Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Morning Briefing for March 27, 2012

RedState Morning Briefing
March 27, 2012Go to www.RedStateMB.com to get
the Morning Briefing every morning at no charge.

One the arguments Mitt Romney’s opponents have against him was defined by Romney’s own campaign’s “etch-a-sketch” comment. No one seems to know what Mitt Romney really stands for and the etch-a-sketch comment gave a visual image, created by Romney’s own campaign, to drive home the lack of trust in Mitt Romney.


With an open microphone, Barack Obama has now done the same to himself. One of the arguments Barack Obama’s opponents make is that after this next election, Obama will not have to worry about public support for his actions. Without having to worry about losing an election, the President who has already gone to war against religious groups, dragged his feet on oil drilling expansion, and sought to destroy private health care for American citizens will be even more emboldened to bring his European style socialist vision for America to reality.


Speaking before a live mic to Russian President Dmitri Medvedev, President Obama explained to him that he and the Russians could find common ground, but Vladimir Putin would have to give President Obama “space” until after the election. Medvedev questions what President Obama meant about “space.” President Obama responded, “This is my last election. After my election I have more flexibility.”


Just as Romney’s words reinforce people’s fears that he will say or do anything to get elected, President Obama’s words reinforce people’s fears that should he win re-election, he will say and do whatever the hell he wants since the voters won’t be able to toss him out of office.


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Supreme Court oral arguments on the Affordable Care Act began Monday. We can expect a decision either in June or October. I predict June. What will it be? I’ll go out on a limb and predict Unconstitutional by 5-4. My confidence level is under 60%. I would not be surprised at Unconstitutional, 6-3, but the odds are less than 1%. Constitutional at 6-3 has odds, in my opinion, at 30%.


The Court faces five main arguments.


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Two years ago, President Obama signed into law ObamaCare, his signature piece of legislation. As a direct result of that law’s unpopularity, Congressional Democrats suffered devastating defeats in the midterm election of 2010, losing more than sixty seats in the House. It would be an understatement to say the President’s healthcare overhaul law is merely “unpopular.” According to several recent polls, Americans still overwhelmingly oppose ObamaCare by a two-to-one margin. Americans understand that not only is this the wrong solution to our healthcare needs and challenges, it is also an affront to freedom that makes our families’ health and country’s fiscal health more fragile.


The 2012 election should be an opportunity for Americans to elect a President committed to ObamaCare’s repeal and replacement with sound free-market competition. But that is where this 2012 election has an unusual aspect. The original architect of the Democrats’ unpopular healthcare law is himself also running for president on the GOP ticket. Mitt Romney, one of the candidates in the race for the GOP nomination, authored and championed his own version of ObamaCare less than six years ago.


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Handicapping Health Care

[from the diaries]


Supreme Court oral arguments on the Affordable Care Act begin Monday.  We can expect a decision either in June or October.  I predict June.  What will it be?  I’ll go out on a limb and predict Unconstitutional by 5-4.  My confidence level is under 60%.  I would not be surprised at Unconstitutional, 6-3, but the odds are less than 1%.  Constitutional at 6-3 has odds, in my opinion, at 30%.


The Court faces five main arguments:


The case is premature: either no one has standing or the Anti-injunction Act (AIA) precludes it.The Mandate violates the Commerce Clause (CC).The Act violates the 10th Amendment in general or through Medicaid issues.The Penalty violates the taxing power.The Penalty enforcement facially denies due process.

The latter two are issues I briefed to the Court.  My brief is here.


Contrary to what most people believe, the government must prevail on all five issues.  See my discussion here.  Opponents must prevail on issue number 1 and at least one other.  My predictions and short analysis follow:


1. Standing/AIA: odds of this being the decision basis: less than 5%.  It would mean we have no decision, at least to the extent the AIA or lack of standing claim applied. Clearly individual plaintiffs can show current injury and thus standing; however, they have a problem with the AIA.  The Court can overcome the AIA in four ways.

