Constitutional law, as understood and implemented for more than two centuries, trumps the AGs' contentions. Article VI, Section 2 provides that "This Constitution, and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof, and all treaties made, or which shall be made, . . . shall be the supreme law of the land; and the judges in every State shall be bound thereby, anything in the Constitution or laws of any State to the contrary notwithstanding." [Emphasis added]
The "supremacy clause" is a clear command. It emphasizes the paramount authority of the Constitution, national laws, and treaties over state laws; for good reason, it has been called the linchpin of our constitutional system. The clause has been the basis for national preemption of authority over the states in a variety of matters, including laws passed under the regulation of commerce or the general welfare clauses. The provision for judicial enforcement buttressed arguments in behalf of the judiciary's special role in interpreting the Constitution. No court with final authority has failed to recognize the imperatives of the clause. It is unlikely the politically-motivated state officials - and their political allies in and out of government - will reverse that path of American constitutionalism.
The AGs certainly must remember their oaths of office. All officials, federal and state alike, must fulfill the constitutional requirement (Article VI, Section 3, following the supremacy clause) to take an oath to support the Constitution. Our obstructionist Attorneys General, too, are obligated to pledge allegiance to national supremacy.
Utah's AG, one of the leaders in proposing the suit, seemed to be whistling in the dark; still, he held out some hope for success when he spoke of "this" U.S. Supreme Court -- which is barely-disguised code language for the hope that Justice Anthony Kennedy will support their position. (It would be interesting to watch Justice Antonin Scalia work around his always-certain knowledge of "original intention.") At bottom, the Utah official forcefully asserted that the federal government cannot require people to buy insurance. Oh? Surely he knows how to spell "Medicare."
After the Republican Party pledged to repeal the Social Security Act in the 1936 election -- and carried only 2 states -- opponents went to the Supreme Court the next year. But the Court, in a 5-4 decision, upheld the taxing provisions of the law ("Congress . . . may lay and collect taxes . . . to . . . provide for the . . . general welfare." U.S. Constitution, Art I, Sec.8.) The Court summarily dismissed arguments that the law encroached on state powers and sovereignty.
The constitutional history of national authority is clear: states may not nullify or overturn a federal statute.
In 1798, the Sedition Act aroused intense political strife. Thomas Jefferson, then the Vice President of the United States, and his longtime political ally, James Madison, covertly led the debate, and they wrote the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions opposing the Act. The Act generated very real fears of government prosecution, and political protest could be readily punished by national authorities. But the federal courts had refused to consider the law's constitutionality, in effect a victory for those who defended the act.
The Kentucky and Virginia legislatures expressed a "warm attachment" to the Union and to the national government's "legitimate powers." But they insisted that the Union had been forged as the agent of sovereign states, which were obligated to challenge congressional laws when they exceeded or contravened the "authorized grants enumerated" in the Constitution.
Jefferson believed the Sedition Act unconstitutional because the First Amendment prohibited national regulation of speech; only the states could regulate speech, religion, and the press, he said. (Yes, he meant that states could circumscribe freedom of speech and press.) The protests called for the state legislatures, in their sovereign capacities, to check national abuses through "interposition" and declare the law unconstitutional. The Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions concluded with a call to other states to follow their lead.
Other states did not, and the doctrine of interposition faded for several decades as national power and authority substantially increased - ironically under Presidents Jefferson and Madison. But the growing development of sectionalism, especially with the massed political power of the pro-slavery states, revived the idea as a means for insuring the protection of one section's "peculiar institution." John C. Calhoun, like Jefferson, a onetime Vice President and then Senator (D-SC), appropriately characterized as the "Marx of the Master Class," resurrected Jefferson and Madison's basic ideas, and turned them to their logical conclusion of full-blown state sovereignty theory, loaded with the doctrines of nullification, and ultimately, secession.
