The latest news in Amicus Briefs is that now, speaker-to-be John Boehner has filed in support of the Florida case. From ABC News:
John Boehner will be House Speaker for the 112th Congress because Republicans won a majority of House seats this November. Clearly, the voices of Republican lawmakers will become louder, and their power will become stronger. Now power will be divided: a Democrat in the White House, a Democrat majority in the Senate, and a Republican majority in the House. Some say this will cause gridlock; some say this gridlock is good, and will lead to more compromise between the parties.
The passage of the health reform law of March 2010 was anything but bipartisan. In a quick party-line vote, Democrats used their then-majority in the House to turn a 2,000-page bill into a 2,000-page law. Its nickname, “ObamaCare,” ties it to our president, who campaigned on unity between the parties, but hasn’t done a lot to follow through in that area.
And then the lawsuits began, and… not so shockingly, the vast majority of states who joined were led by Republican Attorneys General or Republican Governors. See the pattern?
But my hope is that Republicans, Democrats, Independents and others all recognize that the main concern of the health care lawsuits – the legitimate ones – is not the devastating impact of this law on the economy, government spending, or even health care quality. The main concern of the health care lawsuits is the devastating impact of this law on our Constitution, should the law stand. And the Constitution is nonpartisan.
Every American should be willing to defend our constitutional rights, party politics aside. I’m sure it will give Republicans like Boehner some extra political points if they support a lawsuit that wins and voids the law. Conversely, any Democrat who supports a lawsuit against ObamaCare would probably be ostracized by his or her party. But this fight shouldn’t be about political points; it should be about the Constitution.