Cato's Michael Cannon, a mastermind behind Halbig, has made much
of video clips in which ACA architect Jonathan Gruber seems to suggest that
states that do not build their own exchanges might forgo their citizens'
access to the tax credits subsidizing coverage. Gruber has since claimed that the assertion was a verbal slip, and that he probably meant to suggest (at a time when no
one expected states to abstain from building their own exchanges) that a
federal "backstop" might not be in place in time for the first open
season.
That's how I understood Gruber when I listened to the first unearthed clip (at minute 31). But Cannon isn't buying it. He's going for the perceived jugular, claiming proof that the ACA's framers (with whom Gruber worked closely) intended to make the whole ACA machinery dependent on state action:
If that is the case, the flagship suit against the ACA's constitutionality decided by the Supreme Court in June 2012, NFIB v. Sebelius, is moot, because the ACA effectively imposes no federal individual mandate, only state ones.
That's how I understood Gruber when I listened to the first unearthed clip (at minute 31). But Cannon isn't buying it. He's going for the perceived jugular, claiming proof that the ACA's framers (with whom Gruber worked closely) intended to make the whole ACA machinery dependent on state action:
The problem with his explanations is that Jonathan Gruber doesn’t “flake.” He knows this law in and out. He knew what his words meant, with all their implications, when he spoke them. He knew the feature he was describing essentially gave each state a veto over the PPACA’s exchange subsidies, employer mandate and to a large extent its individual mandate. He knew that could lead to adverse selection. To claim Gruber didn’t know what he was saying is as absurd as saying a conductor might fail to notice that the brass section suddenly stopped playing.As Cannon asserts, if only the state exchanges can grant subsidies, the individual mandate is all but inoperative in states relying on the federal exchange, because insurance will be unaffordable for most of the state's uninsured, exempting them from the mandate.
If that is the case, the flagship suit against the ACA's constitutionality decided by the Supreme Court in June 2012, NFIB v. Sebelius, is moot, because the ACA effectively imposes no federal individual mandate, only state ones.