Though the Supreme Court ruled to uphold Obamacare today, five
justices agreed that the individual mandate — the requirement that
all citizens purchase health insurance or pay a penalty — could
not be justified under the Constitution’s Commerce Clause. Here’s
an excerpt from the dissent written by justices Scalia, Kennedy,
Thomas, and Alito:
The striking case of Wickard v. Filburn, 317
U. S. 111 (1942), which held that the economic activity of growing
wheat, even for one’s own consumption, affected commerce
sufficiently that it could be regulated, always has been regarded
as the ne plus ultra of expansive Commerce Clause
jurisprudence. To go beyond that, and to say the failure
to grow wheat (which is not an economic activity, or any
activity at all) nonetheless affects commerce and therefore can be
federally regulated, is to make mere breathing in and out the basis
for federal prescription and to extend federal power to virtually
all human activity. […]
If Congress can reach out and command even those furthest
removed from an interstate market to participate in the market,
then the Commerce Clause becomes a font of unlimited power, or in
Hamilton’s words, “the hideous monster whose devouring jaws …
spare neither sex nor age, nor high nor low, nor sacred nor
profane.”
Over at NRO, John Fund suggests this represents
a modest victory:
In other words, Randy Barnett, David Rivkin, and the other
lawyers who argued that the individual mandate was an unprecedented
expansion of the Commerce Clause’s power were right. They may have
lost the battle on Obamacare, but they now have some weaponry to
win future battles on this issue. In a major case, the court has
found the Commerce Clause indeed has some limits in a major case,
and that really hasn’t happened since the New Deal court
basically abandoned the traditional Constitutional reading of that
clause in 1937.
Kevin Drum takes a different veiw
at Mother Jones.
[T]o the extent that this sets any precedent, it’s only that
Congress can’t force people to engage in commerce. That’s not
something Congress has done before or is likely to need to do in
the future. The taxing power is sufficient for most purposes, and
existing precedent on the Commerce Clause, which allows Congress
nearly unlimited power to regulate existing commerce, is sufficient
for the rest. So I doubt this decision will have much real effect
on future legislation. It will be very easy to write nearly any
kind of legislation that stays inside the court’s new rules.
I haven’t yet read the opinions in their entirety, but from the
portions I’ve seen, I’m inclined to pessimistically agree with
Drum.