Spending Power Bargaining after Sebelius

Erin Ryan
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Abstract

In the wake of the Supreme Court’s Affordable Care Act (ACA) decision, it’s easy to get lost in debate over the Chief Justice’s stated theory of the commerce power, or what precedential effect it will have under the Marks doctrine (given that his only supporters wrote in dissent). Still, the practical implications for existing governance is likely to be small, at least in the foreseeable future. After all, much of the debate over the individual mandate focused on how unprecedented it was: despite months of trying, nobody produced a satisfying example of this particular Congressional tool used in previous health, environmental, or any other kind of federal law. By contrast, the most immediately significant portion of the ruling — and one with far more significance for most regulatory governance — is the part of the decision limiting the federal spending power that authorizes Medicaid. Congress uses its spending power to persuade states to engage in programs of cooperative federalism all the time, ranging from environmental programs under the Clean Air Act to cooperative management of the national highway system. Last month’s decision represents the first time the Court has ever invalidated a congressional act for exceeding its power under the Spending Clause, and the decision has important implications for the way that many state-federal regulatory partnerships work.This very short essay, based on a blog published in the immediate wake of the decision, offers both criticism and praise for different elements of the Chief Justice’s plurality opinion. After explaining the spending bargaining enterprise, it critiques the unprecedented and unworkable imposition the new decision creates on legislative authority to modify these bargains over time. After Sebelius, Congress can never modify a spending power program without potentially creating two tracks — one for states that like the change and another for those that prefer the original (and with further modifications, three tracks, ad infinitum). The decision fails to distinguish permissible modifications from new-program amendments, leaving every bargain improved by experience vulnerable to legal challenge. That said, the decision also exposes an important problem in spending power bargaining that warrants our attention: that is, how the analysis shifts when the states are not opting in or out of a cooperative federalism program from scratch, but after having developed substantial infrastructure around a long-term regulatory partnership.
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西贝利厄斯之后的购买力谈判
在最高法院对平价医疗法案(ACA)做出裁决之后,人们很容易迷失在关于首席大法官所陈述的商业权力理论的争论中,或者它在马克斯主义下会产生什么样的先例效应(考虑到他的唯一支持者写了反对意见)。尽管如此,至少在可预见的未来,对现有治理的实际影响可能很小。毕竟,关于个人强制医保的争论主要集中在它是多么的史无前例:尽管几个月来一直在努力,但没有人拿出一个令人满意的例子来说明国会在以前的健康、环境或任何其他类型的联邦法律中使用了这种特殊的工具。相比之下,该裁决中最直接重要的部分——对大多数监管机构来说意义更大的部分——是限制批准医疗补助计划的联邦支出权力的决定。国会利用它的开支权来说服各州一直参与合作联邦制的项目,从《清洁空气法》下的环境项目到国家高速公路系统的合作管理。上个月的裁决是最高法院第一次以超出支出条款规定的权力为由宣布国会法案无效,这一裁决对许多州-联邦监管伙伴关系的运作方式具有重要意义。这篇很短的文章是根据一篇博客发表的,这篇文章是在判决后立即发表的,对首席大法官的多数意见的不同要素提出了批评和赞扬。在解释了支出讨价还价的过程之后,它批评了新决定对立法机构造成的前所未有的、不可行的强制,要求他们随着时间的推移修改这些讨价还价。在西贝利厄斯之后,国会在修改支出能力计划时,不可能不创建两条轨道——一条是为那些喜欢改变的州准备的,另一条是为那些更喜欢原来的州准备的(再进一步修改,三条轨道,无限延伸)。该决定未能区分允许的修改与新项目的修改,使得每一项由经验改进的交易都容易受到法律挑战。也就是说,这一决定也暴露了消费能力讨价还价中的一个重要问题,值得我们关注:即,当各州不是从零开始选择加入或退出合作联邦制计划,而是在围绕长期监管伙伴关系建立了大量基础设施之后,分析是如何变化的。
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