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Live Blog: Obama Health Law at the Supreme Court, Day 3
Wall Street Journal ^ | March 28, 2012 | Wall Street Journal Court Reporters

Posted on 03/28/2012 8:36:39 AM PDT by katieanna

The Supreme Court on Wednesday is entering the last of its three days of arguments over the Obama health-care law, with justices set to weigh what happens to the rest of the overhaul if the court strikes down the requirement that individuals carry health insurance. We have reporters at the court, who are sending in updates on the action. The morning session started at 10 a.m. ET, and the afternoon session starts at 1 p.m.

(Excerpt) Read more at blogs.wsj.com ...


TOPICS: Breaking News; Constitution/Conservatism; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: deathcarebyromney; livescotusocareday3; obamacare; romneycare; romneycare4all; romneycare4u; scotus; scotusobamacare; scotusocareday3
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To: Aria

Dad says 7-2 against mandate 6-3 against bill.

He pointed out a couple of things that Soto did at the time of her confirmation. He doesn’t think she’ll be as liberal as BO wishes she were.


81 posted on 03/28/2012 11:14:46 AM PDT by hoosiermama (Stand with God and Sarah, the Gipper and Newt will be standing next to you.)
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To: shove_it

I have no more respect for SC judges, or any judge for what matters, than for congresspersons and presidents as to moral authority. I can respect certain individuals that are in these government positions but the stench of politics is always present. Perhaps I’m being too grouchy and carrying memories of my service in WWII and in which my brother was killed. This Nation has become like a Tower of Babel with all It’s immigration for feely-goody reasons and other intended purposes.The 4th of July is a party day more than a day of dedication to the Founders intentions. Though the need for a nation with the spirit of ‘76 is as urgent today as at any time in our history, the Nation is being corrupted by ‘change’ from many government actions.


82 posted on 03/28/2012 11:21:55 AM PDT by noinfringers2
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To: hoosiermama

Dem appointed judges fall in line when it is a marquee Dem piece of legislation that is being considered. Bush-Gore was not about the constitutionality of a Congressional legislative act.It was about the Fla Supreme Court’s misinterpretation of the Constitution.And even in that case the first SC vote on Bush-Gore WAS 5-4 (with all 3 Dems voting with Gore) that the Fla Supreme Court could not order a full recount without an objective measurable counting criteria. The second vote was 7-2 when the Fla SC tried to get around the ruling by ordering a limited recount. It did not involve new legislation. IMHO the only conflicted judge on that bench is Kennedy and he is the only one who will compromise with himself by striking down the mandate but not the entire bill under severabiity. My bet is 5-4 with Kennedy joining the conservatives in striking down the mandate and perhaps 5-4 or 6-3 with Kennedy joining with the Dems not to strike down the entire bill under severability.IMHO The Dems will vote in unison for all aspects of the bill.


83 posted on 03/28/2012 11:30:18 AM PDT by chuckee
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To: Aria
Oh the 6-3 will be to place the responsibility for the contents of the bill back in the laps of congress. Not sure how they'll word it but pay attention to the documents. Neither side will want to be responsible for “passing legislation” or determining what's in the bill. Will only decide on specific issue that is presented to them in court. So they may just hand a shell back to the Congress.
84 posted on 03/28/2012 11:36:30 AM PDT by hoosiermama (Stand with God and Sarah, the Gipper and Newt will be standing next to you.)
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To: chuckee

Kennedy said today that leaving parts of the law in place would be worse than striking the entire thing. On that very note, ALL the justices were conflicted on how to possibly rule which parts would be left intact (a near impossible feat if you ask me).


85 posted on 03/28/2012 11:45:33 AM PDT by katieanna
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To: chuckee
If they vote party line on the bill, they will be opening themselves to being the third house of the legislature with multiple bills being sent their way.

This is NOT an opinion case like abortion.(which really was a states rights issue) There are rules in place that either must be followed, thrown out or rejudicated each time congress goes berserk.

IMO they will follow precedent/rules in place. It is NOT a tax, nor follow the current rules of commerce. It was an attempt by the over zealot congress to change the constitution via the judiciary. Not gonna happen.

86 posted on 03/28/2012 11:48:42 AM PDT by hoosiermama (Stand with God and Sarah, the Gipper and Newt will be standing next to you.)
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To: katieanna
Kennedy said today that leaving parts of the law in place would be worse than striking the entire thing. On that very note, ALL the justices were conflicted on how to possibly rule which parts would be left intact (a near impossible feat if you ask me).

I would agree with Kennedy on that. If insurers are still mandated to accept everyone regardless of preexisting conditions, there is nothing to stop people from having no insurance until the expensive medical condition occurs. The insurers cannot survive in such a system and single payer will then occur very quickly.

87 posted on 03/28/2012 11:54:14 AM PDT by Tatze (I reject your reality and substitute my own!)
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To: hoosiermama; chuckee; katieanna

“Dad says 7-2 against mandate 6-3 against bill.

He pointed out a couple of things that Soto did at the time of her confirmation. He doesn’t think she’ll be as liberal as BO wishes she were.”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

From your Dad’s lips to God’s ear. I listened to both days’ of oral arguments last night. First time listening to SCOTUS. Contrary to many opinions, I had a hopeful impression that Soto might be more “open-minded.”

However, the statements and questions (and timing, i.e., the points of interruption) of Ginsburg and Kagan left me with a hardened impression that they were “politicking” -—Kagan more than Ginsburg.

Not surprising about Kagan. I have nothing good to say about her as a SCOTUS justice, other than that she has a pleasant voice. She does not belong on SCOTUS. She was put there by Obama for one reason, and one reason only. He knew she was a grateful cheerleader and could be psychologically depended on to do his bidding on ObamaCare.

Of course she should have recused herself on ObamaCare, but that was never going to happen (which is why she established personal precedent by recusing herself on the other cases). As far as Obama and she are concerned, she was born to vote in the affirmative for ObamaCare.

In all fairness, she may grow into a good justice, but she never belonged in SCOTUS in the first place.

After last night’s listening to the oral arguments, I feared what Chuckee has prognosticated today, but reading your’s and katieanna’s comments, I am more optimistic. Of course, we know what decision SHOULD be made, but I will be on pins and needles til I hear what decision IS made.


88 posted on 03/28/2012 11:58:47 AM PDT by thouworm (.)
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To: katieanna
The act of determining which part to keep is not a judicial responsibility, it is legislative and the SCOTUS will not touch it. Don't want to be the third legislative branch. They will/can determine only what lies within the contract/constitution.

If they rule against the mandate (which IMO they will) then they can only rule how the mandates effect the entire bill or the consequences of the ruling. Merely stating they are aware of the consequences may be all that can be stated. Simply that with mandates unconstitutional the bill is an empty shell and needs reworking from scratch would suffice.
IMO some justices take the negative side just to have an opportunity or a combatant author to write the opinion.

When they ruled that the decisions re abortion were states rights to determine what was legal (just as marriage is issue now) They will only determine how the acts in each state relate to the laws of that state.
Do not expect a new direction to be pointed out but a line drawn in the sand for prosperity.

89 posted on 03/28/2012 12:02:50 PM PDT by hoosiermama (Stand with God and Sarah, the Gipper and Newt will be standing next to you.)
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To: hoosiermama

That is precisely what the liberal members of the Supreme Court are, an extension of the legislative body.That is the biggest conservative criticism of the broad construction powers the liberal members of the court have acquired for themselves. The ability to fashion and amend legislation from the bench. They have a political philosophy and they fashion their interpretation of the law to advance that agenda.You speak of rules and laws as if they are subject to a strict interpretation.In an ideal world, they are and should be as conservatives argue. But liberals have it otherwise where they will surruptitiously insert their values and political philosophy into the argument and fashion their legal decision to accomodate those values. That is why all 4 Dem liberal judges will uphold all parts of Obamacare under a creative extention of the Interstate Commerce provision which the founders never intended.


90 posted on 03/28/2012 12:10:07 PM PDT by chuckee
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To: caww

My pleasure. You’re welcome!


91 posted on 03/28/2012 12:24:37 PM PDT by katieanna
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To: katieanna

Statements made today mean little since the ruling will be sometime in June. That gives Obama and his cronies a long time to make phone calls and sway his insiders.

