Safeguarding the Safeguards: The ACA Litigation and the Extension of Indirect Protection to Non-Fundamental Liberties

48 Pages Posted: 31 Aug 2011 Last revised: 4 Jun 2012

See all articles by Abigail R. Moncrieff

Abigail R. Moncrieff

University of Texas at Austin School of Law

Date Written: August 29, 2011

Abstract

As the lawsuits challenging the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) have evolved, one feature of the litigation has proven especially rankling to the legal academy: the incorporation of substantive libertarian concerns into structural federalism analysis. The breadth and depth of scholarly criticism on this point is surprising, however, given that judges today frequently choose indirect methods for protecting substantive constitutional values, including structural and process-based methods of the kinds at issue in the ACA litigation. Indeed, indirection in the protection of constitutional liberties is a well-known and well-theorized strategy, which one scholar recently termed “semisubstantive review” and another recently theorized as “judicial manipulation of legislative enactment costs.” This Article situates the ACA plaintiffs' Commerce Clause and taxing power arguments within the broader context of semisubstantive review and enactment cost manipulation, arguing that these structural theories are ordinary and effectual as means of raising the political cost of libertarian infringements. The Article then considers three possible distinctions between the ACA case and the ordinary case of semisubstantive review, and concludes that the only viable descriptive distinction is that the ACA case involves non-fundamental rather than fundamental liberty interests - the freedom of health and the freedom of contract. I then go on to argue that this distinction should not make a normative difference. If anything, the case for structural invalidation should be stronger when non-fundamental liberty interests are at stake because those are, definitionally, the interests that the American legal system leaves to structural protection. If the Supreme Court invalidates the ACA on structural grounds, it can argue that it was merely safeguarding the safeguards of liberty.

Suggested Citation

Moncrieff, Abigail R., Safeguarding the Safeguards: The ACA Litigation and the Extension of Indirect Protection to Non-Fundamental Liberties (August 29, 2011). Florida Law Review, Vol. 64, p. 639, 2012, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1919272

Abigail R. Moncrieff (Contact Author)

University of Texas at Austin School of Law ( email )

727 East Dean Keeton Street
Austin, TX 78705
United States

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