Obamacare and SCOTUS, 10 Years Later
Even Obamacare's fiercest advocates say it has not lived up to its goals.

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010, better known as Obamacare, was designed to patch the insurance gaps between Medicare, Medicaid, and employer-sponsored health care, which is bolstered by a tax carve-out for workplace benefits. Obamacare was barely two years old when it faced its first challenge at the Supreme Court.
A decade after that first challenge, the law remains on the books. But the outcome of that case has shaped both the health law's evolution and its public perception, leaving Americans with a major federal program that even its fiercest advocates say does not live up to its goals.
The justices heard arguments for and against the constitutionality of Obamacare's health insurance mandate, which required every American who did not qualify for an exemption to carry federally approved health insurance. They also considered arguments over the law's mandatory expansion of Medicaid, which penalized noncompliant states with a massive clawback of federal funds.
A year earlier, Judge Roger Vinson of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Florida had struck down the individual mandate and declared that, because it was central to Obamacare, the entire statute should fall. Many observers expected the Supreme Court to likewise rule against Obamacare. They thought the only question was whether the Court would strike down just the mandate or the entire sprawling bill.
As it turned out, the vote was 5–4 to save the mandate. In a strained opinion that would remain controversial for years, Chief Justice John Roberts wrote that the mandate could not be justified under the Commerce Clause, because the power to regulate interstate commerce does not include the power to compel commercial activity—in this case, the purchase of government-approved medical insurance. But because people who failed to comply with the mandate were subject to an IRS-administered financial penalty, he said, the provision could be upheld as an exercise of Congress' taxing power.
In media appearances making the case for the health care law, President Barack Obama had insisted the mandate was not a tax. But according to the Supreme Court majority, that's exactly what it was—and what made it constitutionally permissible.
At the same time, the Court ruled that the federal government could not withhold all Medicaid funds from states that refused to participate in the program's expansion. That penalty, seven justices agreed, was a "gun to the head" that violated the anti-commandeering principle, which bars Congress from forcing states to participate in federal programs.
The Medicaid expansion thus became purely optional. Initially, red states were especially slow to expand. A decade later, a dozen states, including Georgia, Texas, and Florida, still have not expanded their Medicaid programs in line with Obamacare.
The Court's rulings on the mandate and on Medicaid expansion have inspired additional patches for America's health care system. A 2021 Democratic proposal promoted under the "Build Back Better" label, for example, would have created an additional layer of federal health coverage for states that have not expanded Medicaid. But that effort was complicated by internal Democratic Party dynamics: As the bill's total price tag was whittled down throughout the year, some Democrats wondered why scarce resources should be used to fund coverage for mostly Republican states that had explicitly rejected it.
Meanwhile, the individual mandate, once the subject of so much controversy, has all but fallen away. Although the rule is still on the books, the GOP-backed Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 reduced the penalty to zero, rendering the tax meaningless and the mandate unenforceable.
Through all of this, a general air of dissatisfaction with the law has persisted, even among Democrats. The law was passed with the promise that it would make insurance affordable and accessible. Yet when Obama returned to the White House to celebrate the law's 12-year anniversary in April 2022, he remarked upon its failure to fully achieve those goals.
"Even today, some patients still pay too much for their prescriptions," Obama said. "Some poor Americans are still falling through the cracks….Some working families are still having trouble paying for their coverage."
Even the law's namesake could not help but acknowledge reality. Patients still were not protected, and care still was not affordable. The patchwork program would need more patches.
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Obama Care. A classic example of everything wrong with 21st century politics in America.
A huge bill passed on a one party vote by people who didn't even read it ("we have to pass the bill to find out what's in it"). Then when properly challenged in court saved by the tortured reasoning of the squish Chief Justice, more concerned with the reputation of the Court than with the law.
End result: Bad law supported by bad judicial reasoning which has done nothing to resolve the problem it was designed to correct.
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"Then when properly challenged in court saved by the tortured reasoning of the squish Chief Justice, more concerned with the reputation of the Court than with the law."
It showed the press that bitching loudly would get Roberts to cave.
Obamacare, like Obama himself, is awesome. If you don't like it you're a racist. Also Obama deserves credit for the strongest economy ever because Warren Buffett got much richer from 2009 to 2016.
#TemporarilyFillingInForButtplug
Don't forget the debt we owe G Waffen Bush for weaponizing faith-based fanaticism at all levels of The Political State in furtherance of asset-forfeiture prohibitionism. Enough homes were raided and looted via asset forfeiture to make mortgage-backed derivatives worthless, wreck the economy and again persuade voters temporarily to throw away no more votes on the fascist side of the mixed-economy Kleptocracy.
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010, better known as Obamacare, was designed to patch the insurance gaps between Medicare, Medicaid, and employer-sponsored health care, which is bolstered by a tax carve-out for workplace benefits
Really, that’s what it was designed to do?
… Obamacare's health insurance mandate, which required every American who did not qualify for an exemption to carry federally approved health insurance
Getting warmer…
Some may remember that the whole dumpster fire of Obamacare was designed to herald in single payer healthcare, and that the Democrats counted on the stupidity of the voter to get it passed, a glaring omission in this article.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=AEjr9WchNkg
There you go - Obamacare doesn't work because it wasn't designed to work, it was only supposed to be a stepping-stone on the path to universal healthcare.
It was also to cement a legacy too!
It's goal was to increase government control, so it was successful. Affordability was nothing but a catch phrase, individual and economic freedom to make your own choices about your health insurance were the target.
^THIS
"Even Obamacare's fiercest advocates say it has not lived up to its goals."
As others have pointed out, the goal was to destroy American health insurance and American healthcare in a way that would seem to leave national healthcare as the only alternative.
It is succeeding wonderfully.
It will probably take more brains and guts than the republicans have to restore freedoms in healthcare to Americans.
Came here to say this
I pay nearly $3,000/mo. for a silver plan for a family of four.
Fuck ObamaCare in the ass.
Obamacare was about transferring more power and control to a central governrment and making more people dependent on government, so I'd give it just under a B+.
^THIS
Well, it hasn't lived up to its goals in that it was designed to fail and act as a transition for a government-run single payer system.
It has lived up to its goals in that it funneled vast amounts of money to the medical-industrial complex while making Americans sicker, poorer, and less free.
So, Obama achieved half of his goals.
The worst most damaging piece of legislation passed in our lifetime, including the PATRIOT act.
"President Barack Obama had insisted the mandate was not a tax."
That was always a blatant lie to uphold a political fiction. Not that a fact checker would call out it out of course. At least not before it became a done deal.
>>was designed to patch the insurance gaps between Medicare, Medicaid, and employer-sponsored health care
was designed to fail and lead to single-payer.
Even Obamacare's fiercest advocates say it has not lived up to its goals.
It did, but you're not willing to evaluate it based on their real goals.
1. Dems spent a trillion dollars on government employees and contractors. This creates thousands more people whose livelihood is directly dependent on government cementing reliable Dem votes, plus it increases our debt giving them more leverage for future tax increases to punish their enemies.
2. They established the principle that healthcare, or any product and industry, is subject to government control.
As others have pointed out, the goal was control over medical care. Now you can't talk about specific treatments without getting your license pulled. You have to get jabbed to work in the hospitals.
Seems like it's working just fine.
All of that is the cost of adopting a conservative plan in order to attempt to win conservative support.
Hit and run policy. Rich politicians create massive programs which only really affect us, and then they leave office and die leaving people generations later to pay the bill.
As a liberal and a Democrat, I opposed Obamacare for purely political reasons, knowing it would wreck Democratic credibility with low- and middle-income whites. Still, this is a trivial column. The Republican Party has spent 10 years trying to wreck Obamacare, and they've done a reasonably good job of it. There were plenty of faults with Obamacare in the first place, the biggest of all being that the American middle class would be comfortable paying for health care for the poor, but also the "optimistic" expectations that health care costs could be made subject to "reasonable" restraint. Neither the customers nor the providers of health care in the U.S. want costs to be controlled. Attempts by the government to "talk sense" on health care always results in retribution at the polls.
Where in Congress is empowered
To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes;
does it say they get to force us at gunpoint to buy insurance to pay cartel prices to perjured physicians?
The SCOTUS said Congress wasn't empowered to create 0blamocare under the commerce clause.
The DID allow it under the rubric that it fell under the taxation power, after John Roberts agreed that it did, with the other communist justices.
It was the same reasoning by which we got Social Security.
Isn't that funny how they do that. Because we can tax you and steal your money by Gov-Guns; We can do anything....... Welcome to [WE] mob tyranny instead of a CONSTITUTIONAL Union of Republican States.
Obamacare was always intended to make private insurance so expensive that the ignorant masses would clamor for government healthcare
Remember that day "The People" amended the constitution to give the 'feds' the authority over healthcare plans?
Yeah; Me neither....
F'En Nazi's