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Showing Original Post only (View all)Robert Reich: Supreme Court will Uphold Affordable HealthCare Act [View all]
Predictions are always hazardous when it comes to the economy, the weather, and the Supreme Court. I wont get near the first two right now, but Ill hazard a guess on what the Court is likely to decide tomorrow: It will uphold the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) by a vote of 6 to 3.
Three reasons for my confidence:
First, Chief Justice John Roberts is or should be concerned about the steadily-declining standing of the Court in the publics mind, along with the growing perception that the justices decide according to partisan politics rather than according to legal principle. The 5-4 decision in Citizens United, for example, looked to all the world like a political rather than a legal outcome, with all five Republican appointees finding that restrictions on independent corporate expenditures violate the First Amendment, and all four Democratic appointees finding that such restrictions are reasonably necessary to avoid corruption or the appearance of corruption. Or consider the Courts notorious decision in Bush v. Gore.
The Supreme Court cant afford to lose public trust. It has no ability to impose its will on the other two branches of government: As Alexander Hamilton once noted, the Court has neither the purse (it cant threaten to withhold funding from the other branches) or the sword (it cant threaten police or military action). It has only the publics trust in the Courts own integrity and the logic of its decisions both of which the public is now doubting, according to polls. As Chief Justice, Roberts has a particular responsibility to regain the publics trust. Another 5-4 decision overturning a piece of legislation as important as Obamacare would further erode that trust.
It doesnt matter that a significant portion of the public may not like Obamacare. The issue here is the role and institutional integrity of the Supreme Court, not the popularity of a particular piece of legislation. Indeed, what better way to show the Courts impartiality than to affirm the constitutionality of legislation that may be unpopular but is within the authority of the other two branches to enact?
http://wallstreetpit.com/93330-supreme-court-will-uphold-affordable-healthcare-act