Obamacare and “Commerce:” Does A Include Not-A?

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On the eve of the Supreme Court’s decision over Obamacare’s individual mandate, attention is been focused on the challengers’ argument that the mandate is outside the Commerce Power because otherwise there would be no “limiting principle” to Congress’s authority.

Certainly, the question of whether congressional authority is limited or unlimited is an important issue in the case. But another, perhaps deeper, issue is whether the Constitution’s words mean anything at all.

The Constitution grants Congress power to “regulate Commerce . . . among the several States. . . .” The word “Commerce” was designed to encompass only some designated activities: trading (buying and selling) among merchants, navigation and cargo insurance, commercial paper and finance, construction and maintenance of ports, and a few others.

When the American people adopted the Constitution, if an individual was not engaged in some of those activities, then that individual was not engaged in “commerce,” and therefore Congress could not regulate him under the Commerce Clause. True, his activities might be governable under the Necessary and Proper Clause, but only if he was engaged in conduct “incidental” (subordinate and connected by custom or necessity) to “Commerce.”

In case decisions since the 1930s, the Supreme Court has, mostly through the Necessary and Proper Clause, expanded the scope of permissible regulation from commerce and its incidents to “economic activities that substantially affect commerce.” Additionally, in the 1944 case of U.S. v. South-Eastern Underwriters, the Court erroneously held that insurance is “commerce” itself, implying it could be governed under the core Commerce Clause and not merely under the Necessary and Proper component of the Commerce Power. But despite such decisions, the Court always has required that there be some activity for Congress to regulate.

As the great justice John Marshall said in Gibbons v. Ogden (1824), in a document of enumerated powers, “The enumeration presupposes something not enumerated.” Thus, when the Constitution authorized Congress to “regulate Commerce” or “punish Piracies,” it did not thereby authorize Congress to regulate or punish other activities.

Even more fundamentally, a core tenet of western philosophy, at least since Aristotle, has been that a proposition cannot embrace its opposite—that “A” does not, and cannot, include “not A.” That’s why a power to punish piracy is not a power to punish you for the decision not to engage in piracy. Otherwise, “A” would encompass “not A.” Similarly, a power to regulate commerce does not encompass a power to regulate you when you refuse to engage in commerce.

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In the Obamacare litigation, the government has been arguing that health insurance is part of “commerce.” That is wrong under the Constitution’s actual meaning, but a justifiable argument for lawyers to make under post-New Deal Supreme Court jurisprudence.

But the contention that non-Commerce is “Commerce” goes much farther: It is the claim that “A” encompasses “not A.” It is an assault on the very concept of “meaning” that underlies the rule of law.

About Rob Natelson

In private life, Rob Natelson is a long-time conservative/free market activist, but professionally he is a constitutional scholar whose meticulous studies of the Constitution's original meaning have been published or cited by many top law journals. (See: www.constitution.i2i.org/about/.) Most recently, he co-authored The Origins of the Necessary and Proper Clause (Cambridge University Press) and The Original Constitution (Tenth Amendment Center). After a quarter of a century as Professor of Law at the University of Montana, he recently retired to work full time at Colorado's Independence Institute.

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4 comments
Monorprise
Monorprise

Isn't it odd, how apparently to the Federal "supreme" court not only are the Federal Constitution's words irrelevant, so too are the words in the acts of congress when they get in the way of the power to do a thing they desire.

 

I think I'm not alone in being disgusted with John Roberts, sadly this edict is not as shocking for the Federal employees as it should be.

 

WilliamSchooler
WilliamSchooler

In a Corporative Governing Body there is no constitution by We the People because WE dare not stand up to the authorities (the fully deciding regardless of outcomes) and their oblivious acts towards the people.

 

The Constitution simply and act of Liberty to constrain a Governing Body from enforcing itself on others. The Corporate mentality is simply to control it all, to be the final authority over choice. Those who decide not to adhere refuse their own Liberty and shall by choice be refused should you make this choice to refuse them.

 

British royal Corporatism has been around for thousands of years and it is the same British Corporatism we decided to be independent from before only we stopped deciding to be independent of such an authoritarian have we not?

 

 

Since the supreme deciders have decided we shall adhere, then we MUST decide to adhere correct? After all supporting corporatism by choice has worked so well over the decades hasn’t it? Forest Gump said it best; “Stupid is as Stupid does” and when the stupid stop deciding on independence of does stupid only expand itself by its own stupid choice.

 

Welcome to American “the land of the conforming versus the deciding”. When do we question who decides for you?

 

Monorprise
Monorprise

I guess it is always interesting to see how much lib service to the written Federal constitution the Federal Employees in black robes will decide to give in each of their edicts.    I mean ocationaly  when they do infact try to justify their position in the writen law they can make quite an impressive contraption of normally  contractory positions inorder to make their dicition look like it has some relation to what is actually written in law.

 

Sadly many if not most of them don't even try.  I think some Federal employees actualy have it in their head that the Federal Constitution rather than being document enumerating what the Goverment can and cannot do is in fact a vague almost emotional concept of  prinsabless which they ironicly enough get to define and redefine based upon how they feel about a particular issue at a particular time.   In other-words the very definition of lawlessness(government by men).

 

Mick Burke
Mick Burke

Yes, but isn't illegal to sell health insurance across state lines anyway? Either way, my dictionary doesn't define 'regulate' as "force someone to buy something".

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  4. [...] we’re waiting, here’s an article from the good-old Tenth Amendment Center: Obamacare and “Commerce:” Does A Include Not-A? The Constitution grants Congress power to “regulate Commerce . . . among the several States. . . [...]