Prof. Paul Moreno: A Short History of Congress’s Power to Tax

The case against Roberts’ preposterous ruling just keeps building.

Law Professor Paul Moreno:

The Supreme Court has long distinguished the regulatory from the taxing power.

In 1935, Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins was fretting about finding a constitutional basis for the Social Security Act. Supreme Court Justice Harlan Fiske Stone advised her, “The taxing power, my dear, the taxing power. You can do anything under the taxing power.”

Last week, in his ObamaCare opinion, NFIB v. Sebelius, Chief Justice John Roberts gave Congress the same advice—just enact regulatory legislation and tack on a financial penalty, as in failure to comply with the individual insurance mandate. So how did the power to tax under the Constitution become unbounded?

The first enumerated power that the Constitution grants to Congress is the “power to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts, and excises, to pay the debts and provide for the common defense and general welfare of the United States.” The text indicates that the taxing power is not plenary, but can be used only for defined ends and objects—since a comma, not a semicolon, separated the clauses on means (taxes) and ends (debts, defense, welfare).

This punctuation was no small matter. In 1798, Pennsylvania Rep. Albert Gallatin said that fellow Pennsylvania Rep. Gouverneur Morris, chairman of the Committee on Style at the Constitutional Convention, had smuggled in the semicolon in order to make Congress’s taxing power limitless, but that the alert Roger Sherman had the comma restored. The altered punctuation, Gallatin said, would have turned “words [that] had originally been inserted in the Constitution as a limitation to the power of levying taxes” into “a distinct power.” Thirty years later, Virginia Rep. Mark Alexander accused Secretary of State John Quincy Adams of doing the same thing after Congress instructed the administration to print copies of the Constitution.

The punctuation debate simply reinforced James Madison’s point in Federalist No. 41 that Congress could tax and spend only for those objects enumerated, primarily in Article I, Section 8.

Congress enacted very few taxes up to the end of the Civil War, and none that was a pretext for regulating things that the Constitution gave it no power to regulate. True, the purpose of tariffs was to protect domestic industry from foreign competition, not raise revenue. But the Constitution grants Congress a plenary power to regulate commerce with other nations.

Congress also enacted a tax to destroy state bank notes in 1866, but this could be seen as a “necessary and proper” means to stop the states from usurping Congress’s monetary or currency power. It was upheld in Veazie Bank v. Fenno (1869).

The first unabashed use of the taxing power for regulatory purposes came when Congress enacted a tax on “oleomargarine” in 1886. Dairy farmers tried to drive this cheaper butter substitute from the market but could only get Congress to adopt a mild tax, based on the claim that margarine was often artificially colored and fraudulently sold as butter. President Grover Cleveland reluctantly signed the bill, saying that if he were convinced the revenue aspect was simply a pretext “to destroy . . . one industry of our people for the protection and benefit of another,” he would have vetoed it.

Congress imposed another tax on margarine in 1902, which the Supreme Court upheld (U.S. v. McCray, 1904). Three justices dissented, but without writing an opinion.

Then, in 1914, Congress imposed taxes on druggists’ sales of opiates as a way to regulate their use. Five years later, in U.S. v. Doremus , the Supreme Court upheld the levy under Congress’s express power to impose excise taxes.

Then, in 1922, the court rejected Congress’s attempt to prohibit child labor by imposing a tax on companies that employed children. An earlier attempt to accomplish this, by prohibiting the interstate shipment of goods made by child labor, was struck down as unconstitutional—since it was understood since the earliest days of the republic that Congress had the power to regulate commerce but not manufacturing. “A Court must be blind not to see that the so-called tax is imposed to stop the employment of children within the age limits prescribed,” Chief Justice William Howard Taft wrote in Bailey v. Drexel Furniture Co. “Its prohibitory and regulatory effect and purpose are palpable.” Even liberal justices Oliver Wendell Holmes and Louis D. Brandeis concurred in Taft’s opinion.

Things came to a head in the New Deal, when Congress imposed a tax on food and fiber processors and used those tax dollars to provide benefits to farmers. Though in U.S. v. Butler (1936) the court adopted a more expansive view of the taxing power—allowing Congress to tax and spend for the “general welfare” beyond the powers specifically enumerated in the Constitution—it still held the ends had to be “general” and not transfer payments from one group to another. After President Franklin D. Roosevelt threatened to “pack” the Supreme Court in 1937, it accepted such transfer payments in Mulford v. Smith (1939), so long as the taxes were paid into the general treasury and not earmarked for farmers.

And now, in 2012, Justice Roberts has confirmed that there are no limits to regulatory taxation as long as the revenue is deposited in the U.S. Treasury.

Are there any other limits? Article I, Section 2 says that “direct taxes shall be apportioned among the states” according to population. This is repeated in Article I, Section 9, which says that “no capitation, or other direct tax, shall be laid,” unless apportioned.

The Supreme Court struck down income taxes in 1895 (Pollock v. Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co.), on the ground that they were “direct” taxes but not apportioned by population. Apportioning an income tax would defeat the purpose of the relatively poorer Southern and Western states, who wanted the relatively richer states of the Northeast to pay the bulk of the tax. The 16th Amendment gave Congress the power to tax incomes without apportionment.

Other direct taxes should presumably have to be apportioned according to the Constitution. Justice Roberts quickly dismissed the notion that the individual mandate penalty-tax is not a direct tax “under this Court’s precedents.” To any sentient adult, it looks like a “capitation” or head tax, imposed upon individuals directly. Unfortunately, having plenty of other reasons to object to ObamaCare, the four dissenting justices in NFIB v. Sebelius did not explore this point.

Some conservatives have cheered that part of Justice Roberts’s decision that limits Congress’s Commerce Clause power. But an unlimited taxing power is equally dangerous to constitutional government.

Mr. Moreno is a professor of history at Hillsdale College and the author of “The American State from the Civil War to the New Deal,”

Mark Steyn: A lie makes Obamacare legal

Mark Steyn:

Three months ago, I quoted George Jonas on the 30th anniversary of Canada’s ghastly “Charter of Rights and Freedoms”: “There seems to be an inverse relationship between written instruments of freedom, such as a Charter, and freedom itself,” wrote Jonas. “It’s as if freedom were too fragile to be put into words: If you write down your rights and freedoms, you lose them.”

For longer than one might have expected, the U.S. Constitution was a happy exception to that general rule – until, that is, the contortions required to reconcile a republic of limited government with the ambitions of statism rendered U.S. constitutionalism increasingly absurd. As I also wrote three months ago (yes, yes, don’t worry, there’s a couple of sentences of new material in amongst all the I-told-you-so stuff), “The United States is the only Western nation in which our rulers invoke the Constitution for the purpose of overriding it – or, at any rate, torturing its language beyond repair.”

Thus, the Supreme Court’s Obamacare decision. No one could seriously argue that the Framers’ vision of the Constitution intended to provide philosophical license for a national government (“federal” hardly seems le mot juste) whose treasury could fine you for declining to make provision for a chest infection that meets the approval of the Commissar of Ailments. Yet on Thursday, Chief Justice John Roberts did just that. And conservatives are supposed to be encouraged that he did so by appeal to the Constitution’s taxing authority rather than by a massive expansion of the Commerce Clause. Indeed, several respected commentators portrayed the Chief Justice’s majority vote as a finely calibrated act of constitutional seemliness.

Great. That and $4.95 will get you a decaf macchiato in the Supreme Court snack bar. There’s nothing constitutionally seemly about a court decision that says this law is only legal because the people’s representatives flat-out lied to the people when they passed it. Throughout the Obamacare debates, Democrats explicitly denied it was a massive tax hike: “You reject that it’s a tax increase?” George Stephanopoulos demanded to know on ABC. “I absolutely reject that notion,” replied the President. Yet “that notion” is the only one that would fly at the Supreme Court. The jurists found the individual mandate constitutional by declining to recognize it as a mandate at all. For Roberts’ defenders on the right, this is apparently a daring rout of Big Government: Like Nelson contemplating the Danish fleet at the Battle of Copenhagen, the Chief Justice held the telescope to his blind eye and declared, “I see no ships.”

If it looks like a duck, quacks like a duck, but a handful of judges rule that it’s a rare breed of elk, then all’s well. The Chief Justice, on the other hand, looks, quacks and walks like the Queen in Alice In Wonderland: “Sentence first – verdict afterwards.” The Obama administration sentences you to a $695 fine, and a couple of years later the queens of the Supreme Court explain what it is you’re guilty of. A. V. Dicey’s famous antipathy to written constitutions and preference for what he called (in a then-largely unfamiliar coinage) the “rule of law” has never looked better.

Instead, constitutionalists argue that Chief Justice Roberts has won a Nelson-like victory over the ever-expanding Commerce Clause. Big deal – for is his new, approved, enhanced taxing power not equally expandable? And, in attempting to pass off a confiscatory penalty as a legitimate tax, Roberts inflicts damage on the most basic legal principles.

Bingo on that last line. To read the rest of Mark Steyn’s excellent column click HERE.

Seven Truths About Politicians

It is pieces like this that make me regret that I do not have much time to write original pieces anymore. In this piece John Hawkins gives us an all important reminder of what those of us who are politically aware often take for granted.

John Hawkins:

1) The first priority of a politician is always getting re-elected: As Thomas Sowell has noted,

“No one will really understand politics until they understand that politicians are not trying to solve our problems. They are trying to solve their own problems — of which getting elected and re-elected are number one and number two. Whatever is number three is far behind.”

Politicians may care about sticking to the Constitution, doing what’s right for the country, and keeping their promises, but all of those issues pale in importance to staying employed in their cushy jobs.

2) Most politicians care far more about the opinions of interest groups than their constituents: Because of gerrymandering and America’s partisan fault lines, even under the worst of circumstances, 75% of the politicians in Congress are in no danger of losing their seats to a candidate of the opposing party. Furthermore, because of their advantages in name recognition, fund raising, and the fealty of other local politicians to someone they view as a likely winner, most challengers from the same party have little hope of unseating an incumbent either.

The only way that changes is if an incumbent infuriates an interest group on his own side that has the money and influence to help a challenger mount a credible campaign against him. That’s why politicians in non-competitive districts are far more afraid of groups like Freedomworks or the SEIU than their own constituents. Incumbents can — and often do, crap all over their own constituents without fear of losing their jobs. However, if they infuriate an interest group, they may end up in the unemployment line.

3) You shouldn’t ever take a politician at his word: People say they want a politician who’ll tell the truth. Unfortunately, that’s not true. What people actually want is a politician who’ll tell them what they want to hear and call that the truth. [Emphasis ours – Political Arena Editor] Partisans on both sides of the aisle have very little tolerance for politicians who deviate from accepted ideology; so the politicians get around that by lying. Most (but of course, not all) of the politicians championed by the Tea Party? They think the Tea Partiers are riff-raff, but useful riff-raff; so they cater to us. It’s no different on the Left. Most of the politicians who talk up the Occupy Movement think they’re damn, dirty hippies. They’re just useful damn, dirty hippies. That doesn’t mean no politician is ever “one of us,” but they are few and far between.

4) Most members of Congress aren’t particularly competent: On average, the politicians in Congress are generally well meaning, a little smarter than average, a lot more connected, and wealthy — but also considerably less ethical. Beyond that, they’re mostly just like a random subsection of a population. If you had a hundred random Americans in a room, a senator probably wouldn’t be the smartest person there, the person you’d want in charge, or even necessarily one of the more useful people to have around. In many respects, politicians are FAR LESS COMPETENT than the average person because so many of them led pampered, sheltered lives before they got into Congress and then have had their behinds kissed incessantly from the moment they got into power.

5) Members of Congress are out of touch: First off, even if members of Congress care about what their constituents think, they spend most of their time in D.C., not back home. Meanwhile, the median net worth of members of Congress is about $913,000. On top of that, members of Congress have staffers who do everything for them and treat them like god-kings in the process. These aides schedule their lives, read everything for them and regurgitate back what they think they need, and incessantly tell them how wonderful they are. Most members of Congress have more in common with celebrities like Madonna or Barbra Streisand than they do with the teachers, factory workers, and small business owners who vote them into office.

6) Few of them will do anything to limit their own power: It doesn’t matter if you’re talking about big government liberals or small government conservatives, very, very few politicians are interested in doing anything that will limit their own power. That’s why term limits for Congress have never passed. It’s why the ethics rules in the House and Senate are a bad joke. It’s also a big part of the reason why government gets bigger, more expensive, and more powerful no matter who’s in charge. If you expect to reduce the concentration of power in D.C. by electing different politicians, then ultimately you’re going to find that you’re barking up the wrong tree.

7) Most politicians only do the right thing because they’re forced to do it: As the late, great Milton Friedman once said,

“I do not believe that the solution to our problem is simply to elect the right people. The important thing is to establish a political climate of opinion which will make it politically profitable for the wrong people to do the right thing. Unless it is politically profitable for the wrong people to do the right thing, the right people will not do the right thing either, or if they try, they will shortly be out of office.”

If you want to change how politicians behave, then you have to change public opinion, build structural limits into the system that force changes, or make politicians fear for their jobs. If people are hoping politicians will do the right thing, just because it is the right thing, then they’re hoping in vain.

Explanation of the ObamaCare Ruling for the Non-lawyer

Faust:

Again, if you’re confused, you’re not alone.  The mandate is not a tax when Roberts doesn’t want it to be and it is a tax when he wants it to be.  That’s confounding enough.  But what’s worse is that nowhere in the opinion does he state what of the three types of taxes the mandate is.

Folks you might notice that this is exactly what we said a few hours after the ruling came out LINK. To see part II of Faust’s excellent explanation of the ruling HERE – Editor

 

 

By Jason Faust Attorney at Law:

There were four issues presented for a ruling to the Supreme Court in the Obamacare case:

  1. Whether the Anti-Injunction Act precluded the Court from even hearing the case in the first place.
  2. Whether the individual mandate was a constitutional exercise of Congress’ power.
  3. Whether it was constitutional for the federal government to withhold all Medicaid funds from states which refused to comply with the ACA’s expansion of Medicaid.
  4. If any provision of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) was unconstitutional, could it be severed from the rest of the Act or must that make the entire Act unconstitutional?

Each issue will be analyzed separately.  This article will discuss the first two issues presented.  A soon-to-follow article will discuss the second two issues presented as well as a discussion of what this means in practical terms.

The Supreme Court ruled that the “penalty” in 26 U.S.C. Section 5000A (the individual mandate) is NOT a tax for purposes of the Anti-Injunction Act.

As the Supreme Court explained, “The Anti-Injunction Act provides that ‘no suit for the purpose of restraining the assessment or collection of any tax shall be maintained in any court by any person,’ 26 U. S. C. §7421(a), so that those subject to a tax must first pay it and then sue for a refund.”  In other words, one cannot sue to prevent the imposition of tax unless and until that tax has already been levied against an individual.  Only after the tax is levied and paid can an individual sue the government for a refund of the tax on the grounds that the tax is an invalid use of Congress’ taxing power.  So, if the so-called “Free-Rider” provision of the ACA is in fact a tax, then any challenges to it would be premature pursuant to the Anti-Injunction Act because the “tax” in the ACA would not be levied against anyone until 2014 (Section 5000A, which contains the penalty/tax provision, does not go into effect until 2014).  Therefore, any lawsuit would have been dismissed because the issue would not have been what is known as “ripe for adjudication” – that is, the plaintiff has not suffered harm or an injury and, consequently, has no standing to bring the suit (the issue of standing is explained in the next paragraph).  Thus, it was necessary to determine the issue of whether the individual mandate was a tax or a penalty because if it were a tax, the Supreme Court would never have had a chance to rule on the other issues presented in the lawsuit.

A little background regarding the types of cases the federal courts (including the Supreme Court) can hear is necessary to understanding why the ruling on the Anti-Injunction Act was necessary.  There are several requirements which must be met in order for a case to be heard in federal court.  Preliminarily, the party bringing the lawsuit must have what is known as “standing” (a requirement set forth in Article III, Section 2, Clause 1 of the United States Constitution).  In order to have standing: there must be what is called a “case on controversy” between the parties; the plaintiff must have been actually harmed or injured in some way; and the harm or injury suffered by the plaintiff must be capable of being redressed by the adjudication of the claims set forth in the lawsuit.  The purpose of having these requirements is to prevent the federal courts from rendering what are known as “advisory opinions,” that is, opinions on how a lawsuit would turn out if it were to be brought.  By limiting the cases which can be heard to cases in which the plaintiff meets these standing requirements, the number of cases heard in federal courts is reduced dramatically.  (If there were no standing requirements, anybody could theoretically sue anybody else for anything, regardless of whether they were even affected by it.)  The courts exist to settle disputes, so it makes sense there be an actual dispute before the court issues a ruling on the matter.

The Supreme Court (correctly, in my opinion) ruled that the individual mandate was NOT a tax for purposes of the Anti-Injunction Act.  Because the mandate was not a tax, the Anti-Injunction Act did not prevent the Supreme Court from hearing and ruling on the rest of the issues in the case.  This is the reason Part II of Roberts’ opinion (beginning on page nine) opens with the line, “[b]efore turning to the merits [of the case], we need to be sure we have the authority to do so.”  After discussing the arguments for and against the penalty provisions being considered a tax for the purposes of the Anti-Injunction Act, Roberts explained (and the court held), “the Affordable Care Act does not require that the penalty for failing to comply with the individual mandate be treated as a tax for purposes of the Anti-Injunction Act. The Anti-Injunction Act therefore does not apply to this suit, and we may proceed to the merits.”  It is extremely important to note here that Roberts specifically rejected the notion that because the penalty functions as a tax, it should be treated as such for purposes of the Anti-Injunction Act.  (It will become obvious why after reading Roberts’ decision on the constitutionality of the individual mandate).  The analysis literally turned on whether the ACA referred to the penalty as a tax.  Because it did not, the Court held the Anti-Injunction Act did not apply.

To sum up this section: The Anti-Injunction Act was found to be inapplicable because even though the Court said the penalty functions as a tax, it is not a tax for purposes of whether the Anti-Injunction Act applied because the ACA does not refer to the penalty as a tax.  Thus, the suit was able to proceed on the merits.

The Supreme Court Ruled that the “penalty” in 26 U.S.C. 5000A IS tax for purposes of whether the mandate is constitutional.

The most important yet illogical portion of the opinion involves the constitutionality of the individual mandate.  The individual mandate found in the ACA provides that every individual must either purchase health insurance or pay what the ACA calls a penalty.  The main argument set forth (by the government and most liberals) was that the mandate is constitutional under Congress’ power to regulate interstate commerce, which is found in Article I, Section 8, Clause 3 (also known as the “Commerce Clause”).  The Commerce Clause reads in its entirety: “[The Congress shall have Power] To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian tribes.”  This clause has been used to promulgate all sorts of federal legislation because various Supreme Court decisions have held that Congress has the power to regulate virtually anything which, in the aggregate, has a substantial impact on interstate commerce.  Interstate commerce is exactly that: commerce that crosses state lines.  Because pretty much anything can be argued to affect interstate commerce, this power of Congress has gone largely unchecked.  In one absurdly backwards decision in the 1940s, the Supreme Court even went so far as to say that a farmer who grew his own wheat for his own consumption could be regulated because by not purchasing wheat on the open market, he was affecting interstate commerce.  If that seems nonsensical to you, don’t worry – you’re not alone.  The key takeaway from the wheat farmer case – as expansive and egregious as it was – is that the government’s power to regulate activity is nearly all-encompassing.  However, it crucial to keep in mind that even in such an overreaching case, the government was only able to regulate the wheat farmer’s actual activity.  It was not trying to regulate his inactivity.  In fact, the government had never before tried regulating inactivity – that is, regulating individuals for not acting.  In light of this, it seems rather curious that liberals so forcefully believed and argued that the commerce clause gave Congress the constitutional authority to enact the individual mandate.

Predictably, the four liberals on the Supreme Court (Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor, Ruth Bader-Ginsburg, and Stephen Breyer) accepted the notion that commerce clause gave Congress the power to enact the individual mandate.  Thankfully, the other five justices (John Roberts, Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Anthony Kennedy) refused to follow suit and rejected such a frivolous argument.  If they had chosen to go along with the Court’s liberal bloc, it would have been the greatest expansion of Congressional power ever realized.  If the Court held that the government has the power to force individuals to act when they do not want to act, then there literally would nothing that the government could not do.  That should have been the end of the individual mandate.  However, there were two other arguments given in support of the individual mandate’s constitutionality: the Necessary and Proper Clause; and Congress’ taxing power.

The Necessary and Proper Clause is found in Article I, Section 8, Clause 18, and states: “[The Congress shall have Power] To make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any Department or Officer thereof.”  In other words, Congress has the constitutional authority to enact all laws which are necessary to execute its specifically enumerated powers (as set forth in the rest of the Constitution).  This argument was specious at best and was not accepted by the Court’s majority.  Further exploration of the necessary and proper clause does not add to one’s understanding of the Obamacare ruling and it is not necessary to go into any further detail on this particular argument because it was rejected by the Court.

The third (and least viable) argument for upholding the individual mandate is that it is allowable under Congress’ taxing power.  As the dissent pointed out, this argument was rejected by every single court which heard the case.  For reasons still being theorized, Chief Justice Roberts upheld the constitutionality of the individual mandate on the basis that it was a valid exercise of Congress’ power to “lay and collect taxes” (a power enumerated in Article 1, Section 8, Clause 1).  Again, some background is necessary to understand why this is such a puzzling move.  Congress only has the power to “lay and collect taxes” in one of three ways: capitation tax, which is essentially a “head tax,” or a tax levied upon an individual simply for existing (this is such an obscure element of the Constitution and one wrought with so much confusion that Congress hasn’t tried enacting such a tax); excise tax, which is a tax for purchasing a good or service (e.g., cigarette tax, gasoline tax – one can avoid the tax by simply refraining from purchasing the taxed good or service); and the income tax, which only became permissible when the 16th Amendment was ratified and specifically granted Congress the power to enact such a tax.  Again, these are the only sources of power with which Congress may impose taxes.

As previously mentioned, Roberts found that the individual mandate was a valid exercise of Congress’ taxing power.  In contorting logic, he ruled that the same individual mandate that was not a tax for purposes of the Anti-Injunction Act functioned as tax for constitutional purposes and therefore was indeed a tax, which he then said made the individual mandate constitutional.  Again, if you’re confused, you’re not alone.  The mandate is not a tax when Roberts doesn’t want it to be and it is a tax when he wants it to be.  That’s confounding enough.  But what’s worse is that nowhere in the opinion does he state what of the three types of taxes the mandate is.  As discussed in the previous paragraph, the tax imposed by Congress must be one of the three enumerated types.

To sum up this section: The individual mandate was held to be a constitutional exercise of Congress’ taxing power even though Roberts never explains which of the three permissible taxes it is.  The other arguments made in favor of upholding the law’s constitutionality (the commerce clause and the necessary and proper clause) were rejected by a majority of the Court.

See part II of Faust’s excellent explanation of the ruling HERE.

John Kartch: Five major ObamaCare taxes that will impact you in 2013

There are 21 new taxes in ObamaCare several of which target the chronically ill and disabled – LINKLINKLINK.

:

Six months from now, in January 2013, five major ObamaCare taxes will come into force:

1. The ObamaCare Medical Device Manufacturing Tax

This 2.3 percent tax on medical device makers will raise the price of (for example) every pacemaker, prosthetic limb, stent, and operating table. Can you remind us, Mr. President, how taxing medical devices will reduce the cost of health care? The tax is particularly destructive because it is levied on gross sales and even targets companies who haven’t turned a profit yet.

These are often small, scrappy companies with less than 20 employees who pioneer the next generation of life-prolonging devices. In addition to raising the cost of health care, this $20 billion tax over the next ten years will not help the country’s jobs outlook, as the industry employs nearly 400,000 Americans. Several companies have already responded to the looming tax by cutting research and development budgets and laying off workers.

2. The ObamaCare High Medical Bills Tax

This onerous tax provision will hit Americans facing the highest out-of-pocket medical bills. Currently, Americans are allowed to deduct medical expenses on their 1040 form to the extent the costs exceed 7.5 percent of one’s adjusted gross income.

The new ObamaCare provision will raise that threshold to 10 percent, subjecting patients to a higher tax bill. This tax will hit pre-retirement seniors the hardest. Over the next ten years, affected Americans will pony up a minimum total of $15 billion in taxes thanks to this provision.

3. The ObamaCare Flexible Spending Account Cap 

The 24 million Americans who have Flexible Spending Accounts will face a new federally imposed $2,500 annual cap. These pre-tax accounts, which currently have no federal limit, are used to purchase everything from contact lenses to children’s braces. With the cost of braces being as high as $7,200, this tax provision will play an unwelcome role in everyday kitchen-table health care decisions.

The cap will also affect families with special-needs children, whose tuition can be covered using FSA funds. Special-needs tuition can cost up to $14,000 per child per year. This cruel tax provision will limit the options available to such families, all so that the federal government can squeeze an additional $13 billion out of taxpayer pockets over the next ten years.

The targeting of FSAs by President Obama and congressional Democrats is no accident. The progressive left has never been fond of the consumer-driven accounts, which serve as a small roadblock in their long-term drive for a one-size-fits-all government health care bureaucracy.

For further proof, note the ObamaCare “medicine cabinet tax” which since 2011 has barred the 13.5 million Americans with Health Savings Accounts from purchasing over-the-counter medicines with pre-tax funds.

4. The ObamaCare Surtax on Investment Income

Under current law, the capital gains tax rate for all Americans rises from 15 to 20 percent in 2013, while the top dividend rate rises from 15 to 39.6 percent. The new ObamaCare surtax takes the top capital gains rate to 23.8 percent and top dividend rate to 43.4 percent. The tax will take a minimum of $123 billion out of taxpayer pockets over the next ten years.

