Leave aside for a moment the frankly ridiculous question of whether the text of the ACA authorizes premium subsidies to flow through the federal exchange. .Timothy Jost, surveying 30 amicus briefs filed to support the IRS' reading of the law to that effect, first covers those primarily engaging with the text of the law then turns to those from stakeholders that detail the real-world effects of gutting the ACA.
A note before looking at Jost's powerful survey of these pleadings. Some would argue that these real world effects are immaterial: either the law authorizes subsidies to be credited through Healthcare.gov or it doesn't. As I noted once before, though, the conservative justices who dissented against the 2012 decision that upheld the constitutionality of the ACA demonstrated their sensitivity to the real world effects of Supreme Court decisions in that very dissent.
Justices Scalia, Kennedy,Thomas and Alito argued that since the individual mandate was unconstitutional the whole law must be struck down because all its key provisions were interdependent and many of them would wreak economic havoc if left to operate with a core provision removed. They were quite specific about the potential consequences of disfguring the law without killing it:
A note before looking at Jost's powerful survey of these pleadings. Some would argue that these real world effects are immaterial: either the law authorizes subsidies to be credited through Healthcare.gov or it doesn't. As I noted once before, though, the conservative justices who dissented against the 2012 decision that upheld the constitutionality of the ACA demonstrated their sensitivity to the real world effects of Supreme Court decisions in that very dissent.
Justices Scalia, Kennedy,Thomas and Alito argued that since the individual mandate was unconstitutional the whole law must be struck down because all its key provisions were interdependent and many of them would wreak economic havoc if left to operate with a core provision removed. They were quite specific about the potential consequences of disfguring the law without killing it: