power to “,” and it authorizes Congress to “make all laws which shall be necessary and proper” for achieving that goal. The Founding Fathers’ purpose was to put an end to the interstate rivalries that balkanized the country after the American Revolution. But the words of the Commerce Clause are pretty general, and it is the Supreme Court that for more than 200 years has interpreted what they mean.
Early Decision: Broad Power
The court’s first major Commerce Clause decision came in the 1824. The great Chief Justice John Marshall, who was himself one of the Founding Fathers, wrote in  that the Commerce Clause gives Congress broad power to regulate commerce and that this power is mainly limited by the power of the people to deny their representatives re-election if they don’t like what Congress does.
The decision infuriated the likes of Thomas Jefferson, who viewed federal power as far more limited under the Constitution, but the ruling stood as the guiding light on commerce questions for about 70 years.
A Country Transformed
The next landmark case came in 1895, during the rise of great national corporations and concentrations of wealth. When the U.S. government, using the antitrust law, sought to block the leading sugar refining company from acquiring 98 percent control of the industry, the company fought back and won. In , the Supreme Court ruled that since sugar refining took place before shipments of the product crossed state lines, Congress was powerless to regulate the industry.
Federal appeals court Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson, author of a  on constitutional theory, notes that this was a period of profound change in America. The country was being transformed by massive industrialization, coupled with changes in communication and transportation.
The question facing the court, Wilkinson explains, was whether the Congress could deal with these changes. Could it regulate them? “And the court gave a preliminary answer: No.”
Hostility To Regulation
Over the next 40 years, the court used a variety of standards to determine which regulations were permissible and which were not. Did the activity have an indirect or direct effect on commerce? A substantial or insubstantial effect? Was it more like manufacturing or more like trading? The standards were vague and the court’s decisions inconsistent, unpredictable and subjective.
At the same time, the court, citing the fundamental right to make private contracts, was striking down state legislation aimed at regulating wages, hours and working conditions. It was a one-two punch.
The court’s hostility to regulation became even more aggressive at the height of the Great Depression, when Congress, at the behest of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, enacted New Deal legislation to set rules for everything from banks to agriculture, all of which were on the brink of disaster.
Repeatedly, the court struck down legislation enacted by huge congressional majorities. “The conservative majority started with the proposition that laissez-faire economics was good and that any intrusion by the state or the federal government was necessarily suspect,” says New York Law School professor James Simon, author of  about the court and the New Deal.
“The conservative courts of that era really put their collective thumb on the scale on behalf of property at the expense” of the rights of workers, says Jeff Shesol, author of another  about that era.
Roosevelt, Court-Packing And Change
The ultimate setback for the New Deal came in 1936, when the conservative court, by a 5-4 vote, struck down a new federal law designed to regulate wages, hours and working conditions in the coal mining industry. In , the court said that coal production, like sugar refining, did not constitute commerce among the states and thus could not be regulated by the federal government.
That decision turned out to be Roosevelt’s last major defeat at the court. Months later, after winning a landslide re-election, he announced what came to be known as his court-packing plan: He proposed to add six new justices to the court.
The announcement may have provoked the court into rethinking the confrontational path it had undertaken. After all, as Wilkinson observes, the New Deal had huge popular support, and the court, increasingly, did not. “The Supreme Court itself appeared to sense the gravity of the situation, and to back off,” Wilkinson says.
Indeed, just two months later, with the switch of one vote, the justices this time upheld a critical piece of New Deal legislation regulating labor conditions in the steel industry.
Historians agree that the court in  ushered in the modern Commerce Clause doctrine. After that, the court deferred to Congress on economic regulations almost entirely.
The Modern Doctrine
The high point of the new era was a 1942 case called , a challenge to the Agricultural Adjustment Act. The law was aimed at stabilizing agriculture prices, which were in free fall. It paid farmers not to grow certain crops on some of their land. A farmer named Roscoe Filburn went to court, claiming that Congress had exceeded its power when it tried to bar him from growing crops on his own land for his own use. The Supreme Court, however, ruled that if Filburn could exceed his growth allotment, so too could others, and in the aggregate, that activity would undermine the goal of stabilizing prices. Even an entirely local activity like Filburn’s, the court held, may fall under Congress’ reach “if it exerts a substantial economic effect on interstate commerce.”
Filburn’s case sealed the deal. No piece of economic regulatory legislation was struck down for the next half-century.