First, per Bob Jones, the AIA does not bar persons who show irreparable harm and certainty of success.  Although I made this point to one Circuit, and while I believe it should prevail, I also believe it will not.  If it does, it means the opponents have won.Second, the penalty is a penalty and not a tax and thus the AIA is irrelevant.  This is plausible, even though I disagree because I see the penalty as a tax.Third, the AIA bars injunctions, but this is a declaration.  One District Court followed this reasoning and it has some merit.Fourth, States have no AIA problem because States are not persons and the AIA only bars persons; however, they have serious standing issues, at least regarding the Commerce Clause attack.  States have no standing issue regarding the taxing power or 10th Amendment because those issues belong to the States.  Despite the 4th Circuit opinion, I believe the odds of this being the deciding basis to postpone a decision in toto are 1%; hence, I believe we will see a decision on the merits.

2. Commerce Clause: odds of this being the deciding basis: 85%.  Odds unconstitutional: 55%.  This is the most dangerous area.  Striking the Act on CC grounds would be groundbreaking and could foretell overruling Wickard, which would be a good thing.  Upholding the Act on CC grounds, unless it is very narrowly tailored, would be very damaging to federalism.  It would grant unlimited power to the federal government, checked only by the political system.  I have no doubt the Mandate violates the CC: it forces commerce that does not otherwise exist.  Potential commerce is not commerce.  Then again, potential commerce clearly has a substantial impact on interstate commerce; hence, the government’s position is not without merit, assuming one agrees with the Court’s precedents and agrees they should be expanded.


3. 10th Amendment: odds of this being the reason to strike the Act: 1%.  I support the argument; however, I suspect it will have no more than 4 votes.  Admittedly, it is not my area of expertise.  If the Court focuses on this in the opinion, it means the opponents win; however, I doubt we will see much of this.


4. Taxing Power: odds of this being the reason to strike the Act: 2%.  If this forms the opinion basis, odds of opponents’ success are 98% and odds of a 9-0 opinion striking the Penalty are 75% or more.  This is the argument I’ve written about extensively, (here, here, and here) and which formed the bulk of my brief (here) to the Court, as well as to three Circuits.  One small group briefed it on the other side and their argument was unpersuasive.


The Court is not going to find the penalty to be a duty or impost.  Odds of finding it a here-to-fore undiscovered type of tax are less than one in a billion.  Odds of finding it to be a uniform excise are very slim: perhaps one in ten thousand.  Excises must apply to actions or transactions or uses of property or exercises of privileges.  This is not an excise.  Viewed with the Mandate, it is not uniform because together they are a function of state and regional markets.  Thus, if the penalty and Mandate together are an excise (and they do, in fact, appear in the Excise subtitle of the Internal Revenue Code), they are not uniform, as required by the Constitution.


Odds of the Court upholding the penalty as a 16th Amendment income tax are also slim – much less than one in a hundred.  The Court would be subject to ridicule with such a decision, despite what a few academics claim.  I predict it will not happen.  An increased tax on one’s income because he lacks insurance is no more an income tax than an increased tax on one’s income because he owns land.  The latter would undeniably be a Direct Tax and the former is a Capitation/Direct Tax.  The Court is very unlikely to rule otherwise.


That leaves direct taxes.  The penalty/tax is not apportioned and no one claims it to be.  Odds of the Court finding the penalty to be a direct tax but also that the apportionment requirement is no longer binding are close to zero, again despite what many (if not most academics) argue.  They claim the 14th Amendment effectively repealed the apportionment requirement.  I answer that here. The argument is absurd and Supreme Court justices rarely want to make absurd claims on tax issues, which they tend not to like to rule on.  Also, many academics claim apportionment applies only when it is possible.  Again, the argument is absurd and rests on out-of-context quotations from an 18th Century minority opinion.  Sanctions against those who make such a frivolous argument are more likely than the Court agreeing with the argument.  Thus, that argument will not prevail.


Hence, I see a 1.5 to 2% chance of the Court agreeing with me and striking the tax/penalty as an un-apportioned direct tax.  If it does so, the Mandate becomes the suggestion and necessarily fails.  Not great odds; however, also not unthinkable.  I’m not a gambler; however, with those odds, I’d be buying lots of lottery tickets.


