Mind-reading and what-ifs replace legal reasoning in the chief
justice’s decision.
Here is John Roberts, chief oracle of the United States of America, from
Thursday’s King v. Burwell decision:
Congress passed the Affordable Care Act to improve health insurance
markets, not to destroy them. If at all possible, we must interpret the
Act in a way that is consistent with the former, and avoids the latter.
What the statement illustrates is that for Roberts, the law is a
subordinate concern.
I know, I know, the Affordable Care Act is moral and decent and that’s
all that matters. Liberals demand that we govern through empathy-based
jurisprudence rather than anything resembling the antiquated tenets of
founding principles. If you care about the latter more than you do the
former, the fact that Supreme Court justices are aping the
consequentialist arguments of the Left and then working backward to make
their legal justifications is probably the worst sign for checks and
balances yet.
We’re going to be inundated with legal interpretations over the next few
days. But imagine for a moment if a Supreme Court justice argued that
the Defense of Marriage Act was passed to improve marriage rather than
destroy it, so we must focus on the former rather than the latter and
uphold any retroactive provisions the Bush administration cooked up to
make that law work. Or imagine the same for any legislation you disagree
with.
Let’s concede to Roberts that the intention of every politician is to
improve on things. Republicans believe that further nationalizing health
insurance is a bad idea and makes markets less competitive and more
expensive. By overturning the law, they want to improve health-insurance
markets as well. That’s why we have legislatures, to debate these
points of view and then pass bills. That legislation codifies what a
majority can agree on. And we have courts to judge the constitutionality
of laws, not to bore into the souls of politicians to decipher their
true intent or find justifications to rubber-stamp “democracy” — as
Roberts puts it.
But in every case, it seems, we must respect the role of the legislature
and not undo what it has done. A fair reading of the legislation
demands a fair reading of the legislative plan.
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Roberts ruled that laws can be implemented in any way the executive
branch sees fit, as long as judges deem its intentions righteous.
It was Roberts who helped rewrite Obamacare the first time around,
making a penalty into a tax and, for the first time in history, allowing
American government to coerce every citizen into buying a product from a
private company as part of its power to regulate commerce.
Roberts, abandoning law, laments that Obamacare was drafted in a
haphazard and vague way, right before ruling that laws can be
implemented in any way the executive branch sees fit, as long as judges
deem its intentions righteous.
Once we pass massive pieces of legislation that effectively hand entire
industries to regulatory agencies, we are allowing the executive branch
to govern in any way it sees fit. That said, it’s doubtful that SCOTUS
would allow the same rationalizations used for King v. Burwell to be
employed for any legislation it found distasteful. Though Republican
presidents keep nominating judges who disappoint conservatives, you can
rest assured that Hillary Clinton would not disappoint liberals with her
picks.
But on the political side, this ruling means we can no longer rely on
government institutions to check one another or themselves.
Conservatives — or whatever party is in the minority — have to continue
to be the check. Any kind of reform should be opposed, because any kind
of reform, no matter how narrow the focus theoretically is, will be an
opportunity for boundless revision and scope. All a political party
needs to do is cobble together a temporary majority, push through
legislation that expands federal power, and then find some clairvoyant
judges dedicated to empathy rather than their oath. All of this is fine,
according to the Supreme Court, as long as politicians had good
intentions.
— David Harsanyi is a senior editor at The Federalist and the author of
The People Have Spoken (and They Are Wrong): The Case Against Democracy.
Follow him on Twitter @davidharsanyi. © 2015 Creators.com.
Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/420324/king-burwell-john-roberts-david-harsanyi
Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/420324/king-burwell-john-roberts-david-harsanyi
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