Three-day oral arguments in health care case set for March
Dec 20, 2011 lawyersusaonline.com
The U.S.
Supreme Court will hear oral arguments on the four issues involved in the
challenge to the health care law over three days in March.
The court announced
yesterday that the five and a half hours of oral arguments in the case will
begin Monday, March 26, with an hour of argument devoted to the threshold issue
of whether the Anti-Injunction Act precludes consideration of the
constitutional claims before the law goes into effect in 2014.
On March 27 the Court will hear two
hours of arguments on the central issue in the case: whether Congress had the
authority to pass the individual coverage mandate. And on March 28 the Court
has allocated 90 minutes for argument to consider whether the individual
mandate is severable from the rest of the health care law, and an hour on the
issue of the Medicaid expansion.
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Obama Health Care Law: Supreme Court Sets Dates To Hear Oral Arguments
Mike
Sacks mike.sacks@huffingtonpost.com Become a fan of this reporter Dec 2011
WASHINGTON -- March madness is coming to the Supreme Court next year. The justices
have designated three days, March 26 to March 28, as the oral argument dates
for the health care cases.
The Court agreed to hear the challenges to the Affordable Care Act
in November, setting aside an extraordinary five and a half
hours for oral argument.
The main event will be on Tuesday, March 27, when the Court will take up
the constitutionality of the health care law's minimum coverage requirement.
That provision, commonly called the individual mandate, requires virtually all
Americans to purchase health insurance or pay a penalty. The Court has set
aside two hours for argument over whether Congress' passage of the individual
mandate exceeded the legislature's powers to regulate interstate commerce or
lay and collect taxes under Article I of the Constitution.
On Monday, March 26, the Court will hear an hour of argument over whether a
Reconstruction-era federal statute, the Anti-Injunction Act, bars the justices from making a
decision on the individual mandate's constitutionality until after the
provision goes into effect in 2014.
The Court will consider two additional issues on Wednesday, March 28.
Ninety minutes will be dedicated to whether the individual mandate is so
central to the health care overhaul that the entire law must fall should the
justices find the mandate itself unconstitutional. An additional hour of
argument will address 26 states' claim that the law improperly expands Medicaid
by coercively conditioning states' receipt of federal funds on their
participation in the new health care exchange system.
These three days of oral argument will occur almost exactly two years after
President Barack Obama
signed the Affordable Care Act, sparking a slew of lawsuits across the country.
The four courts of appeals to consider the issues now before the Supreme
Court have split on the constitutionality of the individual mandate and the
application of the Anti-Injunction Act, but have all rejected the challengers'
arguments about state coercion and the centrality of the individual mandate.
The justices' decision in the health care cases will likely come down at
the end of June.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/19/obama-health-care-law-supreme-court_n_1158039.html
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