State of Texas v. USA ( 2019 )


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  •      Case: 19-10011   Document: 00515242592     Page: 1   Date Filed: 12/18/2019
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT      United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    December 18, 2019
    No. 19-10011
    Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    STATE OF TEXAS; STATE OF ALABAMA; STATE OF ARIZONA; STATE
    OF FLORIDA; STATE OF GEORGIA; STATE OF INDIANA; STATE OF
    KANSAS; STATE OF LOUISIANA; STATE OF MISSISSIPPI, by and
    through Governor Phil Bryant; STATE OF MISSOURI; STATE OF
    NEBRASKA; STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA; STATE OF SOUTH
    CAROLINA; STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA; STATE OF TENNESSEE;
    STATE OF UTAH; STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA; STATE OF ARKANSAS;
    NEILL HURLEY; JOHN NANTZ,
    Plaintiffs – Appellees,
    v.
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA; UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF
    HEALTH; HUMAN SERVICES; ALEX AZAR, II, SECRETARY, U.S.
    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES; UNITED STATES
    DEPARTMENT OF INTERNAL REVENUE; CHARLES P. RETTIG, in his
    Official Capacity as Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
    Defendants – Appellants,
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA; STATE OF CONNECTICUT; DISTRICT OF
    COLUMBIA; STATE OF DELAWARE; STATE OF HAWAII; STATE OF
    ILLINOIS; STATE OF KENTUCKY; STATE OF MASSACHUSETTS;
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY; STATE OF NEW YORK; STATE OF NORTH
    CAROLINA; STATE OF OREGON; STATE OF RHODE ISLAND; STATE OF
    VERMONT; STATE OF VIRGINIA; STATE OF WASHINGTON; STATE OF
    MINNESOTA,
    Intervenor-Defendants – Appellants.
    Case: 19-10011    Document: 00515242592     Page: 2   Date Filed: 12/18/2019
    No. 19-10011
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Texas
    Before KING, ELROD, and ENGELHARDT, Circuit Judges.
    JENNIFER WALKER ELROD, Circuit Judge:
    The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (the Act or ACA) is a
    monumental piece of healthcare legislation that regulates a huge swath of the
    nation’s economy and affects the healthcare decisions of millions of Americans.
    The law has been a focal point of our country’s political debate since it was
    passed nearly a decade ago. Some say that the Act is a much-needed solution
    to the problem of increasing healthcare costs and lack of healthcare
    availability. Many of the amici in this case, for example, argue that the law
    has extensively benefitted everyone from children to senior citizens to local
    governments to small businesses. Others say that the Act is a costly exercise
    in burdensome governmental regulation that deprives people of economic
    liberty. Amici of this perspective argue, for example, that the Act “has deprived
    patients nationwide of a competitive market for affordable high-deductible
    health insurance,” leaving “patients with no alternative to . . . skyrocketing
    premiums.” Association of American Physicians & Surgeons Amicus Br. at 15.
    None of these policy issues are before the court. And for good reason—
    the courts are not institutionally equipped to address them. These issues are
    far better left to the other two branches of government. The questions before
    the court are far narrower: questions of law, not of policy. Those questions are:
    First, is there a live case or controversy before us even though the federal
    defendants have conceded many aspects of the dispute; and, relatedly, do the
    intervenor-defendant states and the U.S. House of Representatives have
    standing to appeal? Second, do the plaintiffs have standing? Third, if they do,
    2
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    is the individual mandate unconstitutional? Fourth, if it is, how much of the
    rest of the Act is inseverable from the individual mandate?
    We answer those questions as follows: First, there is a live case or
    controversy because the intervenor-defendant states have standing to appeal
    and, even if they did not, there remains a live case or controversy between the
    plaintiffs and the federal defendants. Second, the plaintiffs have Article III
    standing to bring this challenge to the ACA; the individual mandate injures
    both the individual plaintiffs, by requiring them to buy insurance that they do
    not want, and the state plaintiffs, by increasing their costs of complying with
    the reporting requirements that accompany the individual mandate. Third,
    the individual mandate is unconstitutional because it can no longer be read as
    a tax, and there is no other constitutional provision that justifies this exercise
    of congressional power. Fourth, on the severability question, we remand to the
    district court to provide additional analysis of the provisions of the ACA as they
    currently exist.
    I.
    On March 23, 2010, President Barack Obama signed the ACA into law.
    See Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, Pub. L. No. 111-148, 124 Stat.
    119 (2010). The Act sought to “increase the number of Americans covered by
    health insurance and decrease the cost of health care” through several key
    reforms. See Nat’l Fed’n of Indep. Bus. v. Sebelius (NFIB), 
    567 U.S. 519
    , 538
    (2012).
    Some of those reforms implemented new consumer protections, aiming
    primarily to protect people with preexisting conditions. For example, the law
    prohibits insurers from refusing to cover preexisting conditions. 42 U.S.C.
    § 300gg-3. The “guaranteed-issue requirement” forbids insurers from turning
    customers away because of their health. See 42 U.S.C. §§ 300gg, 300gg-1. The
    “community-rating requirement” keeps insurers from charging people more
    3
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    because of their preexisting health issues. 42 U.S.C. § 300gg-4. 1 The law also
    requires insurers to provide coverage for certain types of care, including
    women’s and children’s preventative care. 42 U.S.C. § 300gg-13(a)(3)–(4). 2
    Other reforms sought to lower the cost of health insurance by using both
    policy “carrots” and “sticks.” 3 On the stick side, the individual mandate—
    which plaintiffs challenge in the instant case—requires individuals to
    “maintain [health insurance] coverage.” 26 U.S.C. § 5000A(a). If individuals
    do not maintain this coverage, they must make a payment to the IRS called a
    “shared responsibility payment.” 4 Id.; see also King v. Burwell, 
    135 S. Ct. 2480
    ,
    2486 (2015).
    1 The ACA features a few other consumer-protection reforms of note. For example,
    the Act requires insurance companies to allow young adults to stay on their parents’ health
    insurance plans until they turn 26; prohibits insurers from imposing caps on the value of
    benefits provided; and mandates that the insurance plans cover at least ten “essential health
    benefits,” including emergency services, prescription drugs, and maternity and newborn care.
    See 42 U.S.C. §§ 300gg-14 (young adults), 300gg-11 (restriction on benefit caps), 18022
    (essential health benefits). The ACA also requires employers with at least fifty full-time
    employees to pay the federal government a penalty if they fail to provide their employees
    with ACA-compliant coverage. 26 U.S.C. § 4980H.
    2 The women’s preventative care provision was at issue in a trio of recent Supreme
    Court cases. See Zubik v. Burwell, 
    136 S. Ct. 1557
     (2016); Wheaton College v. Burwell, 
    573 U.S. 958
     (2014); Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc., 
    573 U.S. 682
     (2014); see also California
    v. U.S. Dep’t of Health & Human Servs., No. 19-15072, 
    2019 WL 5382250
     (9th Cir. Oct. 22,
    2019); Pennsylvania v. President United States, 
    930 F.3d 543
     (3d Cir. 2019), as amended (July
    18, 2019); DeOtte v. Azar, 
    393 F. Supp. 3d 490
    , 495 (N.D. Tex. 2019).
    3 Some opponents of the ACA assert that the goal was not to lower health insurance
    costs, but that the entire law was enacted as part of a fraud on the American people, designed
    to ultimately lead to a federal, single-payer healthcare system. In a hearing before the House
    Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, for example, Representative Kerry
    Bentivolio suggested that Jonathan Gruber, who assisted in crafting the legislation, had
    “help[ed] the administration deceive the American people on this healthcare act or [told] the
    truth in [a] video . . . about how [the Act] was a fraud upon the American people.” Examining
    Obamacare Transparency Failures: Hearing Before the H. Comm. on Oversight and
    Government Reform, 113th Cong. 83 (2014) (statement of Rep. Kerry Bentivolio).
    4 The Act exempts several groups of people from the shared responsibility payment.
    Specifically, the Act provides that “[n]o penalty shall be imposed” on those “who cannot afford
    [insurance] coverage,” on “[t]axpayers with income below [the] filing threshold,” on
    4
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    The individual mandate was designed to lower insurance premiums by
    broadening the insurance pool. See 42 U.S.C. § 18091(2)(J) (“By significantly
    increasing . . . the size of purchasing pools, . . . the [individual mandate] will
    significantly . . . lower health insurance premiums.”). When the young and
    healthy must buy insurance, the insurance pool faces less risk, which, at least
    in theory, leads to lower premiums for everyone. See 42 U.S.C. § 18091(2)(I)
    (positing that the individual mandate will “broaden the health insurance risk
    pool to include healthy individuals, which will lower health insurance
    premiums”). The individual mandate thus serves as a counterweight to the
    ACA’s protections for preexisting conditions, which push riskier, costlier
    individuals into the insurance pool. Under the protections for consumers with
    preexisting conditions, if there were no individual mandate, there would
    arguably be an “adverse selection” problem: “many individuals would,” in
    theory, “wait to purchase health insurance until they needed care.” Id. 5
    The Act also sought to lower insurance costs for some consumers through
    policy “carrots,” providing tax credits to offset the cost of insurance to those
    with incomes under 400 percent of the federal poverty line. See 26 U.S.C.
    § 36B; 42 U.S.C. §§ 18081, 18082.              The Act also created government-run,
    taxpayer-funded health insurance marketplaces—known as “Exchanges”—
    which allow customers “to compare and purchase insurance plans.” King, 135
    “[m]embers of Indian tribes,” on those who had only “short coverage gaps,” or on anyone who,
    in the Secretary of Health and Human Services’ determination, has “suffered a hardship.”
    26 U.S.C. § 5000A(e).
    5 Opponents of the ACA, however, argue that the Act goes too far in limiting
    individuals’ freedom to choose healthcare coverage. For example, at a House committee
    hearing, Representative Darrell Issa argued that one of the “false claims” that the Obama
    administration made in passing the Act was that “[i]f you like your doctor, you will be able to
    keep your doctor, period. . . . [And i]f you like your [insurance] plan, you can keep your plan.”
    Examining Obamacare Transparency Failures: Hearing Before the H. Comm. on Oversight
    and Government Reform, 113th Cong. 2 (2014) (statement of Rep. Darrell Issa, Chairman, H.
    Comm. on Oversight and Government Reform).
    5
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    S. Ct. at 2485; see also 42 U.S.C. § 18031. Opponents of the law argue that the
    law has led to unintended subsidies to keep plans afloat and insurance
    companies in the black.      Texas points in its brief, for example, to a
    Congressional Budget Office study estimating that federal outlays for health
    insurance subsidies and related spending will rise by about 60 percent over the
    next ten years, from $58 billion in 2018 to $91 billion by 2028. CBO, The
    Budget and Economic Outlook: 2018 to 2028 at 51 (April 2018), available at
    https://tinyurl.com/CBOBudgetEconOutlook-2018-2028; State Plaintiffs’ Br. at
    13–14.
    The ACA also enlarged the class of people eligible for Medicaid to include
    childless adults with incomes up to 133 percent of the federal poverty line. 42
    U.S.C. §§ 1396a(a)(10)(A)(i)(VII), 1396a(e)(14)(I)(i); NFIB, 567 U.S. at 541–42.
    The ACA originally required each state to expand its Medicaid program or risk
    losing “all of its federal Medicaid funds.” NFIB, 567 U.S. at 542. In NFIB,
    however, the Supreme Court held that this exceeded Congress’ powers under
    the Spending Clause. Id. at 585 (plurality opinion). But the Court allowed
    those states that wanted to accept Medicaid expansion funds to do so. See id.
    at 585–86 (plurality opinion); id. at 645–46 (Ginsburg, J., concurring in part,
    concurring in the judgment in part, and dissenting in part). As a result, the
    states that have not participated in the expansion now subsidize, through their
    general tax dollars, the states that have participated in expansion.
    Since the Act was passed, its opponents have attempted to attack it both
    through congressional amendment and through litigation. Between 2010 and
    2016, Congress considered several bills to repeal, defund, delay, or amend the
    ACA. See Intervenor-Defendant States’ Br. at 10. Except for a few modest
    changes, these efforts were closely fought but ultimately failed. Intervenor-
    Defendant States’ Br. at 10–11.            In 2017, the shift in presidential
    administrations reinvigorated opposition to the law, but many of these later
    6
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    legislative efforts failed as well. In March 2017, House leaders pulled a bill
    that would have repealed many of the ACA’s essential provisions. In July
    2017, the Senate voted on three separate bills that similarly would have
    repealed major provisions of the Act, but each vote failed. 6                      Finally, in
    September 2017, several Senators introduced another bill that would have
    repealed some of the ACA’s most significant provisions, but Senate leaders
    ultimately chose not to bring it to the floor for a vote. Intervenor-Defendant
    States’ Br. at 11.
    The ACA’s opponents also took their cause to the courts in a series of
    lawsuits, some of which reached the Supreme Court. Particularly relevant
    here, the Court, in NFIB, upheld the law’s individual mandate. 567 U.S. at
    574. Through fractured voting and shifting majorities—explained in more
    detail in Part V of this opinion—the Court decided that the ACA’s individual
    mandate could be read as a tax on an individual’s decision not to purchase
    insurance, which was a constitutional exercise of Congress’ taxing powers
    under Article I of the U.S. Constitution. Id.; U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 1. The
    Court       favored   this    tax   interpretation      to   save     the   provision      from
    unconstitutionality.         Reading the provision as a standalone command to
    purchase insurance would have rendered it unconstitutional. This reading
    could not have been justified under the Commerce Clause because it would
    have done more than “regulate commerce . . . among the several states.” U.S.
    Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 3. It would have compelled individuals to enter commerce
    in the first place. 7 NFIB, 567 U.S. at 557–58. The Court also held that the
    One of these bills failed by a razor-thin vote of fifty-one against, forty-nine in favor.
    6
    See 163 Cong. Rec. S4415 (daily ed. July 27, 2017).
    Chief Justice Roberts cautioned that concluding otherwise would empower the
    7
    government to compel Americans into all kinds of behavior that the government thinks is
    7
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    provision could not be justified under the Constitution’s Necessary and Proper
    Clause. Id. at 561 (Roberts, C.J.); id. at 654–55 (Scalia, Kennedy, Thomas, and
    Alito, JJ., dissenting).
    In December 2017, the ACA’s opponents achieved some legislative
    success. As part of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, Congress set the “shared
    responsibility payment” amount—the amount a person must pay for failing to
    comply with the individual mandate—to the “lesser” of “zero percent” of an
    individual’s household income or “$0,” effective January 2019. Pub. L. No. 115-
    97, § 11081, 131 Stat. 2054, 2092 (2017); see also 26 U.S.C. § 5000A(c). The
    individual mandate is still “on the books” of the U.S. Code and still consists of
    the three fundamental components it always featured.                      Subsection (a)
    prescribes that certain individuals “shall . . . ensure” that they and their
    dependents are “covered under minimum essential coverage.”                      26 U.S.C.
    § 5000A(a).       Subsection (b) “impose[s] . . . a penalty” called a “[s]hared
    responsibility payment” on those who fail to ensure they have minimum
    essential coverage. 26 U.S.C. § 5000A(b).           Subsection (c) sets the amount of
    that payment. All Congress did in 2017 was change the amount in subsection
    (c) to zero dollars. 26 U.S.C. § 5000A(c).
    Two months after the shared responsibility payment was set at zero
    dollars, the plaintiffs here—two private citizens 8 and eighteen states 9—filed
    this lawsuit against several federal defendants: the United States of America,
    beneficial for them, including, for example, compelling them to purchase broccoli. See NFIB,
    567 U.S. at 558 (Roberts, C.J.).
    8   Namely, Neill Hurley and John Nantz.
    9 Namely, Texas, Alabama, Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana,
    Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee,
    Utah, West Virginia, and Arkansas. Wisconsin, which was originally a plaintiff state, sought
    and was granted dismissal from the appeal.
    8
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    the Department of Health and Human Services and its Secretary, Alex Azar,
    as well as the Internal Revenue Service and its Acting Commissioner, David J.
    Kautter. The plaintiffs argued that the individual mandate was no longer
    constitutional   because:    (1) NFIB       rested    the      individual   mandate’s
    constitutionality exclusively on reading the provision as a tax; and (2) the 2017
    amendment undermined any ability to characterize the individual mandate as
    a tax because the provision no longer generates revenue, a requirement for a
    tax. The plaintiffs argued further that, because the individual mandate was
    essential to and inseverable from the rest of the ACA, the entire ACA must be
    enjoined.   On this theory, the plaintiffs sought declaratory relief that the
    individual mandate is unconstitutional and the rest of the ACA is inseverable.
    The plaintiffs also sought an injunction prohibiting the federal defendants
    from enforcing any provision of the ACA or its regulations.
    The federal defendants agreed with the plaintiffs that once the shared
    responsibility payment was reduced to zero dollars, the individual mandate
    was no longer constitutional. They also agreed that the individual mandate
    could not be severed from the ACA’s guaranteed-issue and community-rating
    requirements.     Unlike the plaintiffs, however, the federal defendants
    contended in the district court that those three provisions could be severed
    from the rest of the Act. Driven by the federal defendants’ decision not to fully
    defend against the lawsuit, sixteen states 10 and the District of Columbia
    intervened to defend the ACA.
    The district court agreed with the plaintiffs’ arguments on the merits.
    Specifically, the court held that: (1) the individual plaintiffs had standing
    10   Namely, California, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Kentucky,
    Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont,
    Virginia, Washington, and Minnesota.
    9
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    because the individual mandate compelled them to purchase insurance;
    (2) setting the shared responsibility payment to zero rendered the individual
    mandate unconstitutional; and (3) the unconstitutional provision could not be
    severed from any other part of the ACA.              The district court granted the
    plaintiffs’ claim for declaratory relief. Specifically, the district court’s order
    “declares      the      Individual       Mandate,        26      U.S.C.      § 5000A(a),
    UNCONSTITUTIONAL,” and the order further declares that “the remaining
    provisions of the ACA, Pub L. 111-148, are INSEVERABLE and therefore
    INVALID.” The district court, however, denied the plaintiffs’ application for a
    preliminary injunction. The district court entered partial final judgment 11 as
    to the grant of summary judgment for declaratory relief, but stayed judgment
    pending appeal. This appeal followed.
    On appeal, the U.S. House of Representatives intervened to join the
    intervenor-defendant states in defending the ACA. 12              Also on appeal, the
    federal defendants changed their litigation position. After contending in the
    district court that only a few provisions of the ACA were inseverable from the
    individual mandate, the federal defendants contend in their opening brief for
    the first time that all of the ACA is inseverable. See Fed. Defendants’ Br. at
    43–49. Moreover, the federal defendants contend for the first time on appeal
    11   The final judgment is only partial because it addresses only Count One of the
    plaintiffs’ amended complaint. Count One requests a declaratory judgment that the
    individual mandate exceeds Congress’ constitutional powers. The district court has not yet
    ruled on the other counts in the amended complaint. In Count Two, the plaintiffs request a
    declaratory judgment that the ACA violates the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
    In Count Three, the plaintiffs request a declaratory judgment that the ACA violates the
    Tenth Amendment. In Count Four, the plaintiffs request a declaratory judgment that agency
    rules promulgated pursuant to the ACA are unlawful. In Count Five, the plaintiffs request
    an injunction prohibiting federal officials from “implementing, regulating, or otherwise
    enforcing any part of the ACA.”
    12  In addition to the U.S. House, four other states intervened on appeal to join the
    original group that defended the Act in the district court: Colorado, Iowa, Michigan, and
    Nevada.
    10
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    that—even though the entire ACA is inseverable—the court should not enjoin
    the enforcement of the entire ACA. The federal defendants now argue that the
    district court’s judgment should be affirmed “except insofar as it purports to
    extend relief to ACA provisions that are unnecessary to remedy plaintiffs’
    injuries.” 13 Fed. Defendants’ Br. at 49. They also now argue that the district
    court’s judgment “cannot be understood as extending beyond the plaintiff
    states to invalidate the ACA in the intervenor states.” Fed. Defendants’ Supp.
    Br. at 10. Simply put, the federal defendants have shifted their position on
    appeal more than once.
    II.
    We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. Time
    Warner Cable, Inc. v. Hudson, 
    667 F.3d 630
    , 638 (5th Cir. 2012). Summary
    judgment is appropriate when “the movant shows that there is no genuine
    dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a
    matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a); see also Dialysis Newco, Inc. v. Cmty.
    Health Sys. Grp. Health Plan, 
    938 F.3d 246
    , 250 (5th Cir. 2019). A dispute
    about a material fact is genuine if “the evidence is such that a reasonable jury
    could return a verdict for the non-moving party.” Amerisure Ins. v. Navigators
    Ins., 
    611 F.3d 299
    , 304 (5th Cir. 2010) (quoting Gates v. Tex. Dep’t of Protective
    & Regulatory Servs., 
    537 F.3d 404
    , 417 (5th Cir. 2008)). When ruling on a
    motion for summary judgment, the court views all inferences drawn from the
    13The federal defendants do not specify which precise provisions, in their view, injure
    the plaintiffs and which do not.
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    factual record “in the light most favorable to the non-moving parties below.”
    Trent v. Wade, 
    776 F.3d 368
    , 373 n.1 (5th Cir. 2015).
    III.
    We first must consider whether there is a live “[c]ase” or “[c]ontroversy”
    before us on appeal, as Article III of the U.S. Constitution requires. U.S. Const.
    art. III, § 1. A case or controversy does not exist unless the person asking the
    court for a decision—in this case, asking us to decide whether the district
    court’s judgment was correct—has standing, which requires a showing of
    “injury, causation, and redressability.” Sierra Club v. Babbitt, 
    995 F.2d 571
    ,
    574 (5th Cir. 1993). When “standing to appeal is at issue, appellants must
    demonstrate some injury from the judgment below.” Id. at 575 (emphasis
    omitted).
    We conclude, as all parties agree, that there is a case or controversy
    before us on appeal. Two groups of parties appealed from the district court’s
    judgment: the federal defendants, and the intervenor-defendant states. 14
    There is a case or controversy before us because both of these groups have their
    own independent standing to appeal. 15
    The federal defendants have standing to appeal. The instant case is on
    all fours with the Supreme Court’s decision in United States v. Windsor, 
    570 U.S. 744
     (2013). In that case, the executive branch of the federal government
    declined to defend a federal statute that did not allow the surviving spouse of
    14 The U.S. House of Representatives, also a party in this case, intervened in our court
    after the intervenor-defendant states and the federal government had filed notices of appeal.
    15Even if only one of these parties had standing to appeal, that would be enough to
    sustain the court’s jurisdiction. An intervenor needs standing only “in the absence of the
    party on whose side the intervenor intervened.” Sierra Club, 995 F.2d at 574 (alteration
    omitted) (quoting Diamond v. Charles, 
    476 U.S. 54
    , 68 (1986)); see also Vill. of Arlington
    Heights v. Metro. Hous. Dev. Corp., 
    429 U.S. 252
    , 264 & n.9 (1977) (exercising jurisdiction
    because “at least one” plaintiff had standing to sue).
    12
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    a same-sex couple to receive a spousal tax deduction. Id. at 749–53. The
    district court ruled that the statute was unconstitutional and ordered the
    executive branch to issue a tax refund to the surviving spouse. Id. at 754–55.
