The Right Opinion
Silver Lining in Court Decisions
The U.S. Supreme Court handed down two decisions this week that cry out for Congressional action. In upholding the constitutionality of most aspects of President Obama's health care reform legislation and in reaffirming the federal government's role in immigration policy, the Court's decisions should be a call to action for Congress to pass new legislation on these two vital issues.
It's important to recognize that the decisions were narrowly tailored to deal only with constitutionality of the two laws at issue: the federal Affordable Care Act and Arizona's S.B. 1070. Neither decision spoke to the wisdom of existing policy in either area. In fact, both health care and immigration laws are in desperate need of major revisions.
The health care decision, announced Thursday, affirmed the constitutionality of the major provisions of the law. While striking down one provision having to do with Medicaid, the Court upheld the most controversial part of the law, which mandates that individuals buy health insurance or pay a penalty to the federal government.
Five of the justices, including Chief Justice Roberts and the other four conservatives on the Court, said that the Commerce Clause could not be read to allow the federal government to require individuals to buy health insurance -- the argument advanced by the Obama administration. However, Roberts voted to uphold the law's constitutionality based on his interpretation that the federal government's taxing authority permits it to penalize those who choose not to buy insurance -- thus ensuring a 5-4 victory that in effect preserves the means to finance universal health care as envisioned by the law. In essence, the chief justice said that Obamacare is a tax imposed on those who do not wish to purchase health care.
If conservatives are smart, they will use this point to hammer home to Americans that the Obama administration has imposed a hefty tax on every American who is not covered by health insurance and has probably raised premium costs for those who already have insurance by mandating policies to cover new services. In an election season when many, if not most, Americans are feeling an economic pinch, this could be a huge problem for the president. And especially so because the president has consistently maintained that his health care bill was not a tax, nor would it raise the costs of health care. Republicans in Congress should use the opportunity to offer bills to repeal this regressive tax.
The other important decision handed down this week had to do with the power of states to impose their own sets of rules and penalties with regard to illegal immigration. While many conservatives are upset that the Court struck down key provisions of Arizona's tough anti-illegal immigration law, SB 1070, they should be more angry at Congress for failing to pass legal immigration reform that would end up to 90 percent of illegal immigration by expanding legal immigration and temporary work visas. But instead of adhering to their basic understanding of free market principles when it comes to immigration policy, many conservatives have jumped on the bandwagon of intrusive big government to solve immigration problems.
There is no question that Americans have a right to be concerned about border security and the large number of illegal immigrants that are living in the United States. But the solution is not for states to try to impose their own versions of immigration law -- which are the exclusive provenance of the federal government -- but for Americans to push Congress to act on meaningful changes to our immigration laws. The answer to combatting illegal immigration is to base legal immigration laws on the country's economic needs and to make it flexible. The best policy would be to increase immigration when there is high employer demand and not enough domestic workers to fill the need, and decrease it when there supply exceeds demand.
Unfortunately, those on both sides who have dominated the debate in the last few years have been hostile to a free market approach. Liberals favor higher immigration under all circumstances, motivated in large part by their desire to enlarge their own constituency, which they believe will happen naturally if more immigrants from Latin American countries come.
Just as problematic, many conservatives who oppose expanding legal immigration have lost faith in the ability of the United States to assimilate new immigrants, despite overwhelming evidence that current immigrants -- including Latinos -- are assimilating at rates that are as high or higher than previous immigrants from Europe. Instead of adhering to basic conservative principles, these anti-immigration conservatives end up favoring bigger government to patrol our borders and increased regulations for everyone who wants to work in the U.S, including American citizens. We've tried these methods now for more than twenty years, and they haven't done the job.
The Supreme Court's ruling on immigration should motivate conservatives to demand genuine immigration reform at the federal level -- but most importantly, reform that preserves conservative principles on individual liberty and the free market.
When it comes to both decisions this week, conservatives need to follow their own advice: don't rely on the Courts to fix policies that have gone astray.
