Meanwhile, in My Other Life
Today is the day. At 10 a.m., the Supreme Court justices will file into the Court and hand down their decision on the Affordable Care Act. For the last few weeks many of us here in our nation’s capital, especially those of us who work in a law school whose professors have been involved in analyzing the legislation, have been waiting impatiently for this moment.
Will the justices uphold the act or strike it down? Will they banish only the individual mandate, the part that tells us we must buy health insurance or pay a fine? And if they do that, how will the rest of the act stand (the so called “severability question”)? And what of the Medicaid part of the ruling? How will that play out?
This time last summer I was reporting and writing an article on this topic. So I’ve followed the challenge through the lower courts and now to this ultimate one. Like much of official Washington, I was riveted by the oral arguments in March. The constitutionalism of health care legislation is not a specialty of
mine, but after spending a month interviewing experts and writing about it, I learned enough to understand and appreciate the issues.
Which makes me wish I had time to write about every major issue facing this nation. The more you learn, I think, the more you care.
2 thoughts on “Meanwhile, in My Other Life”
What did you think of Professor Barnett's triumphant article in the Post's Outlook Sunday?
Very much what I would expect. My favorite line: "True, Congress can now essentially tax people for not buying broccoli."