    The executive branch agreed with the district court’s legal conclusion, but it
    appealed the judgment and continued to enforce the statute by withholding the
    tax refund until a final judicial resolution. Id. at 757–58.
    The Supreme Court ruled that “the United States retain[ed] a stake
    sufficient to support Article III jurisdiction.” Id. at 757. That stake was the
    tax refund, which the federal government refused to pay.          This threat of
    payment of money from the Treasury constituted “a real and immediate
    economic injury” to the federal government, which was sufficient for standing
    purposes. Id. at 757–58 (quoting Hein v. Freedom From Religion Found., Inc.,
    
    551 U.S. 587
    , 599 (2007) (plurality opinion)). As the Court explained, “the
    refusal of the Executive to provide the relief sought suffices to preserve a
    justiciable dispute as required by Article III.” Windsor, 570 U.S. at 759; see
    also Food Mktg. Inst. v. Argus Leader Media, 
    139 S. Ct. 2356
    , 2362 (2019)
    (concluding that there was a justiciable controversy because the government
    “represented unequivocally” that it would not voluntarily moot the controversy
    absent a final judicial order, and “[t]hat is enough to satisfy Article III”); INS
    v. Chadha, 
    462 U.S. 919
    , 939 (1983) (holding that there was “adequate Art. III
    adverseness” because the executive branch determined that a federal statute
    was unconstitutional and refused to defend it but simultaneously continued to
    abide by it).
    The instant case is similar.     Though the plaintiffs and the federal
    defendants are in almost complete agreement on the merits of the case, the
    government continues to enforce the entire Act. The federal government has
    made no indication that it will begin dismantling any part of the ACA in the
    absence of a final court order. Just as in Windsor, then, effectuating the
    13
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    district court’s order would require the federal government to take actions that
    it would not take “but for the court’s order.” Windsor, 570 U.S. at 758. And
    just as in Windsor, the federal defendants stand to suffer financially if the
    district court’s judgment is affirmed. 16 As just one example, the district court’s
    judgment declares the Act’s Medicare reimbursement schedules unlawful,
    which, if given effect, would require Medicare to reimburse healthcare
    providers at higher rates.         See, e.g., 42 U.S.C. § 1395ww(b)(3)(B)(xi)–(xii).
    Therefore, just as in Windsor, an appellate decision here will “have real
    meaning.” 570 U.S. at 758 (quoting Chadha, 462 U.S. at 939). 17
    The intervenor-defendant states also have standing to appeal. While a
    party’s mere “status as an intervenor below . . . does not confer standing,”
    Diamond v. Charles, 
    476 U.S. 54
    , 68 (1986), intervenors may appeal if they can
    demonstrate injury from the district court’s judgment. Sierra Club, 995 F.2d
    at 574; see also Va. House of Delegates v. Bethune-Hill, 
    139 S. Ct. 1945
    , 1951
    (2019); Cooper v. Tex. Alcoholic Beverage Comm’n, 
    820 F.3d 730
    , 737 (5th Cir.
    2016). The intervenor-defendant states have made this showing because the
    district court’s judgment, if ultimately given effect, would: (1) strip these states
    of funding that they receive under the ACA; and (2) threaten to hamstring
    these states in possible future litigation because of the district court
    judgment’s potentially preclusive effect. 18
    16The dissenting Justices in Windsor objected to the Windsor majority’s approach to
    standing. Justice Scalia, for example, said that this approach to standing “would have been
    unrecognizable to those who wrote and ratified our national charter.” Windsor, 570 U.S. at
    779 (Scalia, J., dissenting). We are bound by the Windsor majority opinion.
    17Just as in Windsor, moreover, principles of prudential standing weigh in favor of
    exercising jurisdiction despite the government’s alignment with the plaintiffs. Just like the
    intervenors in Windsor, the intervenor-defendant states and the U.S. House both put on a
    “sharp adversarial presentation of the issues.” Id. at 761.
    18 At first glance, it may not be entirely clear how a mere partial summary judgment
    on the issuance of a declaratory judgment would aggrieve anyone. But at oral argument, all
    14
    Case: 19-10011       Document: 00515242592        Page: 15     Date Filed: 12/18/2019
    No. 19-10011
    First, the intervenor-defendant states receive significant funding from
    the ACA, which would be discontinued if we affirmed the district court’s
    judgment declaring the entire Act unconstitutional. “[F]inancial loss as a
    result of” a district court’s judgment is an injury sufficient to support standing
    to appeal. United States v. Fletcher ex rel. Fletcher, 
    805 F.3d 596
    , 602 (5th Cir.
    2015). In their supplemental briefing, the intervenor-defendant states identify
    a few examples of the funding sources they would lose under the district court’s
    judgment. Evidence in the record shows that eliminating the Act’s Medicaid
    expansion provisions alone would cost the original sixteen intervening state
    defendants and the District of Columbia a total of more than $418 billion in
    the next decade.         See 42 U.S.C. §§ 1396a(a)(10)(A)(i)(VIII), (e)(14)(I)(i),
    1396d(y)(1). Moreover, the Act’s Community First Choice Option program
    gives states funding to care for the disabled and elderly at home or in their
    communities instead of in institutions. See 42 U.S.C. § 1396n(k). Record
    evidence shows that eliminating this program would cost California $400
    million in 2020, and that Oregon and Connecticut have already received $432.1
    million under this program. This evidence is more than enough to show that
    the intervenor-defendant states would suffer financially if the district court’s
    judgment is given effect, an injury sufficient to confer standing to appeal. See
    Dep’t of Commerce v. New York, 
    139 S. Ct. 2551
    , 2565 (2019).
    The district court’s judgment, if given effect, also threatens to injure the
    intervenor-defendant states with the judgment’s potentially preclusive effect
    in future litigation. We have held that “[a] party may be aggrieved by a district
    court decision that adversely affects its legal rights or position vis-à-vis other
    parties agreed that the district court’s partial summary judgment would have binding effect.
    Indeed, this is partly why the district court issued a stay. The district court acknowledged
    that the intervenor-defendant states would be prejudiced by the judgment, which means that
    the district court understood it to be binding.
    15
    Case: 19-10011    Document: 00515242592      Page: 16    Date Filed: 12/18/2019
    No. 19-10011
    parties in the case or other potential litigants.” Leonard v. Nationwide Mut.
    Ins., 
    499 F.3d 419
    , 428 (5th Cir. 2007) (quoting Custer v. Sweeney, 
    89 F.3d 1156
    , 1164 (4th Cir. 1996)). If the federal defendants began unwinding the
    ACA, either in reliance on the district court’s judgment or on their own, the
    district court’s judgment would potentially estop the intervenor-defendant
    states from challenging that action in court. This case thus stands in contrast
    to the cases in which there was no chance whatsoever of a preclusive effect.
    See Klamath Strategic Inv. Fund ex rel. St. Croix Ventures v. United States,
    
    568 F.3d 537
    , 546 (5th Cir. 2009) (holding that there was no threatened injury
    from potential estoppel from the appealed-from judgment because that
    judgment was interlocutory, not final, and therefore could not estop the
    appealing party).
    Finally, we examine the standing of the U.S. House of Representatives,
    which intervened after the case had been appealed. The Supreme Court’s
    recent decision in Virginia House of Delegates v. Bethune-Hill calls the House’s
    standing to intervene into doubt. 139 S. Ct. at 1953 (“This Court has never
    held that a judicial decision invalidating a state law as unconstitutional inflicts
    a discrete, cognizable injury on each organ of government that participated in
    the law’s passage.”). However, we need not resolve the question of the House’s
    standing. “Article III does not require intervenors to independently possess
    standing” when a party already in the lawsuit has standing and seeks the same
    “ultimate relief” as the intervenor. Ruiz v. Estelle, 
    161 F.3d 814
    , 830 (5th Cir.
    1998). That is the case here: the intervenor-defendant states have standing to
    appeal, and the House seeks the same relief as those states. We accordingly
    pretermit the issue of whether the House has standing to intervene.
    IV.
    We now turn to the issue of whether any of the plaintiffs had Article III
    standing to bring this case at the time they brought the lawsuit. To be a case
    16
    Case: 19-10011      Document: 00515242592         Page: 17    Date Filed: 12/18/2019
    No. 19-10011
    or controversy under Article III, the plaintiffs must satisfy the same three
    requirements listed above. First, a plaintiff must have suffered an “injury in
    fact”—a violation of a legally protected interest that is “concrete and
    particularized,” as well as “actual or imminent, not ‘conjectural’ or
    ‘hypothetical.’” Lujan v. Defs. of Wildlife, 
    504 U.S. 555
    , 560 (1992) (quoting
    Whitmore v. Arkansas, 
    495 U.S. 149
    , 155 (1990)). Second, that injury must be
    “fairly . . . trace[able] to the challenged action of the defendant, and not . . .
    th[e] result [of] the independent action of some third party not before the
    court.” Id. (alterations in original) (quoting Simon v. E. Ky. Welfare Rights
    Org., 
    426 U.S. 26
    , 41–42 (1976)).          Third, it must be “likely”—not merely
    “speculative”—that the injury will be “redressed by a favorable decision.” Id.
    at 561 (quoting Simon, 426 U.S. at 38, 43).
    The instant case has two groups of plaintiffs: the individual plaintiffs
    and the state plaintiffs. Only one plaintiff need succeed because “one party
    with standing is sufficient to satisfy Article III’s case-or-controversy
    requirement.” 19 Texas v. United States (DAPA), 
    809 F.3d 134
    , 151 (5th Cir.
    2015) (quoting Rumsfeld v. Forum for Acad. & Institutional Rights, Inc., 
    547 U.S. 47
    , 52 n.2 (2006)). 20 The individual plaintiffs and the state plaintiffs
    allege different injuries. We evaluate each in turn and conclude that both the
    individual plaintiffs and the state plaintiffs have standing.
    A.
    The standing issues presented by the individual plaintiffs are not novel.
    The Supreme Court faced a similar situation when it decided NFIB in 2012.
    19 For an academic critique of this approach, see Aaron-Andrew P. Bruhl, One Good
    Plaintiff Is Not Enough, 67 Duke L. J. 481 (2017).
    We refer to this 2015 case as “DAPA”—after Deferred Action for Parents of
    20
    Americans, the policy at issue there—to prevent confusion with the present case of the same
    name.
    17
    Case: 19-10011          Document: 00515242592           Page: 18   Date Filed: 12/18/2019
    No. 19-10011
    At oral argument in that case, Justice Kagan asked Gregory Katsas,
    representing NFIB, whether he thought “a person who is subject to the
    [individual] mandate but not subject to the [shared responsibility payment]
    would have standing.” Transcript of Oral Argument at 68, Dep’t of Health and
    Human Servs. v. Florida, 
    567 U.S. 519
     (2012) (No. 11-398). Mr. Katsas replied,
    “Yes, I think that person would, because that person is injured by compliance
    with the mandate.” Id. Mr. Katsas explained, “the injury—when that person
    is subject to the mandate, that person is required to purchase health insurance.
    That’s a forced acquisition of an unwanted good. It’s a classic pocketbook
    injury.” Id. at 68–69.
    In 2012, this questioning made sense because neither the individual
    mandate nor the shared responsibility payment would be assessed for another
    two years. Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, Pub. L. No. 111-148,
    § 1501, 124 Stat. 119, 244 (2012) (requiring insurance coverage “for each
    month beginning after 2013” and applying the shared responsibility payment
    for any failure to purchase insurance “during any calendar year beginning
    after 2013”). It was thus certainly imminent that the private plaintiffs would
    be subject to the individual mandate, which applies to everyone, but not certain
    that they would be subject to the shared responsibility payment, which
    exempts certain people. 26 U.S.C. § 5000A(e) (prescribing that “[n]o penalty
    shall be imposed” on certain groups of people). 21 The distinction was important
    because a plaintiff “must demonstrate standing for each claim he seeks to
    press.” Davis v. Fed. Election Comm’n, 
    554 U.S. 724
    , 734 (2008) (quoting
    DaimlerChrysler Corp. v. Cuno, 
    547 U.S. 332
    , 352 (2006)). To bring a claim
    21   For the full list of exemptions, see supra note 4.
    18
    Case: 19-10011     Document: 00515242592     Page: 19   Date Filed: 12/18/2019
    No. 19-10011
    against the individual mandate, therefore, the plaintiffs needed to show injury
    from the individual mandate—not from the shared responsibility payment.
    Accordingly, the district court in NFIB ruled that the private plaintiffs
    were injured by the ACA “because of the financial expense [they would]
    definitively incur under the Act in 2014,” and the private plaintiffs’ need “to
    take investigatory steps and make financial arrangements now to ensure
    compliance then.” Florida ex rel. Bondi v. U.S. Dep’t of Health & Human
    Servs., 
    780 F. Supp. 2d 1256
    , 1271 (N.D. Fla. 2011), aff’d in part and rev’d in
    part, 
    648 F.3d 1235
     (11th Cir. 2011), aff’d in part and rev’d in part, 
    567 U.S. 519
     (2012). The record evidence in that case supported this conclusion. Mary
    Brown, one of the private plaintiffs in that case, for example, had declared that
    “to comply with the individual insurance mandate, and well in advance of 2014,
    I must now investigate whether and how to rearrange my personal finance
    affairs.” Appendix of Exhibits in Support of Plaintiffs’ Motion for Summary
    Judgment, Florida v. U.S. Dep’t of Health & Human Servs., No. 3:10-cv-91-
    RV/EMT (N.D. Fla. Nov. 10, 2010), ECF No. 80-6. At the Eleventh Circuit, all
    parties agreed that Mary Brown had standing. Florida ex rel. Atty. Gen. v.
    U.S. Dep’t of Health & Human Servs., 
    648 F.3d 1235
    , 1243 (11th Cir. 2011),
    aff’d in part and rev’d in part, 
    567 U.S. 519
     (2012) (“Defendants do not dispute
    that plaintiff Brown’s challenge to the minimum coverage provision is
    justiciable.”). Congress could have reasonably contemplated people like Mary
    Brown. As Mr. Katsas explained at oral argument in the Supreme Court,
    “Congress reasonably could think that at least some people will follow the law
    19
    Case: 19-10011        Document: 00515242592          Page: 20      Date Filed: 12/18/2019
    No. 19-10011
    precisely because it is the law.” Transcript of Oral Argument at 67, Dep’t of
    Health & Human Servs. v. Florida, 
    567 U.S. 519
     (2012) (No. 11-398).
    The district court in the instant case followed a similar approach with
    regard to the individual plaintiffs’ standing. 22 It concluded that because the
    individual plaintiffs are the object of the individual mandate, which requires
    them to purchase health insurance that they do not want, those plaintiffs have
    demonstrated two types of “injury in fact”: (1) the financial injury of buying
    that insurance; and (2) the “increased regulatory burden” that the individual
    mandate imposes.          In concluding that these injuries were caused by the
    individual mandate, the court made specific fact findings that both Nantz and
    Hurley purchased insurance solely because they are “obligated to comply with
    the . . . individual mandate.” The district court made these findings based on
    Nantz’s and Hurley’s declarations, which the intervenor-defendant states
    never challenged.          Because the undisputed evidence showed that the
    individual mandate caused these injuries, the district court reasoned that a
    favorable judgment would redress both injuries, allowing the individual
    plaintiffs to forgo purchasing health insurance and freeing them “from what
    they essentially allege to be arbitrary governance.”
    We agree with the district court. The Supreme Court has held that when
    a lawsuit challenges “the legality of government action or inaction, the nature
    and extent of facts that must be averred (at the summary judgment stage) or
    proved (at the trial stage) in order to establish standing depends considerably
    upon whether” the plaintiffs are themselves the “object[s] of the action (or
    forgone action) at issue.” Lujan, 504 U.S. at 561; see also Texas v. EEOC, 
    933 F.3d 433
    , 446 (5th Cir. 2019). “Whether someone is in fact an object of a
    22 No party initially questioned the plaintiffs’ standing in the district court. An amicus
    brief raised the issue, and the intervenor-defendant states addressed it at oral argument.
    20
    Case: 19-10011     Document: 00515242592     Page: 21   Date Filed: 12/18/2019
    No. 19-10011
    regulation is a flexible inquiry rooted in common sense.” EEOC, 933 F.3d at
    446 (quoting Contender Farms, L.L.P. v. U.S. Dep’t of Agric., 
    779 F.3d 258
    , 265
    (5th Cir. 2015)). If a plaintiff is indeed the object of a regulation, “there is
    ordinarily little question that the action or inaction has caused [the plaintiff]
    injury, and that a judgment preventing or requiring the action will redress it.”
    Lujan, 504 U.S. at 561–62.
    It is undisputed that Hurley and Nantz are the objects of the individual
    mandate and that they have purchased insurance in order to comply with that
    mandate. Record evidence supports these conclusions. In his declaration in
    the district court, Nantz stated, “I continue to maintain minimum essential
    health coverage because I am obligated.” Similarly, Hurley averred in his
    declaration that he is “obligated to comply with the ACA’s individual
    mandate.” They both explain in their declarations that they “value compliance
    with [their] legal obligations” and bought insurance because they “believe that
    following the law is the right thing to do.” Accordingly, the district court
    expressly found that Hurley and Nantz bought health insurance because they
    are obligated to, and we must defer to that factual finding. The evidentiary
    basis for this injury is even stronger than it was in NFIB. In the instant case,
    the individual mandate has already gone into effect, compelling Nantz and
    Hurley to purchase insurance now as opposed to two years in the future.
    The intervenor-defendant states fail to point to any evidence
    contradicting these declarations, and they did not challenge this evidence in
    the district court. In fact, some of the evidence these parties rely on actually
    supports the conclusion that Nantz and Hurley purchased insurance to comply
    with the individual mandate. The intervenor-defendant states acknowledge a
    2017 report from the Congressional Budget Office indicating that “a small
    number of people” would continue to buy insurance without a penalty “solely
    because” of a desire to comply with the law. Cong. Budget Office, Repealing
    21
    Case: 19-10011    Document: 00515242592      Page: 22    Date Filed: 12/18/2019
    No. 19-10011
    the Individual Health Insurance Mandate: An Updated Estimate 1 (Nov. 2017).
    This report is at least somewhat consistent with a 2008 Congressional Budget
    Office report, relied on by the state plaintiffs, that “[m]any individuals” subject
    to the mandate, but not the shared responsibility payment, will obtain
    coverage to comply with the mandate “because they believe in abiding by the
    nation’s laws.” Cong. Budget Office, Key Issues in Analyzing Major Health
    Insurance Proposals 53 (Dec. 2008). Whether this group of law-abiding citizens
    includes “many individuals” or “a small number of people,” Nantz and Hurley
    have undisputed evidence showing that they are a part of this group.
    In this context, being required to buy something that you otherwise
    would not want is clearly within the scope of what counts as a “legally
    cognizable injury.” “Economic injury” of this sort is “a quintessential injury
    upon which to base standing.” Tex. Democratic Party v. Benkiser, 
    459 F.3d 582
    ,
    586 (5th Cir. 2006); see also Vt. Agency of Nat. Res. v. United States, 
    529 U.S. 765
    , 772–77 (1998) (finding Article III injury from financial harm); Clinton v.
    New York, 
    524 U.S. 417
    , 432 (1998) (same); Sierra Club v. Morton, 
    405 U.S. 727
    , 733–34 (1972) (same); DAPA, 809 F.3d at 155 (same). In Benkiser, for
    example, we held that a political party would suffer an injury in fact because
    it would need to “expend additional funds” in order to comply with the
    challenged regulation. 459 F.3d at 586. In the instant case, the undisputed
    record evidence shows that the individual plaintiffs have spent “additional
    funds” to comply with the statutory provision that they challenge on
    constitutional grounds.
    This injury, moreover, is “actual,” not merely a speculative fear about
    future harm that may or may not happen. Lujan, 504 U.S. at 560. The record
    shows that, at the time of the complaint, Hurley and Nantz held health
    insurance, spending money every month that they did not want to spend.
    Nantz reports that his monthly premium is $266.56, and Hurley says his is
    22
    Case: 19-10011     Document: 00515242592    Page: 23   Date Filed: 12/18/2019
    No. 19-10011
    $1,081.70.      The injury is also “concrete” because it involves the real
    expenditure of those funds. See Barlow v. Collins, 
    397 U.S. 159
    , 162–63, 164
    (1970) (finding a concrete injury when a regulation caused economic harm from
    lost profit).
    Causation and redressability “flow naturally” from this concrete,
    particularized injury. Contender Farms, 779 F.3d at 266. The evidence in the
    record from Hurley’s and Nantz’s declarations show that they would not have
    purchased health insurance but for the individual mandate, and the
    intervenor-defendant states have no evidence to the contrary. A judgment
    declaring that the individual mandate exceeds Congress’ powers under the
    Constitution would allow Hurley and Nantz to forgo the purchase of health
    insurance that they do not want or need.          They could purchase health
    insurance below the “minimum essential coverage” threshold, or even decide
    not to purchase any health insurance at all.
    The intervenor-defendant states make several arguments against this
    straightforward injury, and all of them come up short. They first argue that
    there is no legally cognizable injury because there is no longer any penalty for
    failing to comply. In one sense, this argument misses the point. The threat of
    a penalty that Hurley and Nantz would face under the pre-2017 version of the
    statute is one potential form of injury, but it is far from the only one. We have
    held that the costs of compliance can constitute an injury just as much as the
    injuries from failing to comply. See, e.g., Benkiser, 459 F.3d at 586. Thus, in
    this instance, it is this injury—the time and money spent complying with the
    statute, not the penalty for failing to do so—that constitutes the plaintiffs’
    injury.
    But the intervenor-defendant states also argue that even the costs of
    compliance cannot count as an injury in fact if there is no consequence for
    failing to comply.    The individual mandate’s compulsion cannot inflict a
    23
    Case: 19-10011         Document: 00515242592            Page: 24      Date Filed: 12/18/2019
    No. 19-10011
    cognizable injury, they say, because it is not a compulsion at all. Because the
    enforcement mechanism has been removed, the U.S. House contends, it is now
    merely a suggestion, at most. We recently rejected this argument in Texas v.
    EEOC, when the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission tried to argue
    that Texas could not challenge its allegedly non-final administrative guidance
    because “the Guidance does not compel Texas to do anything.” 933 F.3d at 448.
    We concluded that it would “strain credulity to find that an agency action
    targeting current ‘unlawful’ discrimination among state employers—and
    declaring presumptively unlawful the very hiring practices employed by state
    agencies—does not require action immediately enough to constitute an injury-
    in-fact.” 23 Id. The individual mandate is no different. Just like the agency
    guidance, the individual mandate targets as “unlawful” the decision to go
    without health insurance.
    The dissenting opinion grounds its discussion of the issue in the Supreme
    Court’s decision in Poe v. Ullman, 
    367 U.S. 497
     (1961). There, the Supreme
    Court rejected a challenge to Connecticut’s criminal prohibition on
    contraception. The dissenting opinion states that if there was no standing in
    Ullman, then there cannot be standing here. The dissenting opinion seems to
    treat Ullman as part of the “pre-enforcement challenge” line of cases in which
    the Supreme Court analyzed claims of injury based on future enforcement to
    determine whether the future enforcement was sufficiently imminent.
