President Obama entered the White House with a clearly defined goal: expanding healthcare coverage to all Americans. He marketed this goal to the public and Congress as a “moral imperative,” as well as a necessary means to achieving a “more effective and efficient health care system.” Yet as reform proceeded, it became clear that the latter was the preeminent, if not only, goal of most legislators. While the President's rhetoric was essential in drumming up support for historic reform, it reflects an appreciation for human rights that many Americans do not share. As Congress focused on the failings of the most expensive healthcare system in the world, it became evident that the right to health (a fundamental and nonderogable human right under international law) would not be a factor in the new legislation.
This defining characteristic of reform may, paradoxically, prove invaluable in preserving the law. In challenging the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA), litigators, politicians, and judges have focused on principles of federalism, asserting that Congress has overstepped its authority in enacting such landmark legislation. As opponents hone in on the insurance mandate and Medicaid expansion, they condemn the unprecedented expansion of coverage that moves America closer to realizing a universal right to health. The government has an extremely strong argument that these provisions are properly grounded within Congress’s authority to regulate commerce or within its taxing and spending power, although legal scholars differ on the Supreme Court’s projected interpretation of the matter. Still, the law’s basis in economic regulation, and not rights, will, if anything, prove to be its saving element.