OMB director inadvertently admits duplicity of Obama admin on ObamaCare

The Washington Examiner’s Philip Klein reports:

Testifying before Congress this morning, President Obama’s acting budget director Jeffrey Zients directly undercut one of the administration’s key legal defenses of its national health care law as it nears a hearing before the Supreme Court.

In a hearing of the House Budget Committee Rep. Scott Garrett, R-N.J., pressed Zients on whether the penalty that the health care law imposes on individuals who do not purchase health insurance constitutes a tax. Eventually, Zients said it did not.

But this directly contradicts one of the arguments the Obama administration is making before the Supreme Court in defense of the health care law, which is that the mandate is Constitutional because it’s a tax and government has taxing power.

This has always been a tricky argument for the Obama administration, because admitting that the mandate is a tax means that Obama violated his pledge not to raise taxes on those earning less than $250,000. In September 2009, ObamaΒ toldΒ ABC’s George Stephanapoulos that the mandate was not a tax. But by the following June, his administration wasΒ arguingΒ in court that it was.

This takes “straddling the fence” to a whole new level, doesn’t it? Β I sure as heck hope the anti-ObamaCare lawyers include such official statements when they argue against Obama’s “health care reform” bill before the Supreme Court next month and – of course – the remarks help a majority of the Court decide against the administration. Β It’d be great for that to happen at any time, but during an important election year? It would be epic.

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