Obama Administration Backslides On 50 Employee Worker Mandate
Our backslidings are many.
Isaiah
The Obama administration had taken another unilateral
step down the slippery slope known as ObamaCare. It has delayed its mandate for a year that penalizes small and medium
sized businesses of 50 employees or over with a fine of $2000 for each
uncovered worker.
The new ruling has three parts.
1. Employers with 50 to 99 employees get a another year of transition.
2. Employers with 100 or more workers aren't required to cover everyone.
3. Volunteers won't be counted as full-time employees.
The new ruling has three parts.
1. Employers with 50 to 99 employees get a another year of transition.
2. Employers with 100 or more workers aren't required to cover everyone.
3. Volunteers won't be counted as full-time employees.
It is Obama’s
latest tweak to placate the business
community who have regarded the 50 employee rule as the most virulent antigrowth
provision of ObamaCare. The business
community maintains the 50 employee rule
has slowed hiring, increased overhead, and culminated in a
part-time employment economy.
This tweak,
when coupled with last week’s CBO report that ObamaCare may encourage 2.3 million Americans not to work over the
next 10 years, is another blow against
the administration.
It opens other floodgates of criticism.
These floodgates include:
· The argument that President Obama, by taking unilateral executive actions, violates the Constitution, which says the President must consult with
Congress before changing a law.
The argument that if the Employment Mandate is changed the Individual Mandate must also be changed, for it is unfair to continue to punish individuals and their families while letting businesses off the hook.
Republicans have seized upon this latest change.
Senators Tom Barrasso, R. Wyoming, and joined Tom Coburn, R-Oklahoma., and other Republican lawmakers by immediately firing off a letter to IRS Commissioner John Koskinen, asking about the enforcement of the individual mandate, considering all the other changes to the law's implementation.
The letter read:
"Given a number of last-minute administrative 'adjustments' made by the Administration, there is some understandable confusion and concern about the enforcement of the individual mandate tax. With the Administration's decision to waive, delay, or unilaterally alter some provisions of the law-including the employer mandate tax on businesses-taxpayers deserve clarification on how the agency intends to enforce the individual mandate tax."
The language and words used – waive, delay, unilaterally alter – are intended to highlight the unworkability, unconstitutionality, and unfairness of the health law and to hasten the slide of ObamaCare down the slope towards repeal, and not uncoincidently, up the hill towards capture of both Houses of Congress in November 2014.
Tweet: The Treasury Department has announced delay for 1 year of penalties for businesses of 50 workers or more who do not offer health insurance to those workers
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