On Healthcare Reform Challenge - March 22, 2010 - Attorney General Greg Abbott:
http://video.foxbusiness.com/v/4119068/states-fighting-health-care-reform?playlist_id=87185AG
This from Jonathan McClennan March 23, 2010:AG Abbott has filed a lawsuit against ObamaCare. Governor Perry supports the AG 100% in this.
Attorney General Abbott Challenges the Constitutionality of Federal
Health Care Takeover
Bipartisan Group of 13 Attorneys General from Across the Country
Challenge Newly Enacted Law
AUSTIN--Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott and 12 state
attorneys general today filed a legal action challenging the
constitutionality of the recently enacted federal health care law. The
bipartisan legal challenge explains that the new law infringes upon
Americans' constitutionally protected individual liberties; encroaches
upon the states' constitutionally guaranteed sovereignty; forces states
to spend billions of additional dollars on entitlement programs; imposes
an unconstitutional tax; and violates the Tenth Amendment of the United
States Constitution.
Under the new law, for the first time in the nation's history, the
federal government is attempting to force individual Americans to enter
into contracts and purchase services from private companies-in this
case, insurance companies-or face a penalty. The state attorneys general
are challenging this so-called individual mandate requirement,
explaining that such an imposition on the American people exceeds
Congress' authority and violates Americans' constitutional rights.
Additionally, the states are challenging provisions of the new law that
will impose dramatic Medicaid spending increases on the states-including
more than $24 billion in mandatory spending increases in the State of
Texas.
"The
federal health care legislation signed today violates the United States
Constitution and unconstitutionally infringes upon Texans' individual
liberties," Attorney General Abbott said. "No public policy goal--no
matter how important or well-intentioned--can be allowed to trample the
protections and rights guaranteed by our Constitution. To protect all
Texans' constitutional rights, preserve the constitutional framework
intended by our nation's founders, and defend our state from further
infringement by the federal government, the State of Texas and other
states have filed a legal challenge seeking judgment from the courts
that the federal health care take over is unconstitutional."
The thirteen-state coalition, which includes Texas, Florida, South
Carolina, Nebraska, Pennsylvania, Louisiana, Washington, Colorado,
Michigan, Utah, Alabama, South Dakota, and Idaho, filed its legal
challenge in the Federal District Court in the Northern District of
Florida. It was filed shortly after President Barack Obama signed the
bill into law. The legal action specifically challenges the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act and names the U.S. Departments of
Health and Human Services, Treasury and Labor as defendants because
those federal agencies are charged with implementing the Act's
constitutionally impermissible provisions.
Encroachment on Individual Liberties
According to the states' legal action, the federal health care bill
violates both Article I and the Tenth Amendment of the U.S.
Constitution: "The Act represents an unprecedented encroachment on the
liberty of individuals living in the Plaintiffs' respective states, by
mandating that all citizens and legal residents of the United States
have qualifying healthcare coverage or pay a tax penalty. The
Constitution nowhere authorizes the United States to mandate, either
directly or under threat of penalty, that all citizens and legal
residents have qualifying healthcare coverage. By imposing such a
mandate, the Act exceeds the powers of the United States under Article I
of the Constitution and violates the Tenth Amendment to the
Constitution."
Explaining why the individual mandate is unconstitutional, Attorney
General Abbott said: "Our nation's founding fathers had the wisdom to
limit the federal government's authority by specifically enumerating the
powers given to Congress. Today, the federal government is attempting
an unconstitutional power-grab-and relying upon Congress' authority to
regulate Commerce to justify their unprecedented overreach. If there are
to be any limitations on the federal government then 'Commerce' cannot
be twisted to cover every possible human activity under the
sun-including mere human existence. The act of doing absolutely nothing
does not constitute an act of commerce, and today's legal challenge
reflects the states' attempt to preserve the individual liberties that
were intended by our founders and guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution."
Removes States' Discretion
The states also charge that the Act "converts what had been a voluntary
federal-state partnership into a compulsory top-down federal program."
As a result, the Act effectively removes the states' discretion and
constitutes a "derogation of the core constitutional principle of
federalism upon which this Nation was founded...[and] exceeds the powers
of the United States and violates the Tenth Amendment to the
Constitution."
Unprecedented Encroachment on State Sovereignty
Further, the multi-state lawsuit explains that the federal health care
law "represents an unprecedented encroachment on the sovereignty of the
states" by imposing new federal Medicaid enrollment standards. According
to the Texas Health & Human Services Commission, the Act will
double the number of Medicaid recipients and therefore force the Texas
taxpayers to spend an additional $24.3 billion on Medicaid over the next
10 years. In addition to dramatic spending increases, the new law will
shift substantial administrative costs to the states and therefore
requires that state employees and agencies devote considerable time and
resources to implementing the Act. The lawsuit also cites "several
unfunded mandates that will cost state governments significantly."
Unconstitutional Tax
Finally, the states allege that the Act imposes an unconstitutional tax
on the American people. According to the states' legal action, "the tax
penalty required under the Act, which must be paid by uninsured citizens
and residents, constitutes an unlawful capitation or direct tax, in
violation of Article I, sections 2 and 9 of the Constitution of the
United States."
Jonathon McClellan Texans for Rick Perry Central Texas Region- Field Director Work- 512-478-3276 Cell- 281-793-4558 jonmcclellan@rickperry.org
Find your early voting location here, http://rickperry.org/texas-early-voting
Show your support for Governor Perry here, http://hq.rickperry.org/join/0b78v
Judy Holloway
Tea Party Patriots
Texas State Coordinator
Austin Tea Party Patriots
Common Sense Texans
havinganaustinteaparty.com
512-585-7673
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