The Individual Mandate: Can States Opt Out?

by Benjamin Domenech on 4:12 pm March 24, 2010

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At the Patrick Henry Building in Richmond today, Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell signed the Virginia Health Care Freedom Act, flanked by Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli and VA Health Sec. Dr. Bill Hazel (the former head of the Inova system) among others.

“We all agree that we must expand access to quality health care and reduce costs for all Virginians. However, that should not be accomplished through an unprecedented federal mandate on individuals that we believe violates the U.S. Constitution,” said McDonnell, who was also careful to point out that the act received the votes of leading Democratic state senators and the Democratic House Minority Leader.

But Sen. Ron Wyden has an interview with the Huffington Post today claiming that acts like the one McDonnell signed (pending in 30+ states as ballot initiatives or amendments) and the associated legal threats from Attorneys General over the individual mandate are pointless, given that states can simply “opt out” of the individual mandate requirement. Update from Wyden’s office added below.

Here’s what Wyden tells Sam Stein:

Speaking to the Huffington Post on Tuesday, Wyden discussed — for one of the first times in public — legislative language he authored which “allows a state to go out and do its own bill, including having no individual mandate” … provided that, as Wyden puts it, “they can meet the coverage requirements of the bill.”

“Why don’t you use the waiver provision to let you go set up your own plan?” the senator asked those who threaten health-care-related lawsuits. “Why would you just say you are going to sue everybody, when this bill gives you the authority and the legal counsel is on record as saying you can do it without an individual mandate?”

Sen. Wyden is one of the few politicians in either party who understands health care policy, and he’s an honest, smart, and hard-working guy. But there are a number of problems with what he is saying here, even if we take it seriously.

The Wyden language — found in the bill here (side note: I actually think some of this language originates from a Maria Cantwell amendment in the Finance Committee, and called Wyden’s office to confirm, but they haven’t gotten back to me yet) — provides, as he says, that “if a state can demonstrate that they can meet the criteria — particularly on cost containment, improving the delivery system,” they can get a waiver from the Department of Health and Human Services. It would be up to Secretary Sebelius if this was in force today to determine what criteria must be met.

I checked with my colleague at Heartland, senior legal fellow Maureen Martin, about this. She says that “Senators can say whatever they want about what statutes mean. Whatever they say is irrelevant. In the end, the courts will decide what statutes mean. Whatever Congress or the President say about the meaning of statutes is totally irrelevant. Courts look at the exact language of statutes and decide what they mean. So intent of Congress is irrelevant. It matters only what the statutes say and how that is interpreted. I’m not sure this point is well understood by the public.”

There are of course a number of questions to be raised here about standing, but also about whether the waiver is adequate protection if it is only possible for a five year gap, and subject to the discretion of the HHS Secretary. My colleague John Graham at the Pacific Research Institute points out that “applying for a waiver” is not the same as “opting out” — he presumes the HHS Secretary would grant a waiver if a state imposed single-payer, such as in California and some other states.

Yet even presuming states wanted to do something pro-market, they would only be able to apply for these waivers starting in 2017, and the waivers in question would have to meet standards for “cost containment” and “improving the delivery system” — standards which can be very fluid. As with any regulatory issue that shifts at the whim of the party in power, this will almost certainly lead to more litigation as to what all of these terms mean for the states in terms of tangible, measurable standards.

Nor can states be made exempt from the tax increases for individuals and employers, the cuts in Medicare, the newly expanded unfunded liabilities in Medicaid, and a host of other aspects of this bill. Of course states could set up their own programs to cover people, but that would be a waiver almost no state would want to accept, given that they can’t prohibit their taxpayer dollars from going to fund this reform elsewhere.

That’s hardly a full opt out. What’s more, an exemption from the individual and employer mandates really can’t take place at a state level without raising a host of other legal issues. The whole point of the health freedom act in Virginia is not that the state is acting in its own defense, but that it requires the state to act as a legal matter in the defense of an individual being compelled by the federal government to purchase a product or suffer a fine.

I’m unconvinced, and I assume the AGs are as well. Wyden’s statement is essentially offering a political answer to a Constitutional question. Saying that these legal issues are unimportant because a state government may exempt its citizens from the individual or employer mandate requirements doesn’t help a citizen or employer whose state fails to act.

Taken as a whole, one thing is clear: a lot of lawyers and judges will be answering these questions in the months and years to come.

Update: The very pleasant folks at Wyden’s office got back to me. Here’s the answer on how the exemption would work: you could only get an exemption approved by the Secretary of HHS if you prove you can cover more people with your non-individual mandate plan, while also meeting their new requirements for coverage (in other words, not by turning to a catastrophic + HSA plan or something along those lines).

In other words, it is hard to see all but a few rare circumstances where a state would apply for this exemption and move toward a pro-market solution. You would have to prove that you would have a greater number of people purchase a product than you would by legally requiring them to purchase that product.

Crossposted at Health Care News. Follow Ben Domenech on Twitter.

{ 8 comments… read them below or add one }

tractah March 25, 2010 at 9:41 am

Only those who voted for “the one” should be forced to purchase healthcare. The rest of us normal people should be allowed to live our lives in peace and prosperity without the burden and knowledge that armies of IRS agents are prowling thru our privacy 24/7.

ap82 March 25, 2010 at 10:14 am

Another question:

What about not states but individuals opting out?

