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politics and politicians Title: Judge Says House Can Sue Administration Over Obamacare Spending The House can pursue some constitutional claims in a lawsuit against the Obama administration over appropriations and implementing the health care overhaul law, a federal district judge ruled Wednesday. The ruling means Congress has cleared a high procedural hurdle in the separation of powers case, one that usually stops the judiciary from stepping into fights between lawmakers and the executive branch. The House has legal standing to pursue allegations that the secretaries of Health and Human Services and Treasury are spending $175 billion over the next 10 fiscal years that was not appropriated by Congress, Judge Rosemary M. Collyer of the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., wrote in the 43-page ruling. The House lawsuit asks the court to declare the president acted unconstitutionally in making payments to insurance companies under Section 1402 of the health care overhaul law (PL 111-148, PL 111-152) and to stop the payments. Wednesdays ruling does not address the merits of the claims. Collyer acknowledged that the court was taking a rare step, but doing so carefully into a high-profile dispute, so that it wouldnt give the House standing to file other similar lawsuits. Despite its potential political ramifications, this suit remains a plain dispute over a constitutional command, of which the judiciary has long been the ultimate interpreter, Collyer wrote. The court is also assured that this decision will open no floodgates, as it is inherently limited by the extraordinary facts of which it was born. The dispute focuses on two sections of the health care overhaul law. The administration felt it could make Section 1402 Offset Program payments from the same account as Section 1401 Refundable Tax Credit Program payments. House Republicans say the health care law doesn't permit that. The Obama administration, during the fiscal 2014 appropriations process, initially asked Congress for a separate line item for 1402 payments. Congress did not include money for such a line item. During oral arguments in the case in May, Collyers questioned government lawyers about why the administration could ignore Congress and then argue that the House couldnt sue them. The administration argued that the House has other options, such as political remedies or passing other legislation, they said. The attorney for the House, Jonathan Turley, at the time called it astonishing for the Obama administration to call the dispute an abstraction. He pointed out that the 1402 program would send $175 billion over the next 10 fiscal years to insurance companies under a Department of Health and Human Services cost-sharing program, even though Congress has never appropriated funds for the program. Congress already passed a bill that did not include funding for the 1402 program and without the House lawsuit, the power of the purse would be rendered effectively decorative and the executive branch would have an open account on the U.S. Treasury, Turley added at the time. That would mean there would be nothing we could do to stop them, Turley told the judge. The case at the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia is U.S. House of Representatives v. Burwell, No. 14-cv-1967. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
#1. To: cranky (#0)
House v Burwell, DCDC 14-cv-01967, Doc 41 (9 Sep 2015) Memorandum Opinion
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