In 1995, that streak came to an end when the Supreme Court rejected a federal law that banned the possession of guns within 1,000 feet of a school. A five-justice majority in  said that the statute was a bridge too far, because the law did not regulate any economic activity. A second case of this sort followed five years later, but in hindsight, neither did much to change the overall deference given to Congress on regulating the economy.
Enter The Health Care Law
Now comes the Obama health care overhaul, known as the ACA, the Affordable Care Act, a law under full assault by the modern conservative movement. Some, like Georgetown Law Center professor Randy Barnett, the architect of the challenge, say openly that they believe many of the New Deal cases were wrongly decided.
“They are well-settled precedents and are not likely to be revisited in my lifetime,” Barnett says. “But I do think that according to the original meaning of the Constitution, they were wrongly decided.”
Barnett is similarly skeptical of some conservatives’ insistence that judges defer to popularly elected legislatures. “I don’t think the court should simply defer to what Congress wants, especially when the issue is the scope of Congress’ own power,” Barnett says.
Barnett argues that the health care law can be struck down without undoing 75 years of judicial precedent. “Nothing about existing Supreme Court doctrine needs to change for us to prevail in this case,” he insists.
But his critics, including George Washington University law professor Jeff Rosen, contend that Barnett’s claim is disingenuous, and that the real goal here is to achieve what has not been achievable even by conservative Republican presidents and Congresses: rolling back major economic regulation.
“Let’s not pretend that this is just a modest case of applying existing precedents,” Rosen says. “The question is: Are you going to reverse decades of judicial deference in economic matters?”
Another Turning Point?
Other scholars agree that the ACA presents a watershed, a potential breaking point with the legal framework that has undergirded our modern economy. “The expansive understanding of the Commerce Clause has been the basis of minimum-wage legislation, of workplace safety legislation, of economic protections, and in fact of our civil rights laws,” notes Shesol. “The conservative legal establishment has been very open about its interest in undoing the New Deal at the constitutional level,” and “this would be the first great success of the movement.”
Nonetheless, Shesol cautions that comparisons to the 1930s can be overblown. Roosevelt and his allies really believed that if they could not enact major reforms to deal with the Depression, “there would be a total economic collapse that would make the Depression look like a cakewalk, and that conditions would be paved for the rise of a dictator,” Shesol explains. “They were watching what was happening in Europe, and they really believed that if they couldn’t get these pieces of legislation through the Supreme Court, that the whole thing might come crashing down.”
Then, as now, advocates on both sides thought the very survival of democracy was at stake.
ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about .This <a target="_blank" href="/news/health-care-decision-commerce-clause-npr/">article</a> first appeared on <a target="_blank" href="">KFF Health News</a> and is republished here under a <a target="_blank" href=" Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License</a>.<img src="/wp-content/uploads/sites/8/2023/04/kffhealthnews-icon.png?w=150" style="width:1em;height:1em;margin-left:10px;">
<img id="republication-tracker-tool-source" src="/?republication-pixel=true&post=23189&ga4=G-J74WWTKFM0" style="width:1px;height:1px;">]]>This story comes from our partner
If the U.S. Supreme Court term opening Monday were a Broadway show, all eyes would be on the stars waiting in the wings.
The constitutional challenge to President Obama’s health care overhaul almost certainly will be decided this term, but at this point it has not formally made it onto the docket. Also making their way to the court are cases involving almost every hot-button issue in America: immigration; affirmative action; gay marriage; and the constitutionality of the Defense of Marriage Act, the federal law barring federal recognition of gay marriage even in states where it is legal.
A Challenge To State-Enacted Medicaid Cuts
Although these star cases are still backstage, as it were, there are plenty of important cases already center stage. In the spotlight Monday is a case testing when and whether doctors, hospitals and patients can challenge state-enacted reductions in Medicaid payments that violate federal law. It is a case with huge implications for cash-strapped states desperate to cut costs, and for patients desperate for care guaranteed by federal law — and paid for in large part by the federal government.
The federal Medicaid law establishes a cooperative federal-state program in which the federal government assists states to furnish medical help for the poor, elderly and disabled. The federal government contribution varies from state to state but is a majority of the total tab. The program is voluntary, but if a state participates, it has to comply with federal requirements, which include paying enough to health care providers that patients can get access to care. And the state, before cutting fees to health care providers, must get approval from the federal agency that runs the program.
In 2008 and 2009, the California Legislature cut fees for hospitals, doctors and other providers by as much as 10 percent. The changes went into effect without being submitted to the federal Medicaid agency as required by law, and when they were submitted, the cuts were not approved. When California went ahead with the cuts anyway, hospitals, doctors and patients sued to stop them.
Dr. Ruth Haskins, an obstetrician-gynecologist who practices in Southern California, has 4,500 patients, about 15 percent of them Medicaid, or Medi-Cal, as the program is known in California. She and other doctors worry that they will simply have to stop taking Medicaid patients.
“I have a quota already … because the reimbursement is just too low to meet my overhead,” Haskins says.
She notes that 56 percent of Medicaid patients in California at this point cannot find a primary care doctor, and hospital administrators tell horror stories about unmet medical needs.
After a federal appeals court ruled that the cuts were illegal and halted them, California appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court. The state, backed by the Obama administration, contends that health care providers and their patients have no right to sue to enforce the Medicaid law.
California Solicitor General Manuel Medeiros says these cuts amount to a contract dispute between the United States and the state, and the health care providers don’t get to horn in on that dispute by taking the state to court.Â
“There was no expectation that we were going to have to be administering this multibillion-dollar program by ad hoc litigation, where courts can substitute their individual judgment for the views of an expert administrative agency that has worked out the problems with the state administrative agency, balancing the competing state and federal interests and policy objectives,” says Medeiros.
Countering that argument, lawyer Carter Phillips, representing the health care providers, contends that if California had in fact been able to show how it was balancing competing interests, there would have been no case. But, he maintains, it didn’t do that.
“California has a budget problem, and that is all that animated California’s actions in this case,” he says. “There was no effort made to determine whether or not these cuts would have any impact on services.” The state just said, “We want to save money, we’re doing it this way, we’re done.”
The lower court said that was illegal and ordered the state to stop the cuts, citing a long line of cases that bar state officials from defying federal law. But the state contends that Congress did not specifically authorize this kind of lawsuit, and that even if the state did act illegally, the only remedy would be for the federal government to cut off all federal Medicaid funds — a process that would take years and has never been done because the consequences are so dire.
Interestingly, this dispute pits Democrats against Democrats. Though the case started during the tenure of Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, it is being carried on by Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown.
And while the Obama administration is supporting Brown and the state, the Democratic leadership in Congress, including key California Democrats, has filed a brief on the other side, supporting the rights of the providers to sue to enforce the Medicaid law. The Democratic congressional leadership says the Obama administration has, in essence, formed an unholy alliance with the states to undermine the minimums set out as conditions for the federal government giving billions of dollars to the states.
The state’s Medeiros responds ruefully. “These are peculiar times,” he says. “The states and the federal government are operating under a very severe fiscal crisis, and everybody is trying to manage their financials the best they can.”
Other Cases On The Docket
Later this week, the court will hear another thorny constitutional question testing whether the federal Americans with Disabilities Act applies to parochial schoolteachers whose primary job is teaching nonreligious courses like math and history.Â
Like all civil rights laws, the ADA bars not just discrimination, but also retaliating against an employee who threatens to sue to enforce his or her rights under the law. In the case before the court, a Lutheran church school contends that the law violates its religious mandate to resolve disputes internally.
Also on the docket next week is a case testing whether the Constitution allows local jailers to automatically strip-search even those arrested for minor offenses, including traffic violations. And later in the term, the justices will examine a case testing whether government investigators have to get a warrant before putting a GPS tracking device on a car.
The term also features a variety of cases pushing conservative causes, a property rights challenge to EPA enforcement of the Clean Water Act, and a free-speech challenge to union dues collected from all state employees. And there are a wide variety of criminal law cases that could have significant repercussions.
On the more entertaining side of the docket is a case brought by Fox TV and backed by other broadcasters testing the constitutionality of a Federal Communications Commission ban on expletives, nudity and other “indecent content” on TV and radio.
At issue in the case are fines imposed on Fox for excretory and sexual expletives uttered by celebrities at the Billboard Awards ceremonies broadcast live by the network. A lower court ruled that the ban on indecency is so vague as to be unconstitutional, meaning nobody would know what is and isn’t legal. Now the case is at the Supreme Court, along with a lot of other cases with sex appeal, both real and figurative.Â
ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about .This <a target="_blank" href="/health-industry/supreme-court-to-take-on-medicaid-case-npr/">article</a> first appeared on <a target="_blank" href="">KFF Health News</a> and is republished here under a <a target="_blank" href=" Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License</a>.<img src="/wp-content/uploads/sites/8/2023/04/kffhealthnews-icon.png?w=150" style="width:1em;height:1em;margin-left:10px;">
<img id="republication-tracker-tool-source" src="/?republication-pixel=true&post=28080&ga4=G-J74WWTKFM0" style="width:1px;height:1px;">]]>