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6 Comments
JTG in IN
Friday, June 29, 2012 at 8:19 AM
OK, so why not annex Mexico and be done with it? We're taking in all the undesirables that Mexico peddles our way while the government is giving preferential treatment to illegal criminals. In fact, why have laws at all? Oblahma makes up his own as he goes so I should be given the same deference to choose which laws I recognize as legitimate.
wjm in Colorado
Friday, June 29, 2012 at 9:29 AM
the president has consistently maintained that his health care bill was not a tax
Exposed once again as the LIAR that he is, Obamao must be removed from office one way or another.
sfj in Alabama
Friday, June 29, 2012 at 6:45 PM
What is it about "illegal" that folks don't understand? Alabama has a law similar to Arizona's. There are all kind of protesters claiming "leave them alone, they're hard workers" and other such B.S. I guess, using this reasoning, I could rob a bank and be set free because "I work hard" - what a load of rubbish. It is ILLEGAL you dumba$$e$. They shouldn't be here. Mexico enforces their borders and deports illegals. Why shouldn't we do the same?
BNgranny in MO
Saturday, June 30, 2012 at 12:10 PM
Once again Linda shows her ignorance of the law, the Constitution and the English language. Why she's still reprinted here, I guess, is so those with low blood pressure can just read her instead of taking those expensive meds. Must remember it's her "opinion" and just like belly-buttons and other body parts everybody's got one.
Adrien Nash in Crescent City, CA
Saturday, June 30, 2012 at 6:31 PM
"the Obama administration has imposed a hefty tax on every American who is not covered by health insurance" Are you mad? A tax is not a penalty and a penalty is not a tax. Don't you have the gray matter to be able to tell the difference? One is a punishment and the other is not. And the penalty is not for "every American who is not covered by health insurance", -that is flat out erroneous. It's for those who refuse to be ordered to engaged in an insurance contract against their will, wishes, and economic ability.
"for states to try to impose their own versions of immigration law -- which are the exclusive provenance of the federal government -" You really need to read my current grassroots commentary, it's addressed specifically to that false idea, which is based on nothing found in the Constitution. WHEN EXPERTS ARE IDIOTS AND AUTHORITIES ARE FOOLS http://patriotpost.us/commentary/13955
"conservatives end up favoring bigger government to patrol our borders" Again I have to ask. are you mad? Increasing the ranks of undermanned necessary border patrol agents is what the government is charged with doing. Your lame characterization would be like complaining about favoring bigger government because of increasing the military in the face of imminent invasion. The bigger government that is the threat is not the part that protects the nation but the part that drains the treasury via pork barrel spending and unlimited entitlements. Are you seriously comparing the two?
Holmes Simons in FL
Sunday, July 1, 2012 at 12:30 PM
The inalienable rights of American citizens have been revoked by the egotistical rantings of one pseudo-intellectual judge in an pathetic attempt to exhibit the superiority of his legal acumen above that of his peers, and, by his singular effort, he has destroyed and repudiated the legacy of individual freedom that is the very foundational principle upon which the Federal Government was created to defend and protect.
So, before one jumps on the bandwagon glorifying the shrewdness of Justice Roberts in advancing conservatism, please consider these two simple facts:
1) The inherent fallacy of the so-called “Commerce Clause”, upon which Congress has relied for years to regulate any and every aspect of economic activity, was upheld; but it cannot be used to regulate “economic inactivity”, such as one not purchasing health insurance.
2) What then can Congress use to regulate “inactivity”? What else but its UNLIMITED power to tax.
What kind of personal behavior falls outside the categories of “activity” and “inactivity”? None, whatsoever! Therefore, the ramifications of ruling by the Supreme Court that the ACA is constitutional grant Congress, a group of corrupt cowards, by one means or another, the power to regulate everything and everyone.
Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness, human rights that the Founders considered to be given to an individual by God, are now completely subordinated to the whims and fancies of godless, manipulative politicians.
Let’s hear it for InJustice Roberts: YEA!!!!!
Let’s hear it for God: BOO!!!!!
Let’s hear it for the American Citizen: FU.