Paul Heldman News
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In the next two weeks, John Roberts will sit in his high-backed, black leather chair in the U.S. Supreme Court’s marble courtroom and tell a hushed crowd that the justices are about to rule on health care.
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The U.S. Supreme Court today will consider how much of President Barack Obama’s health-care law must be thrown out if the justices decide Congress can’t require Americans to buy medical insurance.
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A Supreme Court decision striking down the U.S. health-care law’s expansion of Medicaid might expose environmental and educational laws to legal challenges while hurting stocks that surged anticipating more than $600 billion in new spending over the next decade.
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Several U.S. Supreme Court justices suggested they may leave much of President Barack Obama’s health-care law intact even if they strike down its core requirement that Americans buy insurance.
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U.S. Supreme Court justices indicated during three days of arguments that they may reject the centerpiece of President Barack Obama’s health-care overhaul -- its requirement that Americans obtain insurance -- and bring down other parts of the law with it.
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For insurance companies nervously watching the legal fight over the constitutionality of the president’s health-care law, it would be the unthinkable:
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