Health Care Freedom Act Passes

The Federal Health Care Reform legislation recently signed into law by President Obama forces uninsured individuals to purchase health insurance or face penalties imposed by the IRS.

The Florida House and Senate passed a measure intended to send a clear signal to Washington that Floridians reject intrusive health care mandates.

The measure proposes an amendment to the State Constitution prohibiting the government from interfering with an individual’s personal health care decisions.

Representative Plakon, sponsor of the measure, issued the following statement:

The government has never required citizens to purchase a product from a private for-profit company as a condition of lawful residence in the United States. As elected officials, it is our duty to protect citizens from Federal and State mandates that strip away the very freedoms our forefathers risked their lives for. With this vote, the Florida House has empowered the citizens of this great State to vote in November and make their voice heard on whether medical freedom is a fundamental right that must be protected in our State Constitution. I humbly thank all of the grassroots supporters and my House colleagues for looking beyond politics by pursuing public policy that ensures that we remain free souls under God and not property of the State.

Since the measure proposes an amendment to the State Constitution it will need to receive 60% of the vote to be ratified and made law.

FL to Join Suit

Florida’s Attorney General Bill McCollum will join 37 other states and file a lawsuit against the Federal Government if ObamaCare passes.

The suit will target two key components of the bill, the healthcare mandate and the manipulation of the states. The mandate compels people to buy healthcare or incur a tax penalty. This essentially taxes people for just living. The manipulation of the states has to do with sovereignty and the 10th Amendment.

The Florida legislature is considering two bills this session.

Senator Carey Baker and Representative Scott Plakon filed the Healthcare Freedom Act which amends Florida’s Constitution “to prohibit any law or rule from forcing people into a one size fits all, federally mandated health care system such as that being rushed through Congress.”

In addition they are taking up a resolution reasserting Florida’s tenth amendment rights under the Constitution of the United States.

Ultimately, the Supreme Court may have to decide on the Constitutionality of the Health Care Bill.