    Ullman, however, is not cited in the seminal Supreme Court cases of that line.
    23  The dissenting opinion states that Texas had standing in Texas v. EEOC because of
    the “consequences for disobeying the [challenged] guidance—including the possibility that
    the Attorney General would enforce Title VII against it.” This depiction of Texas v. EEOC
    ignores that opinion’s emphasis on the fact that Texas was “the object of the Guidance.” 933
    F.3d at 446; see also id. (“If, in a suit ‘challenging the legality of government action,’ ‘the
    plaintiff is himself an object of the action . . . there is ordinarily little question that the action
    or inaction has caused him injury . . . .’” (quoting Lujan, 504 U.S. at 561–62)). As explained
    above, the individual plaintiffs in this case are the objects of the individual mandate.
    24
    Case: 19-10011       Document: 00515242592          Page: 25     Date Filed: 12/18/2019
    No. 19-10011
    See, e.g., Susan B. Anthony List v. Driehaus, 
    573 U.S. 149
    , 158–61 (2014);
    Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project, 
    561 U.S. 1
    , 15 (2010); Virginia v. Am.
    Booksellers Ass’n, Inc., 
    484 U.S. 383
    , 392–93 (1988); Babbitt v. United Farm
    Workers Nat’l Union, 
    442 U.S. 289
    , 298 (1979); see also Abbott Labs. v.
    Gardner, 
    387 U.S. 136
    , 154 (1967). More importantly, as we have explained,
    this case is not a pre-enforcement challenge because the plaintiffs have already
    incurred a financial injury. 24
    The plurality opinion in Ullman said there was insufficient adversity
    between the parties because there was overwhelming evidence—eighty years’
    worth of no enforcement of the statute—of “tacit agreement” between
    prosecutors and the public not to enforce the anti-contraceptive laws that the
    plaintiffs challenged. 367 U.S. at 507–08. As a result, the Court held that the
    lawsuit before it was “not such an adversary case as will be reviewed here.” Id.
    The fifth, controlling vote in that case—Justice Brennan, who concurred in the
    judgment—emphasized that this adverseness was lacking because of the case’s
    “skimpy record,” devoid of evidence that the “individuals [were] truly caught
    in an inescapable dilemma.” Id. at 509 (Brennan, J., concurring).
    By contrast, as documented above, the record in the instant case contains
    undisputed evidence that Nantz and Hurley feel compelled by the individual
    mandate to buy insurance and that they bought insurance solely for that
    24The dissenting opinion also relies on City of Austin v. Paxton, No. 18-50646, ___ F.3d
    ___, 
    2019 WL 6520769
     (5th Cir. Dec. 4, 2019). That reliance is confusing because City of
    Austin is an Ex parte Young case, not a standing case. For the Ex parte Young exception to
    Eleventh Amendment sovereign immunity to apply, the state official sued “must have ‘some
    connection with enforcement of the challenged act.’” Id. at *2 (alteration omitted) (quoting
    Ex parte Young, 
    209 U.S. 123
    , 157 (1908)). In City of Austin, the City’s claims against the
    Texas Attorney General failed because the City failed to show the requisite connection to
    enforcement under Ex parte Young. Of course, because this is a lawsuit against the federal
    government, neither the Eleventh Amendment nor Ex parte Young applies. Moreover, even
    if City of Austin had been a pre-enforcement challenge standing case, it would still be
    irrelevant because this case is not a pre-enforcement challenge.
    25
    Case: 19-10011     Document: 00515242592      Page: 26   Date Filed: 12/18/2019
    No. 19-10011
    reason. Especially in light of the fact that the individual mandate lacks a
    similar eighty-year history of nonenforcement, Nantz and Hurley have gone
    much further in demonstrating that they are caught in the “inescapable
    dilemma” that the Ullman plaintiffs were not.
    The intervenor-defendant states also argue that there is no causation
    between the individual mandate and Hurley and Nantz’s purchase of
    insurance because Hurley and Nantz exercised a voluntary “choice” to
    purchase insurance. Because Nantz and Hurley would face no consequence if
    they went without insurance, the intervenor-defendant states argue that their
    purchase of insurance is not fairly traceable to the federal defendants. Instead,
    they claim that Nantz and Hurley impermissibly attempt to “manufacture
    standing merely by inflicting harm on themselves.” Glass v. Paxton, 
    900 F.3d 233
    , 239 (5th Cir. 2018) (quoting Clapper v. Amnesty Int’l USA, 
    568 U.S. 398
    ,
    416 (2013)).
    This argument fails, however, because it conflates the merits of the case
    with the threshold inquiry of standing. The argument assumes that 26 U.S.C.
    § 5000A presents not a legal command to purchase insurance, but an option
    between purchasing insurance and doing nothing. Because this option exists,
    the argument goes, any injury arising from Hurley’s and Nantz’s decisions to
    buy insurance instead of doing nothing (the other putative option) is entirely
    self-inflicted. This, however, is a merits question that can be reached only after
    determining the threshold issue of whether plaintiffs have standing.
    Texas v. EEOC makes clear that courts cannot fuse the standing inquiry
    into the merits in this way. There, in addition to the injury described above
    from the Guidance’s rebuke of Texas’s employment practices as “unlawful,”
    Texas claimed it was injured by the EEOC’s curtailing of Texas’s procedural
    right to notice and comment before being subject to a regulation. EEOC, 933
    F.3d at 447. In rejecting the suggestion that Texas was not truly injured
    26
    Case: 19-10011    Document: 00515242592      Page: 27    Date Filed: 12/18/2019
    No. 19-10011
    because the EEOC had not in fact violated the Administrative Procedure Act’s
    notice-and-comment rules, we held that “[w]e assume, for purposes of the
    standing analysis, that Texas is correct on the merits of its claim that the
    Guidance was promulgated in violation of the APA.” Id. (citing Sierra Club v.
    EPA, 
    699 F.3d 530
    , 533 (D.C. Cir. 2012)); see also Bennett v. Spear, 
    520 U.S. 154
    , 177–78 (1997) (treating constitutional standing and finality as distinct
    inquiries).
    Indeed, allowing a consideration of the merits as part of a jurisdictional
    inquiry would conflict with the Supreme Court’s express decision in Steel Co v.
    Citizens for a Better Environment to not abandon “two centuries of
    jurisprudence affirming the necessity of determining jurisdiction before
    proceeding to the merits.” 
    523 U.S. 83
    , 98 (1998). That case presented both
    the question of Article III standing and the merits question of whether the
    relevant statute authorized lawsuits for purely past violations. Id. at 86. The
    Court rejected any “attempt to convert the merits issue . . . into a jurisdictional
    one.” Id. at 93. The Court further rejected the “doctrine of hypothetical
    jurisdiction,” under which certain courts of appeals had “proceed[ed]
    immediately to the merits question, despite jurisdictional objections” in certain
    circumstances. Id. at 93–94. As the district court correctly noted, that is
    exactly what the appellants ask this court to do. They urge us to “skip ahead
    to the merits to determine § 5000A(a) is non-binding and therefore
    constitutional and then revert to the standing analysis to use its merits
    determination to conclude there was no standing to reach the merits in the
    first place.”
    Moreover, even if we were to consider the merits as part of our
    jurisdictional inquiry, it would not make a difference in this case. Because we
    conclude in Part IV of this opinion that the individual mandate is best read as
    a command to purchase insurance (and an unconstitutional one at that), rather
    27
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    No. 19-10011
    than as an option between buying insurance or doing nothing, the individual
    plaintiffs would have standing even if we considered the merits. 25
    B.
    We next consider whether the eighteen state plaintiffs have standing,
    and we conclude that they do. 26 The state plaintiffs allege that the ACA causes
    them both a fiscal injury as employers and a sovereign injury “because it
    prevents them from applying their own laws and policies governing their own
    healthcare markets.” State Plaintiffs’ Br. at 25. In DAPA, we determined that
    the state of Texas was entitled to special solicitude because it was “exercising
    a procedural right created by Congress and protecting a ‘quasi-sovereign’
    interest.” DAPA, 809 F.3d at 162 (quoting Massachusetts v. EPA, 
    549 U.S. 497
    ,
    520 (2007)); see also id. at 154–55. Because the state plaintiffs in this case
    have suffered fiscal injuries as employers, we need not address special
    solicitude or the alleged sovereign injuries.
    Employers, including the state plaintiffs, are required by the ACA to
    issue forms verifying which employees are covered by minimum essential
    coverage and therefore do not need to pay the shared responsibility payment.
    See 26 U.S.C. § 6055(a) (“Every person who provides minimum essential
    coverage to an individual during a calendar year shall, at such time as the
    Secretary may prescribe, make a return described in subsection (b).”); 26
    U.S.C. § 6056(a) (“Every applicable large employer [that meets certain
    25 Even if the individual plaintiffs did not have standing, this case could still proceed
    because the state plaintiffs have standing. DAPA, 809 F.3d at 151 (holding that only one
    plaintiff needs standing for the court to exercise jurisdiction). “This circuit follows the rule
    that alternative holdings are binding precedent and not obiter dictum.” Id. at 178 n.158
    (quoting United States v. Potts, 
    644 F.3d 233
    , 237 n.3 (5th Cir. 2011)).
    26Likewise, even if the state plaintiffs did not have standing, this case could still
    proceed because the individual plaintiffs have standing. DAPA, 809 F.3d at 151 (holding that
    only one plaintiff needs standing for the court to exercise jurisdiction).
    28
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    statutory requirements] shall . . . make a return described in subsection (b).”).
    These provisions have led to Form 1095-B and 1095-C statements that
    employees receive from their employers around tax time, which include a series
    of check boxes indicating the months that employees had health coverage that
    complies with the ACA. State Plaintiffs’ Br. at 23. These legally required
    reporting    practices    exist on top of state employers’ own in-house
    administrative systems for managing and tracking their employees’ health
    insurance coverage.
    The record is replete with evidence that the individual mandate itself
    has increased the cost of printing and processing these forms and of updating
    the state employers’ in-house management systems. For example, Thomas
    Steckel, the director of the Division of Employee Benefits within the South
    Dakota Bureau of Human Resources, submitted a declaration documenting the
    administrative costs that the individual mandate has imposed by way of these
    reporting requirements. He said, “[t]he individual mandate caused significant
    administrative burdens and expenses to program our IT system to track and
    report ACA eligible employees and complete mandatory IRS Form 1095 annual
    reports.” Steckel noted specifically that “the individual mandate caused . . .
    $100,000.00 [in] ongoing costs” for Form 1095-C administration alone. The
    dissenting opinion discards this evidence as conclusory. But as even counsel
    for the intervenor-defendant states admitted at oral argument, nobody
    challenged this evidence as conclusory in the district court or in the appellate
    court. 27 Oral Argument at 5:12.
    South Dakota is far from the only state that has been harmed from the
    financial cost of the reporting requirements that the individual mandate
    27The reason why is obvious: the evidence is not conclusory. This is bread-and-butter
    summary judgment practice, not, as the dissenting opinion contends, any “new summary-
    judgment rule.” Of course, a properly-included affidavit must be based on personal
    29
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    No. 19-10011
    aggravates. Judith Muck, the Executive Director of the Missouri Consolidated
    Health Care Plan, reported that Missouri’s costs for preparing 1095-B forms,
    along with 1094-B forms, are projected to be $47,300 in fiscal year 2019 and
    $49,200 in fiscal year 2020. Similarly, Teresa MacCartney, the Chief Financial
    Officer of the State of Georgia and the Director of the Georgia Governor’s Office
    of Planning and Budget, reported that Georgia’s overall cost of compliance with
    the ACA’s reporting requirements “is an estimated net $3.6 million to date.”
    MacCartney also reported that after the ACA’s implementation, Georgia’s
    Department of Community Health “experienced increased enrollment of
    individuals already eligible for Medicaid benefits under pre-ACA eligibility
    standards.” This enrollment increase required the Department to enhance its
    management systems, which was “very costly.” Blaise Duran, who is the
    Manager for Underwriting, Data Analysis and Reporting for the Employees
    Retirement System of Texas, further documented Texas’ costs of the reporting
    requirements. He declared that the Texas Employees Group Benefits Program
    “has made administrative process changes in connection with its ACA
    knowledge, and conclusory facts and statements on information and belief cannot be utilized.
    See Charles Alan Wright and Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure, § 2738 (4th
    ed. 2019). The Steckel affidavit easily satisfies this standard: it is a detailed 8-page
    declaration. Steckel attested, under penalty of perjury, that he is “responsible for developing
    and implementing the State’s health plan for state employees” and that he is “particularly
    familiar with changes in costs, plans, and policies related to the enactment of the ACA
    because of my role as the Director of the Division [of Employee Benefits].” He estimates the
    financial costs the individual mandate has caused in nine different categories, including
    ongoing costs of $10,400 for review of denied appeals, ongoing costs of $100,000 for Form
    1095-C administration, and a one-time cost of $3,302,942 as a Transitional Reinsurance
    Program fee. For other costs, such as the pre-existing conditions prohibition and the
    expanded eligibility for adult dependent children to age 26, he conceded that he was “unable
    to accurately estimate the ongoing costs of this mandate.” A determination of standing is
    supported by the administration of Form 1095-C, the CBO’s prediction that some individuals
    will continue to purchase insurance in the absence of a shared responsibility payment, the
    fact that two such individuals are before this court, and the Supreme Court’s observation
    that “third parties will likely react in predictable ways.” Department of Commerce, 139 S. Ct.
    at 2566.
    30
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    No. 19-10011
    compliance, such as those related to the provision of Form 1095-Bs to plan
    participants and the Internal Revenue Service.” 28
    The intervenor-defendant states and the U.S. House have not challenged
    the state plaintiffs’ evidence or presented any evidence to the contrary.
    Instead, they argue that the reporting requirements set forth in Sections
    6055(a) and 6056(a) “are separate from the mandate and serve independent
    purposes.” U.S. House Reply Br. at 19. Therefore, they claim, “any resulting
    injury is thus neither traceable to Section 5000A nor redressable by its
    invalidation.” U.S. House Reply Br. at 19. But this misreads the undisputed
    evidence in the record. The individual mandate commands individuals to get
    insurance. Every time an individual gets that insurance through a state
    employer, the state employer must send the individual a form certifying that
    he or she is covered and otherwise process that information through in-house
    management systems. 29 Thus, the reporting requirements in Sections 6055(a)
    and 6056(a) flow from the individual mandate set forth in Section 5000A(a).
    28 This list is not exhaustive. For instance, Arlene Larson, Manager of Federal Health
    Programs and Policy for Wisconsin Employee Trust Funds, declared that the state expended
    funds by “hir[ing] a vendor to issue 343 Form 1095-Cs” in 2017. And Mike Michael, Director
    of the Kansas State Employee Health Plan, averred that reporting for Form 1094 and 1095
    cost the state $43,138 in 2017 and $38,048 in 2018. No record evidence indicates that these
    reporting requirements have been eliminated. Moreover, the “standing inquiry remains
    focused on whether the party invoking jurisdiction had the requisite stake in the outcome
    when the suit was filed.” Davis v. Fed. Election Comm’n, 
    554 U.S. 724
    , 734 (2008).
    29  Relying on this injury, therefore, does not run afoul of Nat’l Fed. of the Blind of
    Texas v. Abbott, 
    647 F.3d 202
     (5th Cir. 2011). That case prevents plaintiffs from claiming
    injury based on provisions whose enforcement would be enjoined only if they are inseverable
    from an unconstitutional provision that does not harm the plaintiff. Id. at 210–11. The state
    plaintiffs’ injuries stem from the increased administrative costs created by the individual
    mandate itself, not from other provisions. To be sure, those costs are created in part by the
    individual mandate’s practical interaction with other ACA provisions, like the reporting
    requirements. But this is no different from the injuries in DAPA, where the challenged action
    interacted with Texas’s driver’s license regulations. It is also no different from Department
    of Commerce, where the challenged census question interacted with constitutional rules tying
    political representation to a state’s population.
    31
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    No. 19-10011
    These costs to the state plaintiffs are well-established. 30 Moreover, the
    continuing nature of these fiscal injuries is consistent with Fifth Circuit and
    Supreme Court precedent.
    In DAPA, we held that the state of Texas had standing to challenge the
    federal government’s DAPA program because it stood to “have a major effect
    on the states’ fisc.” Id. at 152. This was because, if DAPA were permitted to
    go into effect, it would have “enable[d] at least 500,000 illegal aliens in Texas”
    to satisfy Texas’s requirements that the Department of Public Safety “‘shall
    issue’ a license to a qualified applicant,” including noncitizens who present
    “documentation issued by the appropriate United States agency that
    authorizes the applicant to be in the United States.” Id. at 155 (quoting Tex.
    Transp. Code §§ 521.142(a), 521.181). Evidence in the record showed that
    Texas, which subsidizes its licenses, would “lose a minimum of $130.89 on each
    one it issued to a DAPA beneficiary.”               Id.    Even a “modest estimate” of
    30  The dissenting opinion, citing no authority, contends that the state plaintiffs need
    evidence that at least one specific “employee enrolled in one of state plaintiffs’ health
    insurance programs solely because of the unenforceable coverage requirement.” We have
    already explained why the uncontested affidavits suffice. We note, moreover, that the DAPA
    court found that Texas had standing because “it would incur significant costs in issuing
    driver’s licenses to DAPA beneficiaries”—without requiring that Texas first show that it had
    issued a specific license to a specific illegal alien because of DAPA. Finally, the dissenting
    opinion’s rule would create a split with our sister circuits. See Massachusetts v. United States
    Dep’t of Health & Human Servs., 
    923 F.3d 209
    , 225 (1st Cir. 2019) (“[Massachusetts] need
    not point to a specific person who will be harmed in order to establish standing in situations
    like this.”); California v. Azar, 
    911 F.3d 558
    , 572 (9th Cir. 2018), cert. denied sub nom. Little
    Sisters of the Poor Jeanne Jugan Residence v. California, 
    139 S. Ct. 2716
     (2019) (“Appellants
    fault the states for failing to identify a specific woman likely to lose coverage. Such
    identification is not necessary to establish standing.”); Pennsylvania v. President United
    States, 
    930 F.3d 543
    , 564 (3d Cir. 2019), as amended (July 18, 2019) (“The Government faults
    the States for failing to identify a specific woman who will be affected by the Final Rules, but
    the States need not define injury with such a demanding level of particularity to establish
    standing.”).
    32
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    No. 19-10011
    predictable third-party behavior would rack up costs of “several million
    dollars.” Id.
    The Supreme Court recently applied a similar analysis in Department of
    Commerce v. New York, 
    139 S. Ct. 2551
     (2019). In that case, a group of state
    and local governments sued to prevent the federal government from including
    a question about citizenship status on the 2020 census. Id. at 2563. The
    Supreme Court held that these plaintiffs had standing because they met their
    burden “of showing that third parties will likely react in predictable ways to
    the citizenship question.” Id. at 2566. The census question would likely lead
    to “noncitizen households responding . . . at lower rates than other groups,
    which in turn would cause them to be undercounted.” Id. at 2565. This
    undercounting of third parties would injure the state and local governments
    by “diminishment of political representation, loss of federal funds, degradation
    of census data, and diversion of resources.” Id.
    In both DAPA and Department of Commerce, the state plaintiffs
    demonstrated injury by showing that the challenged law would cause third
    parties to behave in predictable ways, which would inflict a financial injury on
    the states. The instant case is no different. The individual mandate commands
    people to ensure that they have minimum health insurance coverage. That
    predictably causes more people to buy insurance, which increases the
    administrative costs of the states to report, manage, and track the insurance
    coverage of their employees and Medicaid recipients. 31
    V.
    Having concluded that both groups of plaintiffs have standing to bring
    this lawsuit, we must next determine whether the individual mandate is a
    31 The dissenting opinion contends that our opinion is inconsistent because we rely on
    Department of Commerce, in which the Court found that some individuals will predictably
    violate the law, in explaining why some individuals will predictably “follow the law regardless
    33
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    No. 19-10011
    constitutional exercise of congressional power. We conclude that it is not. We
    first discuss the Supreme Court’s holding in NFIB, and then we explain why,
    under that holding, the individual mandate is no longer constitutional.
    A.
    The NFIB opinion was extremely fractured. In that case, Chief Justice
    Roberts wrote an opinion addressing several issues. Parts of that opinion
    garnered a majority of votes and served as the opinion of the Court. 32 In
    relevant part, Part III-A of the Chief Justice’s opinion, joined by no other
    Justice, observed that “[t]he most straightforward reading of the [individual]
    mandate is that it commands individuals to purchase insurance,” and that,
    using that reading of the statute, the individual mandate is not a valid exercise
    of Congress’ power under the Interstate Commerce Clause. NFIB, 567 U.S. at
    562, 546–61 (Roberts, C.J.). The Constitution, he explained, “gave Congress
    the power to regulate commerce, not to compel it.” Id. at 555 (Roberts, C.J.).
    For similar reasons, the Chief Justice concluded that this command to
    of the incentives.” In a large group, there will predictably be some individuals in each
    category. Even the dissenting opinion accepts the Congressional Budget Office’s projection
    that some people will buy insurance solely because of a desire to comply with the law. See
    Cong. Budget Office, Repealing the Individual Health Insurance Mandate: An Updated
    Estimate 1 (Nov. 2017).
    32 As a general overview, Chief Justice Roberts’s opinion functioned in the following
    way. In Part III-A, Chief Justice Roberts said that the individual mandate was most
    naturally read as a command to buy insurance, which could not be sustained under either
    the Interstate Commerce Clause or the Necessary and Proper Clause. Though no Justice
    joined this part of the opinion, the four dissenting Justices—Justices Scalia, Kennedy,
    Thomas, and Alito—agreed with Part III-A in a separate opinion. In Part III-B, the Chief
    Justice wrote that even though the most natural reading of the individual mandate was
    unconstitutional, the Court still needed to determine whether it was “fairly possible” to read
    the provision in a way that saved it from being unconstitutional. In Part III-C, the Chief
    Justice—joined by Justices Ginsburg, Breyer, Kagan, and Sotomayor—concluded that the
    provision could be construed as constitutional by reading the individual mandate, in
    conjunction with the shared responsibility payment, as a legitimate exercise of Congress’
    taxing power. This last part of the opinion supported the Court’s ultimate judgment: that
    the individual mandate was constitutional as saved.
    34
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    No. 19-10011
    purchase insurance could not be sustained under the Constitution’s Necessary
    and Proper Clause. Id. The individual mandate was not “proper” because it
    expanded federal power, “vest[ing] Congress with the extraordinary ability to
    create the necessary predicate to the exercise of” its Interstate Commerce
    Clause powers. Id. at 560.
    Though no other Justices joined this part of the Chief Justice’s opinion,
    the “joint dissent”—joined by Justices Scalia, Kennedy, Thomas, and Alito—
    reached the same conclusions on the Interstate Commerce Clause and
    Necessary and Proper Clause questions. Id. at 650–60 (joint dissent). A
    majority of the court, therefore, concluded that the individual mandate is not
    constitutional under either the Interstate Commerce Clause or the Necessary
    and Proper Clause.
