The fate of President Barack Obama’s health-care law is again in the hands of the U.S. Supreme Court.

Two years after upholding the law by a single vote, the justices are weighing whether to hear a Republican-backed appeal that would block people in 36 states from getting tax subsidies to buy insurance. The justices are scheduled to discuss the matter tomorrow, with an announcement coming as soon as Nov. 3.

The tax credits have implications well beyond the 4.6 million people who receive them in those states. A high court decision against the administration would have ripple effects, undercutting other parts of the Affordable Care Act and potentially destabilizing insurance markets across the nation.

“The basic structure of the act would be gutted,” said Theodore Ruger, a health-law professor at the University of Pennsylvania Law School.

The law, intended to provide coverage to tens of millions of uninsured Americans, has been attacked by Republicans since it was passed on a party-line vote in 2010. While many provisions are popular, a majority of Americans say they disapprove of it, polls show. More than 100,000 anti-Obamacare ads have aired this year as Republicans try to exploit what they see as a Democratic liability in next month’s elections.

Unlike in 2012, when the core of the statute survived on a 5-4 vote, the latest case comes to the court with the law’s major provisions in effect and more than 14 million Americans covered by its programs.

Critics predicted the law would result in soaring insurance premiums and national health-care spending. So far, that hasn’t happened.

Four Words

The case centers on a four-word phrase: The health-care law says people qualify for tax credits when they buy insurance on an online marketplace “established by the state.”

Those words matter because only 14 states have set up their own marketplaces, known as exchanges. The rest have left the job to the federal government, as the law permits. The question is whether people can collect the subsidies even if they buy policies on the federal exchange.

Under a rule issued by the Internal Revenue Service, consumers can claim tax credits no matter where they live. The Obama administration says the IRS approach is consistent with the law’s “goals of making affordable health coverage available to all Americans and ensuring functional insurance markets.” Critics say Obama has adopted an interpretation that flies in the face of clear statutory language.

‘Unworkable’ Law

“The president did this in an attempt to make his unworkable health-care law workable,” said Michael Cannon, director of health-policy studies at the Cato Institute. The libertarian organization is backed by Charles and David Koch, who have invested tens of millions of dollars opposing Obama’s policies and Democratic candidates.

A Supreme Court ruling against the administration would mean that more than half of the 7.3 million people who have bought Obamacare policies aren’t entitled to the subsidies they are receiving.

That would be just the start. Without the billions of dollars in tax credits, many of those people would find insurance so expensive that they would qualify for the law’s hardship exemption and no longer have to obtain a policy.

The result might be that only the sickest and most desperate would get insurance through the individual market, at least in states that haven’t established their own exchanges.

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