132 S. Ct. 2566, 2593 (2012).
, at 2651–5 (Scalia, J., dissenting).
56
Laurence H. Tribe
a path I had publicly predicted he would take (and had argued he should take)
months before the decision was announced.
200
What I
do mean to be
saying is simply that, although presented as an
instance of constitutional avoidance, the Roberts opinion didn’t actually avoid
any constitutional question, but instead resolved it against what Congress quite
plainly wrote. The Chief Justice conceded that “reading” the congressional
mandate to purchase insurance as though it offered individuals and employers
the option of either purchasing insurance or paying a federal tax penalty for
not doing so required rejecting by far the most natural reading of the ACA and
replacing it with a version of the law that Congress had not actually crafted.
But he said that he had to adopt that reading in order to avoid the more drastic
step of striking down the ACA altogether. Thus, the Chief Justice essentially
rewrote Congress’ handiwork so as to avoid the politically unpalatable and
institutionally injurious result of dooming the entire ACA. In doing so, he was
taking two significant and controversial steps.
One was a step that four dissenting justices criticized as a usurpation of
Congress’ exclusive power to raise and collect taxes under Article I
201
– while
four concurring justices defended it as entirely legitimate in as much as it did
not entail subjecting anyone to a tax liability that Congress had not in fact
authorized, albeit under a regulatory rubric.
202
The other was a step that the four dissenters praised as a proper applica-
tion of prior Commerce Clause jurisprudence
203
– while the four concurring
justices attacked it as unprecedented and unjustifiable.
204
To those four, the
Chief had imposed a substantial and analytically
incoherent new constraint
on Congress’ Article I power to regulate interstate commerce when he insisted
that Congress had exceeded its power to regulate commercial activity when it
sought to create such activity by compelling supposedly “inactive” individuals
to enter the stream of commerce.
205
It was an instance
of using faux-avoidance
not as a genuinely interpretive technique but, rather, as a more modest
remedy for a constitutional violation than out-and-out rejection of Congress’
200
Josh Blackman,
Unprecedented: The Constitutional Challenge to Obamacare, 183–4 (2013);
Laurence Tribe, Chief Justice Roberts Comes into His Own and Saves the Court While Pre-
venting a Constitutional Debacle, SCOTUSblog (June 28, 2012, 3:41 P.M.),
www.scotusblog
.com/2012/06/chief-justice-roberts-comes-into-his-own-and-saves-the-court-while-preventing-a-
constitutional-debacle/
[
https://perma.cc/52DM-A64R
].
201
See
NFIB, 132 S. Ct. at 2651 (Scalia, J., dissenting).
202
See
ibid.
, at 2612–13 (Ginsburg, J. concurring).
203
Ibid.
, at 2645–7 (Scalia, J., dissenting).
204
Ibid.
, at 2621–3 (Ginsburg, J. concurring).
205
Ibid.