Supreme Court begins hearing arguments on health care law

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WASHINGTON — The battle over President Barack Obama’s landmark health care law arrived at the Supreme Court as justices began three days of oral arguments, quickly making clear they are ready to rule on the politically charged question of whether the government can require all Americans to have health insurance by 2014.

WASHINGTON — The battle over President Barack Obama’s landmark health care law arrived at the Supreme Court as justices began three days of oral arguments, quickly making clear they are ready to rule on the politically charged question of whether the government can require all Americans to have health insurance by 2014.

Outside, where spectators had been lining up since Friday for the few available seats inside the court, protesters, partisans and even a Republican presidential candidate gathered. Former Sen. Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania pledged to seek a repeal of the law if he is elected president.

As supporters of the law chanted, “Health care is a human right,” Santorum demurred. “Rights come from our creator. … Rights should not and cannot be created by a government,” he said.

The administration, for its part, has been touting the health care law more prominently as the case neared, hoping to make a virtue of the necessity of defending a statute that remains controversial.

Over the weekend, tea party activists protested the law near the court. On Monday, most of those waiting outside were supporters.

Among them was Kathie McClure, a lawyer from Atlanta who has an adult son with Type 1 diabetes and a daughter with epilepsy. She had been planning her court visit for two weeks and arrived to get in line at 2 p.m. Friday. “I decided this is too important to me and my family,” she said.

Inside, the justices focused on whether a 19th-century tax law might bar them from deciding the case now. The old law says no one may sue to challenge a tax until he or she has paid the amount and sought a refund.

Until Monday, some legal experts had thought the court might use that law as an opportunity to postpone a ruling until 2015. Then, the first taxpayers could face a penalty on their tax returns for not having the required minimum health coverage.

But the prospect of a delay faded quickly. The justices, both liberals and conservatives, appeared eager to rule by late June on what many see as the biggest constitutional case in decades.

Justice Stephen G. Breyer, joining others, said he did not see a problem ruling on the mandate because it was enforced through a penalty, not a general tax.

“It’s up to Congress, and they did not use the word ‘tax,’” he said.

When Solicitor General Donald Verrilli Jr. said the law requires those without insurance to “pay a tax,” Breyer corrected him. “Why do you keep saying ‘tax’?” he asked.

Verrilli thanked him for the correction and called it a “tax penalty.”

Justice Antonin Scalia said he was inclined to agree with Breyer, but for a different reason. Courts can usually rule directly on legal challenges unless the law makes clear they should hold off, he said. “I find it hard to think that this is clear. … Whatever else it is … it’s not clear,” he said.

Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. cited a historic precedent. In 1937, the Supreme Court upheld the Social Security Act and its new tax on workers to pay for old-age pensions. It is “quite similar to this,” Roberts said, since the court ruled on the constitutional challenge without waiting for a taxpayer to seek a refund.

None of the justices spoke in favor of delaying a decision based on the Anti-Injunction Act, the old tax law. Both sides in the legal battle — the Obama administration and the 26 states joined by the National Federation of Independent Business — agreed the court should rule this year.

That has been a longstanding strategy of opponents of the law, who believe the legal battle strengthens their efforts to undermine its legitimacy. More recently, the Obama administration, which has been blamed by many Democrats for not working harder to sell the benefits of the law to the American public, also embraced the showdown as a political opportunity.

Although the president himself did not publicly celebrate the law’s two-year anniversary last week, Obama’s advisers and allies have become increasingly aggressive in attacking Republicans for threatening to take away many popular protections in the law, including expanded coverage for adult children, new aid for seniors on Medicare and new benefits for women.

Over the weekend, Obama political strategist David Plouffe predicted that by the end of the decade the law would be so popular that Democrats would be glad Republicans had termed it “Obamacare,” a derisive label that backers of the law are embracing.

On Tuesday, the justices will turn their attention to the crucial question: Does Congress have the power to require everyone to have health insurance?

The Constitution says Congress may “regulate commerce” among the states and enact all laws “necessary and proper” to make the regulation effective. The administration argues its regulation of the health insurance market can be effective only if everyone participates. Otherwise, people could refuse to buy insurance when they are healthy, waiting until they get sick or suffer a serious accident. The new law says insurers cannot deny coverage because of a person’s “pre-existing” medical condition.

Opponents say the mandate goes too far because it forces people to buy a product they do not want. They say that although Congress can regulate commerce, it cannot force Americans to engage in commerce.

The justices gave no clues Monday as to their views on this question. They will hear two hours of argument on it today.

And on Wednesday, 26 Republican-led states will argue that the federal pressure to expand Medicaid violates states’ rights.

Staff writer Ian Duncan in Washington contributed to this story.