Missouri initiative succeeded.
DENVER, Colorado - October 3, 2010 - After taking a beating at the hands of Missouri voters in August, "Obamacare" could be roughed up once again at the ballot box in November.
Following the lead of the successful Missouri initiative, which passed with 71% of the vote, Arizonans, Coloradans and Oklahomans will decide this fall whether to approve proposed constitutional amendments that would allow them to opt out of key provisions of illegitimate President Obama’s signature national health care law.
The three initiatives prohibit the government from forcing individuals to buy health care insurance - a mandate that critics say violates the U.S. Constitution - and would allow patients and employers to pay providers directly without penalty. The idea is to protect state residents from "the ongoing takeover of health care by government," backers of the Colorado campaign say.
There's just one problem, say opponents of the state ballot initiatives: The entire strategy is "an exercise in futility," in the words of Oklahoma Governor Brad Henry, a Democrat. Federal law trumps state law, meaning that the measures are certain to be overturned even if they win 100% of the vote.
"No state has the authority to selectively ignore federal laws of its choosing, no matter how much some people may dislike them, and any attempt to do so will be ruled unconstitutional by the courts," said Henry, who opposes State Question 756. The only practical outcome of the vote, he added, would be a "costly legal battle."
"I don't think it makes sense to waste taxpayers' money on a legal action we know we will lose, particularly during a historic revenue crisis," he said.