Nov 21, 2010

Repubes file brief supporting attempt to kill HCR act in federal court.

Mitch McConnell and Thirty-two of his fellow Corporate bootlickers filed the amicus brief. From Jurist:
Thirty-three Republican senators filed an amicus curiae brief [PDF] on Thursday supporting state attorneys general in their legal effort to have the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) declared unconstitutional. The brief, filed in the US District Court for the Northern District of Florida supports the suit's proposed arguments that the PPACA violates the Commerce Clause [Cornell LII backgrounder] of the US Constitution. In making their argument, the senators attacked the individual mandate, arguing:

    Indeed, in more than 200 years of debate as to the proper scope of the Commerce Power, the Supreme Court has never suggested that the Commerce Power allows Congress to impose affirmative obligations on passive individuals, or to punish individuals for failing to purchase a particular product. To the contrary, every landmark Commerce Clause case has dealt with congressional efforts to regulate different kinds of activity under the Commerce power. In every significant Commerce Clause case the Supreme Court has always had to decide whether Congress may regulate a given form of activity.

The Hill lists the 33 signatories to the brief, all of whom voted against passage [roll call] of the bill.

Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum filed the lawsuit in March, which is joined by 20 states and the National Federation of Independent Businesses (NFIB). The suit was allowed to proceed in October, despite an attempt to dismiss. On Thursday, McCollum sent a letter asking 13 other state attorneys general to join Florida in the suit. A federal judge in Michigan ruled in October that the law is constitutional under the Commerce Clause as it addresses the economic effects of health care decisions and it does not represent an unconstitutional direct tax. In August, a federal judge allowed a similar lawsuit filed in Virginia to proceed on narrow grounds, addressing only subject matter jurisdiction and the legal sufficiency of the complaint. Several days later, McCollum cited the ruling in his response to the Obama administration's motion to dismiss the Florida challenge, filed in June.
Stayed tuned as this fight will be long and ugly. I personally think the HCR bill was a weak-ass piece of shit, but it's a start I guess and something to be protected from the assholes that support the Corporatocracy.

It's a Sports Sunday Extravaganza at our house, so I gotta go set up all my fantasy football, nascar and basketball teams. Yes....my leftwing ass loves nascar.

Today's Photo..er..Graphic..ok, Picture.

It's moving day!!!!!!!!!!!!

I have purchased a domain name. I have been meticulously working on a new site,Leftwing Nutjob. Please change your bookmarks people..this puppy will no longer be updated as of July 1st 2011.