Governor Chris Gregoire, along with Gov. Jennifer Granholm of Michigan, Gov. Edward Rendell of Pennsylvania and Gov. Bill Ritter of Colorado announced they have filed a joint motion to enter a federal lawsuit and present information about the benefits and opportunities provided to their states by the landmark health care reform legislation recently signed by President Obama.
“I’ve said from the beginning – the action of the Attorney General in filing this lawsuit does not represent the Governor, the Insurance Commissioner, legislative leadership, or thousands of Washingtonians in our state that would benefit from national health care reform,” Gregoire said. “We need to move forward. This legislation not only provides necessary care to millions of Americans who desperately need it – it protects our tax payers from the skyrocketing costs of health care.”
“The individual mandate is an issue of personal responsibility,” said Insurance Commissioner Mike Kreidler. “It prevents people from shifting the cost of their medical care onto others. It’s a cornerstone for making the new reforms work.”
Minutes after the President signed the health care reform package into law on March 23, 13 attorneys general, including those from Washington, Colorado, Michigan and Pennsylvania, filed a joint lawsuit in Pensacola, Florida – claiming the legislation violates the constitution.
The motion filed today is the first step in entering the case, and asks the court to allow a “friend of the court” brief to be filed by governors who actually administer state health care programs and are familiar with the way the federal law helps their states meet the needs of governments, residents and businesses in their states.
“The position of the Attorneys General does not represent the interests of small businesses and individuals who seek affordable health care options, individuals with preexisting conditions who need health care insurance, or all the people who find their taxes and insurance premiums raised to bear the costs of the uninsured” said Gregoire. “We are seeking to give voice to these beneficiaries of the health reform law.”
The governors will argue that the court should reject the attorney generals’ request that implementation of the health care reform law be prevented from moving forward. The governors will be able to inform the Court about the need for and the benefits of federal reform.
They will argue that the attorney generals’ assertions that the federal law violates states rights are unfounded.
Attorneys in Seattle and Florida have agreed to represent the governors at no cost. The attorneys include Rebecca Roe, Adam Berger, William Rutzick and Kristin Houser of the Seattle firm Schroeter, Goldmark & Bender. They will work with Guy M. Burns of the firm Johnson, Pope, Bokor, Ruppel & Burns in Tampa, Florida.
The governors worked to ensure the federal health reform law met the needs of the states, and will point to numerous benefits to the states from the federal-state partnership including:
Other benefits of the Act include:
Topics: 2010, Affordable Care Act, affordable health care, America, business, Congress, employers, Governance, government, Governor Bill Ritter, Governor Chris Gregoire, Governor Edward G. Rendell, Governor Jennifer M. Granholm, health care, health care reform, health care system, health insurance market, health insurance premiums, Health Insurance Reform, individual market, insurance, Insurance Companies, jobs, Medicaid, Medicare, middle class, monitor, news, Obama Administration, politics, President Obama, subsidies, tax credits, U.S., unaffordable premium increases, United States, White House
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