“To encourage health insurers to offer insurance on newly created health benefit exchanges, and to keep premiums low, the federal government made an unambiguous statutory commitment: If the costs of claims under these new health insurance policies exceeded the premiums charged in the first three years, the government would reimburse insurers a specified percentage of the difference. Numerous health insurers, including petitioners, relied on that promise, joined the exchanges, set their premiums, and incurred significant losses in providing health coverage. Congress later enacted a series of appropriations riders restricting the sources of funds available to the Department of Health and Human Services (‘HHS’) to pay insurers what was owed, but never amended the underlying statute. A divided Federal Circuit panel agreed that the government’s initial statutory commitment was unambiguous, but relied on legislative history to hold the appropriations riders had repealed the statutory guarantee. The net effect was a bait-and-switch of staggering dimensions in which the government has paid insurers $12 billion less than what was promised. The question presented is: Whether Congress can evade its unambiguous statutory promise to pay health insurers for losses already incurred simply by enacting appropriations riders restricting the sources of funds available to satisfy the government’s obligation.”
“These cases present three questions: First, did §1342 of the Affordable Care Act obligate the Government to pay participating insurers the full amount calculated by that statute? Second, did the obligation survive Congress’ appropriations riders? And third, may petitioners sue the Government under the Tucker Act to recover on that obligation? Because our answer to each is yes, we reverse.”