Nearly five years after President Barack Obama signed his health care 
overhaul into law, its fate is yet again in the hands of the Supreme 
Court.
This time it's not just the White House and Democrats who have reason to
 be anxious. Republican lawmakers and governors won't escape the 
political fallout if the court invalidates insurance subsidies worth 
billions of dollars to people in more than 30 states.
Obama's law offers subsidized private insurance to people who don't have
 access to it on the job. Without financial assistance with their 
premiums, millions of those consumers would drop coverage.
And disruptions in the affected states don't end there. If droves of 
healthy people bail out of HealthCare.gov, residents buying individual 
policies outside the government market would face a jump in premiums. 
That's because self-pay customers are in the same insurance pool as the 
subsidized ones.
Health insurers spent millions to defeat the law as it was being 
debated. But the industry told the court last month that the subsidies 
are a key to making the insurance overhaul work. Withdrawing them would 
"make the situation worse than it was before" Congress passed the 
Affordable Care Act.
The debate over "Obamacare" was messy enough when just politics and 
ideology were involved. It gets really dicey with the well-being of 
millions of people in the balance. "It is not simply a function of law 
or ideology; there are practical impacts on high numbers of people," 
said Republican Mike Leavitt, a former federal health secretary.
The legal issues involve the leeway accorded to federal agencies in 
applying complex legislation. Opponents argue that the precise wording 
of the law only allows subsidies in states that have set up their own 
insurance markets, or exchanges. That would leave out most 
beneficiaries, who live in states where the federal government runs the 
exchanges. The administration and Democratic lawmakers who wrote the law
 say Congress' clear intent was to provide subsidies to people in every 
state.
 
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