maxparrish
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http://www.hhs.gov/healthcare/rights/law/patient-protection.pdf
Sec. 1401(b)(2)(A):
So the plaintiff's case is that federally run state exchanges don't meet the definition under 1311. Let's look at 1311(b):
(b) AMERICAN HEALTH BENEFIT EXCHANGES.—
(1) IN GENERAL.—Each State shall, not later than January 1, 2014, establish an American Health Benefit Exchange (referred to in this title as an ‘‘Exchange’’) for the State that—
(A) facilitates the purchase of qualified health plans;
(B) provides for the establishment of a Small Business Health Options Program (in this title referred to as a ‘‘SHOP Exchange’’) that is designed to assist qualified employers in the State who are small employers in facilitating the enrollment of their employees in qualified health plans offered in the small group market in the State; and
(C) meets the requirements of subsection (d).
Seems simple enough so far: tax subsidies are for Exchanges that are 1311 Exchanges as defined in Sec. 1311(b).
The federally run exchanges are defined in Sec 1321(c)(1):
(c) FAILURE TO ESTABLISH EXCHANGE OR IMPLEMENT REQUIREMENTS.—
(1) IN GENERAL.—If—
(A) a State is not an electing State under subsection (b); or
(B) the Secretary determines, on or before January 1, 2013, that an electing State—
(i) will not have any required Exchange operational by January 1, 2014; or
(ii) has not taken the actions the Secretary determines necessary to implement—
(I) the other requirements set forth in the standards under subsection (a); or
(II) the requirements set forth in subtitles A and C and the amendments made by such subtitles; the Secretary shall (directly or through agreement with a not-for-profit entity) establish and operate such Exchange within the State and the Secretary shall take such actions as are necessary to implement such other requirements.
Now, the Textualists tell us it's very important take the literal meaning of the words in the law in order to properly interpret it.
Section 1401 says subsidies are eligible on the Exchanges established under Sec 1311. Note that the word Exchanges is capitalized. That means there is a specific definition for what Exchanges are.
Section 1311(b)(1) gives us that definition:
an American Health Benefit Exchange (referred to in this title as an ‘‘Exchange’’)
Therefore an Exchange is that which meets the criteria drawn up in Section 1311.
Section 1321 directs the head of HHS to set up "such Exchange" for a State if a State does not set up a 1311 Exchange on its own. The text says "such Exchange". So unless the supporters of the Plaintiffs can demonstrate there's a different definition of the word "Exchange" in the text of the PPACA then that has to mean that "such Exchanges" set up by the federal government meet the requirements of 1311 Exchanges and thus individuals enrolling in those "such Exchanges" are eligible for the federal subsidies.
I lifted the above reasoning from here where you can go and read that author's development of this point.
Perhaps a review is in order. There are two Sections of ACA at issue. 1311 is for the establishment of exchanges created by the states (or their non-profits, or multi-state cooperative exchanges) and 1321 is for federal exchanges, to be established in states which fail to do so. Section 1401 provides tax credits for “exchanges established by the State under Section 1311.”
There is no need to resort to borderline sophistry - this means what it literally says: that tax credits are only authorized in exchanges established by the States.
ACA supporters argue that the phrase “established by the State” does not REALLY mean what it says, and then they try to make some degree of equivalence between Section 1311 and Section 1321 transform into total equivalence.
The problem with this weak limb is that it requires us to pretend the repeated phrase “established by the State” has no real meaning – as if it is it saturated with literalness of no relevance of meaning or effect to the law. They ignore that this was added in multiple places within Section 1401 at multiple times, and that “State” is defined as the fifty states and the District of Columbia. The ignore that the law does explicitly make equivalency between territorial exchanges and state exchanges, but does not do so for federal exchanges. They ignore that the law contained no reference to tax credits in federal exchanges.
What do they do? They try to mine (or invent) a single nugget and, if discovered, hope it can overcome the avalanche of definitional and constructive evidence on the other side.
If we were arguing about any other non-political case of statutory interpretation is would be a no-brainer. "The law clearly says what it says, that it means what it says, and that if Congress made an error, it is up to Congress to fix it." (J. Alder).