Federal Judge Allows Virginia Lawsuit Challenging the Constitutionality of Health Care Legislation To Proceed

Yesterday, a federal district court judge in Virginia declined to dismiss a challenge brought by Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli to the “individual mandate” contained in the federal Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, the historic health care reform law enacted earlier this year. The ruling, by Judge Henry Hudson of the Eastern District of Virginia, was not a decision on the merits of the state’s arguments but rather a procedural ruling that allows the lawsuit to proceed.

Specifically, yesterday’s ruling allows Cuccinelli to make his argument that Congress lacks the constitutional authority to require individuals to buy health insurance or pay a tax penalty.  However, this is an argument that is contrary to constitutional text and history.  As CAC has written about extensively – both in our Issue Brief entitled The States, Health Care Reform, and the Constitution, and, more recently, in this installment our blog series, Strange Brew: The Constitution According to the Tea Party – Congress’ power to pass health care reform that includes an individual mandate is firmly rooted in the Constitution, and in particular in the provisions in Article I, section 8 authorizing Congress to regulate interstate commerce and to tax and spend for the general welfare, as well as to enact laws that are necessary and proper in exercising its other powers.

Please stay tuned to Text & History for additional updates on this lawsuit.

 

More from

Immigration and Citizenship
June 25, 2026

CAC Release: Supreme Court Misunderstands Immigration Law—and the Presumption of Extraterritoriality—in Decision about Asylum-Seekers at the Border

WASHINGTON, DC – Following the Supreme Court’s decision this morning in Noem v. Al Otro...
By: Smita Ghosh
Access to Justice
June 23, 2026

CAC Release: In Deeply Disappointing Decision, Supreme Court Ignores Ordinary Meaning of Statute and Denies Victims of Torture Their Day in Court

WASHINGTON, DC – Following today’s decision at the Supreme Court in Cisco Systems v. Doe,...
By: Harith Khawaja
Rule of Law
June 23, 2026

CAC Release: Supreme Court Decision on Excessive Fines Clause Reaches the Wrong Result, But Gets the Standard Right

WASHINGTON, DC – Following today’s decision at the Supreme Court in Pung v. Isabella County,...
By: Brianne J. Gorod
Access to Justice
June 23, 2026

CAC Release: Supreme Court’s Conservative Supermajority Undermines Important Right Created by Congress

WASHINGTON, DC – Following today’s decision at the Supreme Court in Landor v. Louisiana Department...
By: Brianne J. Gorod
Rule of Law
June 22, 2026

The Supreme Court Is About to Decide Four Cases Defining Trump’s Power

The Wall Street Journal
CAC President Elizabeth Wydra spoke to the Wall Street Journal about the major decisions left...
Rule of Law
June 21, 2026

Trump DOJ in CRISIS MODE

Legal AF
CAC Vice President Praveen Fernandes joined the Legal AF podcast to discuss Todd Blanche's nomination...