I think
that the brief is largely correct about the political theory underlying
textualism, the interpretive tenets of textualism, and the application of
those tenets to the ACA. I want to examine a few objections from the side of
theory.
Wednesday, March 25, 2015
The Law Professors' Brief in King v. Burwell
In the
challenge to the Affordable Care Act now under consideration by the Supreme
Court, an amicus curiae brief was
filed by law professors William Eskridge, John Ferejohn, Charles Fried, Lisa
Marshall Manheim and David Strauss. The brief sets out an account of textualism
in statutory construction, contrasting it with “purposivism” – which takes the
intentions of legislators to be the touchstone of interpretation. The brief
then applies textualist methods in arguing that the government's (the IRS's)
interpretation of the disputed language in the ACA should be upheld.
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