And, last but not least…

5. The ObamaCare Medicare Payroll Tax increase

This tax soaks employers to the tune of $86 billion over the next ten years.

As you can understand, there is a reason why the authors of ObamaCare wrote the law in such a way that the most brutal tax increases take effect conveniently after the 2012 election.  It’s the same reason President Obama, congressional Democrats, and the mainstream media conveniently neglect to mention these taxes and prefer that you simply “move on” after the Supreme Court ruling.

Stroke of Obama’s pen and an entire industry is eliminated

Philip Morris does not like competition, even if it is small time boutique competition that really is no competition at all. In this case a big business and its lobbyists say “JUMP!” in an effort to stick it to a tiny small time competitor and the Congress and the President ask Philip-Morris “How high?” Don’t you wish that your Member of Congress was this responsive to you and our problems? This is why we need new leadership in BOTH parties. Prepare to be made ill by what you are about to read.

They say it is about tax revenues, suuuure, and Philip Morris paid big money to buy off politicians and engage in a massive lobbying effort because, you know, they just can’t stand to see the government maybe miss out on the statistically insignificant lower taxes from roll your own boutique tobacco? Gimme a break. What this is about is a big wealthy company snuffing out a tiny boutique one because the tiny one cannot afford a huge lobbying effort. Anyone who claims that “it’s about taxes” is insulting your intelligence.

There should be a concerted effort to see to it that Boehner is not re-elected Speaker.

Las Vegas Review Journal:

Roll-your-own cigarette operations to be snuffed out.

A tiny amendment buried in the federal transportation bill to be signed today by President Barack Obama will put operators of roll-your-own cigarette operations in Las Vegas and nationwide out of business at midnight.

Robert Weissen, with his brothers and other partners, own nine Sin City Cigarette Factory locations in Southern Nevada, including six in Las Vegas, and one in Hawaii. He said when the bill is signed their only choice is to turn off their 20 RYO Filling Station machines and lay off more than 40 employees.

“We’ll stay open for about another week to sell tubes and tobacco just to get through our inventory, but without the use of the RYO machines, we won’t be staying open,” he said.

The machines are used by customers who buy loose tobacco and paper tubes from the shop and then turn out a carton of finished cigarettes in as little as 10 minutes, often varying the blend to suit their taste. Savings are substantial – at $23 per carton, half the cost of a name-brand smoke – in part because loose tobacco is taxed at a lower rate.

“These cigarettes are different because there are benefits in saving money and in how they make you feel,” said Amy Hinds, a partner who operates the Sin City Cigarette Factory at Craig and Decatur.

“These cigarettes don’t have any of the chemicals in them, and the papers are chemical-free, unlike the cartons people buy from Philip Morris.”

But a few paragraphs added to the transportation bill changed the definition of a cigarette manufacturer to cover thousands of roll-your-own operations nationwide. The move, backed by major tobacco companies, is aimed at boosting tax revenues.

Faced with regulation costs that could run to hundreds of thousands of dollars, RYO machine owners nationwide are shutting down more than 1,000 of the $36,000 machines.

“I feel it’s kind of shaky,” Wiessen said. “The man who pushed for this bill is Sen. (Max) Baucus from Montana, and he received donations from Altria, a parent company of Philip Morris. Interestingly enough, there are also no RYO machines in the state of Montana. It really makes me question the morals and values of our elected speakers.”

Sierra Bawden, a single mom with two kids who started rolling her own smokes at Hind’s shop three months ago, said cost is only one factor.

“It saves me time and money, and in the end I feel better because I don’t get all of the chemicals that the other cigarettes have,” Bawden said. “With the brand-name cigarettes, we pay for the chemicals and the name, and I don’t want any of that, so I don’t even know what I’ll do when the shop closes down.”

Megyn Kelly Calls Out Obama: Your lawyer called it a tax in court and now your campaign people are lying about it (video)

Obama and the Democrat Party leadership after saying it was not a tax, directed their lawyers in court to argue that it is a legal tax and now the Obama campaign is saying that they never said it was a tax and that the SDupreme Court got it wrong when they agreed wih the argument form Obama’s own lawyer.

[Actually there are 21 new taxes in ObamaCare several of which target the chronically ill and disabled – LINKLINKLINKEditor]