    This limited reading of the Interstate Commerce Clause—and, by
    extension, of the Necessary and Proper Clause—was necessary to preserving
    “the country [that] the Framers of our Constitution envisioned.” Id. at 554
    (Roberts, C.J.). As Chief Justice Roberts observed, if the individual mandate
    were a proper use of the power to regulate interstate commerce, that power
    would “justify a mandatory purchase to solve almost any problem.” Id. at 553
    (Roberts, C.J.). If Congress can compel the purchase of health insurance today,
    it can, for example, micromanage Americans’ day-to-day nutrition choices
    tomorrow. Id. (Roberts, C.J.); see also id. at 558 (Roberts, C.J.) (reasoning that,
    under an expansive view of the Commerce Clause, nothing would stop the
    federal government from compelling the purchase of broccoli).
    An expansive reading of the Interstate Commerce Clause would be
    foreign to the Framers, who saw the clause as “an addition which few oppose[d]
    and from which no apprehensions [were] entertained.” Id. at 554 (Roberts,
    C.J.) (quoting The Federalist No. 45, at 293 (J. Madison) (C. Rossiter ed.,
    1961)).   Elevating Congress’ power to “regulate commerce . . . among the
    35
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    several states,” U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 3, to a power to create commerce
    among the several states would make a Leviathan of the federal government,
    “everywhere extending the sphere of its activity and drawing all power into its
    impetuous vortex.”     NFIB, 567 U.S. at 554 (Roberts, C.J.) (quoting The
    Federalist No. 48, at 309 (J. Madison) (C. Rossiter ed., 1961)). Justice Scalia,
    writing for the joint dissenters, similarly noted that the more expansive
    reading of the Interstate Commerce Clause would render that provision a “font
    of unlimited power,” id. at 653 (joint dissent), or, in the words of Alexander
    Hamilton, a “hideous monster whose devouring jaws . . . spare neither sex nor
    age, nor high nor low, nor sacred nor profane,” id. (quoting The Federalist No.
    33, at 202 (C. Rossiter ed., 1961)).
    In Part III-B, again joined by no other Justice, Chief Justice Roberts
    concluded that because the individual mandate found no constitutional footing
    in the Interstate Commerce or Necessary and Proper Clauses, the Supreme
    Court was obligated to consider the federal government’s argument that, as an
    exercise in constitutional avoidance, the mandate could be read not as a
    command but as an option to purchase insurance or pay a tax. This “option”
    interpretation   of   the   statute    could   save   the   statute   from   being
    unconstitutional, as it would be justified under Congress’ taxing power. Id. at
    561–63 (Roberts, C.J.); see also id. at 562 (Roberts, C.J.) (“No court ought,
    unless the terms of an act rendered it unavoidable, to give a construction to it
    which should involve a violation, however unintentional, of the constitution.”)
    (quoting Parsons v. Bedford, 28 U.S. (3 Pet.) 433, 448–49 (1830)); see also id.
    at 563 (Roberts, C.J.) (“The question is not whether that is the most natural
    interpretation of the mandate, but only whether it is a ‘fairly possible’ one.”)
    (quoting Crowell v. Benson, 
    285 U.S. 22
    , 62 (1932)).
    In Part III-C, the Chief Justice—writing for a majority of the Court,
    joined by Justices Ginsburg, Breyer, Sotomayor, and Kagan—undertook that
    36
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    inquiry of determining whether it was “fairly possible” to read the individual
    mandate as an option and thereby save its constitutionality. See id. at 563–74
    (majority opinion).        Chief Justice Roberts reasoned that the individual
    mandate could be read in conjunction with the shared responsibility payment
    in order to save the individual mandate from unconstitutionality.                         Read
    together with the shared responsibility payment, the entire statutory provision
    could be read as a legitimate exercise of Congress’ taxing power for four
    reasons.
    First and most fundamentally, the shared-responsibility payment
    “yield[ed] the essential feature of any tax: It produce[d] at least some revenue
    for the Government.” Id. at 564. Second, the shared-responsibility payment
    was “paid into the Treasury by taxpayers when they file their tax returns.” Id.
    at 563 (alternations and internal quotation marks omitted). Third, the amount
    owed under the ACA was “determined by such familiar factors as taxable
    income, number of dependents, and joint filing status.” Id. Fourth and finally,
    “[t]he requirement to pay [was] found in the Internal Revenue Code and
    enforced by the IRS, which . . . collect[ed] it in the same manner as taxes.” Id.
    at 563–64 (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Because of these four attributes of the shared responsibility payment,
    the Court reasoned that “[t]he Federal Government does have the power to
    impose a tax on those without health insurance.” Id. at 575. The Court
    concluded that “[s]ection 5000A is therefore constitutional, because it can
    reasonably be read as a tax.” 33 Id. We agree with the dissenting opinion that
    “this case begins and ought to end” with NFIB.
    33  Seven Justices—Chief Justice Roberts and Justices Scalia, Kennedy, Thomas,
    Breyer, Alito, and Kagan—agreed that the Act’s Medicaid-expansion provisions
    unconstitutionally coerced states into compliance. NFIB, 567 U.S. at 575–85 (plurality
    opinion); id. at 671–89 (joint dissent). But, in light of a severability clause, Part IV–B of the
    Chief Justice’s opinion concluded that the unconstitutional portion of the Medicaid provisions
    37
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    No. 19-10011
    B.
    Now that the shared responsibility payment amount is set at zero, 34 the
    provision’s saving construction is no longer available.                  The four central
    attributes that once saved the statute because it could be read as a tax no
    longer exist. Most fundamentally, the provision no longer yields the “essential
    feature of any tax” because it does not produce “at least some revenue for the
    Government.” Id. at 564. Because the provision no longer produces revenue,
    it necessarily lacks the three other characteristics that once rendered the
    provision a tax. The shared-responsibility payment is no longer “paid into the
    Treasury by taxpayer[s] when they file their tax returns” because the payment
    is no longer paid by anyone. Id. at 563 (alteration in original and internal
    quotation marks omitted). The payment amount is no longer “determined by
    such familiar factors as taxable income, number of dependents, and joint filing
    status.” Id. The amount is zero for everyone, without regard to any of these
    factors. The IRS no longer collects the payment “in the same manner as taxes”
    because the IRS cannot collect it at all. Id. at 563–64 (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    Because these four critical attributes are now missing from the shared
    responsibility payment, it is, in the words of the state plaintiffs, “no longer
    ‘fairly possible’ to save the mandate’s constitutionality under Congress’ taxing
    could be severed. Id. at 585–88 (plurality opinion). Meanwhile, Justice Ginsburg, joined by
    Justice Sotomayor, disagreed that the Act’s mandatory Medicaid expansion was
    unconstitutional. Id. at 633 (Ginsburg, J., concurring in the judgment in part, and dissenting
    in part). Those two Justices concurred in the judgment with respect to the Chief Justice’s
    conclusion that the unconstitutional provisions could be severed from the remainder of the
    Act. Id. at 645–46 (Ginsburg, J., concurring in the judgment in part, and dissenting in part).
    The four dissenting Justices concluded that the Act’s Medicaid-expansion provisions were
    unconstitutionally coercive and rejected the relief of allowing states to opt into Medicaid
    expansion. Id. at 671–90 (joint dissent).
    34   26 U.S.C. §§ 5000A(c)(2)(B)(iii), (c)(3)(A).
    38
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    power.” State Plaintiffs’ Br. at 32. The proper application of NFIB to the new
    version of the statute is to interpret it according to what Chief Justice
    Roberts—and four other Justices of the Court—said was the “most
    straightforward” reading of that provision: a command to purchase insurance.
    Id. at 562 (Roberts, C.J.). As the district court properly observed, “the only
    reading available is the most natural one.” Under that reading, the individual
    mandate is unconstitutional because, under NFIB, it finds no constitutional
    footing in either the Interstate Commerce Clause or the Necessary and Proper
    Clause. Id. at 546–61 (Roberts, C.J.); id. at 650–60 (joint dissent).
    The intervenor-defendant states have several arguments against this
    conclusion, all of which fail. They first argue that the saving construction of
    the individual mandate, interpreting the provision as an option to buy
    insurance or pay a tax, is still “fairly possible.” As the individual plaintiffs
    point out, the Court interpreted the individual mandate as an option only
    because doing so would save it from being unconstitutional. Accordingly, the
    intervenor-defendant states must show that the “option” would still be a
    constitutional exercise of Congress’ taxing power. To make that showing, the
    intervenor-defendant states reject the plaintiffs’ attempt to read a “some
    revenue” requirement into the Constitution’s Taxing and Spending Clause,
    arguing instead for a potential-to-produce-revenue requirement.                The
    individual mandate, they say, is still set out in the Internal Revenue Code. It
    still provides a “statutory structure through which” Congress could eventually
    tax people for failing to buy insurance. It still includes references to taxable
    income, number of dependents, and joint filing status.              26 U.S.C. §§
    5000A(b)(3), (c)(2), (c)(4). Further, it still does not apply to individuals who pay
    no federal income taxes. 26 U.S.C. § 5000A(e)(2).
    The intervenor-defendant states have little support for this reading of
    the Taxing and Spending Clause. For starters, NFIB could not be clearer that
    39
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    No. 19-10011
    the “produc[tion]” of “at least some revenue for the Government”—not the
    potential to produce that revenue—is “the essential feature of any tax.” 567
    U.S. at 564 (majority opinion) (emphasis added). As the district court observed,
    when determining whether a statute is a tax, the actual production of revenue
    is “not indicative, not common—[but] essential.”
    The intervenor-defendant states also find no support in United States v.
    Ardoin, 
    19 F.3d 177
    , 179–80 (5th Cir. 1994). In that unusual case, Congress
    had imposed a tax on machine guns, but subsequently outlawed machine guns
    altogether, which prompted the relevant agency to stop collecting the tax. Id.
    at 179–80. The defendant was convicted not only for possessing a machine gun
    but also for failing to pay the tax, which remained on the books. Id. at 178.
    The court upheld the conviction on the basis that the tax law at issue could “be
    upheld on the preserved, but unused, power to tax or on the power to regulate
    interstate commerce.” Id. at 180. But the taxing power was “preserved” in
    Ardoin because it was non-revenue-producing only in practice whereas the
    “tax” here is actually $0.00 as written on the books. 35 See Fed. Defendants’ Br.
    at 32. Expanding Ardoin to apply here would, as the federal defendants point
    out, puzzlingly allow Congress to “prohibit conduct that exceeds its commerce
    power through a two-step process of first taxing it and then eliminating the tax
    while retaining the prohibition.” Fed. Defendants’ Br. at 32.
    The intervenor-defendant states argue further that the individual
    mandate does not even need constitutional justification because it is merely a
    suggestion, not binding legislative action.             The individual mandate, they
    contend, is no different from the Flag Code, which, though entered into the
    35 This distinction also disposes of the intervenor-defendant states’ concern about
    “cast[ing] constitutional doubt on taxes with delayed start dates or that Congress has
    temporarily suspended for periods of time.” Intervenor-Defendant States’ Br. at 43. In none
    of the examples the intervenor-defendant states cite did the statute purport to levy a “tax” of
    $0.00.
    40
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    pages of the U.S. Code, “was not intended to proscribe conduct.” Dimmitt v.
    City of Clearwater, 
    985 F.2d 1565
    , 1573 (11th Cir. 1993) (analyzing 36 U.S.C.
    §§ 174–76). This argument is just a repackaged version of their argument that
    the individual mandate can still be read as an option.         But, as the state
    plaintiffs, the individual plaintiffs, and the federal defendants point out, the
    Supreme Court has already held that the “most straightforward” reading of
    the individual mandate—which emphatically demands that individuals “shall”
    buy insurance, 26 U.S.C. § 5000A(a)—is as a command to purchase health
    insurance. The Court then concluded that that command lacked constitutional
    justification. The zeroing out of the shared responsibility payment does not
    render the provision any less of a command. Quite the opposite: Chief Justice
    Roberts concluded that the greater-than-zero shared responsibility payment
    actually converted the individual mandate into an option. NFIB, 567 U.S. at
    563–64 (majority opinion). Now that the shared responsibility payment has
    been zeroed out, the only logical conclusion under NFIB is to read the
    individual mandate as a command, quite unlike the Flag Code.             It is an
    individual mandate, not an individual suggestion.
    Moreover, it is not true that when the Court adopts a limiting
    construction to avoid constitutional questions, that construction controls as to
    all applications of the statute, regardless of whether the original constitutional
    implications are present. The case on which the U.S. House relies involved
    different applications of an identical statute to different facts.       Clark v.
    Martinez, 
    543 U.S. 371
    , 380 (2005) (rejecting the argument that “the
    constitutional concerns that influenced” a previous interpretation of a
    provision of the Immigration and Nationality Act were “not present for” the
    aliens at issue in that case). This case is readily distinguishable because the
    four characteristics that made the previous interpretation possible—the
    production of revenue and other tax-like features—have now been legislatively
    41
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    removed.     The limiting construction is no longer available as a matter of
    statutory interpretation.       The interpretation must accordingly change to
    comport with what five Justices of the Supreme Court have said is the “most
    straightforward reading” of that interpretation. 36
    The dissenting opinion justifies its continued reliance on the saving
    construction—even though it is no longer applicable—by citing Kimble v.
    Marvel Entm’t, LLC, 
    135 S. Ct. 2401
     (2015). This approach fares no better.
    The dissenting opinion quotes Kimble to say that “in whatever way reasoned,”
    the Court’s interpretation “effectively become[s] part of the statutory scheme,
    subject . . . to congressional change.” Id. at 2409. The dissenting opinion
    correctly acknowledges that the individual mandate was never changed. But
    what did change was the provision that actually mattered: the shared
    responsibility payment. When it was set above zero, it could be saved as a tax,
    even though five justices agreed this was an unnatural reading. It would be
    puzzling if Congress could change a statute at will, entirely insulated from
    constitutional infirmity, just because the Court had previously used
    constitutional avoidance to save a previous version of the statute.
    The intervenor-defendant states argue furthermore that the individual
    mandate can now be constitutional under the Interstate Commerce Clause
    because it does not compel anyone into commerce. This is again a repackaged
    version of their argument that the individual mandate is an option even
    36Contrary to the dissenting opinion’s suggestion, a saving construction is no longer
    available. The canon of constitutional avoidance applies only “when statutory language is
    susceptible of multiple interpretations.” Jennings v. Rodriguez, 
    138 S. Ct. 830
    , 836 (2018).
    In NFIB, § 5000A was amenable to two possible interpretations. It was either “a command
    to buy insurance” or “a tax.” NFIB, 567 U.S. at 574 (Roberts, C.J.). After Congress zeroed
    out the shared responsibility payment, one of those possible interpretations fell away. What
    was then the “most straightforward reading” is now the only available reading: it is a
    “command to buy insurance” and “the Commerce Clause does not authorize such a command.”
    Id.
    42
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    without a revenue-generating shared responsibility payment, an argument
    that, as the state plaintiffs point out, the Supreme Court has already rejected.
    This argument, as the district court observed, is also logically inconsistent. If
    the individual mandate no longer truly compels anything, then it can hardly
    be said to be a “regulat[ion]” of interstate commerce. In the words of the
    district court, the intervenor-defendant states “hope to have their cake and eat
    it too.” 37
    Finally, we would be remiss if we did not engage with the dissenting
    opinion’s contention that § 5000A is not an exercise of legislative power. This
    would likely come as a shock to the legislature that drafted it, the president
    who signed it, and the voters who celebrated or lamented it. It is not surprising
    that the dissenting opinion can cite no case in which a federal court deems a
    duly enacted statute not an exercise of legislative power, much less a statute
    that clearly commands that an individual “shall” do something. 38                       The
    dissenting opinion is inconsistent on this point: it argues that the provision’s
    status as an exercise of legislative power fluctuates according to the amount of
    the shared responsibility payment while simultaneously contending that “if
    the text of the coverage requirement has not changed, its meaning could not
    37Any argument that the individual mandate can now be sustained under the
    Necessary and Proper Clause fails for the same reasons. The individual mandate now must
    be read as a command, and five Justices in NFIB already rejected the argument that such a
    command could be sustained under the Necessary and Proper Clause. NFIB, 567 U.S. at 561
    (Roberts, C.J.); id. at 654–55 (joint dissent).
    38 The dissenting opinion’s theory of the “law that does nothing” results in some
    bizarre metaphysical conclusions. The ACA was signed into law in 2010. No one questions
    that when it was signed, § 5000A was an exercise of legislative power. Yet today, the
    dissenting opinion asserts, § 5000A is not an exercise of legislative power. So did Congress
    exercise legislative power in 2010, as seen from 2015? As seen from 2018? Does § 5000A
    ontologically re-emerge should a future Congress restore the shared responsibility payment?
    Perhaps, like Schrödinger’s cat, § 5000A exists in both states simultaneously. The dissenting
    opinion does not say. Our approach requires no such quantum musings.
    43
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    have changed either.” Our decision breaks no new ground. We simply observe
    that § 5000A was originally cognizable as either a command or a tax. Today,
    it is only cognizable as a command. It has always been an exercise of legislative
    power.
    ***
    In NFIB, the individual mandate—most naturally read as a command to
    purchase insurance—was saved from unconstitutionality because it could be
    read together with the shared responsibility payment as an option to purchase
    insurance or pay a tax.      It could be read this way because the shared
    responsibility payment produced revenue. It no longer does so. Therefore, the
    most straightforward reading applies: the mandate is a command. Using that
    meaning, the individual mandate is unconstitutional.
    VI.
    Having concluded that the individual mandate is unconstitutional, we
    must next determine whether, or how much of, the rest of the ACA is severable
    from that constitutional defect. On this question, we remand to the district
    court to undertake two tasks: to explain with more precision what provisions
    of the post-2017 ACA are indeed inseverable from the individual mandate; and
    to consider the federal defendants’ newly-suggested relief of enjoining the
    enforcement only of those provisions that injure the plaintiffs or declaring the
    Act unconstitutional only as to the plaintiff states and the two individual
    plaintiffs. We address each issue in turn.
    A.
    The Supreme Court has said that the “standard for determining the
    severability of an unconstitutional provision is well established.”      Alaska
    Airlines, Inc. v. Brock, 
    480 U.S. 678
    , 684 (1987). Unless it is “evident that the
    Legislature would not have enacted those provisions which are within its
    power, independently of that which is not, the invalid part may be dropped if
    44
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    what is left is fully operative as a law.” Id. (quoting Buckley v. Valeo, 
    424 U.S. 1
    , 108 (1976)).
    This inquiry into counterfactual Congressional intent has been
    crystallized into a “two-part . . . framework.” NFIB, 567 U.S. at 692 (joint
    dissent). First, if a court holds a statutory provision unconstitutional, it then
    determines whether the now-truncated statute will operate in “a manner
    consistent with the intent of Congress.” Alaska Airlines, 480 U.S. at 685
    (emphasis omitted).      This first step asks whether the constitutional
    provisions—standing on their own, without the unconstitutional provisions—
    are “fully operative as a law,” not whether they would simply “operate in some
    coherent way” not designed by Congress.          Free Enter. Fund v. Pub. Co.
    Accounting Oversight Bd., 
    561 U.S. 477
    , 509 (2010) (quoting New York v.
    United States, 
    505 U.S. 144
    , 186 (1992)); NFIB, 567 U.S. at 692 (joint dissent).
    Second, even if the remaining provisions can operate as Congress designed
    them to, the court must determine if Congress would have enacted the
    remaining provisions without the unconstitutional portion. If Congress would
    not have done so, then those provisions must be deemed inseverable. Alaska
    Airlines, 480 U.S. at 685 (“[T]he unconstitutional provision must be severed
    unless the statute created in its absence is legislation that Congress would not
    have enacted.”); Free Enter. Fund, 561 U.S. at 509 (“[N]othing in the statute’s
    text or historical context makes it evident that Congress, faced with the
    limitations imposed by the Constitution, would have preferred no Board at all
    45
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    to a Board whose members are removable at will.” (internal quotation marks
    omitted)).
    Severability doctrine places courts between a rock and a hard place. On
    the one hand, courts strive to be faithful agents of Congress, 39 which often
    means refusing to create a hole in a statute in a way that creates legislation
    Congress never would have agreed to or passed. See Murphy, 138 S. Ct. at
    1482 (“[Courts] cannot rewrite a statute and give it an effect altogether
    different from that sought by the measure viewed as a whole.” (quoting R.R.
    Ret. Bd. v. Alton R.R., 
    295 U.S. 330
    , 362 (1935))). On the other hand, courts
    often try to abide by the medical practitioner’s maxim of “first, do no harm,”
    aiming “to limit the solution to the problem” by “refrain[ing] from invalidating
    more of the statute than is necessary.” Ayotte v. Planned Parenthood of N. New
    England, 
    546 U.S. 320
    , 328 (2006); Collins v. Mnuchin, 
    938 F.3d 553
    , 592 (5th
    Cir. 2019) (en banc) (Haynes, J.) (severing unconstitutional removal restriction
    from remainder of Federal Housing Finance Agency’s enabling statute). 40 In
    fact, courts have a “duty” to “maintain the act in so far as it is valid” if it
    “contains unobjectionable provisions separable from those found to be
    unconstitutional.” Alaska Airlines, 480 U.S. at 684 (quoting Regan v. Time,
    Inc., 
    468 U.S. 641
    , 652 (1984) (plurality opinion)).
    The Supreme Court emphasizes this duty so strongly that commentators
    have identified “a presumption [of severability] implicit in the Court’s”
    severability jurisprudence. Adrian Vermeule, Saving Constructions, 85 Geo.
    L.J. 1945, 1950 n.28 (1997); see also Brian Charles Lea, Situational
    See Frank H. Easterbrook, Text, History, and Structure in Statutory Interpretation,
    39
    17 Harv. J. L. & Pub. Pol’y 61, 63 (1994) (“[Courts] are supposed to be faithful agents, not
    independent principals.”).
    40 Judge Haynes wrote the opinion of the court as to the question of remedy. See
    Collins, 538 F.3d at 591.
    46
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    Severability, 
    103 Va. L
    . Rev. 735, 744 (2017) (“[C]ourts assume that a
    legislature intends for any unlawful part of its handiwork to be severable from
    all lawful parts in the absence of indicia of a contrary intention.”).         This
    presumption is strongest when Congress includes a severability clause in the
    statutory text; however, “[i]n the absence of a severability clause . . . Congress’s
    silence is just that—silence—and does not raise a presumption against
    severability.” Alaska Airlines, 480 U.S. at 686.
    Nevertheless, the meticulous analysis required by severability doctrine
    defies reliance on presumptions or generalities. The Supreme Court’s latest
    venture into severability territory, Murphy v. NCAA, 
    138 S. Ct. 1461
     (2018),
    provides an example.       There, the Court held that the entirety of the
    Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act was unconstitutional because
    one of its provisions—authorizing private sports gambling—violated the anti-
    commandeering doctrine.        Id. at 1484.    Justice Alito’s majority opinion
    separately explored each of the other operative provisions in the act, reasoning
    that all of the act’s provisions were “obviously meant to work together” and be
    “deployed in tandem.” Id. at 1483. Because Congress would not have wanted
    the otherwise-valid provisions “to stand alone,” the Court declined to sever
    them. Id. This conclusion prompted a dissent from Justice Ginsburg, who
    characterized the majority as “wield[ing] an ax . . . instead of using a scalpel to
    trim the statute” and reiterated that “the Court ordinarily engages in a salvage
    rather than a demolition operation.” Id. at 1489–90 (Ginsburg, J., dissenting).
