Once again, the fate of the Affordable Care Act is before the courts. The health law has traveled all the way to the Supreme Court (twice!) and is highly likely to make another visit.
On that path, the law made a stop Tuesday before a three-judge panel of the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans. Both sides presented , interrupted, at times, by sharp questions from two of the judges.
For those just tuning in, the Trump administration is not defending the nine-year-old ACA.
It instead has sided with the to have the law overturned.
In doing so, Department of Justice lawyers appeared to use strategies and take positions that sounded somewhat unconventional to a layperson. But are they?
KHN checked with some legal experts for their take.
For starters, this is the third time the administration has changed its position. Does this often happen?
No. It鈥檚 unusual for an administration to shift its own legal opinions during the case, say experts.
When the lawsuit was filed, the only the parts of the law tied to a requirement that most Americans carry insurance, the so-called individual mandate, should be tossed. (That鈥檚 a pretty big part, which includes protections for people with preexisting conditions.)
The red-state plaintiffs, conversely, argued that the entire law should go, pointing to Congress鈥 2017 vote to zero out the individual mandate鈥檚 tax penalty. The Supreme Court鈥檚 2012 decision to preserve the ACA hinged on that penalty.
But, last December, a in Texas sided with the states, saying the whole law should be tossed, which would affect provisions as diverse as the preexisting condition protections, Medicaid expansion and calorie counts on restaurant menus.
That鈥檚 when the its position to agree that, indeed, the whole thing had to go.
And that鈥檚 rare.
鈥淵ou don鈥檛 usually say, 鈥極h, never mind,鈥欌 said Tom Miller, resident fellow at the conservative American Enterprise Institute. 鈥淚t鈥檚 unusual to do that flip.鈥
But that鈥檚 not the last flip. came up in legal papers filed shortly before the Tuesday hearing and in oral arguments.
DOJ attorney August Flentje told the appeals court that, well, maybe only those provisions of the law that directly affect the plaintiffs 鈥 the 18 states 鈥 should be struck.
鈥淚t鈥檚 complicated,鈥 he admitted, calling to mind a made in 2017 by President Donald Trump amid the repeal debate in Congress: 鈥淣obody knew that health care could be so complicated.鈥
Even as this legal challenge works its way through the courts, the ACA remains the law of the land. The evolving legal positions, however, are fodder for professors.
鈥淚鈥檓 teaching a class this fall and this gives me more material,鈥 said Miller. 鈥淏ut if I had to consistently try to argue a position at the DOJ, I would go crazy.鈥
So, the government wants to skewer some provisions of the law, but not others 鈥 and have those changes apply only in some states. How would that work? 聽
Questions about that argument came from 5th Circuit Judge Jennifer Walker Elrod, appointed by President George W. Bush in 2007.
The government wants to have it apply 鈥渋n certain states and strike it down in certain states?鈥 Elrod asked. 鈥淭he government believes that鈥檚 a possibility?鈥
Unasked but implicit: How would some states enforce the law and not others?
Flentje said 鈥渁 lot of that would have to get sorted out鈥 but not until after all the appeals in the case are exhausted.
Behind the argument may well be an ongoing dispute in the legal community about whether lower-court judges should make decisions that have nationwide implications, said John Malcolm, director of the conservative Heritage Foundation鈥檚 Edwin Meese III Center for Legal and Judicial Studies. Still, it would be difficult, he said, for the ACA to be declared unconstitutional in some states, but remain in effect elsewhere.
Beyond that legal question, such a position has financial and policy implications for consumers and state regulators.
鈥It would create a very untenable situation for the rest of the states,鈥 said Mila Kofman, executive director of the DC Health Benefit Exchange Authority, where individuals and small businesses buy health insurance.
Some of the very sickest people in the states where the rules were dropped would likely move to states keeping the preexisting condition protections so they could maintain their insurance, she said. That could drive up costs in those areas.
Arguments Tuesday revolved around whether parts of the law were 鈥渟everable鈥 from other parts. Did it seem the government wants it both ways 鈥 to toss the entire law, but also keep parts of it?
Elrod again queried Flentje.
The government wants the health insurance provisions to go, but 鈥測ou would leave in the calorie guide?鈥 Elrod asked, referring to the ACA鈥檚 requirement that chain restaurants display calorie counts of menu items.
Flentje said the government鈥檚 鈥渁rgument on scope is totally separate from argument on severability.鈥
She pressed him for clarification: 鈥淪o, are you saying it鈥檚 entirely inseverable, or arguing that some parts can be kept?鈥
The government鈥檚 position remains that 鈥渢he entire act is not severable,鈥 he replied, adding, however that the judgment could be 鈥渘arrowed a bit to provisions that injure and impact the plaintiffs.鈥
He suggested some of those details would still have to be worked out.
鈥淭hey鈥檝e gone from saying a couple of provisions have to go to the whole thing has to go, to now there are some things we might not have to get rid of,鈥 said Miller. 鈥淏ut they鈥檝e never defined how far back down the ladder to go.鈥
A ruling by the appeals court isn鈥檛 expected for weeks or months, and some questions may well return to the district court.
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