Hopefully, he’ll make snide ass remark about the Justices between now and then and they’ll all vote against it.


92 posted on 03/28/2012 12:34:09 PM PDT by maddog55 (OBAMA: Why stupid people shouldn't vote.)
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To: mrsadams
I thought that because of that, if part is found un-Constitutional, all of it has to get thrown out, right?

As far as I know, "severability" has never really been tested. It's thrown in there to show intent, more than anything else, but I don't think there's any case law that says its presence or absence is actually binding.

Traditionally, the Court places a lot of credence in the intent of Congress -- they will strike specific provisions that are unconstitutional, but leave the rest of the law alone.

In this case, IIRC, the severability clause was intentionally removed by the Democrats because they wanted to force the issue by making all or nothing -- it wasn't simple oversight. So that mucks up the whole intent issue. Plus, as Scalia points out, the traditional light-handed approach goes out the window when a law's central premise is voided.

93 posted on 03/28/2012 12:36:46 PM PDT by kevkrom (Those in a rush to trample the Constitution seem to forget that it is the source of their authority.)
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To: katieanna

We know that Congress didn’t read it....and were “shocked”...”shocked” I tell you when they read about the Form 1099 inclusion (which has been “outlawed”.


94 posted on 03/28/2012 12:44:04 PM PDT by Sacajaweau
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To: maddog55

“Statements made today mean little since the ruling will be sometime in June. That gives Obama and his cronies a long time to make phone calls and sway his insiders.”

I disagree. First, the ruling does not have to come in June. It is merely presumed it will as that is the end of the term. They can rule next month if they are ready. 2) If by cronies you mean Soto and Kagan, look, they are having a hard time defending the Statute because it is BAD law. Bad law, and in this case, Sloppy law, is terribly hard to defend. The president will be gone in less than a year (at most 5 years) whereas these Justices’ rulings and reputations are part of history. Hence, imo they will try to help Obama, but there is little to nothing he can do to threaten them now. They are more powerful now than he frankly. Right now their arguments are falling like cheap suits. I’m sure they have no problem letting O. Reid and Pelosi take the fall all by themselves on this one; while their reputations can live to be saved later.


95 posted on 03/28/2012 12:45:33 PM PDT by katieanna
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To: katieanna

I hope you’re right but Liberals are Liberals and you have to have moral character to be worried about your reputation.


96 posted on 03/28/2012 12:55:27 PM PDT by maddog55 (OBAMA: Why stupid people shouldn't vote.)
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To: katieanna

Agree entirely with your reasoning re: Kagan, but see my post #88. Kagan will take the fall and pass “bad” and unconstitutional ObamaCare. She was chosen, IMO, by physiological profile to do just that. After this decision, she is “unencumbered.”

I so very hope I am wrong about her. I would eat crow and think I am dining on lobster.


97 posted on 03/28/2012 1:09:46 PM PDT by thouworm (.)
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To: katieanna

Re: my post #97. “physiological profile” ???. “psychological profile”!!! lol...


98 posted on 03/28/2012 1:18:06 PM PDT by thouworm (.)
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To: katieanna
Mr. Kneedler, in response, said such a move would violate principles of judicial restraint.

Kneedler and other liberals and democrats stand up and applause violation of the principles of judicial restraint when it suits his purposes.

99 posted on 03/28/2012 1:19:35 PM PDT by prairiebreeze
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To: Be Free
"11:55am - Justice Sonia Sotomayor was first to interrupt the challengers' lawyer Paul Clement, who is arguing that the whole law should be invalidated, shortly after he began making his remarks. "Why shouldn't we let Congress" decide what to do, she asked him. "What's wrong with leaving it in the hands of people" who should be taking this decision, "not us?" she continued."

Because, Justice Sotomayor, it's the job of SCOTUS to determine Constitutionality of laws. Oh, also, because of parachutes, pole vaults, and Pelosi.

And because Pelosi and Reid completely ignored the will of the people. They sacrificed the careers of the (D)s who voted for this monstrous power grab disguised as legislation.

100 posted on 03/28/2012 1:20:27 PM PDT by bootless (Never Forget. Never Again. (PursuingLiberty.com))
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