The history of state resistance is a minor stream of the past; states never have successfully mounted a challenge to federal supremacy. The attempts to do so occurred before 1860, at a time when a variety of centrifugal forces - political, economic, and social - threatened the integrity of the Union. But the force of arms in the Civil War assured the triumph of American nationalism, cementing the bonds of nationhood. The dubious doctrines of nullification disappeared into the ashcan of history. Calhoun, however, occasionally is resurrected, and now appears in the Republican guise of Sen. Jim DeMint (R-SC), who has reached into the ashcan to resurrect state interposition against the new health care law.
John Marshall, our first great Chief Justice, and a man intimately related to the ratification of the Constitution, methodically dissected and rejected notions of state sovereignty and interposition in an 1821 opinion. Marshall realized the stakes if such doctrines prevailed. With words today's state attorneys general might ponder, Marshall said that "America has chosen to be, in many respects, and to many purposes, a nation . . . . The people have declared that in the exercise of all powers given for these objects, it is supreme." He concluded by citing the "supremacy clause: "These States are constituent parts of the United States. They are members of one great empire - for some purposes sovereign, for some purposes subordinate."
Marshall in his time preserved the "mystic chords of memory" that bound the nation, as Lincoln said. We have the obligation to preserve them - unless as Marshall conceded, we choose to exercise our inalienable right of revolution and overturn the Constitution.
Pity that our state Attorneys General have chosen to turn a blind side to the history of the Constitution and federal supremacy. They belong to that long ago abandoned path of politically-motivated attempts to defy national laws and the Constitution. Their action is embarrassing; they offer only political theater to an angry crowd, easily led and filled by such demagoguery; worse, it undermines the very Constitution they have sworn to uphold.


Constitution
Forcing you to purchase auto insurance when you choose to drive a car is one thing (the possibility of inflicting harm on others), but making you buy health insurance merely because you are alive should worry many people. It establishes a dangerous precedent. What else will Uncle Sam force you to purchase?
Re: Constitution
Much of Medicare is offered through private companies.
Re: Constitution
federal supremacy
Arnold Offner
C.F. Hugel Professor of History
Lafayette College
Kutler on AG suits
Does It Really Matter Whether the Mandate Holds Up?
Even if we assume that the mandate as a whole gets thrown out, that would merely put the insurance companies into difficulties. They would have to do something to fix their difficulties. If the Medicare age were lowered a bit, that would remove a lot of potentially expensive customers from the insurance companies' rolls, and would serve the same purpose as a mandate. There are probably at least three or four Republican senators who are, um, persuadable by the insurance companies. The way the fix works is that a corporation employs a senator's son. Nothing too blatant, you understand. The Democrats, of course, support such a measure on principle, as a step towards "single payer." The mandate is not something essential to ObamaCare, but simply the result of a near-chance bargain which fell through.
Medicare is designed with a "Gap." The rules create a "risk" of a rare event, with a maximum loss ceiling, which does not require a lot of claims supervision, in short, something pretty much like the kind of risk covered by homeowners insurance. An insurance company offering "Medigap Insurance" simply pays its share of those expenses the Medicare people approve. The Gap was a shrewd bribe to the insurance industry to let Medicare go through. So, if you lower the Medicare age, there is more scope for insurance companies to sell Medigap insurance.
AG's
Actually, the question should be: "Why is it no surprise that no Democrats have joined them?"
I'll answer. Because, evidently, they have bought into the socialist agenda of the current regime.
An
An Administrative Nightmare
In addition, that fine cadre known as the IRS cannot enforce compliance on something like 20% of the population for income taxes--certainly 20% in the age group of 20-somethings), so how in the world will they get $800 out of millions of these kids? The victims will simply jump from one gated apartment complex to another, one step ahead of the gendarmes.
Get Your Facts Straight
John Caldwell is a Democrat.
http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Justice/2010/0323/Attorneys-general-in-14-states-sue-to-block-healthcare-reform-law
John Marshall also wrote: "A law repugnant to the Constitution is void."
