Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius has said the administration will fight challenges by states’ attorneys general to overturn health reform.
Sebelius said Tuesday the suits are nothing more than conservatives trying to advance their political careers within the Republican Party. Later in the day, she filed a motion asking a judge to dismiss the suit filed in Virginia.
Virginia’s Republican attorney general, Ken Cuccinelli, filed suit in U.S. District Court in Richmond less than eight hours after Congress enacted the law. His suit contends that that requiring people to buy health coverage or pay a fee exceeds federal powers limited by the Constitution’s 10th Amendment, according to the Associated Press.
Cuccinelli, a conservative, based his suit ion a Virginia law enacted this winter that exempts state residents from having to have health coverage.
In her motion, Sebelius argues that Virginia lacks the standing to sue.
“A state cannot … manufacture its own standing to challenge a federal law by simple expedient of passing a statute purporting to nullify it,” read the motion. “Otherwise, a state could import almost any political or policy dispute into federal court by enacting its side of the argument into state law.”
Health reform shouldn’t be about Democrats versus Republicans. This is a moral issue. It’s about preventing 45,000 needless deaths every year. Republicans have tried to stop it at every turn, even though most Americans want reform.
Surveys have shown a majority of people who were against passage of the bill opposed it because it didn’t go far enough.
It’s part of what’s fueling the anti-incumbent movement, even though the conservatives would have you believe the Tea Party is the power behind it.
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