Tuesday round-up

Discussion of the Affordable Care Act’s future before the Court has continued apace. As the Wall Street Journal, AP, and USA Today all report, President Obama recently predicted during a town hall meeting in Minnesota that the Court will uphold the law under its existing precedent (the Affordable Care Act is the subject of an ongoing symposium on this blog). Politico discuses why – in light of the decision by the Eleventh Circuit striking down the Act’s “individual mandate” provision – the Court is now very likely to review the constitutionality of the Act, while the editorial board of the Christian Science Monitor urges the Court to support what it describes as a “long-term trend toward people taking charge of their health – and not having others make decisions for them.” At the Legal News Line, Professor Stephen Presser argues that President Obama will seek to stall the appeal until after the 2012 presidential election for political reasons. Discussing the likely outcome of these challenges at the Court, Nick Bravin argues at Dorf on Law that, although “all eyes will be focused on Justice Kennedy,” the Justice’s oft-repeated emphasis on liberty and states’ rights might instead lead supporters of the law to seek an “unlikely ally” in Justice Scalia. James Vicini of Reuters takes a different tack, suggesting that Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Kennedy hold ACA’s fate in their hands.

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