5. Due Process:  odds of this being the reason to strike the Act: less than 1%.  Ultimate chance of success for this argument: 75%.  However, I suspect the Court will determine the argument should be deferred to an as applied rather than facial challenge.  In layman’s terms, it is arguably premature.  I disagree, but I believe that will be the consensus and thus it is unlikely to even reach the opinion, except perhaps in a dissent or concurrence (and a slim chance at that).  Essentially, the “collection” procedures presume the taxpayer “guilty,” allow the government to take his money, and then force him to seek and ultimately to sue for a refund, with the burden of proof being on him.  The Act (together with existing statutes) provides no realistic opportunity for pre-collection judicial review on the merits.  Taxpayers also have virtually no chance for pre-collection judicial review of the sufficiency of administrative review.  That surely violates due process.


If the Court approves the Act, the due process problems create what I see as the most frightening aspect of a very disturbing law.  I make the argument here and in an upcoming American Journal of Law and Medicine symposium (not available for at least another week in final version and in print, not for several weeks).  However, until the due process denial happens to an individual, the Court is unlikely to entertain the argument.  Arguably, the government may never attempt to enforce the Act; or, it may seek enforcement only through a civil suit or a criminal penalty for those who fail to pay the civil penalty. [Yes, despite everything you’ve heard, criminal penalties are possible, if not likely.  See here].  If the government proceeds with civil suits and criminal penalties, it will necessarily grant due process in those matters.  While I believe the civil collection scenario being the sole collection method  is highly unrealistic, it is arguably sufficiently possible so as to defer a decision on due process.


We will know a little more after we hear the questions and arguments this week – especially the questions.  But it will likely be very little more, as judges and Justices often do not tip their hands.  That they ask a question does not indicate they agree with the most likely answer, so be careful reading much into the oral argument and questioning.  Unless, of course, the Justices ask about direct taxes, which would be very telling.


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There Is A Lot At Stake In Sanford, Florida

When someone (or a group) can publicly do this, and no one (President, Attorney General, Governor, Sheriff) condemns it or brings charges as a result, we need no more proof that we are losing our country.


Anybody else think this would have happened in Texas? Perry would have the Texas Rangers rounding those thugs up, like within hours of such an announcement. Governor Scott should demand that the bounty be rescinded or someone is going to jail.


And if any of the GOP candidates expressed outrage (are you listening, Mitt?) over this, I suspect his base would finally get energized.


Meanwhile, the great, silent majority is sitting on its collective hands, while these fringe minorities get more and more outrageous in their actions.


The barbarians are truly at the gate.


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Brazilian Government Pouting About Need for Transparency in Procurement Process

When I first wrote about Hawker-Beechcraft losing the U.S. Airforce light aircraft contract to Brazilian company Embraer, I didn’t expect it to be as controversial as it ended up being. I even had one person on twitter tell me it was downright birther-like to think there was something fishy going on.


Turns out people above my pay grade concurred as the US Air Force has suspended the contract pending an internal investigation:



While we pursue perfection, we sometimes fall short, and when we do we will take corrective action,” says Air Force Secretary Michael Donley in a statement. Citing the ongoing litigation, he adds, “I can only say Air Force Senior Acquisition Executive David Van Buren is not satisfied with the quality of the documentation supporting the award decision.” (emphasis mine)


As Rep. Mike Pompeo alluded to when it happened, this is not something that the Air Force would do simply to bow to political pressure:



The action is highly unusual, Rep. Mike Pompeo said in a conference call.


“That’s no small undertaking,” Pompeo said. “It’s a contractual process. They have now undone that contract. The Air Force does not do that lightly.”


I’ve said from the beginning of the saga that the reasons for Hawker-Beechcraft’s bid disqualification could be perfectly legitimate. But normally when someone is disqualified (as opposed to simply losing the bid) they are given a reason. Hawker was not and for me that raised an eyebrow. That eyebrow continued to be raised as I looked into Embraer and its cozy relationship (as in ownership stake) with the Brazilian government and the Brazilian government’s cozy relationship (as in, nuclear assistance) with that bastion of peace and understanding, Iran.


Well, Embraer won’t be taking the USAF’s desire to be more transparent lying down and, in diplomatic terms has made clear that this could cause them to take their ball and go home.



