The health bills in
Congress
rob you of your constitutional rights. Here are five provisions (of many) that
fail the constitutionality test and reveal Congress's disrespect for the
public:
* Section 3403 of the
Senate
health bill, establishing a commission to cut Medicare spending, says the law
can't be changed or repealed in the future. This whopper shows that Congress
thinks its work should be set in stone. Wrong. The people always have the
right to elect a new Congress to change or repeal what a previous Congress has
done.
* A Senate health-bill amendment mysteriously allocates
$100 million to an unnamed facility that "shall be affiliated with an academic
health center at a public research university in the United States that
contains a state's sole public academic medical and dental school" (Sec.
10502, p. 328-329). Why not name the facility?
Dodd: Got his pork into health bill.
This pork deal was arranged by Sen. Chris Dodd for the
University of Connecticut Health Center, although 11 hospitals in the
nation technically meet these specifications. If Congress wrote the provision
in Polish or Russian to keep the public in the dark, it would be
unconstitutional. The language is a deception. The fact that legislators
commonly do this makes it more damaging, not less so.
* The bills require you to enroll in a "qualified health
plan," whether you want it or not. Forcing people to buy insurance obviously
reduces the number of uninsured. But Congress doesn't have the authority to
force people to buy a product.
Sen. Orin Hatch (R-Nev.) said on the Senate floor, "If Congress may require
individuals to purchase a particular good or service . . . We could simply
require that Americans buy certain cars . . . for that matter, we could attack
the problem of obesity by requiring Americans to buy fruits and vegetables."
Some Congress members claim the "general welfare clause" of the
Constitution empowers them to impose a mandate. But they're taking the phrase
out of context. The Constitution gives Congress power to tax and spend for the
general welfare, but not to make other kinds of laws for the general welfare.
The Senate bill (pages 320-324) claims the "interstate commerce" clause of
the Constitution gives Congress this authority. But for half a century, states
have regulated health insurance. In fact, individuals are barred from buying
insurance in any state except where they live, the antithesis of interstate
commerce.
Congressional majorities have frequently resorted to the commerce clause
to justify their lawmaking. In FDR's first term, Congress cited it to pass the
National Industrial Recovery Act, which gave the federal government power to
micromanage local businesses, setting wages and hours and even barring
customers from selecting their live chickens at the butcher. Two Brooklyn
brothers, owners of Schechter Poultry Corp., a kosher chicken business,
challenged that interference. In 1935, the US Supreme Court ruled the NIRA
unconstitutional.
In 1995, the high court again admonished Congress against using the
commerce clause as a basis for expanded lawmaking, even when the purpose is as
worthy as keeping handguns out of a school zone (US v. Lopez). The court ruled
that Congress must stick to its enumerated powers and leave states to police
school zones (and, perhaps, mandate health insurance).
* Never before has the federal government intruded into
decisions made by doctors for privately insured patients, except on narrow
issues such as drug safety. Nothing in the Constitution permits it. But the
Senate bill makes you enroll in a plan and then says that only doctors who do
what the government dictates can be paid by your plan.
"Qualified plans" can contract only with a doctor who "implements such
mechanisms to improve health-care quality as the [current or future] secretary
[of Health and Human Services] may by regulation require" (Sec. 1311, p.
148-49). That covers all of medicine, from heart care to child birth, stents
to mammograms.
* Finally, the "takings clause" of the Fifth Amendment
bars government from taking your property without compensation. It should
protect everyone, no matter how unpopular -- even insurance companies, but
Congress ignored it in writing the health bill. The Senate version goes beyond
reining in insurance-company abuses, a just cause, and actually caps
insurance-company profit margins at well below current levels, robbing
shareholders.
Next year, Congress could impose similar caps on profit margins of bodegas,
pizzerias and grocers, by arguing that food -- also a necessity -- is too
expensive. Your business could be next.
In 2010, ordinary citizens will have to stand up for their constitutional
rights, just as the Schechter brothers did 75 years ago. Congress members
swear to uphold the Constitution, but it appears many are ignorant of what it
says. They should be mandated to take a course, as pilots and doctors are.
Congress needs to be reminded that the Constitution defines and limits its
powers.
Betsy McCaughey, a former New York lieutenant governor, is author of
"Government by Choice: Inventing the United States Constitution."