Monday round-up

With oral arguments in the challenge to the Affordable Care Act set to begin in two weeks, the weekend’s coverage of the Court focuses on the Term’s most anticipated case.

In the New York Times, Adam Liptak writes that the Court’s health care decision will “shape, if not define,” the legacy of Chief Justice John Roberts, reasoning that “clashes like the one over the health care law come around only a few times in a century, and he may well complete his service without encountering another case posing such fundamental questions about the structure of American government.” Michael Leahy of the Washington Post profiles former Solicitor General Paul Clement, who will serve as counsel for Florida and the other states challenging the law as unconstitutional.  Leahy observes that “the personal stakes in the battle are high for Clement,” who is “frequently mentioned by Republicans as being on the short list of Supreme Court nominees should the GOP win back the White House.” Writing for Forbes, Lawrence Hunter describes the White House’s “campaign to hoist the Court on the petard of conservative justice Antonin Scalia’s words,” based on the Justice’s “expansive view of . . . the Commerce Clause and the Necessary and Proper Clause.” And at Politico, Jennifer Haberkorn discusses the possible political consequences of a decision either way.

In addition, as Joshua noted in Friday’s round-up, the White House is coordinating a series of events that it hopes will showcase the Affordable Care Act’s most popular provisions. Bloomberg’s Alex Wayne provides additional coverage of these efforts, while USA Today’s David Jackson reports on efforts by both sides to make their cases in the court of public opinion. At the ABA Journal, Debra Cassens Weiss reports (as Joshua also noted on Friday) on the recent bankruptcy filing by Mary Brown, one of the lead individual plaintiffs in the case, who lists unpaid medical bills as part of her debt. The editorial board of the Los Angeles Times argues that Brown is an “exemplar of a problem the new law was designed to address,” emphasizes that there are too many uninsured Americans “racking up . . . in medical bills every year that they cannot afford, forcing doctors and hospitals to pass those costs on to federal taxpayers and those patients who can pay their bills.”

 

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Posted in: Round-up

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