The Brazilian government has warned Washington that the abrupt cancellation by the US Air Force of an order of warplanes from Embraer, the country’s aircraft manufacturer, could damage military relations.


[...]


“The Brazilian government learnt with surprise of the suspension of the bid process to purchase A-29 Super Tucano aircraft by the United States Air Force, in particular due to its manner and timing,” the foreign affairs ministry said, referring to Embraer’s light attack aircraft.


“This development is not considered conducive to strengthening relations between the two countries on defence affairs.”


Rep. Pompeo agrees that there should be more transparency around the process:


Normally a contract dispute wouldn’t interest me so much but Embraer’s connections with some of the worst people on the planet had me concerned. Call me crazy, but I find connections to Iran disturbing in a weapons contract. But believing that the DoD would make such a huge error in awarding contracts is downright conspiratorial right? They’d never do anything like that! I mean, are there any other examples of …



U.S. Sens. John Cornyn (R-TX), Dick Durbin (D-IL), Kelly Ayotte (R-NH), and Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) today led a bipartisan letter to Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta calling for an end to the U.S. Governments relationship with the Russian state-controlled arms export firm Rosoboronexport, who until just three years ago had been the subject of U.S. sanctions for assisting Iran, and has for years been arming the Assad regime as they continue to commit atrocities against the Syrian people…


Oh…maybe not so conspiratorial after all?


Follow @Ben_Howe


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Tech at Night: FTC makes a move, FCC still trouble, NAM backs SECURE IT

Tech at Night


So we already had the coming FCC battle over Verizon’s attempts to acquire the spectrum it needs, the Senate fight over ‘cybersecurity,’ and a possible Congressional fight over Internet sales taxation. But now there’s a new issue to keep track of: the FTC is taking it upon itself to regulate the Internet on the grounds of protecting privacy. Jim Harper seems thinks it’s nothing new, but under the Obama administration, I’m more concerned. Still Adam Thierer also says it could have been worse, though, but also mentions those dirty words ‘personal responsibility.’ Can’t have that.


Democrats are eager to empower the Obama administration, of course. That’s why we need a Republican Senate to go with a Republican House.


They’re not calling it Net Neutrality now that it’s all about restricting choice and empowering government to regulate the Internet, but the George Soros-funded Public Knowledge is called for Net Neut action against Comcast. On the Open Internet, your choices of Internet service are closed to what government decides you are allowed to have.


More FCC: the push continues for the FCC to continue to be a spectrum roadblock against Verizon, contrary to every goal of universal access it claims to have. That’s because universal access is supposed to be code for subsidies, not actual pro-growth, pro-investment policies that allow market signals to guide spectrum to the more efficient uses.


Naturally the White House opposes FCC reform which would return power back to legislators, not regulators. Can’t have that. Too much respect for the Constitution, which is over 100 years old.


I’ve actually been reading up on export controls lately, so when I see this seemingly-harmless plan to control export of censorship technology to unfree countries, I question whether it’s a good idea. We already have many cabinet-level departments doing export controls, plus a new directorate Obama created in 2010 which complicated the situation further. We might need simplification before we add more complication.


Apple and its publisher allies are probably about to get smacked hard as the agency pricing scandal comes out, where Amazon was pressured into taking the deal Apple wrote.


Support for the broad-based GOP alternative cybersecurity bill, SECURE IP, grows with NAM praising the proposal. SECURE IT’s light touch, and information sharing approach is much better than the massive power grab of the Lieberman-Collins bill.


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Evan Feinberg in Pennsylvania

The Republican Primary in Pennsylvania is one month away. I have documented just how terrible Congressman Tim Murphy is.


I’d like to encourage you to support his opponent, Evan Feinberg. Evan is endorsed by Senators Tom Coburn and Rand Paul. He is a solid conservative and a great fit for Tim Murphy’s district. Conservatives lost a primary with Don Manzullo’s defeat last week. What conservatives are seeing is conservative activists not opening their checkbooks. I realize people don’t have a lot of money to give these days, but the cruel reality is that conservatives need money to get elected and our opponents are opening their checkbooks up while we are not.


So do what you can for Evan Feinberg. We need him in Congress.


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