The Constitution also states: "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."
Where does the Constitution delegate "healthcare" as a federal responibility, including the power to control the entire medical profession? Or is the entire concept of limited government too old-fashion to even merit acknowledgment from our new Progressive overlords?
All the facts
Re: All the facts
"As Attorney General, I am duty bound by my oath of office to pursue a request by the Governor of the state of Louisiana for legal assistance, so long as it has substantial legal merit.
To save Louisiana the potential expense of filing a separate suit regarding the health-care legislation, it was my decision to sign-on to Florida's well-drafted action at minimal cost to Louisiana and accomplish the same legal purpose."
"As Attorney General I will not engage in political opportunism or partisan politics nor file any claim that does not have substantial legal merit."
http://www.nola.com/politics/index.ssf/2010/03/attorney_general_buddy_caldwel.html
What part of "SUBSTANTIAL LEGAL MERIT" do you find confusing?
The headline of the article by the fringe group you link to is: "Did Jindal Bribe Louisiana’s Attorney General To Force Him To Join Frivolous Health Care Lawsuit?" Note the word "bribe," not blackmail. Of course, even that accusation is based on some "unnamed source." Real convincing.
But then again, Democrats have always responded well to bribes and kickbacks. Although in this case, such may be the only thing that can compel a Dem to do the right thing.
Good thing nobody was bribed into supporting socialized medicine.
Re: Get Your Facts Straight
Where does the Constitution delegate "healthcare" as a federal responibility, including the power to control the entire medical profession?
Re: Get Your Facts Straight
I'm neither a lawyer nor an American historian, but even I can answer that. Multiple ways.
The Constitution grants Congress the power to regulate commerce between the States. The medical and insurance professions are trades regulated by the states, but regulated differently; in order to create a consistent national market for both industries -- a priority you should appreciate -- Congress had to act.
The Constitution is also a tool for the protection of rights, and health care has evolved into a right. The US used to be at the forefront of human civilization; now it can begin to reclaim that position.
Re: Get Your Facts Straight
Millions of Americans think otherwise, as you are going to discover this November.
Re: Get Your Facts Straight
As far as your "millions of Americans" go, I'm reminded of a classic gaffe made by someone who was advocating a kind of global democracy. "If a billion people say 'yes' who could say no?" he wrote in all earnestness. The obvious answer, of course, was "two billion people."
You may be right, that millions of Americans believe as you do. Tens of millions, though are what's required to win at the national ballot.
Re: Get Your Facts Straight
Liberty now equals unlimited government. Epic fail.
Excellent example of formal equivocation with your attempt to define liberty as socialism. The issue at hand is on the meaning of liberty. You can't define it out of existance.
Instead of abusing the language in Orwellian fashion, how about just admitting that Progressive oppose liberty has it has been understood for the last 250 years? It would be more honest than your freedom (liberty) = slavery (socialism) Newspeak.
Re: Get Your Facts Straight
Re: Get Your Facts Straight
In this country, however, that control is dangerously lax, comparing to the other civilized countries.
The new health care bill, unfortunately, does not go as far as addressing one of the main frivolities enjoyed by the US medical doctors: the right to refuse to serve a patient, unless the latter is covered with the insurance plan accepted by the doctor or pays cash. Considerations of humanity and democracy (which are real substance of medical profession) should compel the US "medical profession" to accept any insurance plan without any exclusion. However, those doctors who are driven not by those
considerations, but by considerations
of greater profits (greed) have to be reminded about their professional Hippocrates oath by societal means of enforcement, i.e, governmental regulations. Simple like this, sir.
An opinion that puts interests of SOME (since most of them agree with mine, in principle) in medical profession above the core interests of a whole nation, is not even worth a discussion.
Re: Get Your Facts Straight
Arnold, what are you counting on when laying on an operating table under that doctor's knife?