So it turns out there is an Obamacare death panel after all.
It has nine members and it operates out of a marble building directly across the street from the Capitol.
When the Supreme Court on Friday announced that it would take up another challenge to the Affordable Care Act in March, it delivered the threat of two mortal blows to the signature achievement of the Obama presidency.
First, it raised the possibility that the justices, who narrowly spared the law in 2012, will in June come out with a new ruling that would dismantle the law on different grounds. But even if the justices make no such ruling, the very act of taking up the challenge will itself undermine the law. The justices announced their decision just a week before the open-enrollment period for 2015 begins — and the looming possibility that the high court will strike down the law will probably deter those who are considering signing up for its coverage.
Thus did Sylvia Mathews Burwell, the new secretary of health and human services, find herself in a defensive posture Monday afternoon, even though she was in the friendly environs of the liberal Center for American Progress. An event had been scheduled to generate enthusiasm for the new open-enrollment season, but the host, former Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland, had little choice but to acknowledge the elephant in the room.
"What do you want consumers to know and should they be concerned, as we head into this open-enrollment period, about this Supreme Court decision?" he asked gingerly.
Burwell's practiced reply: Nothing to see here.
"The most important thing for consumers to know is that nothing has changed," she said, assuring all that the law's tax credits would continue. "And so as we go into open enrollment, nothing has changed," she repeated. She kept her face determinedly in a smile, though nothing about the gesture indicated pleasure.