    These Murphy opinions draw attention to one difficulty inherent in
    severability analysis: selecting the right tool for the job. Justice Thomas’
    concurring opinion goes further, providing two reasons why navigating
    between the Scylla of poking small but critical holes in complex, carefully
    crafted legislative bargains and the Charybdis of invalidating more duly
    enacted legislation than necessary stands “in tension with traditional limits on
    47
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    judicial authority.”    Murphy, 138 S. Ct. at 1485 (Thomas, J., concurring).
    “[T]he judicial power is, fundamentally, the power to render judgments in
    individual cases,” and severability doctrine threatens to violate that vital
    separation-of-powers principle in more than one way.                 Id. (Thomas, J.,
    concurring).
    First,   severability    doctrine    requires    “a   nebulous     inquiry    into
    hypothetical congressional intent,” as opposed to the usual judicial bread-and-
    butter of “determin[ing] what a statute means.” Id. at 1486 (Thomas, J.,
    concurring) (quoting United States v. Booker, 
    543 U.S. 220
     at 321 n.7 (2005)
    (Thomas, J., dissenting in part)). Because “Congress typically does not pass
    statutes with the expectation that some part will later be deemed
    unconstitutional,” id. at 1487, this requirement often leaves courts to exercise
    their imagination or “intuitions regarding what the legislature would have
    desired had it considered the severability issue.” Lea, supra, at 747. This, in
    turn, “enmeshes the judiciary in making policy choices” the Constitution
    reserves for the legislature, David H. Gans, Severability as Judicial
    Lawmaking, 76 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 639, 663 (2008), providing unelected
    judicial officers with cover to simply implement their own policy preferences.
    Second, severability doctrine forces courts to “weigh in on statutory
    provisions that no party has standing to challenge, bringing courts
    dangerously close to issuing advisory opinions.” Murphy, 138 S. Ct. at 1487
    (Thomas, J., concurring); see also Jonathan F. Mitchell, The Writ-of-Erasure
    Fallacy, 
    104 Va. L
    . Rev. 933, 936 (2018) (“The federal courts have no authority
    to erase a duly enacted law from the statute books, [but can only] decline to
    enforce a statute in a particular case or controversy.” 41). As Justice Thomas
    41  If that is true, then courts are speaking loosely when they state that they are
    “invalidating” or “striking down” a law.
    48
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    points out, when Chief Justice Marshall famously declared that “[i]t is
    emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the
    law is,” he justified that assertion by explaining that “[t]hose who apply [a]
    rule to particular cases, must of necessity expound and interpret that rule.”
    Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 137, 177 (1803). Yet severability
    doctrine directs courts to go beyond the necessary—that is, the application of
    a particular statutory provision to a particular case—to consider the viability
    of other provisions without even “ask[ing] whether the plaintiff has standing
    to challenge those other provisions.” Murphy, 138 S. Ct. at 1487 (Thomas, J.,
    concurring). “[S]everability doctrine is thus an unexplained exception to the
    normal rules of standing, as well as the separation-of-powers principles that
    those rules protect.” Id.
    Severability analysis is at its most demanding in the context of sprawling
    (and amended) statutory schemes like the one at issue here.          The ACA’s
    framework of economic regulations and incentives spans over 900 pages of
    legislative text and is divided into ten titles. Most of the provisions directly
    regulating health insurance, including the one challenged in this case, are
    found in Titles I and II. See, e.g., 26 U.S.C. § 5000A(a) (individual mandate);
    42 U.S.C. § 300gg-14(a) (requiring insurers offering family plans to cover adult
    children until age 26), §§ 18031–18044 (creating health insurance exchanges).
    The other titles generally amend Medicare (Title III), fund preventative
    healthcare programs (Title IV), seek to expand the supply of healthcare
    workers (Title V), enact anti-fraud requirements for Medicare/Medicaid
    facilities (Title VI), establish or expand drug regulations (Title VII), create a
    49
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    voluntary long-term care insurance program (Title VIII), address taxation
    (Title IX), and improve health care for Native Americans (Title X 42).
    The plaintiffs group this host of provisions into three categories for ease
    of reference. State Plaintiffs’ Br. at 38. The first category includes the three
    core ACA provisions the Supreme Court has called “closely intertwined”: the
    individual mandate, 26 U.S.C. § 5000A(a), the guaranteed-issue requirement,
    42 U.S.C. §§ 300gg, 300gg-1, and the community-rating requirement, 42 U.S.C.
    § 300gg-4.          King, 135 S. Ct. at 2487.         The second category includes the
    remaining “[m]ajor provisions of the Affordable Care Act,” NFIB, 567 U.S. at
    697 (joint dissent), namely other provisions dealing with “insurance
    regulations and taxes,” “reductions in federal reimbursements to hospitals and
    other Medicare spending reductions,” the insurance “exchanges and their
    federal subsidies,” and “the employer responsibility assessment.” See, e.g., 25
    U.S.C. § 4980H; 26 U.S.C. § 36B; 42 U.S.C. §§ 1395ww, 18021–22. The third
    category includes a variety of minor provisions, for example taxes on certain
    medical devices or provisions requiring the display of nutritional content at
    restaurants. See, e.g., 21 U.S.C. § 343(q)(5)(H); 26 U.S.C. § 4191(a).
    Moreover, Congress has made a number of substantive amendments to
    the ACA, revising the statute in 2010, 2011, 2014, 2017, and 2018. See, e.g.,
    Medicare and Medicaid Extenders Act of 2010, Pub. L. No. 111-309, 124 Stat.
    3285 (2010) (modifying tax credit scale and Medicaid requirements);
    Department of Defense and Full-Year Continuing Appropriations Act, 2011,
    Pub. L. No. 112-10, 125 Stat. 38 (2011) (repealing program that required some
    employers to provide some employees with vouchers for purchasing insurance);
    Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015, Pub. L. No. 114-74, 129 Stat. 584 (2015)
    42   Title X also includes a number of miscellaneous provisions relating to the other
    titles.
    50
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    (repealing requirement that employers with more than 200 employees enroll
    new full-time employees in health insurance and continue coverage for current
    employees). Most of these amendments occurred prior to the 2017 legislation
    eliminating the shared responsibility payment, but some are more recent. See,
    e.g., Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018, Pub. L. No. 115-123, 132 Stat. 64 (2018)
    (repealing Independent Payment Advisory Board).
    In summary, then, this issue involves a challenging legal doctrine
    applied to an extensive, complex, and oft-amended statutory scheme.            All
    together, these observations highlight the need for a careful, granular
    approach to carrying out the inherently difficult task of severability analysis
    in the specific context of this case. We are not persuaded that the approach to
    the severability question set out in the district court opinion satisfies that
    need. The district court opinion does not explain with precision how particular
    portions of the ACA as it exists post-2017 rise or fall on the constitutionality of
    the individual mandate. Instead, the opinion focuses on the 2010 Congress’
    labeling of the individual mandate as “essential” to its goal of “creating
    effective health insurance markets,” 42 U.S.C. § 18091(2)(I), and then proceeds
    to designate the entire ACA inseverable. In using this approach, the opinion
    does not address the ACA’s provisions with specificity, nor does it discuss how
    the individual mandate fits within the post-2017 regulatory scheme of the
    ACA.
    The district court opinion begins by addressing the 2010 version of the
    ACA. Starting with the text of the ACA, the district court opinion points out
    that the 2010 Congress incorporated into the text its view that “the absence of
    the [individual mandate] would undercut Federal regulation of the health
    insurance market.” 42 U.S.C. § 18091(2)(H). The district court opinion notes
    that the 2010 Congress devised the individual mandate, “together with the
    other provisions” of the ACA, to “add millions of new customers to the health
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    insurance market.” 42 U.S.C. § 18091(2)(C). In this way, the 2010 Congress
    sought to “minimize th[e] adverse selection” that might otherwise occur if
    healthy individuals “wait[ed] to purchase health insurance until they needed
    care,” 42 U.S.C. § 18091(2)(I)—a strategic choice that would otherwise be
    available given the ACA’s guaranteed-issue and community-rating provisions.
    According to the district court opinion: because the 2010 Congress found the
    individuate mandate “essential” to this plan to reshape health insurance
    markets, the individual mandate is inseverable from the rest of the ACA “[o]n
    the unambiguous enacted text alone.”
    The district court opinion also addresses ACA caselaw.          Citing the
    Supreme Court’s decisions in NFIB and King, the district court opinion states
    that “[a]ll nine Justices . . . agreed the Individual Mandate is inseverable from
    at least the pre-existing-condition provisions.” See NFIB, 567 U.S. at 548
    (Roberts, C.J.), 596–98 (Ginsburg, J., joined by Breyer, Kagan, and Sotomayor,
    JJ.), 695–96 (joint dissent of Scalia, Kennedy, Thomas, and Alito, JJ.); King,
    135 S. Ct. at 2487 (stating that the individual mandate is “closely intertwined”
    with the guaranteed-issue and community-rating provisions). As to the ACA’s
    other provisions, the district court opinion notes that the only group of Justices
    who fully considered whether the other major and minor provisions were
    severable was the joint dissent in NFIB—and those Justices would have held
    that “invalidation of the ACA’s major provisions requires the Court to
    invalidate the ACA’s other provisions.” NFIB, 567 U.S. at 704 (joint dissent).
    Beyond these points, the district court opinion states that its “conclusion
    would only be reinforced” if it “parse[d] the ACA’s provisions one by one.” The
    district court opinion arrives at this conclusion by reasoning that declaring
    only the individual mandate unlawful would disrupt the Act’s careful balance
    of “shared responsibility.” The district court opinion lists a few examples of
    how it would expect this to happen with regard to the ACA’s major provisions.
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    First, the district court opinion reasons that “the Individual Mandate reduces
    the financial risk forced upon insurance companies and their customers by the
    ACA’s major regulations and taxes.” If the individual mandate fell and the
    regulations and taxes did not, insurance companies would suffer a burden
    without enjoying a countervailing benefit—“a choice no Congress made and
    one contrary to the text.” Second, if a court were to declare just the individual
    mandate and the protections for preexisting conditions unlawful—but not the
    subsidies for health insurance—then the Act would be transformed into “a law
    that subsidizes the kinds of discriminatory products Congress sought to
    abolish at, presumably, the re-inflated prices it sought to suppress.” Third,
    Congress never intended “a duty on employers, see 26 U.S.C. § 4980H, to cover
    the skyrocketing insurance premium costs” that would “inevitably result from
    removing” the individual mandate. Fourth, because “the Medicaid-expansion
    provisions were designed to serve and assist fulfillment of the Individual
    Mandate,” removing the individual mandate would remove the need for that
    expansion.
    As to the ACA’s minor provisions, the district court opinion states that it
    is “impossible to know which minor provisions Congress would have passed
    absent the Individual Mandate,” and that such an inquiry involves too much
    “legislative guesswork.”    Relying on the 2010 Congress’ labeling of the
    individual mandate as “essential,” the district court opinion ultimately
    determines that there is “no reason to believe that Congress would have
    enacted” the minor provisions independently.        The district court opinion
    similarly disclaims the ability to divine the intent of the 2017 Congress—which
    had zeroed out the shared responsibility payment but left the rest of the ACA
    untouched—labeling such an inquiry “a fool’s errand.”         To the extent it
    analyzed the intent of the 2017 Congress, the district court opinion determines
    that Congress’ failure to repeal the individual mandate shows that it “knew
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    that provision is essential to the ACA.” In sum, the district court opinion
    concludes that the entire ACA is inseverable from the individual mandate.
    The plaintiffs urge affirmance for essentially the same reasons stated in
    the district court opinion. 43 As to the guaranteed-issue and community-rating
    provisions, they rely primarily on the 2010 Congress’ express findings linking
    those provisions to the individual mandate. State Plaintiffs’ Br. at 39–44;
    Individual Plaintiffs’ Br. at 47–48. The 2010 Congress found that, without the
    individual mandate, “many individuals would wait to purchase health
    insurance until they needed care,” creating an “adverse selection” problem. 42
    U.S.C. § 18091(2)(I); see also id. (finding that the individual mandate is
    “essential to creating effective health insurance markets in which improved
    health insurance products that are guaranteed issue and do not exclude
    coverage of pre-existing conditions can be sold”). As to the remaining major
    and some of the minor provisions, the plaintiffs rely primarily on the joint
    dissent in NFIB for the proposition that leaving these provisions standing
    would “undermine Congress’ scheme of shared responsibility,” throwing off the
    balance interlocking insurance market reforms set out in the ACA. 567 U.S.
    at 698 (joint dissent) (internal quotation marks omitted); State Plaintiffs’ Br.
    at 44–49. As for the most minor provisions, they argue that these were “mere
    adjuncts” of the more important provisions and would not have been
    independently enacted. State Plaintiffs’ Br. at 50.
    On appeal, the federal defendants agree with the plaintiffs that the
    entirety of the ACA is inseverable from the individual mandate.                     Fed.
    Defendants’ Br. at 36–49.         This marks a significant change in litigation
    position, as the federal defendants had previously submitted to the district
    43  The individual plaintiffs adopt the state plaintiffs’ severability arguments by
    reference. See Fed. R. App. P. 28(i).
    54
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    court that only the guaranteed-issue and community-rating provisions were
    inseverable. And that is not the only new argument the federal defendants
    make on appeal. For the first time on appeal, the federal defendants argue
    that the remedy in this case should be limited to enjoining enforcement of the
    ACA only to the extent it harms the plaintiffs. See Fed. Defendants’ Br. at 26–
    29 (arguing that the individual “plaintiffs do not have standing to seek relief
    against provisions of the ACA that do not in any way affect them”); Fed.
    Defendants’ Supp. Br. at 10 (“[T]he judgment itself, as opposed to its
    underlying legal reasoning, cannot be understood as extending beyond the
    plaintiff states to invalidate the ACA in the intervenor states.”).
    The intervenor-defendant states, meanwhile, argue that every provision
    of the ACA is severable from the individual mandate. They argue that the
    2017 Congress’ decision not to repeal or otherwise undermine any other
    provision of the ACA shows that it intended the rest of the ACA to remain
    operative—and that the court should not focus on the intent of the 2010
    Congress. Intervenor-Defendant States’ Br. at 34–35, 43. They point to the
    statements of several legislators in the 2017 Congress that seem to evince an
    assumption that other parts of the ACA would not be altered, 44 and to
    Congress’ knowledge of reports highlighting the severe consequences a total
    44 Although we decline to opine on the merits of the parties’ arguments at this
    juncture, we caution against relying on individual statements by legislators to determine the
    meaning of the law. “[L]egislative history is not the law.” Epic Sys. Corp. v. Lewis, 138 S.
    Ct. 1612, 1631 (2018); see also Asadi v. G.E. Energy (USA), LLC, 
    720 F.3d 620
    , 626 n.9 (5th
    Cir. 2013) (“[T]he authoritative statement is the statutory text, not the legislative history or
    any other extrinsic material.”) (quoting Exxon Mobil Corp. v. Allapattah Servs., Inc., 
    545 U.S. 546
    , 568 (2005)); Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of
    Legal Texts 392–93 (2012) (“Each member voting for the bill has a slightly different reason
    for doing so. There is no single set of intentions shared by all . . . [y]et a majority has
    undeniably agreed on the final language that passes into law . . . and that is the sole means
    by which the assembly has the authority to make law.”). And even among legislative history
    devotees, “floor statements by individual legislators rank among the least illuminating
    forms.” N.L.R.B. v. SW Gen., Inc., 
    137 S. Ct. 929
    , 943 (2017).
    55
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    invalidation of the ACA would have. Intervenor-Defendant States’ Br. at 40.
    Finally, they argue that the passage of time since the ACA’s enactment has
    shown that the individual mandate is not all that crucial after all, and they
    provide examples of ACA provisions they say have nothing to do with insurance
    markets or became operative years before the individual mandate took effect.
    Intervenor-Defendant States’ Br. at 45.
    Although we understand and share the district court’s general
    disinclination to engage in what it refers to as “legislative guesswork”—and
    what a Supreme Court Justice has described as “a nebulous inquiry into
    hypothetical congressional intent,” Murphy, 138 S. Ct. at 1486 (Thomas, J.,
    concurring) (quoting Booker, 543 U.S. at 321 n.7 (Thomas, J., dissenting in
    part))—we nevertheless conclude that the severability analysis in the district
    court opinion is incomplete in two ways.
    First, the opinion gives relatively little attention to the intent of the 2017
    Congress, which appears in the analysis only as an afterthought despite the
    fact that the 2017 Congress had the benefit of hindsight over the 2010
    Congress: it was able to observe the ACA’s actual implementation. Although
    the district court opinion states that burdening insurance companies with
    taxes and regulations without giving them the benefit of compelling the
    purchase of their product is “a choice no Congress made,” it only links this
    observation to the 2010 Congress. It does not explain its statement that the
    2017 Congress’ failure to repeal the individual mandate is evidence of an
    understanding that no part of the ACA could survive without it.
    Second, the district court opinion does not do the necessary legwork of
    parsing through the over 900 pages of the post-2017 ACA, explaining how
    particular segments are inextricably linked to the individual mandate. The
    opinion lists a few examples of major provisions and cogently explains their
    link to the individual mandate, at least as it existed in 2010. For example, the
    56
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    opinion discusses the individual mandate’s interplay with the guaranteed-
    issue and community-rating provisions—all of which are found in Title I of the
    ACA—analyzing how Congress intended those provisions to work and how
    they might be expected to work without the individual mandate. But in order
    to strike the delicate balance that severability analysis requires, the district
    court must undertake a similar inquiry for each segment of the post-2017 law
    that it ultimately declares unlawful—and it has not done so. Instead, the
    district court opinion focuses on the 2010 Congress’ designation of the
    individual mandate as “essential to creating effective health insurance
    markets” and intention that, for at least one set of legislative goals, the
    individual mandate was intended to work “together with the other provisions”
    of the ACA. E.g., 42 U.S.C. § 18091(2)(I). On this basis, and on the views of
    the dissenting Justices in NFIB addressing the ACA as it stood in 2012, the
    district court opinion renders the entire ACA inoperative. More is needed to
    justify the district court’s remedy.
    Take, for example, the ACA provisions in Title IV requiring certain chain
    restaurants to disclose to consumers nutritional information like “the number
    of calories contained in the standard menu item.” Patient Protection and
    Affordable Care Act, Pub. L. No. 111-148, § 4206, 124 Stat. 119, 573–74 (2012)
    (codified at 21 U.S.C. § 343). Or consider the provisions in Title X establishing
    the level of scienter necessary to be convicted of healthcare fraud. Patient
    Protection and Affordable Care Act § 10606, 124 Stat. 119, 1006–09, (codified
    at 18 U.S.C. § 1347). Without more detailed analysis from the district court
    opinion, it is unclear how provisions like these—which certainly do not directly
    regulate the health insurance marketplace—were intended to work “together”
    with the individual mandate. Similarly, the district court opinion’s assertion
    that “most of the minor provisions” of the ACA “are mere adjuncts of” or “aids
    to the[] effective execution” of the project of the individual mandate is not
    57
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    supported by the actual analysis in the district court opinion, which does not
    dive into those provisions. Finally, some insurance-related reforms became
    law years before the effective date of the individual mandate; the district court
    opinion does not explain how provisions like these are inextricably linked to
    the individual mandate.       See, e.g., 42 U.S.C. §§ 300gg-11, 300gg-14(a).
    Whatever the solution to the problem of “legislative guesswork” the district
    court opinion identifies in severability doctrine as it currently stands, it must
    include a careful parsing of the statutory scheme at issue to address questions
    like these.
    We have long “require[d] that a district court explain its reasons for
    granting a motion for summary judgment in sufficient detail for us to
    determine whether the court correctly applied the appropriate legal test.”
    Wildbur v. ARCO Chem. Co., 
    974 F.2d 631
    , 644 (5th Cir. 1992). This is because
    we have “little opportunity for effective review” when the district court opinion
    leaves some reasoning “vague” or “unsaid.” Myers v. Gulf Oil Corp., 
    731 F.2d 281
    , 284 (1984). “In such cases, we have not hesitated to remand . . . .” Id. In
    this case, the analysis the district court opinion provides is substantial and far
    exceeds the sort of cursory reasoning that normally prompts us to remand. Yet,
    the vast, wide-ranging statutory scheme at issue in this case also far exceeds
    the comparatively small number of provisions at issue in other severability
    cases, see, e.g., Chadha, 462 U.S. at 931–35 (considering whether 8 U.S.C.
    § 244(c)(2) could be severed from the rest of § 244)—especially cases in which
    entire legislative acts are determined to be inseverable, see, e.g., Murphy, 138
    S. Ct. at 1481–84 (considering whether part of 28 U.S.C. § 3702(1) could be
    severed from §§ 3701–04).
    Moreover, the Supreme Court has remanded in the severability context
    upon a determination that additional analysis was necessary. In Ayotte v.
    Planned Parenthood of Northern New England, 
    546 U.S. 320
     (2006), the
    58
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    No. 19-10011
    Supreme Court took up the issue of what relief was appropriate upon a
    determination that a New Hampshire provision requiring parental notification
    prior to abortion was unconstitutional in some applications. Id. at 328–32.
    The Supreme Court determined that, although the district court’s choice to use
    “the most blunt remedy”—total inseverability—was “understandable” under
    its own precedent, more analysis was needed to determine “whether New
    Hampshire’s legislature intended the statute to be susceptible to” severability.
    Id. at 330–31. As a result, the Supreme Court remanded for “lower courts to
    determine legislative intent in the first instance.” Id.
    We do the same here, directing the district court to employ a finer-
    toothed comb on remand and conduct a more searching inquiry into which
    provisions of the ACA Congress intended to be inseverable from the individual
    mandate. We do not hold forth on just how fine-toothed that comb should be—
    the district court may use its best judgment to determine how best to break the
    ACA down into constituent groupings, segments, or provisions to be analyzed.
    Nor do we make any comment on whether the district court should take into
    account the government’s new posture on appeal or what the ultimate outcome
    of the severability analysis should be. 45 Although “we cannot affirm the order
    as it is presently supported,” we do not suggest what result will be merited
    “[a]fter a more thorough inquiry.” Unger v. Amedisys Inc., 
    401 F.3d 316
    , 325
    (5th Cir. 2005). We only note that the inquiry must be made, and that the
    district court—which has many tools at its disposal—is best positioned to
    determine in the first instance whether the ACA “remains ‘fully operative as a
    law’” and whether it is evident from “the statute’s text or historical context”
    45 The district court should also consider this court’s recent severability analysis in
    Collins v. Mnuchin, 
    938 F.3d 553
     (5th Cir. 2019) (en banc). That opinion was issued after
    both the district court’s decision and the oral argument here.
    59
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    that Congress would have preferred no ACA at all to an ACA without the
    individual mandate. Free Enter. Fund, 561 U.S. at 509 (quoting New York, 505
    U.S. at 186).
