Wednesday, October 19, 2011

GOP bill S. 197 seems to endorse ObamaCare, says health care and insurance 'affect interstate commerce,' cite Commerce Clause

.
With S. 197 republicans show they side with Obama, ObamaCare, and democrats. The bill says health care and health insurance "affect interstate commerce" and can be regulated by congress via the Commerce Clause.

10/18/11, "Senate GOP Jobs Bill Contains a Landmine for Federalism," National Review, Carrie Severino

"Douglas Holtz-Eakin offers three cheers for the “Jobs Through Growth Act,” the Senate Republican alternative to President Obama’s jobs bill. For reasons I explain below, I’m not sure I’d even go with the old “two cheers.”

On the upside, the bill would repeal the Obama administration’s two most aggressive assaults on the Constitution — Obamacare and Dodd-Frank — and “require congressional approval by joint resolution of any federal rule that would cost the economy $100 million or more.” If they left it at that, Senate Republicans would be making significant improvements to the nation’s economic climate while vindicating important constitutional limitations on the national government’s power.

Unfortunately, the bill would also enact S.197, “The Medical Care Access Protection Act.” Among other things, S.197 sets a statute of limitations for claims, caps damages and creates standards for expert witnesses. These may sound like great ideas, but they are not within the constitutional powers granted to the federal government

  • for the very same reasons Obamacare is not. ...

The bill’s findings state that health care and health insurance are industries that “affect interstate commerce,” and conclude that Congress therefore has Commerce Clause power to regulate them — even when it involves an in-state transaction between a doctor and patient, governed by in-state medical malpractice laws. Is there any industry that couldn’t be found to have an effect on interstate commerce? The agriculture and manufacturing industries, long considered the paradigmatic areas not covered by the Commerce Clause, certainly fall under federal power under this broad analysis....

The doctor-patient relationship at issue here is simply not commerce among the states. To say otherwise is to buy into the idea that everything we do (or don’t do) is subject to congressional authority because of some commercial effect somewhere in the cosmos. Congress would be nationalizing purely local activity because state-by-state solutions would require a lot of resources and hard work. There are serious problems with our current legal climate, and medical malpractice is an area of specific need. Like the proponents of this bill, I am no fan of frivolous lawsuits or the trial lawyers who use our civil justice system as a means of diverting wealth (usually into their own bank accounts). But if we sacrifice our commitment to the rule of law here, what standing do we have when the next iteration of Obamacare presents itself?

I hope Senate Republicans will consider replacing or removing S.197 from their jobs bill."

--------------------

ObamaCare needed to be defunded immediately and could have been, independent of the Senate. Now we find such moves aren't even close to being 'marked up.' Proving again how well deserved the House GOP's minority status was before Nov. 2010. They love ObamaCare, despise the American middle class, and are happier being a tiny minority.

9/29/11, "Draft spending bill would defund Obama healthcare law," The Hill, Sam Baker


via Instapundit

No comments: