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Did the state/federal dynamic just change?

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* In upholding the federal health care reform program, the US Supreme Court also ruled that part of the law was unconstitutional. Congress could not withhold all Medicaid funding from states if they refused to participate in the law’s huge Medicaid expansion, the court ruled, calling it unconstitutional coercion. From Chief Justice John Roberts’ majority opinion

In this case, the financial ‘inducement’ Congress has chosen is much more than ‘relatively mild encouragement’ — it is a gun to the head

* The federal government is constantly putting strings on money it doles out to the states, so this ruling has made people wonder what might happen to current and future federal “inducements,” and if states might now be emboldened to take other federal requirements to court. NPR looks into the matter

“It is true that this is the first time that the court has invalidated an expansion based upon restraint on federal power,” says James Blumstein, a law professor at Vanderbilt University who wrote an amicus brief in the Medicaid case that anticipated Roberts’ ruling.

“But they’ve always said for years, decades, that this [limit] existed,” Blumstein says. “If this [Medicaid rule] had not crossed the line, the line wouldn’t have existed.”

So where exactly is the line now? No one is certain.

In his health care opinion, Roberts cited a 1987 decision, South Dakota v. Dole, in which the court found that it wasn’t “impermissively coercive,” as the chief justice put it, to require states to raise the minimum drinking age to 21 or lose 5 percent of their federal highway funds.

The sum at stake amounted to less than one-half of 1 percent of South Dakota’s budget at the time — a lot less than the share of federal Medicaid money that makes up every state’s budget, which is about 15 percent, according to the National Association of State Budget Officers.

But because there’s such a big gap between the amount of money the court has said is permissible and the amount it has ruled is unconstitutional, no one has a clear sense of how much leverage Congress can wield over the states.

It’s possible that the Medicaid ruling will remain an outlier. Medicaid is far and away the largest federal-state program, and it was an unusual move for Congress to put the entirety of existing Medicaid dollars at risk, as opposed to a small percentage of program funding. […]

On the other hand, nothing in the court’s opinion suggested that it views Medicaid as unique because of its size.

Go read the whole thing.

…Adding… So far, six Republican governors have said they won’t participate in Obamacare’s Medicaid expansion program. The Washington Post looks at the history of the program

Medicaid got a chilly reception when it launched in January 1966. It was up to the states to decide whether to participate and only six initially signed up: Hawaii, Illinois, Minnesota, North Dakota, Oklahoma and Pennsylvania. Twenty-seven followed suit later that year. Across the country, governors weighed the boon of new federal dollars — Washington would foot half of Medicaid’s bill — against the drawback of putting state money into a new program.

Nascent Medicaid programs quickly faced threats: Republican legislators in the New York introduced a bill in 1967 calling for the state to “live within its means” and repeal its Medicaid program.

Doctors, meanwhile, lamented the program’s bureaucracy and griped that payments often arrived late. “Doctors’ complaints tie up our telephone lines all day, every day,” Frederick W. Richmond, chairman of the Citizen’s Committee for Medicaid, told the New York Times in 1967. Some pharmacists voted to boycott the program altogether.

posted by Rich Miller
Tuesday, Jul 10, 12 @ 11:55 am

Comments

  1. Many of the gripes Mr. Richmond mentions are still alive and well today among medical professionals.

    It will be interesting to see how the expansion of coverage combines with the looming doctor shortage and lower Medicaid payments to impact service and treatment among the general population.

    Comment by Freeman Tuesday, Jul 10, 12 @ 12:22 pm

  2. Congress should have done a better job on the carrots and sticks for the states. South Dakota v Dole is a famous case and should have been spotted a mile away.

    Comment by Boone's is Back Tuesday, Jul 10, 12 @ 12:45 pm

  3. Some holdout governors will be make Tea Party points for a while, but it won’t last.

    They’re bucking the tide of human nature: everyone wants to live as long as they can and a continuing revolution in medical science makes that more possible.

    How long do you think elected politicians can stand in the way of access?

    The rest of the planet either has universal health care are is on the march toward it, regardless of political ideology or culture. The United States is an outlier, for now.

    http://articles.latimes.com/2012/may/12/nation/la-na-global-health-reform-20120512

    Comment by wordslinger Tuesday, Jul 10, 12 @ 1:09 pm

  4. I thought from the day the decision came down that this item would be a significant and far-reaching limit on federal power and a real victory for conservatives. It just got lost in the weight of the headlines about the legality of the health care law.

    The devil is always in the details. Roberts plans on being the chief for the next 20 years, and I’d look for this ruling to trigger a flood of new cases seeking to further limit the power of the federal government over the states.

    Comment by 47th Ward Tuesday, Jul 10, 12 @ 1:10 pm

  5. The providers were correct in 1967 and are still correct today. This program is NOT adequately funded and our State of Illinois has had trouble paying is bills as a result almost since the inception of this program.

    Comment by BIG R. PH Tuesday, Jul 10, 12 @ 3:03 pm

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