    It may still be that none of the ACA is severable from the individual
    mandate, even after this inquiry is concluded. It may be that all of the ACA is
    severable from the individual mandate. It may also be that some of the ACA
    is severable from the individual mandate, and some is not. 46 But it is no small
    thing for unelected, life-tenured judges to declare duly enacted legislation
    passed by the elected representatives of the American people unconstitutional.
    The rule of law demands a careful, precise explanation of whether the
    provisions of the ACA are affected by the unconstitutionality of the individual
    mandate as it exists today.
    B.
    Remand is appropriate in this case for a second reason: so that the
    district court may consider the federal defendants’ new arguments as to the
    proper scope of relief in this case. The relief the plaintiffs sought in the district
    court was a universal nationwide injunction: an order that totally “enjoin[ed]
    Defendants from enforcing the Affordable Care Act and its associated
    regulations.” Before the district court, the federal defendants urged entry of a
    declaratory judgment stating that the guaranteed-issue and community-rating
    provisions—at that time, the only provisions the federal defendants argued
    were inseverable—were “invalid[ated]” by the zeroing out of the shared
    46For an explanation of some, but certainly not all, of the potential conclusions with
    regard to severability, see Josh Blackman, Undone: The New Constitutional Challenge to
    Obamacare, 23 Tex. Rev. L. & Pol. 1, 28–51 (2018) (stating that the district court could halt
    the enforcement of just the individual mandate, halt the enforcement of the entire Act, or
    halt the enforcement of the community-rating and guaranteed-issue provisions along with
    the individual mandate, for example). The district court could also issue a declaratory
    judgment without enjoining any government official.
    60
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    No. 19-10011
    responsibility payment.       This would be “sufficient relief against the
    Government,” the federal defendants argued, because a declaratory judgment
    would “operate[] in a similar manner as an injunction” against the federal
    government, which would be “presumed to comply with the law” once the court
    provides “a definitive interpretation of the statute.”
    Ultimately, of course, the district court opinion determined that no ACA
    provision was severable and resulted in a judgment declaring the entire ACA
    “invalid.” On appeal, the federal defendants first changed their litigation
    position to agree that no ACA provision was severable. Now they have changed
    their litigation position to argue that relief in this case should be tailored to
    enjoin enforcement of the ACA in only the plaintiff states—and not just that,
    but that the declaratory judgment should only reach ACA provisions that
    injure the plaintiffs. They argue that the Supreme Court has made clear that
    “[a] plaintiff’s remedy must be tailored to redress the plaintiff’s particular
    injury.” Gill v. Whitford, 
    138 S. Ct. 1916
    , 1934 (2018); see also Printz v. United
    States, 
    521 U.S. 898
    , 935 (1997) (reasoning that the Court has “no business
    answering” questions dealing with enforcement of provisions that “burden . . .
    no plaintiff”); see also Murphy, 138 S. Ct. at 1485–86 (Thomas, J., concurring).
    This argument came as a surprise to the plaintiffs, who explained at oral
    argument that they saw the government’s new position as a possible “bait and
    switch.” The federal defendants admitted at oral argument that they had
    raised the scope-of-relief issue on appeal “for the first time,” but argued that it
    was necessary to address, as it went to the district court’s Article III
    jurisdiction. The federal defendants therefore suggested that it “would be
    appropriate to remand to consider the scope of the judgment.”
    The court agrees that remand is appropriate for the district court to
    consider these new arguments in the first instance. The district court did not
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    have the benefit of considering them when it crafted the relief now on appeal. 47
    On remand, the district court—which is in a far better position than this court
    to determine which ACA provisions actually injure the plaintiffs—may
    consider the federal defendants’ position on the proper relief to be afforded. As
    part of this inquiry, the district court may consider whether the federal
    defendants’ arguments were timely raised, and whether limiting the remedy
    in this case is supported by Supreme Court precedent. Once again, we place
    no thumb on the scale as to the ultimate outcome; the district court is free to
    weigh the federal defendants’ changed arguments as it sees fit.
    VII.
    For these reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED in
    part and VACATED in part. We REMAND for proceedings consistent with
    this opinion.
    47 The consideration of limited relief may affect the intervenors as well. The district
    court is better suited to resolving these issues in the first instance.
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    KING, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    Any American can choose not to purchase health insurance without legal
    consequence. Before January 1, 2018, individuals had to choose between
    complying with the Affordable Care Act’s coverage requirement or making a
    payment to the IRS. For better or worse, Congress has now set that payment
    at $0. Without any enforcement mechanism to speak of, questions about the
    legality of the individual “mandate” are purely academic, and people can
    purchase insurance—or not—as they please. No more need be said; it has long
    been settled that the federal courts deal in cases and controversies, not
    academic curiosities.
    The majority sees things differently and today holds that an
    unenforceable law is also unconstitutional. If the majority had stopped there,
    I would be confident its extrajurisdictional musings would ultimately prove
    harmless. What does it matter if the coverage requirement is unenforceable by
    congressional design or constitutional demand? Either way, that law does not
    do anything or bind anyone.
    But again, the majority disagrees. It feels bound to ask whether
    Congress would want the rest of the Affordable Care Act to remain in force now
    that the coverage requirement is unenforceable. Answering that question
    should be easy, since Congress removed the coverage requirement’s only
    enforcement mechanism but left the rest of the Affordable Care Act in place. It
    is difficult to imagine a plainer indication that Congress considered the
    coverage requirement entirely dispensable and, hence, severable. And yet, the
    majority is unwilling to resolve the severability issue. Instead, it merely
    identifies serious flaws in the district court’s analysis and remands for a do-
    over, which will unnecessarily prolong this litigation and the concomitant
    uncertainty over the future of the healthcare sector.
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    I would vacate the district court’s order because none of the plaintiffs
    have standing to challenge the coverage requirement. And although I would
    not reach the merits or remedial issues, if I did, I would conclude that the
    coverage requirement is constitutional, albeit unenforceable, and entirely
    severable from the remainder of the Affordable Care Act.
    I.
    To my mind, this case begins and ought to end with the Supreme Court’s
    decision in National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius, 
    567 U.S. 519
     (2012). In that case, the Court held that the coverage requirement would
    be unconstitutional if it were a legal command, because neither the Commerce
    Clause nor the Necessary and Proper Clause allows Congress to compel
    individuals to engage in commerce by purchasing health insurance. See NFIB,
    567 U.S. at 552, 560 (opinion of Roberts, C.J.); id. at 652-53 (joint dissent). The
    Court concluded, however, that the coverage requirement was constitutional,
    because—notwithstanding the most natural reading of the provision’s text—
    the coverage requirement was not actually a legal command to purchase
    insurance.
    Instead, according to the NFIB Court, the coverage requirement “leaves
    an individual with a lawful choice to do or not do a certain act,” i.e., purchase
    health insurance. Id. at 574 (Roberts, C.J., majority opinion). All that is
    required, under this reading, is “a payment to the IRS” if one chooses not to
    purchase health insurance. Id. at 567. Beyond this shared-responsibility
    payment, there are no further “negative legal consequences to not buying
    health insurance,” and individuals who forgo insurance do not violate the law
    as long as they make the required payment. Id. at 567. “Those subject to the
    [coverage requirement] may lawfully forgo health insurance and pay higher
    taxes, or buy health insurance and pay lower taxes. The only thing they may
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    not lawfully do is not buy health insurance and not pay the resulting tax.” Id.
    at 574 n.11. Forcing individuals to make that choice was constitutional, per
    NFIB, because Congress could “impose a tax on not obtaining health
    insurance” by exercising its enumerated power to lay and collect taxes, duties,
    imposts, and excises. Id. at 570.
    Contrary to the suggestion of the majority, which I address specifically
    infra at Part III, Congress did not alter the coverage requirement’s operation
    when it amended the ACA in 2017. See Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, Pub. L.
    No. 115-97, § 11081, 131 Stat. 2054, 2092 (“TCJA”). All the TCJA did, with
    respect to healthcare, was change the amount of the shared-responsibility
    payment to zero dollars. Thus, despite textual appearances, the post-TCJA
    coverage requirement does nothing more than require individuals to pay zero
    dollars to the IRS if they do not purchase health insurance, which is to say it
    does nothing at all.
    This insight, that the coverage requirement now does nothing, should be
    the end of this case. Nobody has standing to challenge a law that does nothing.
    When Congress does nothing, no matter the form that nothing takes, it does
    not exceed its enumerated powers. And since courts do not change anything
    when they invalidate a law that does nothing, every other law retains, or at
    least should retain, its full force and effect.
    II.
    But as the majority goes well past NFIB, I respond. To begin, I
    emphasize the importance of the rule that a plaintiff must have standing to
    invoke a federal court’s power. This is not an anachronism lingering from some
    era in which empty formalities abounded in legal practice. Quite the opposite:
    “[T]he requirement that a claimant have ‘standing is an essential and
    unchanging part of the case-or-controversy requirement of Article III.’” Davis
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    v. FEC, 
    554 U.S. 724
    , 733 (2008) (quoting Lujan v. Defs. of Wildlife, 
    504 U.S. 555
    , 560 (1992)); see also Susan B. Anthony List v. Driehaus, 
    573 U.S. 149
    , 157
    (2014) (“Article III of the Constitution limits the jurisdiction of federal courts
    to ‘Cases’ and ‘Controversies.’” (quoting U.S. Const. art. III, § 2)). And “[n]o
    principle is more fundamental to the judiciary’s proper role in our system of
    government than the constitutional limitation of federal-court jurisdiction to
    actual cases or controversies.” Clapper v. Amnesty Int’l USA, 
    568 U.S. 398
    , 408
    (2013) (alteration in original) (quoting DaimlerChrysler Corp. v. Cuno, 
    547 U.S. 332
    , 341 (2006)); accord Raines v. Byrd, 
    521 U.S. 811
    , 818 (1997).
    The   Constitution’s    case-or-controversy   requirement     reflects   the
    Framers’ view of the judiciary’s place among the coequal branches of the
    federal government: to fulfill “the traditional role of Anglo–American courts,
    which is to redress or prevent actual or imminently threatened injury to
    persons caused by private or official violation of law.” Summers v. Earth Island
    Inst., 
    555 U.S. 488
    , 492 (2009). Strict adherence to the case-or-controversy
    requirement—and to standing in particular—thus “serves to prevent the
    judicial process from being used to usurp the powers of the political branches.”
    Clapper, 568 U.S. at 408; see also Town of Chester v. Laroe Estates, Inc., 137 S.
    Ct. 1645, 1650 (2017) (“This fundamental limitation preserves the ‘tripartite
    structure’ of our Federal Government, prevents the Federal Judiciary from
    ‘intrud[ing] upon the powers given to the other branches,’ and ‘confines the
    federal courts to a properly judicial role.’” (alteration in original) (quoting
    Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins, 
    136 S. Ct. 1540
    , 1547 (2016))). Thus, “federal courts may
    exercise power only ‘in the last resort, and as a necessity,’ and only when
    adjudication is ‘consistent with a system of separated powers and [the dispute
    is one] traditionally thought to be capable of resolution through the judicial
    process.’” Allen v. Wright, 
    468 U.S. 737
    , 752 (1984) (alteration in original)
    66
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    (citation omitted) (first quoting Chi. & Grand Trunk Ry. Co. v. Wellman, 
    143 U.S. 339
    , 345 (1892); then quoting Flast v. Cohen, 
    392 U.S. 83
    , 97 (1968)),
    abrogated on other grounds, Lexmark Int’l, Inc. v. Static Control Components,
    Inc., 
    572 U.S. 118
     (2014). And needless to say, a federal court must conduct an
    “especially rigorous” standing inquiry “when reaching the merits of the dispute
    would force [it] to decide whether an action taken by one of the other two
    branches of the Federal Government was unconstitutional.” Amnesty Int’l, 568
    U.S. at 408 (quoting Raines, 521 U.S. at 819-20). “The importance of this
    precondition should not be underestimated as a means of ‘defin[ing] the role
    assigned to the judiciary in a tripartite allocation of power.’” Valley Forge
    Christian Coll. v. Ams. United for Separation of Church & State, 
    454 U.S. 464
    ,
    474 (1982) (alteration in original) (quoting Flast, 392 U.S. at 95).
    The standing doctrine polices this constitutional limit on the judiciary’s
    power “by ‘identify[ing] those disputes which are appropriately resolved
    through the judicial process.’” Susan B. Anthony List, 573 U.S. at 157
    (alteration in original) (quoting Lujan, 504 U.S. at 560). The party seeking
    redress in the courts has the burden to establish standing. See Spokeo, 136 S.
    Ct. at 1547. To do so, the plaintiff must show it has “(1) suffered an injury in
    fact, (2) that is fairly traceable to the challenged conduct of the defendant, and
    (3) that is likely to be redressed by a favorable judicial decision.” Id. “To
    establish injury in fact, a plaintiff must show that he or she suffered ‘an
    invasion of a legally protected interest’ that is ‘concrete and particularized’ and
    ‘actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical.’” Id. at 1548 (quoting
    Lujan, 
    504 U.S. 560
    ). This means the injury must be “personal” to the plaintiff
    and, although the injury does not need to be “tangible,” “it must actually exist.”
    Id. at 1548-49.
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    The plaintiffs’ evidentiary burden depends on the stage of the litigation.
    At each stage, the plaintiffs must demonstrate standing “with the manner and
    degree of evidence” otherwise required to establish the plaintiffs’ merits case.
    Lujan, 504 U.S. at 561. Thus, because this case comes to us on the plaintiffs’
    own motion for summary judgment, the plaintiffs must conclusively prove all
    three elements of standing with evidence that “would ‘entitle [them] to a
    directed verdict if the evidence went uncontroverted at trial.’” Int’l Shortstop,
    Inc. v. Rally’s, Inc., 
    939 F.2d 1257
    , 1264-65 (5th Cir. 1991) (quoting Golden
    Rule Ins. Co. v. Lease, 
    755 F. Supp. 948
    , 951 (D. Colo. 1991)). If a plaintiff meets
    its burden, the defendant can nevertheless defeat summary judgment “by
    merely demonstrating the existence of a genuine dispute of material fact.” Id.
    at 1265. In other words, the plaintiffs here must show that, considering the
    summary-judgment record, all reasonable factfinders would agree that the
    plaintiffs demonstrate an injury traceable to the coverage requirement and
    redressable by a favorable decision. See Alonso v. Westcoast Corp., 
    920 F.3d 878
    , 885-86 (5th Cir. 2019).
    These general principles alone should make the majority’s error
    apparent. More specific authority illuminates it. I explain first why the
    majority errs in concluding the individual plaintiffs have standing, then I
    explain why the majority errs in concluding the state plaintiffs have standing.
    A.
    The majority concludes that the individual plaintiffs have standing to
    challenge the coverage requirement in the Patient Protection and Affordable
    Care Act (the “ACA”), 26 U.S.C. § 5000A(a), 1 because it forces them to purchase
    1The coverage requirement is sometimes colloquially known as the “individual
    mandate.” For reasons that will become clear, this nickname can be misleading.
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    health insurance that they would not purchase otherwise. The majority
    overlooks what will happen if the individual plaintiffs fail to purchase
    insurance: absolutely nothing. The individual plaintiffs will be no worse off by
    any conceivable measure if they choose not to purchase health insurance. Thus,
    whatever injury the individual plaintiffs have incurred by purchasing health
    insurance is entirely self-inflicted.
    A long line of cases establishes that self-inflicted injuries cannot
    establish standing because a self-inflicted injury, by definition, is not traceable
    to the challenged action. See, e.g., Amnesty Int’l, 568 U.S. at 416
    (“[R]espondents cannot manufacture standing merely by inflicting harm on
    themselves . . . .”); Pennsylvania v. New Jersey, 
    426 U.S. 660
    , 664 (1976) (“The
    injuries to the plaintiffs’ fiscs were self-inflicted, resulting from decisions by
    their respective state legislatures. . . . No State can be heard to complain about
    damage inflicted by its own hand.”); Zimmerman v. City of Austin, 
    881 F.3d 378
    , 389 (5th Cir.) (“[S]tanding cannot be conferred by a self-inflicted injury.”),
    cert. denied, 
    139 S. Ct. 639
     (2018). When a plaintiff chooses to incur an expense,
    the plaintiff must show that the challenged law forced the plaintiff to incur
    that expense to avoid some other concrete injury. See Amnesty Int’l, 568 U.S.
    at 415-16 (concluding costs plaintiffs incurred trying to avoid surveillance were
    self-inflicted because plaintiffs’ fear of surveillance was speculative);
    Contender Farms, L.L.P. v. USDA, 
    779 F.3d 258
    , 266 (5th Cir. 2015) (finding
    plaintiff had standing to challenge regulations that required plaintiff to either
    “take additional measures” to comply with regulation or “face harsher,
    mandatory penalties” and prosecution). In other words, a plaintiff can show
    standing if the challenged act placed him between the proverbial rock and hard
    place. But without showing such a dilemma, a plaintiff “cannot manufacture
    standing” by expending costs to avoid an otherwise noncognizable injury,
    69
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    which is exactly what the individual plaintiffs did here. Amnesty Int’l, 568 U.S.
    at 416.
    The majority brushes off this authority by insisting—without
    explanation—that labeling the plaintiffs’ injuries self-inflicted “assumes” that
    the coverage requirement does not act as a legal command to purchase
    insurance, which the majority refuses to question at the standing stage. The
    majority misunderstands the argument. Even accepting that the coverage
    requirement acts as a legal command, the individual plaintiffs are still free to
    disregard that command without legal consequence. Therefore, any injury they
    incur by freely choosing to obtain insurance is still self-inflicted.
    Nor does it matter that to avoid inflicting injury upon themselves, the
    plaintiffs would have to violate an unenforceable statute. Plaintiffs may
    challenge a statute that requires them “to take significant and costly
    compliance measures or risk criminal prosecution.” Virginia v. Am. Booksellers
    Ass’n, 
    484 U.S. 383
    , 392 (1988) (emphasis added); see also, e.g., Int’l Tape Mfrs.
    Ass’n v. Gerstein, 
    494 F.2d 25
    , 28 (5th Cir. 1974) (explaining that standing to
    challenge a statute requires a “realistic possibility that the challenged statute
    will be enforced to [the plaintiff’s] detriment”). But “[w]hen plaintiffs ‘do not
    claim that they have ever been threatened with prosecution, that a prosecution
    is likely, or even that a prosecution is remotely possible,’ they do not allege a
    dispute susceptible to resolution by a federal court.” Babbitt v. United Farm
    Workers Nat’l Union, 
    442 U.S. 289
    , 298-99 (1979) (quoting Younger v. Harris,
    
    401 U.S. 37
    , 42 (1971)); see also Poe v. Ullman, 
    367 U.S. 497
    , 507 (1961)
    (Frankfurter, J., plurality) (“It is clear that the mere existence of a state penal
    statute would constitute insufficient grounds to support a federal court’s
    adjudication of its constitutionality in proceedings brought against the State’s
    prosecuting officials if real threat of enforcement is wanting.”); cf. Zimmerman,
    70
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    881 F.3d at 389-90 (“[T]o confer standing, allegations of chilled speech or ‘self-
    censorship must arise from a fear of prosecution that is not “imaginary or
    wholly speculative.”’” (quoting Ctr. for Individual Freedom v. Carmouche, 
    449 F.3d 655
    , 660 (5th Cir. 2006))).
    Ullman illustrates this principle well. 2 The plaintiffs there sought to
    challenge Connecticut’s criminal prohibition on contraception. Ullman, 367
    U.S. at 498 (Frankfurter, J., plurality). But in the more than 75 years that the
    statute had been on the books, only one violation had been prosecuted—and
    even that was a collusive prosecution brought to challenge the law. Id. at 501-
    02. The Court dismissed the challenge for lack of standing, holding that “[t]he
    fact that Connecticut has not chosen to press the enforcement of this statute
    deprives these controversies of the immediacy which is an indispensable
    condition of constitutional adjudication.” Id. at 508. The Court explained that
    it could not “be umpire to debates concerning harmless, empty shadows.” Id. 3
    Ullman makes this an easy case. Connecticut’s contraception law at least
    allowed the possibility of enforcement, even if it was speculative and unlikely
    2 The majority dismisses Ullman as an adversity case. Nonetheless, as this court and
    the Supreme Court have repeatedly recognized, Ullman grounds its analysis in terms of
    standing and ripeness. See, e.g., Blum v. Yaretsky, 
    457 U.S. 991
    , 1000 (1982); Roark &
    Hardee LP v. City of Austin, 
    522 F.3d 533
    , 544 (5th Cir. 2008); Thomes v. Equitable Sav. &
    Loan Ass’n, 
    837 F.2d 1317
    , 1318 (5th Cir. 1988). In any event, Ullman is just one example;
    other cases demonstrate this concept just as well. See, e.g., Driehaus, 573 U.S. at 158-59
    (“One recurring issue in our cases is determining when the threatened enforcement of a law
    creates an Article III injury. . . . [W]e have permitted pre-enforcement review under
    circumstances that render the threatened enforcement sufficiently imminent.”).
    3 The lead opinion in Ullman garnered only a four-judge plurality. But Justice
    Brennan, who concurred in the judgment, wrote that he “agree[d] that this appeal must be
    dismissed for failure to present a real and substantial controversy” and that “until the State
    makes a definite and concrete threat to enforce these laws . . . this Court may not be compelled
    to exercise its most delicate power of constitutional adjudication.” Ullman, 367 U.S. at 509
    (Brennan, J., concurring in judgment). Accordingly, five Justices agreed that plaintiffs lacked
    standing absent any real threat of enforcement.
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    to ever occur. Here, as I cannot say often enough, the coverage requirement
    has no enforcement mechanism. It is impossible for the individual plaintiffs to
    ever be prosecuted (or face any other consequences) for violating it. In
    “find[ing] it necessary to pass on” the coverage requirement, the majority
    “close[s] [its] eyes to reality.” Id. 4
    The majority does not engage with the lessons of Ullman and its progeny.
    The closest it comes is in its citation to Texas v. EEOC, 
    933 F.3d 433
     (5th Cir.
    2019). That case does not abrogate Ullman, Younger, Babbitt, American
    Booksellers, or Tape Manufacturers—nor could it. In Texas v. EEOC, Texas
    challenged EEOC administrative guidance stating that employers who screen
    out job applicants with criminal records could be held liable for disparate-
    impact discrimination. Id. at 437-38. The EEOC argued that Texas did not
    have standing to challenge the guidance because the guidance reflected only
    the EEOC’s interpretation of Title VII, and the Attorney General, not the
    EEOC, has the sole power to enforce Title VII against states. See Brief for
    Appellants Cross-Appellees at 18-19, Texas v. EEOC, 
    933 F.3d 433
     (5th Cir.
    2019) (No. 18-10638). In rejecting that argument, this court explained that
    Title VII’s enforcement scheme is not so simple. Although the EEOC may not
    itself bring enforcement actions against states, it may investigate states and
    refer cases to the Attorney General for enforcement actions. EEOC, 933 F.3d
    at 447. Therefore, “the possibility of investigation by EEOC and referral to the
    Attorney General for enforcement proceedings if it fails to align its laws and
    4For the same reason, it does not matter that the district court “expressly found” that
    the individual plaintiffs “are obligated to” purchase health insurance. Even ignoring the
    conclusory nature of this supposed finding of fact, it is not the abstract obligation that
    matters; it is the concrete consequences, if any, that follow from a violation of that obligation.
    And the district court did not find (and there would be no basis for it to find) that the
    individual plaintiffs would face any consequences.
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    policies with the Guidance” put pressure on Texas to conform to the EEOC’s
    guidance. Id.
    In other words, even absent a direct threat of a formal enforcement
    action from the EEOC, Texas faced other consequences for disobeying the
    guidance—including the possibility that the Attorney General would enforce
    Title VII against it. In fact, we noted that “[o]ne Texas agency ha[d] already
    been required to respond to a charge of discrimination filed with EEOC based
    on its no-felon hiring policy.” Id. at 447 n.26. The majority here cites no similar
    concrete consequences that will (or even plausibly could) follow if the plaintiffs
    violate the coverage requirement.
    My conclusion that individual plaintiffs lack standing is only bolstered
    by a unanimous opinion issued mere weeks ago by a panel that included the
    author of today’s majority opinion. In that case, the court held that Austin,
    Texas could not use a suit against the Texas Attorney General to challenge a
    state statute, which the Attorney General was authorized to enforce, that
    barred the city from enforcing one of its ordinances. City of Austin v. Paxton,
    No. 18-50646, ___ F.3d ____, 
    2019 WL 6520769
    , at *6 (5th Cir Dec. 4, 2019).
    Although the Paxton court based its holding on sovereign immunity, it looked
    to “our standing jurisprudence,” and “note[d] that it’s unlikely the City had
    standing,” because it did not show that the Attorney General would likely
    “inflict ‘future harm’” by enforcing the statute against Austin. Id. at *6-7. If
    standing was absent in Paxton because enforcement was insufficiently
    probable, I have no idea why standing should be present in this case, where
    enforcement of the challenged portion of the ACA is altogether impossible.
    In sum, even if the unenforceable coverage requirement must be read as
    a command to purchase health insurance, it does not harm the individual
    plaintiffs because they can disregard it without consequence. Binding
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    precedent squarely establishes that plaintiffs may not sue in such
    circumstances—and with good reason. The great power of the judiciary should
    not be invoked to disrupt the work of the democratic branches when the
    plaintiffs can easily avoid injury on their own. 5
    B.
    The majority’s conclusion that the state plaintiffs have standing to
    challenge the coverage requirement fares no better. I would deny the state
    plaintiffs standing because there is no evidence in the record, much less
    conclusive evidence, to support the state plaintiffs’ alleged injuries.
    1.
    The majority first concludes that the state plaintiffs have standing
    because it believes that the coverage requirement increases the number of
    state employees who enroll in the states’ employee healthcare programs. And
    with more enrollees, the logic goes, the states as employers must file more
    forms with the IRS at a higher cost to the states.
    The majority’s biggest mistake is that it ignores the posture of this case:
    the defendants appeal from the district court’s order granting summary
    judgment to the plaintiffs. Accordingly, the state plaintiffs face a tremendous
    evidentiary burden—they must produce evidence so conclusive of the coverage
    5  The majority’s suggestion that NFIB, 567 U.S. at 552 (opinion of Roberts, C.J.),
    supports the individual plaintiffs’ standing does not warrant above-the-line attention. In
    short, the NFIB Court did not address standing. See id. at 530-708. At the time NFIB was
    decided, the coverage requirement was set to take effect with the shared-responsibility
    payment as an enforcement mechanism. And there is no indication that any of the NFIB
    plaintiffs were exempt from the shared-responsibility payment. Thus, even if the majority
    seeks to infer from NFIB some jurisdictional ruling in violation of the Supreme Court’s
    “repeated[]” command “that the existence of unaddressed jurisdictional defects has no
    precedential effect,” Lewis v. Casey, 
    518 U.S. 343
    , 352 n.2 (1996), NFIB offers no inferences
    of value for the majority to draw. Further, counsel’s answer to a Justice’s hypothetical
    question does not bind this court.
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    requirement’s effect on their healthcare-administration costs that the evidence
    “would ‘entitle [them] to a directed verdict if the evidence went uncontroverted
    at trial.’” Int’l Shortstop, 939 F.2d at 1264-65 (quoting Golden Rule Ins., 755 F.
    Supp. at 951). 6 And the state plaintiffs provided no evidence at all, never mind
    conclusive evidence, to support the dubious notion that even a single state
    employee enrolled in one of state plaintiffs’ health insurance programs solely
    because of the unenforceable coverage requirement. 7
    The majority relies on affidavits from several of the state plaintiffs’
    healthcare administrators. But these affidavits only establish that the state
    plaintiffs incur costs complying with the IRS reporting requirements found in
    26 U.S.C. §§ 6055(a) and 6056(a). And as the majority recognizes, these
    requirements are distinct from the coverage requirement. Accordingly, to trace
    the state plaintiffs’ reporting burden to the coverage requirement, the majority
    must additionally show that at least some state employees have enrolled in
    employer-sponsored health insurance solely because of the unenforceable
    coverage requirement. The majority comes up empty at this step, pointing only
    to a conclusory statement from a South Dakota human-resources director
    claiming that the coverage requirement, not §§ 6055(a) and 6056(a), caused
    South Dakota to incur its reporting expenses. This will not do. See, e.g., Lujan v. Nat’l
    Wildlife Fed’n, 
    497 U.S. 871
    , 888 (1990) (“The object of [summary judgment] is
    6  The district court was free to—but did not—make findings of jurisdictional fact,
    which we would review for clear error. See Krim v. pcOrder.com, Inc., 
    402 F.3d 489
    , 494 (5th
    Cir. 2005). Indeed, the district court did not address the state plaintiffs’ standing at all. Thus,
    for the state plaintiffs to establish standing on their own motion for summary judgment, they
    must show the summary-judgment evidence is conclusive.
    7 The majority misunderstands my position. See Maj. Op. 32 n.31. The state plaintiffs
    do not need to identify a “specific” person that is likely to enroll, but they still must establish
    that at least one state employee will enroll as a result of the post-TCJA coverage requirement.
    Otherwise, the state plaintiffs’ injuries are not traceable to the provision they challenge and
    would not be redressed by its elimination.
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    not to replace conclusory allegations of the complaint or answer with
    conclusory allegations of an affidavit.”);          Shaboon v. Duncan, 
    252 F.3d 722
    , 737   (5th Cir.
    2001) (“[U]nsupported affidavits setting forth ‘ultimate or conclusory facts and
    conclusions of law’ are insufficient to either support or defeat a motion for
    summary judgment.” (alteration in original) (quoting Orthopedic & Sports Injury Clinic v.
    Wang Labs., Inc., 
    922 F.2d 220
    , 225 (5th Cir. 1991))). 8
    Citing Department of Commerce v. New York, 
    139 S. Ct. 2551
     (2019), the
    majority argues the state plaintiffs can establish standing by “showing that
    third parties will likely react in predictable ways” to the coverage requirement.
    Id. at 2566. But the majority fails to explain why state employees who do not
    want health insurance would nevertheless predictably enroll in health
    insurance solely because an unenforceable statute, here the coverage
    requirement, directs them to do so. What the majority fails to mention in its
    discussion of Department of Commerce is that the “predictable” behavior at
    issue there was individuals “choosing to violate their legal duty to respond to
    8  The majority suggests we must accept this statement as true because the defendants
    did not “challenge” this evidence. The majority cites no authority for this proposition, and I
    am at a loss to understand where the majority came up with its challenge rule. I know of
    nothing in the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure or the caselaw requiring litigants to
    “challenge” conclusory statements in declarations. On the contrary, courts in this circuit
    regularly confront and disregard conclusory statements in the summary-judgment record.
    See, e.g., Tex. Capital Bank N.A. v. Dall. Roadster, Ltd. (In re Dall. Roadster, Ltd.), 
    846 F.3d 112
    , 124 (5th Cir. 2017); Brown v. Mid-Am. Apartments, 
    348 F. Supp. 3d 594
    , 602-03 (W.D.
    Tex. 2018). The district courts and litigants of this circuit will be surprised to learn about the
    majority’s new summary-judgment rule.
    The majority also claims that the statement is not conclusory. But nothing in the
    affidavit addresses the post-TCJA coverage requirement. The affiant states that his
    knowledge is “related to the enactment of the ACA,” which occurred in 2010. He focuses on
    “financial costs associated with ACA regulations” and concludes that “South Dakota would
    be significantly burdened if the ACA remained law.” The affidavit does not explain how the
    post-TCJA coverage requirement harms South Dakota. Such generalities, untethered to the
    actual law at issue in this appeal, cannot establish standing—especially not at the summary-
    judgment stage.
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    the census.” Id. at 2565 (emphasis added). Thus, Department of Commerce
    shows that people will predictably violate the law when sufficiently
    incentivized to do so. This directly contradicts the assumption undergirding
    much of the majority’s analysis—that people tend to follow the law regardless
    of the incentives. And state employees who do not want to enroll in insurance
    have every incentive to violate the coverage requirement. 9
    2.
    The majority similarly argues that the coverage requirement increases
    the number of individuals enrolled in the state plaintiffs’ Medicaid programs.
    This argument fails for the same reason: the state plaintiffs produce no
    evidence—let alone conclusive evidence—showing that anyone has enrolled in
    their Medicaid programs solely because of the unenforceable coverage
    requirement. To this end, the best the majority can scrape up is a statement
    from Teresa MacCartney, a Georgia budget official, stating that “[a]fter the
    implementation of the ACA, [Georgia] experienced increased enrollment of
    individuals already eligible for Medicaid benefits under pre-ACA eligibility
    standards.” The majority’s takeaway is that the coverage requirement caused
    this increase. Maybe so. But MacCartney’s statement refers specifically to the
    coverage requirement at the time of the ACA’s enactment, when the coverage
    9A Congressional Budget Office report released shortly before Congress repealed the
    shared-responsibility payment further supports this notion. It concluded:
    If the [shared-responsibility payment] was eliminated but the [coverage
    requirement] itself was not repealed . . . . only a small number of people who
    enroll in insurance because of the [coverage requirement] under current law
    would continue to do so solely because of a willingness to comply with the law.
    Cong. Budget Office, Repealing the Individual Health Insurance Mandate: An Updated
    Estimate at 1 (2017) (hereinafter “CBO Report”). On this record, we have been given no
    reason to believe that any of the state plaintiffs’ employees are among this “small number of
    people.” Id.
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    requirement interacted with the shared-responsibility payment. This
    statement provides no insight into how the coverage requirement affects
    Medicaid rolls after the shared-responsibility payment’s repeal. In fact,
    MacCartney signed her declaration on May 14, 2018, more than seven months
    before the shared-responsibility payment’s repeal went into effect. See Budget
    Fiscal Year, 2018, Pub. L. No. 115-97, § 11081(b), 131 Stat. 2054, 2092 (2017).
    Accordingly, the majority’s analysis again rests on the necessary
    assumption that people will obey the coverage requirement regardless of the
    incentives, in direct contradiction to Department of Commerce. And because
    Medicaid is available to eligible recipients at little to no cost, it is especially
    unlikely that the unenforceable coverage requirement would play any
    significant part in anyone’s decision to enroll. It belies common sense to
    conclude that anyone who would otherwise pass on the significant benefits of
    Medicaid would be motivated to enroll solely because of an unenforceable law.
    In sum, the majority cites no actual evidence tying any costs the state
    plaintiffs have incurred to the unenforceable coverage requirement. The state
    plaintiffs accordingly cannot show an injury traceable to the coverage
    requirement, so they do not have standing to challenge the coverage
    requirement.
    III.
    I would not reach the merits of this case because, as explained in Part II,
    I would vacate the district court’s order for lack of standing. But as the majority
    errs on the merits too, I voice my disagreement.
    “Neither the Act nor any other law attaches negative legal consequences
    to not buying health insurance, beyond requiring a payment to the IRS.” NFIB,
    567 U.S. at 568 (Roberts, C.J., majority opinion). Now that Congress has zeroed
    out that payment, the coverage requirement affords individuals the same
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    choice individuals have had since the dawn of private health insurance, either
    purchase insurance or else pay zero dollars. Thus, to my mind, the majority’s
    focus on whether Congress’s taxing power or the Necessary and Proper Clause
    authorizes Congress to pass a $0 tax is a red herring; the real question is
    whether Congress exceeds its enumerated powers when it passes a law that
    does nothing. 10 And of course it does not. 11 Congress exercises its legislative
    power when it “alter[s] the legal rights, duties and relations of persons.” INS
    v. Chadha, 
    462 U.S. 919
    , 952 (1983); cf. id. (“Not every action taken by either
    House is subject to the bicameralism and presentment requirements of Art. I.
    Whether actions taken by either House are, in law and fact, an exercise of
    legislative power depends not on their form but upon ‘whether they contain
    matter which is properly to be regarded as legislative in its character and
    effect.’” (citation omitted) (quoting S. Rep. No. 1335, 54th Cong., 2d Sess., 8
    (1897))).
    Lest the majority mistake my position and end up shadowboxing with
    “bizarre     metaphysical       conclusions,”       “quantum        musings,”      or    ersatz
    inconsistencies, Maj. Op. at 44 & n.40, I need to make something explicit at
    the outset. The TCJA did not change the text or the meaning of the coverage
    requirement, but it did change the real-world effects it produces. Before the
    TCJA, the two options afforded by the coverage requirement—purchasing
    insurance      or    making       a   shared-responsibility         payment—were           both
    10  “In litigation generally, and in constitutional litigation most prominently, courts in
    the United States characteristically pause to ask: Is this conflict really necessary?” Arizonans
    for Official English v. Arizona, 
    520 U.S. 43
    , 75 (1997). The majority would do well if it paused
    to ask whether it is necessary for a federal court to rule on whether the Constitution
    authorizes a $0 tax or otherwise prohibits Congress from passing a law that does nothing.
    The absurdity of these inquiries highlights the severity of the majority’s error in finding the
    plaintiffs have standing to challenge this dead letter.
    11 The majority does not argue otherwise.
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    burdensome, but Congress could force individuals to choose one of those
    options by exercising its Taxing Power. Today, the shared-responsibility
    payment’s meaning has not changed—it still gives individuals the choice to
    purchase insurance or make a shared-responsibility payment—but the amount
    of that payment is zero dollars, which means that the coverage requirement
    now does nothing. The majority’s contrary conclusion rests on the premise that
    the coverage requirement compels individuals to purchase health insurance.
    With this understanding, the majority says that the coverage requirement does
    exactly what the Supreme Court said it cannot do: compel participation in
    commerce. See NFIB, 567 U.S. at 552 (opinion of Roberts, C.J.); id. at 652-53
    (joint dissent). This conclusion follows fine from the premise, but the premise
    is wrong. Despite its seemingly mandatory language, the coverage requirement
    does not compel anyone to purchase health insurance.
    In NFIB, although five Justices agreed that “[t]he most straightforward
    reading of the [coverage requirement] is that it commands individuals to
    purchase insurance,” id. at 562 (opinion of Roberts, C.J.); accord id. at 663
    (joint dissent), applying the canon of constitutional avoidance, the Court
    rejected this interpretation. Instead, the Court interpreted the coverage
    requirement to offer applicable individuals a “lawful choice” between
    purchasing health insurance and paying the shared-responsibility payment,
    which the Court interpreted as a valid exercise of Congress’s taxing power. Id.
    at 574 (Roberts, C.J., majority opinion). This is a permissible construction, the
    Court concluded, because “[w]hile the [coverage requirement] clearly aims to
    induce the purchase of health insurance, it need not be read to declare that
    failing to do so is unlawful.” Id. at 567-68. The Court observed that “[n]either
    the [ACA] nor any other law attaches negative legal consequences to not
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    buying health insurance, beyond requiring a payment to the IRS.” Id. at 568.
    And the Court further explained:
    Indeed, it is estimated that four million people each year will
    choose to pay the IRS rather than buy insurance. We would expect
    Congress to be troubled by that prospect if such conduct were
    unlawful. That Congress apparently regards such extensive failure
    to comply with the [coverage requirement] as tolerable suggests
    that Congress did not think it was creating four million outlaws.
    Id. (citation omitted).
    The NFIB Court’s application of constitutional avoidance as an
    interpretive tool does not mean that the Court rewrote the statute. Only
    Congress can do that. Rather, the Court was “choosing between competing
    plausible interpretations of a statutory text, resting on the reasonable
    presumption that Congress did not intend the alternative which raises serious
    constitutional doubts.” Clark v. Martinez, 
    543 U.S. 371
    , 381 (2005). “The canon
    is thus a means of giving effect to congressional intent, not of subverting it.”
    Id. at 382. Accordingly, when the Court ruled in NFIB that “[t]hose subject to
    the [coverage requirement] may lawfully forgo health insurance,” NFIB, 567
    U.S. at 574 n.11, that was an authoritative determination regarding what the
    text of the coverage requirement meant and what Congress intended.
    The majority pushes aside NFIB’s construction, acting as though the fact
    that the NFIB Court applied the canon of constitutional avoidance means that
    its interpretation no longer governs following the repeal of the shared-
    responsibility payment. But when the Court construes statutes, its
    “interpretive decisions, in whatever way reasoned, effectively become part of
    the statutory scheme, subject (just like the rest) to congressional change.”
    Kimble v. Marvel Entm’t, LLC, 
    135 S. Ct. 2401
    , 2409 (2015) (emphasis added).
    While Congress can change its mind and could have amended the coverage
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    requirement to turn the “lawful choice” described by NFIB, 567 U.S. at 574,
    into an unwavering command, the majority does not suggest that Congress
    ever made such a choice. Sure, Congress amended the shared-responsibility
    payment in 2017. Yet as the district court went to great lengths to establish
    and the majority is elsewhere eager to point out, the coverage requirement and
    the shared-responsibility payment are distinct provisions. See Maj. Op. at 19
    (“To bring a claim against the [coverage requirement], therefore, the plaintiffs
    needed to show injury from the individual mandate—not from the shared
    responsibility payment.”); Texas v. United States, 
    340 F. Supp. 3d 579
    , 596
    (N.D. Tex. 2018) (“It is critical to clarify something at the outset: the shared-
    responsibility payment, 26 U.S.C. § 5000A(b), is distinct from the [coverage
    requirement], id. § 5000A(a).”). And Congress did not touch the text of the
    coverage requirement when it amended the shared-responsibility payment.
    See Budget Fiscal Year, 2018, Pub. L. No. 115-97, § 11081. Compare
    § 5000A(a), with 26 U.S.C. § 5000A(a) (2011). At risk of stating the obvious, if
    the text of the coverage requirement has not changed, its meaning could not
    have changed either. By “giv[ing] these same words a different meaning,” the
    majority “invent[s] a statute rather than interpret[s] one.” Clark, 543 U.S. at
    378.
    The majority is thus left on unsteady ground: amendment by implication,
    which “will not be presumed unless the legislature’s intent is ‘clear and
    manifest.’” In re Lively, 
    717 F.3d 406
    , 410 (5th Cir. 2013) (quoting Nat’l Ass’n
    of Home Builders v. Defs. of Wildlife, 
    551 U.S. 644
    , 662 (2007)); see also, e.g.,
    Epic Sys. Corp v. Lewis, 
    138 S. Ct. 1612
    , 1624 (2018) (“[I]n approaching a
    claimed conflict, we come armed with the ‘stron[g] presum[ption]’ that repeals
    by implication are ‘disfavored’ and that ‘Congress will specifically address’
    preexisting law when it wishes to suspend its normal operations in a later
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    statute.” (second and third alterations in original) (quoting United States v.
    Fausto, 
    484 U.S. 439
    , 452-53 (1988))). This rule operates with equal force when
    a judicial construction previously illuminated the meaning of the purportedly
    amended statute. See TC Heartland LLC v. Kraft Foods Grp. Brands LLC, 
    137 S. Ct. 1514
    , 1520 (2017) (“When Congress intends to effect a change of [a
    statute’s earlier judicial interpretation], it ordinarily provides a relatively clear
    indication of its intent in the text of the amended provision.”); Midlantic Nat’l
    Bank v. N.J. Dep’t of Envtl. Prot., 
    474 U.S. 494
    , 501 (1986) (“The normal rule
    of statutory construction is that if Congress intends for legislation to change
    the interpretation of a judicially created concept, it makes that intent
    specific.”); cf. Whitman v. Am. Trucking Ass’n, 
    531 U.S. 457
    , 468 (2001)
    (“Congress, we have held, does not alter the fundamental details of a
    regulatory scheme in vague terms or ancillary provisions—it does not, one
    might say, hide elephants in mouseholes.”). Congress’s silence on the matter is
    thus conclusive.
    Yet even if one probes further, it boggles the mind to suggest that
    Congress intended to turn a nonmandatory provision into a mandatory
    provision by doing away with the only means of incentivizing compliance with
    that provision. Congress quite plainly intended to relieve individuals of the
    burden the coverage requirement put on them; it did not intend to increase that
    burden. And if it did, it certainly did not make that intent “clear and manifest.”
    Lively, 717 F.3d at 410. Moreover, the considerations that led the NFIB Court
    to conclude that Congress did not intend the coverage requirement to impose
    a legal command to purchase health insurance are even more compelling in the
    absence of the shared-responsibility payment. Whereas before the only
    “negative legal consequence[] to not buying health insurance” was the payment
    of a tax, NFIB, 567 U.S. at 567-68, now there are no consequences at all. And
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    as the Congressional Budget Office (“CBO”) has predicted, without the shared-
    responsibility payment, most applicable individuals will not maintain health
    insurance solely for the purpose of obeying the coverage requirement. See
    Cong. Budget Office, Repealing the Individual Health Insurance Mandate: An
    Updated Estimate at 1 (2017). “That Congress apparently regards such
    extensive failure to comply with the [coverage requirement] as tolerable
    suggests that Congress did not think it was creating [millions of] outlaws.”
    NFIB, 567 U.S. at 568.
    Ergo, when Congress zeroed-out the shared-responsibility payment
    without amending the coverage requirement, it did not do away with the lawful
    choice it previously offered applicable individuals; it simply changed the
    parameters of that choice. Under the old scheme, applicable individuals could
    lawfully choose between maintaining health insurance and paying a tax.
    Under the new scheme, applicable individuals can lawfully choose between
    maintaining health insurance and doing nothing. In other words, the coverage
    requirement is a dead letter—it functions as an expression of national policy
    or words of encouragement, at most. Accordingly, although I would not reach
    the merits, I would reverse if I did.
    IV.
    I agree with much of what the majority has to say about the district
    court’s severability ruling. But I fail to understand the logic behind remanding
    this case for a do-over. Severability is a question of law that this court can
    review de novo. And the answer here is quite simple—indeed, a severability
    analysis will rarely be easier. After all, “[o]ne determines what Congress would
    have done by examining what it did,” and Congress declawed the coverage
    requirement without repealing any other part of the ACA. Legal Servs. Corp v.
    Velazquez, 
    531 U.S. 533
    , 560 (2001) (Scalia, J., dissenting); see also Ayotte v.
