Constitutionality of mandates
by
sashal12
11/07/2009, 6:55 PM #
There is no constitutional problem with Congress requiring that
individuals purchase health care or pay a penalty. There is much to
debate over health care reform and how to achieve it, but I have no
doubt that the proposals would be constitutional.
The
constitutional objection that I have heard most often is that Congress
lacks the authority under Article I of the Constitution to do this. But
such a mandate clearly falls within the scope of Congress's authority
to regulate commerce among the states.
Over many cases, the
Supreme Court has held that Congress can regulate economic activities
that taken cumulatively across the country have a substantial effect on
interstate commerce. Purchasing health insurance is an economic
transaction. Taken cumulatively those who do this, or who don't do it,
have a substantial effect on interstate commerce.
In 2007,
healthcare expenditures amounted to $2.2 trillion, or $7,421 a person,
and accounted for 16.2% of the gross domestic product. These statistics
leave no doubt that regulating health insurance is regulating
interstate commerce.
Those who argue that this is
unconstitutional maintain that those not purchasing health insurance,
by definition, are not part of interstate commerce. There are numerous
flaws with this argument. First, Congress can regulate activities that
themselves are not part of interstate commerce if they have a
substantial effect on interstate commerce. For example, in Wickard v. Filburn, the Supreme Court held that Congress could regulate wheat that farmers grew for their own home consumption. More recently in Gonzales v. Raich,
the Court ruled that Congress could prohibit cultivating and possessing
small amounts of marijuana for personal medicinal use. Even though the
individuals were not personally engaged in commerce, the matter still
fit within the commerce power.
Second, not engaging in economic
transactions is a form of commercial behavior that Congress can
regulate. The Supreme Court held that Congress could require that
hotels and restaurants provide services to African-Americans. Their
refusal to engage in commerce still was deemed to be within the scope
of Congress's commerce clause power.
Third, the likelihood is
that everyone will require medical care at some point. An uninsured
person in an automobile accident will be taken to the emergency room
for treatment. An uninsured person with a communicable disease will be
treated. Congress can ensure that there is an adequate fund to pay for
everyone's medical needs.
In other words, the health care system
is part of interstate commerce. Providing care for all unquestionably
has a substantial economic effect. Congress, then, can use its
authority under the necessary and proper clause to make sure that the
system that it is creating is viable and capable of providing health
care for all.
Nor is there any individual right violated by a
mandate for purchasing health care. There is no constitutionally
protected freedom to be able to refuse to be insured or to avoid paying
for the benefits provided.
There are many close constitutional
questions. But this is not among them. Congress clearly has the legal
authority to require individuals to have health insurance.
Prof. Erwin Chemerinsky
Professor of Law and Professor of Political Science, Duke University School of Law