Yet another Obamacare lawsuit

Some things never get old.

It's constitutional - deal with it

It’s constitutional – deal with it

n Texas’ latest salvo against Obamacare, Attorney General Ken Paxton has filed suit over a fee states must help cover to pay for the sweeping federal health reform law.

Texas joins Louisiana and Kansas in suing the Obama administration over the Health Insurance Providers Fee, which Paxton says cost Texas $86 million in 2013 and about $120 million per year since. Texas feels the effect of the fee, levied on health insurers, because it reimburses the companies that operate with public funds in the state’s privatized Medicaid program.

“This threat to cut Medicaid funding to Texans unless the state continues to pay hundreds of millions in taxes to Washington amounts to the very ‘gun to the head’ the Supreme Court warned about in earlier rulings on Obamacare,” Paxton said in a statement Thursday.

[…]

State lawmakers debated the validity of the fee this year as they were crafting a new budget. A handful of Republican legislators briefly entertained the possibility of not reimbursing the private insurers who operate in Medicaid, the joint state-federal insurance program for the poor and disabled, for the health insurance providers fee. They ultimately voted to pay back the Medicaid managed care organizations — after taking the opportunity to lambast the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare.

Now, Paxton says Texas should get its money back, arguing that the state should not have had to pay the “unconstitutional tax to Washington” in the first place.

The attorney general’s office alleges the wide-ranging federal health law is “silent” about whether states should have to pay the health insurance providers fee — under threat of losing federal funding to pay for Medicaid. That, Paxton says, violates a provision of the U.S. Constitution requiring state officials to “clearly understand” the conditions of accepting federal funds and amounts to “coercion.”

The lawsuit was filed in federal court in Wichita Falls. The states are asking for the fee to be ruled unconstitutional and to be reimbursed for the funding already paid to the federal government in previous years.

You can see a copy of the complaint here. A lot of other anti-Obamacare litigation has been telegraphed in advance, but I couldn’t find anything enlightening on the Health Insurance Providers Fee. You’d think all the obvious targets would have been aimed at already, but I suppose there could be a judge out there willing to buy into whatever Paxton et al are selling. Nice to know his self-recusal isn’t keeping him from his most solemn of duties. Gotta give his wife something to sing about, I guess. As for the merits of the claim that Texas is being unfairly deprived of this Medicaid money, I might have a big more sympathy for it if the state, with Paxton’s assistance and blessing, weren’t voluntarily depriving itself of a whole lot more Medicaid money. But hey, all’s fair in politics, right? Trail Blazers and KUHF have more.

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