[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 120 (Tuesday, July 29, 2014)]
[House]
[Page H6980]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
OBAMACARE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
North Carolina (Ms. Foxx) for 5 minutes.
Ms. FOXX. Mr. Speaker, the recent decision in Halbig v. Burwell held
that ObamaCare ``makes tax credits available . . . to individuals who
purchase health insurance through . . . exchanges . . . established by
the State.''
Supporters of the law predictably decried judicial partisanship. They
claimed the reasoning of the Court was spurious because it led to an
absurd result which was not in line with the intended policy of the
law.
Also recently, video surfaced of MIT health economist Jonathan
Gruber, a prominent architect of and supporter of ObamaCare, clearly
stating that States have an incentive to set up exchanges so that their
citizens will have access to Federal subsidies. So much for the charge
that the Court's reasoning led to an absurd result.
Mr. Speaker, it is quite obvious that someone at some point in the
legislative drafting of ObamaCare thought using Federal subsidies as an
incentive to get States to set up insurance exchanges was a good idea,
and that was the view that was codified as law. But at a fundamental
level, the issue here isn't the way the statute was written; it is the
way the statute was passed. The extremely partisan nature of
ObamaCare's passage has made the administration unwilling or unable to
seek fixes via the normal legislative process because doing so would
necessitate working across the aisle and compromising.
We all remember that ObamaCare was hastily passed after an election
which cost the Democrats their supermajority in the Senate. They
couldn't edit this law because the people of Massachusetts denied them
that privilege. But that didn't stop Democrats from ramming this poorly
drafted law through using some very questionable legislative tactics.
Now they are asking the courts to let them make edits to the plain
language of law without consulting Congress.
As this case moves forward on appeal, judges should ask themselves
this question: Is it my role to shield the Democratic Party from the
consequences of a republic form of government? I don't recall ever
reading that particular clause in my copy of the Constitution.
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