Bob Kellum March 25, 2010 at 12:00 pm

You people REALLY don't get it. <whine> Why don't you just use the provision in the bill? <\whine>
The problem is that the bill is a gigantic grab of authority that is BY CONSTITUTION reserved to the States and the People. The purpose is not to just achieve the goal of “opting out”, the purpose is to spit a gigantic wad of snot in the faces of those politicians who have decided to IGNORE their obligations UNDER OATH to defend the Constitution against all enemies.
As far as I am concerned, every member of Congress that voted for this huge land grab, needs to be tried for TREASON for ignoring their obligations under our Constitution. They have broken their oath, and need to be called to account.
Our system of Checks and Balances is not just the anemic 3-way described to you in your pathetic Social Studies classes, it includes a whole range of checks and balances on Government power. These balances include:
1. Right and Responsibility of interpretation. Every “actor” in the Federal system has an independent opportunity to interpret the text of the Constitution. The House, The Senate, The President, The Secretaries, the AG, the States, and the Individuals must interpret the Constitution and what it means, and must bear faith and allegiance to their understanding of the meaning of the text.
2. Judicial Right of Juries for Invalidation: Juries have the RIGHT to invalidate a law that they do not agree with in any instance that comes before them. If you are on a Jury, and you think that a law is WRONG, you have a responsibility to stand up and persuade your jury to invalidate the law in that instance.
3. Individual Right to Bear Arms: It has been said that an armed populace is a polite populace. The possibility of the population rising up against tyranny must be, and is an essential cross check against out of control government. With that right comes responsibility, and that must not be taken lightly. The actors in Government must understand this tenet, and must fear it. Conversely, those under arms must understand the awesome responsibility in the use of deadly force. I have personally not seen ANY situations that yet call for the use of this deadly power, but I've read about them in history books. Our revolutionary past bears witness to the rare need for this remedy, and Jefferson himself spoke about the need to water the tree of liberty.
3. Right and Responsibility to Vote: The last is the most important. We must hold our elected officials to a high standard. We MUST be both informed and educated in what tyranny is, and how it works. There are many “Democracies” that have succumbed to tyranny, the latest “almost” was Honduras. If you don't know about that one, please refer to the third sentence of this point.

Taylor March 25, 2010 at 12:05 pm

Sounds like a pre-emptive legal defense, based on allowing a court to deny a lawsuit on the theory that unless a state tries to “opt out” first it won't have exhausted its remedies.

It's hard to think of any other explanation for building in “opt-out” language that really isn't designed to allow for a state to opt out, and then burying that little jewel in thousands of pages of paper.

tractah March 25, 2010 at 1:41 pm

Only those who voted for “the one” should be forced to purchase healthcare. The rest of us normal people should be allowed to live our lives in peace and prosperity without the burden and knowledge that armies of IRS agents are prowling thru our privacy 24/7.

ap82 March 25, 2010 at 2:14 pm

Another question:

What about not states but individuals opting out?

Bob Kellum March 25, 2010 at 4:00 pm

You people REALLY don't get it. <whine> Why don't you just use the provision in the bill? <\whine>
The problem is that the bill is a gigantic grab of authority that is BY CONSTITUTION reserved to the States and the People. The purpose is not to just achieve the goal of “opting out”, the purpose is to spit a gigantic wad of snot in the faces of those politicians who have decided to IGNORE their obligations UNDER OATH to defend the Constitution against all enemies.
As far as I am concerned, every member of Congress that voted for this huge land grab, needs to be tried for TREASON for ignoring their obligations under our Constitution. They have broken their oath, and need to be called to account.
Our system of Checks and Balances is not just the anemic 3-way described to you in your pathetic Social Studies classes, it includes a whole range of checks and balances on Government power. These balances include:
1. Right and Responsibility of interpretation. Every “actor” in the Federal system has an independent opportunity to interpret the text of the Constitution. The House, The Senate, The President, The Secretaries, the AG, the States, and the Individuals must interpret the Constitution and what it means, and must bear faith and allegiance to their understanding of the meaning of the text.
2. Judicial Right of Juries for Invalidation: Juries have the RIGHT to invalidate a law that they do not agree with in any instance that comes before them. If you are on a Jury, and you think that a law is WRONG, you have a responsibility to stand up and persuade your jury to invalidate the law in that instance.
3. Individual Right to Bear Arms: It has been said that an armed populace is a polite populace. The possibility of the population rising up against tyranny must be, and is an essential cross check against out of control government. With that right comes responsibility, and that must not be taken lightly. The actors in Government must understand this tenet, and must fear it. Conversely, those under arms must understand the awesome responsibility in the use of deadly force. I have personally not seen ANY situations that yet call for the use of this deadly power, but I've read about them in history books. Our revolutionary past bears witness to the rare need for this remedy, and Jefferson himself spoke about the need to water the tree of liberty.
3. Right and Responsibility to Vote: The last is the most important. We must hold our elected officials to a high standard. We MUST be both informed and educated in what tyranny is, and how it works. There are many “Democracies” that have succumbed to tyranny, the latest “almost” was Honduras. If you don't know about that one, please refer to the third sentence of this point.

Taylor March 25, 2010 at 4:05 pm

Sounds like a pre-emptive legal defense, based on allowing a court to deny a lawsuit on the theory that unless a state tries to “opt out” first it won't have exhausted its remedies.

It's hard to think of any other explanation for building in “opt-out” language that really isn't designed to allow for a state to opt out, and then burying that little jewel in thousands of pages of paper.

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