At Monday’s opening Senate hearing on the nomination of Judge Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court, Senate Democrats focused on the Affordable Care Act as a major issue, explaining that Barrett — who has previously criticized Chief Justice John Roberts for his ruling that upheld the Affordable Care Act in 2012 — poses a major threat of overturning the law’s protections, and in the middle of the coronavirus pandemic.
However, right-wing media have begun a new public charm offensive to assure everyone that the ACA is in no danger — even as the Trump administration and Republican state attorneys general are seeking to get the law overturned in a case to be heard just one week after the 2020 election.
The threat to the Affordable Care Act
The case was brought in Texas, arguing that because Congress in 2017 reduced the individual mandate’s tax penalty to $0 — effectively wiping out the mandate, after congressional Republicans had failed to repeal the law earlier that year – the entire law should now be declared unconstitutional.
According to the Kaiser Family Foundation: “A host of ACA provisions could be eliminated, including protections for people with pre-existing conditions, subsidies to make individual health insurance more affordable, expanded eligibility for Medicaid, coverage of young adults up to age 26 under their parents’ insurance policies, coverage of preventive care with no patient cost-sharing, closing of the doughnut hole under Medicare’s drug benefit, and a series of tax increases to fund these initiatives.”
As a presidential candidate, Donald Trump promised that his appointments to the Supreme Court would strike down the Affordable Care Act:
Two current sitting justices on the Supreme Court, Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito, voted in 2012 to overturn the ACA completely, and they have also voted against another key provision of the law. With the two other justices Trump has already placed on the court, the confirmation of Amy Coney Barrett would add a potential fifth vote to rule exactly as Trump had promised.
In a tweet from this past September 27 — the day after Trump’s rollout at the White House of the Barrett nomination — the president further reiterated his intention to see the Supreme Court strike down the ACA: