Virginia AG Asks SCOTUS to Rule on Health Bill
Virginia's top lawyer said the court should expedite a ruling to settle the confusion surrounding lawsuits against healthcare reform.
Virginia’s attorney general on Thursday joined the growing chorus calling for the Supreme Court to immediately decide if the healthcare law is constitutional.
“Currently, state governments and private businesses are being forced to expend enormous amounts of resources to prepare to implement a law that, in the end, may be declared unconstitutional,” said Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli (R), who challenged the law in federal court.
Cuccinelli said the high court should expedite a ruling to settle the confusion surrounding the numerous lawsuits against healthcare reform.
“Regardless of whether you believe the law is constitutional or not, we should all agree that a prompt resolution of this issue is in everyone’s best interest," he said in a statement.
On Monday, a federal judge in Florida struck down the entire reform law in a 26-state lawsuit challenging its constitutionality. In December, a federal judge ruled in favor of Cuccinelli’s challenge to the reform law’s requirement for individuals to purchase insurance by 2014, but the judge did not rule the entire law unconstitutional.
Meanwhile, two federal judges last year upheld the reform law. So far, the court rulings have been split by party lines. The two judges upholding the law were appointed by President Clinton, while the two ruling against the law were Republican appointees. More than a dozen lawsuits were thrown out in court on standing.
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