Ohio's Republican attorney general is going to war with Trump to try and save Obamacare


President Donald Trump is forcing his Justice Department, over the objections of his own attorney general, to support the position of a coalition of right-wing states suing to strike down the Affordable Care Act, aka "Obamacare" in its entirety.
But at least one GOP state attorney general is among those fighting back. According to the Cincinnati Enquirer, Ohio's Dave Yost is advising a federal court to throw out the lawsuit:
Yost said in an interview he agrees that the individual mandate to buy health insurance is unconstitutional but disagrees that the rest of the law is also therefore invalid.
Yost plans to file a friend-of the-court brief in the 5th Circuit Court of Appeal. The brief will argue the individual mandate can be removed from the law without eliminating protections for pre-existing conditions, insurance caps and other parts of the law. About 1.9 million non-elderly Ohioans have pre-existing conditions, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.
The lawsuit is rooted in the GOP tax bill passed at the end of 2017, which among other things eliminated the ACA's individual mandate, and in the Supreme Court's 2012 decision in National Federation of Independent Businesses v. Sebelius, which said the mandate was constitutional under Congress' power to tax. Since the mandate no longer exists, the lawsuit argues, it is no longer a tax, and therefore the entire law — pre-existing conditions, community rating, insurance exchanges, essential benefits, tax credits, Medicaid expansion, Medicare reforms, all of it — must be struck down.