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    Planned Parenthood of N. New Eng., 
    546 U.S. 320
    , 330 (2006) (“[T]he
    touchstone for [severability analysis] is legislative intent.”). Consequently,
    little guesswork is needed to determine that Congress believed the ACA could
    stand in its entirety without the unenforceable coverage requirement.
    The majority suggests that remand is necessary because the district
    court “has many tools at its disposal” and is thus “best positioned to undertake”
    the severability inquiry. Maj. Op. at 60. It is true that the district court is better
    able to assess factual issues than appellate judges, because it can hold
    evidentiary hearings, but I cannot see how that could be relevant,                       since
    severability is a question of law that we review de novo. Further, it is not clear
    what sort of evidence the district court could receive that would be useful when
    deciding severability questions except perhaps legislative history, a source
    which the majority derides. See Maj. Op. at 56 n.45 (“[W]e caution against
    relying on individual statements by legislators to determine the meaning of
    the law.”). When it comes to analyzing the statute’s text and historical context,
    see id., we are just as competent as the district court. There is thus no reason
    to prolong the uncertainty this litigation has caused to the future of this
    indubitably significant statute. 12
    A.
    Before I address the more specific problems with the district court’s
    inseverability ruling, some background on the ACA is in order. Congress
    12 The majority also suggests that remand is necessary so that the district court can
    consider remedial issues, raised by the United States for the first time on appeal, regarding
    the appropriate scope of relief. But such issues are largely moot if, as I believe, the coverage
    requirement is completely severable from the rest of the ACA. For example, I do not perceive
    a meaningful difference between a nationwide injunction prohibiting enforcement of the
    already-unenforceable coverage requirement versus an injunction against enforcement that
    is limited to the plaintiff states. In any case, this court could—and, in my view, should—
    resolve the severability issue even if remanding remedial issues is appropriate.
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    passed the ACA in 2010 to address a growing crisis of Americans living without
    health insurance. Prior to the ACA, nearly 50 million Americans (about 15
    percent of the population at the time) were uninsured. Florida ex rel. Att’y Gen.
    v. U.S. Dep’t of Health & Human Servs., 
    648 F.3d 1235
    , 1244 (11th Cir. 2011),
    rev’d on other grounds, NFIB, 
    567 U.S. 519
    . Although many large employers
    provided health insurance, coverage was often cost prohibitive for small
    businesses and consumers seeking insurance through the individual market
    (i.e., directly instead of through an employer). See U.S. Gov’t Accountability
    Office, GAO-12-166R, Health Care Coverage: Job Lock and the Potential
    Impact of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act 3-4 (2011). Moreover,
    insurance companies could—and regularly would—deny coverage to high-risk
    consumers, especially those with preexisting medical conditions. Id. at 4.
    The pre-ACA status quo created numerous economic and social
    problems. Most obviously, America’s uninsured population could not afford
    spiraling healthcare costs, thus exacerbating health problems, leading to an
    estimated 45,000 premature deaths annually, Andrew P. Wilper et al., Health
    Insurance and Mortality in US Adults, 99 Am. J. Pub. Health 2289, 2292
    (2009), and causing “62 percent of all personal bankruptcies,” 42 U.S.C.
    § 18091(2)(G). The uninsured crisis caused some subtler problems too. For one
    thing, hospitals would have to absorb the costs of treating uninsured patients
    and would inevitably pass those costs along to insurance companies, which
    would then pass them along to consumers. See § 18091(2)(F) (“The cost of
    providing uncompensated care to the uninsured was $43,000,000,000 in 2008.
    To pay for this cost, health care providers pass on the cost to private insurers,
    which pass on the cost to families.”). See generally Amicus Br. of HCA
    Healthcare, Inc. at 9-13. And dependency on employer-based healthcare
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    decreased labor mobility, discouraged entrepreneurship, and kept potential
    caregivers away from the home. See GAO-12-166R, supra, at 5-6.
    In enacting the ACA, Congress sought to address these and other
    problems with the national healthcare system by drastically reducing the
    number of uninsured and underinsured Americans. To achieve this goal, the
    ACA undertook a series of reforms, most notably to the individual insurance
    market. See generally Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, Pub. L. No.
    111-148, tit. I, 124 Stat. 119 (2010). Among the ACA’s most important (and
    visible) reforms are two related provisions: guaranteed issue and community
    rate. See 42 U.S.C. §§ 300gg, 300gg-1. The guaranteed-issue provision requires
    health-insurance providers to accept every individual who applies for coverage,
    thus preventing insurers from denying coverage based on a consumer’s
    preexisting medical condition. See § 300gg-1(a). The community-rate provision
    prevents insurers from charging a higher rate because of a policyholder’s
    medical condition. See § 300gg(a).
    Left      without     some     counterbalance,         the   guaranteed-issue    and
    community-rate provisions threatened to overload insurers’ risk pools with
    high-risk policyholders. Beyond allowing more high-risk consumers to
    purchase health insurance (as intended), these provisions disincentivized
    healthy (i.e., low risk) consumers from purchasing health insurance because it
    allowed them to wait until they developed costly health problems to purchase
    insurance. 13 This would have caused premiums to skyrocket, exacerbating
    many of the problems Congress sought to solve. See generally Amicus Br. of
    Blue Cross Blue Shield Ass’n at 3-4. Thus, the ACA included several provisions
    to incentivize low-risk consumers to purchase health insurance. It offered tax
    13   This is known as the adverse-selection problem.
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    credits to offset much of the cost of health insurance for middle-income
    consumers. See 26 U.S.C. § 36B(b). It created healthcare exchanges to facilitate
    competition among health plans and to lower transaction costs. See 42 U.S.C.
    §§ 18031, 18041. It limited new enrollments to an open-enrollment period set
    by the Secretary of Health and Human Services, which mitigates the adverse-
    selection problem by preventing consumers from purchasing health insurance
    only when they need it. See § 18031(c)(6). And it included the coverage
    requirement at issue in this lawsuit. See § 5000A(a).
    Although the coverage requirement has been among the ACA’s best-
    known provisions, the ACA’s reforms to the private insurance market extend
    well beyond it. As just mentioned, Congress created other mechanisms to
    achieve the same goal as the coverage requirement: incentivize low-risk
    consumers to purchase health insurance. The ACA also included other
    provisions expanding access to the private insurance market, including a
    requirement that employers with 50 or more employees offer health insurance,
    see 26 U.S.C. § 4980H, and a requirement that health-insurance providers
    allow young adults to remain on their parents’ insurance until they turn 26,
    see 42 U.S.C. § 300gg-14. And it included provisions designed to make health-
    insurance policies more attractive, such as those directly regulating premiums,
    see, e.g., id. § 300gg-18(b), limiting benefits caps, see id. § 300gg-11, and
    prescribing certain minimum-coverage requirements for health plans, see, e.g.,
    id. § 300gg-13. Moreover, the ACA contains countless other provisions that are
    unrelated to the private insurance market—and many that are only
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    tangentially related to health insurance at all. 14 The following are only some
    of many possible examples:
    • Section 3006, which directs the Secretary of Health and Human
    Services to “develop a plan to implement a value-based
    purchasing program for payments under the Medicare program
    . . . for skilled nursing facilities.”
    • Section 4205, which requires chain restaurants to
    conspicuously display “the number of calories contained in . . .
    standard menu item[s].”
    • Section 5204, which creates a student-loan repayment
    assistance program “to eliminate critical public health
    workforce shortages in Federal, State, local and tribal public
    health agencies.”
    • Section 6402, which, among other things, strengthens criminal
    laws prohibiting healthcare fraud.
    • Title III of Part X, which reauthorizes and amends the Indian
    Health Care Improvement Act, a decades-old statute creating
    and maintaining the infrastructure for tribal healthcare
    services.
    Given the breadth of the ACA and the importance of the problems that
    Congress set out to address, it is simply unfathomable to me that Congress
    hinged the future of the entire statute on the viability of a single, deliberately
    unenforceable provision. 15
    14 The ACA contains ten titles. Only the first title focuses on the private insurance
    industry. The other titles address wide-ranging topics from the “prevention of chronic
    disease,” ACA tit. IV, to the “health care work force,” id. tit. V.
    15 I do not mean to suggest that, as a policy matter, Congress chose the best (or even
    worthwhile) solutions to these problems. Such matters are beyond my job description, so I
    express no opinion on them. But the district court should have thought more critically about
    whether Congress likely intended to leave its chosen solution to a serious problem so
    vulnerable to judicial invalidation.
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    B.
    In Planned Parenthood of Northern New England, the Court announced
    the three principles that must guide our severability analysis. “First, we try
    not to nullify more of a legislature’s work than is necessary, for we know that
    ‘[a] ruling of unconstitutionality frustrates the intent of the elected
    representatives of the people.’” Planned Parenthood of N. New Eng., 546 U.S.
    at 329 (alteration in original) (quoting Regan v. Time, Inc., 
    468 U.S. 641
    , 652
    (1984) (plurality opinion)). “Second, mindful that our constitutional mandate
    and institutional competence are limited, we restrain ourselves from
    ‘rewrit[ing] [a] law to conform it to constitutional requirements’ even as we
    strive to salvage it.” Id. (first alteration in original) (quoting Am. Booksellers,
    484 U.S. at 397). “Third, the touchstone for any decision about remedy is
    legislative intent, for a court cannot ‘use its remedial powers to circumvent the
    intent of the legislature.’” Id. at 330 (quoting Califano v. Westcott, 
    443 U.S. 76
    ,
    94 (1979) (Powell, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part)).
    In accordance with these principles, the Court’s cases suggest a two-part
    inquiry. First, we must ask “whether the law remains ‘fully operative’ without
    the invalid provisions.” Murphy v. NCAA, 
    138 S. Ct. 1461
    , 1482 (2018); see also
    United States v. Booker, 
    543 U.S. 220
    , 258-59 (2005); Alaska Airlines, Inc. v.
    Brock, 
    480 U.S. 678
    , 684 (1987). If so, the remaining provisions are “presumed
    severable” from the invalid provision. Chadha, 462 U.S. at 934 (quoting
    Champlin Ref. Co. v. Corp. Comm’n, 
    286 U.S. 210
    , 234 (1932)). This
    presumption is rebutted only if “the statute’s text or historical context makes
    it ‘evident’ that Congress, faced with the limitations imposed by the
    Constitution, would have preferred” no statute over the statute with only the
    permissible provisions. Free Enter. Fund v. Pub. Co. Accounting Oversight Bd.,
    
    561 U.S. 477
    , 509 (2010). And as should be clear by now, “the ‘normal rule’ is
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    ‘that partial, rather than facial, invalidation is the required course.’” Id. at 508
    (quoting Brockett v. Spokane Arcades, Inc., 
    472 U.S. 491
    , 504 (1985)).
    1.
    The majority has identified the most glaring flaw in the district court’s
    severability analysis: the district court “gives relatively little attention to the
    intent of the 2017 Congress, which appears in the analysis only as an
    afterthought.” When one takes this fact into account, there can be little doubt
    as to Congress’s intent.
    We have unusual insight into Congress’s thinking because Congress was
    given a chance to weigh in on the ACA’s future without an effective coverage
    requirement and it decided the ACA should remain in place. By zeroing out the
    shared-responsibility payment, the 2017 Congress left the coverage
    requirement unenforceable. If Congress viewed the coverage requirement as
    so essential to the rest of the ACA that it intended the entire statute to rise
    and fall with the coverage requirement, it is inconceivable that Congress would
    have declawed the coverage requirement as it did. And make no mistake:
    Congress declawed the coverage requirement. As the CBO found only a month
    before Congress passed the TCJA, “[i]f the [coverage requirement] penalty was
    eliminated but the [coverage requirement] itself was not repealed, the results
    would be very similar to” if the coverage requirement itself were repealed. 2017
    CBO Report, supra, at 1. Regardless of lofty civic notions about people who
    follow the law for the sake of following the law, the objective evidence before
    Congress was that “only a small number of people” would obey the coverage
    requirement without the shared-responsibility payment. Id.; cf. Dep’t of
    Commerce, 139 S. Ct. at 2565-66 (concluding people will “predictabl[y]” “violate
    their legal duty” when incentivized to do so). Congress accordingly knew that
    repealing the shared-responsibility payment would have the same essential
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    effect on the ACA’s statutory scheme as would repealing the coverage
    requirement.
    Furthermore, as various amici highlight, judicial repeal of the ACA
    would have potentially devastating effects on the national healthcare system
    and the economy at large. See, e.g., Amicus Br. of Am.’s Health Ins. Plans
    (discussing impact on health-insurance industry); Amicus Br. of 35 Counties,
    Cities, and Towns (discussing impact on municipalities); Amicus Br. of
    Bipartisan Econ. Scholars (discussing impact on economy); Amicus Br. of Am.
    Hosp. Ass’n et al. (discussing impact on hospitals). Regardless of whether the
    ACA is good or bad policy, it is undoubtedly significant policy. It is unlikely
    that Congress would want a statute on which millions of people rely for their
    healthcare and livelihoods to disappear overnight with the wave of a judicial
    wand. If Congress wanted to repeal the ACA through the deliberative
    legislative process, it could have done so. But with the stakes so high, it is
    difficult to imagine that this is a matter Congress intended to turn over to the
    judiciary.
    2.
    A second flaw in the district court’s analysis is the great weight it places
    on the fact that Congress in 2017 did not repeal its statutory findings
    emphasizing the coverage requirement’s importance to the guaranteed-issue
    and community-rate provisions. See 42 U.S.C. § 18091. The district court
    overread the significance of § 18091. Congress enacted the findings in § 18091
    to demonstrate the coverage requirement’s role in regulating interstate
    commerce. When it invokes its commerce power, Congress routinely makes
    such findings to facilitate judicial review. See United States v. Morrison, 
    529 U.S. 598
    , 612 (2000) (“While ‘Congress normally is not required to make formal
    findings as to the substantial burdens that an activity has on interstate
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    commerce,’ the existence of such findings may ‘enable us to evaluate the
    legislative judgment that the activity in question substantially affect[s]
    interstate commerce, even though no such substantial effect [is] visible to the
    naked eye.’” (alterations in original) (citation omitted) (quoting United States
    v. Lopez, 
    514 U.S. 549
    , 562-63 (1995))). Indeed, § 18091(2), the subsection the
    district court focused its attention on, is entitled “Effects on the national
    economy and interstate commerce.”
    Section 18091 is not an inseverability clause, and nothing in its text
    suggests that Congress intended to make the coverage requirement
    inseverable from the remainder of the ACA. If Congress intended to draft an
    inseverability clause, it knew how to do so. See Office of Legislative Counsel,
    U.S. Senate, Senate Legislative Drafting Manual § 131(b) (1997) (explaining
    purpose of inseverability clause). Compare id. § 131(c) (providing as example
    of proper form for inseverability clause: “EFFECT OF INVALIDITY ON
    OTHER PROVISIONS OF ACT.—If section 501, 502, or 503 of the Federal
    Election Campaign Act of 1971 (as added by this section) or any part of those
    sections is held to be invalid, all provisions of and amendments made by this
    Act shall be invalid”), with § 18091(2)(H) (“The requirement is an essential
    part of this larger regulation of economic activity, and the absence of the
    requirement would undercut Federal regulation of the health insurance
    market.”). In fact, both the House and the Senate legislative drafting guides
    suggest that Congress should include an inseverability clause if it wants to
    make a statute inseverable because “[t]he Supreme Court has made it quite
    clear that invalid portions of statutes are to be severed ‘unless it is evident that
    the Legislature would not have enacted those provisions which are within its
    powers, independently of that which is not.’” Office of Legislative Counsel, U.S.
    House of Representatives, House Legislative Counsel’s Manual on Drafting
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    Style § 328 (1995) (quoting Chadha, 462 U.S. at 931); accord Senate Legislative
    Drafting Manual, supra, at § 131(a). The absence of a genuine inseverability
    clause should be all but conclusive in assessing the legislature’s intent.
    Moreover, the argument that § 18091 is meant to signal Congress’s
    intent that the coverage requirement be inseverable proves far too much.
    Section 18091 discusses the coverage requirement’s importance to the entire
    federal healthcare regulatory scheme, including—along with the ACA—the
    Public Health Service Act (“PHSA”) and the Employee Retirement Income
    Security Act (“ERISA”). See § 18091(2)(H) (“Under the Employee Retirement
    Income Security Act of 1974 (29 U.S.C. 1001 et seq.), the Public Health Service
    Act (42 U.S.C. 201 et seq.), and this Act, the Federal Government has a
    significant role in regulating health insurance. The [coverage] requirement is
    an essential part of this larger regulation of economic activity, and the absence
    of the requirement would undercut Federal regulation of the health insurance
    market.” (emphasis added)). It is not suggested that Congress intended a court
    to strike down the PHSA and ERISA if it found the coverage requirement
    unconstitutional. This would be especially implausible given the intensity of
    the debate over the coverage requirement’s constitutionality from the get-go.
    See NFIB, 567 U.S. at 540 (“On the day the President signed the [ACA] into
    law, Florida and 12 other States filed a complaint in the Federal District Court
    for the Northern District of Florida.”). Yet in signaling that the coverage
    requirement is “an essential part of this larger regulation,” Congress did not
    distinguish between the ACA and these prior statutes. Thus, § 18091 cannot
    reasonably be read to bear on the coverage requirement’s severability.
    3.
    Another flaw in the district court’s analysis is its suggestion that the
    Supreme Court concluded in NFIB and King v. Burwell, 
    135 S. Ct. 2480
     (2015),
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    that the coverage requirement is inseverable from the ACA’s guaranteed-issue
    and community-rate provisions. The district court misconstrued these
    opinions. And even if the district court read them correctly, these opinions
    address the coverage requirement as enforced by the shared-responsibility
    payment. They give little valuable insight into the coverage requirement’s role
    in the post-TCJA ACA.
    In NFIB, only the dissenters addressed the coverage requirement’s
    severability. The district court did not suggest it is bound by a Supreme Court
    dissent, and of course it is not. The district court instead took language from
    the other five Justices out of context to conclude that each of them viewed the
    coverage requirement as inseverable. But none of the language the district
    court cited addresses severability. See NFIB, 567 U.S. at 547-48 (opinion of
    Roberts, C.J.) (discussing Government’s argument that coverage requirement
    plays a role in regulating interstate commerce); id. at 597 (Ginsburg, J.,
    dissenting in part) (same). Although the Justices’ reasoning certainly suggests
    that they saw the coverage requirement as an important part of the statutory
    scheme as it existed in 2012, this does not mean the Justices found it “evident”
    that Congress would have preferred the entire statute to fall without the
    coverage requirement. Alaska Airlines, 480 U.S. at 684.
    King likewise contains some helpful commentary about the ACA’s
    original statutory scheme, but it does not discuss severability or otherwise
    control the severability analysis. The Court ruled in King that the ACA’s tax
    credits were available to every eligible consumer regardless of whether the
    state in which a consumer lived established its own exchange or relied on the
    federally operated exchange. 135 S. Ct. at 2496. The coverage requirement
    came up because many more individuals would have been exempt from the
    shared-responsibility payment if tax credits were not available to them. Id. at
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    2493-95; see also § 5000A(e)(1)(A) (“No penalty shall be imposed . . . with
    respect to . . . [a]ny applicable individual for any month if the applicable
    individual’s required contribution (determined on an annual basis) for
    coverage for the month exceeds 8 percent of such individual’s household income
    . . . .”). 16 Noting the importance of the tax credits and coverage requirement (as
    enforced by the shared-responsibility payment) to the statutory structure, the
    Court concluded as a matter of statutory interpretation that Congress did not
    intend a scheme in which neither tax credits nor the coverage requirement
    were operating to bring low-risk consumers into the insurance pools. See King,
    135 S. Ct. at 2492-94 (“The combination of no tax credits and an ineffective
    coverage requirement could well push a State’s individual insurance market
    into a death spiral. . . . It is implausible that Congress meant the [ACA] to
    operate in this manner.”).
    The district court framed King as saying that Congress intrinsically tied
    the community-rate and guaranteed-issue provisions to the coverage
    requirement, meaning that those provisions must be inseverable from the
    coverage requirement. But the district court ignored a crucial aspect of the
    King Court’s analysis: it explicitly discussed the coverage requirement as
    enforced by the shared-responsibility payment. See id. at 2493 (referring to the
    coverage requirement as “a requirement that individuals maintain health
    insurance coverage or make a payment to the IRS” (emphasis added)). Indeed,
    as the Court identified it, the crux of the problem with denying consumers tax
    credits in federal-exchange states was that doing so would make a large
    16Lest there be any confusion, the exemption at issue in King exempted individuals
    otherwise subject to the coverage requirement from the shared-responsibility payment; it did
    not exempt them from the coverage requirement itself. Exemptions from the shared-
    responsibility payment are listed in § 5000A(e)(1), whereas exemptions from the coverage
    requirement itself are listed in § 5000A(d).
    96
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    No. 19-10011
    number of individuals unable to afford insurance, thus exempting them from
    the shared-responsibility payment. See id. These widespread exemptions
    would, in turn, make the coverage requirement “ineffective.” Id. King thus
    speaks far more to the shared-responsibility payment’s role in the ACA’s pre-
    TCJA statutory scheme than it does the coverage requirement’s role in the
    statutory scheme.
    Even to the extent the Court in NFIB or King meant to opine on the
    coverage requirement’s severability, these cases were both decided before the
    TCJA. They thus give no insight into how the coverage requirement fits into
    the post-TCJA scheme. Whatever reservations the Court previously harbored
    about severing the coverage requirement, Congress plainly did not share those
    concerns when it zeroed out the shared-responsibility payment. Congress
    either concluded that healthcare markets under the ACA had reached a point
    of stability at which they no longer needed an effective coverage requirement, 17
    or it chose to accept the negative side effects of effectively repealing the
    coverage requirement as a cost of relieving the burden it placed on applicable
    individuals. Either way, the legislative considerations have necessarily
    shifted.
    In sum, there was no reason for the district court to conclude that any
    provision in the ACA was inseverable from the coverage requirement. The
    majority does not necessarily disagree. I thus do not understand its decision to
    remand when, even on the majority’s analysis of the case, it could instead
    17See CBO Report, supra, at 1 (concluding that “[n]ongroup insurance markets would
    continue to be stable in almost all areas of the country throughout the coming decade” if the
    coverage requirement were repealed); Amicus Br. of Blue Cross Blue Shield Ass’n at 24-27
    (explaining that tax credits and other ACA provisions are driving enough consumers into
    insurance markets to make the coverage requirement unnecessary).
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    No. 19-10011
    reverse and render a judgment declaring only the coverage requirement
    unconstitutional.
    V.
    Limits on judicial power demand special respect in a case like this. For
    one thing, careless judicial interference has the potential to be especially
    pernicious when it involves a complex statute like the ACA, which carries such
    significant implications for the welfare of the economy and the American
    populace at large. For another, the legitimacy of the judicial branch as a
    countermajoritarian institution in an otherwise democratic system depends on
    its ability to operate with restraint—and especially so in a high-profile case
    such as the one at bar. The district court’s opinion is textbook judicial
    overreach. The majority perpetuates that overreach and, in remanding,
    ensures that no end for this litigation is in sight.
    I respectfully dissent.
    98
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 19-10011

Filed Date: 12/18/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/18/2019

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