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cover of episode How the Supreme Court ruling on nationwide injunctions impacts businesses

How the Supreme Court ruling on nationwide injunctions impacts businesses

2025/6/30
logo of podcast Marketplace Morning Report

Marketplace Morning Report

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People
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Andre Harris
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Anthony Sanders
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Bank of America survey data
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Becca Brett
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Kimberly Adams
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Mary Heinz Drosch
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Melanie Fish
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Michael T. Morley
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Mitchell Hartman
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Nancy Marshall-Genzer
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Nancy Marshall-Genzer: 最高法院再次审议奥巴马医改法案,案件涉及哪些类型的预防性医疗保健可以被强制纳入健康保险计划,以及由谁来决定。这次的裁决直接影响到数百万美国人的医疗保障,特别是那些依赖平价医疗法案获得预防性服务的群体。最高法院的立场对于未来的医疗政策走向具有重要意义,也关系到医疗资源的分配和利用效率。 Mitchell Hartman: 这起案件主要争议在于哪些类型的预防性医疗保健(如筛查、药物和治疗)必须作为私人健康保险计划的一部分免费提供。保守派反对者认为,设立联邦独立医学专家小组来决定哪些预防性医疗保健应该免费提供是不合理的。原告反对支付包括暴露前预防(PrEP)等预防艾滋病毒传播的治疗费用,但法院认为,工作组将该治疗纳入是合法的,因为工作组本身是符合宪法的。预防性医疗保健的支持者对此表示欢迎,因为这意味着包括癌症和糖尿病筛查、预防中风和心脏健康的药物,甚至新生儿预防眼部感染的药膏等一系列护理也将得到维护和免费提供。我个人认为,确保所有人都能够获得基本的预防性医疗服务是至关重要的,这不仅关乎个人健康,也关系到整个社会的公共卫生水平。

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The Supreme Court addressed the types of preventive care mandated for free coverage under private health insurance plans. The ruling upholds the constitutionality of the federal task force determining these services, ensuring coverage for a wide range of preventive care, including cancer and diabetes screenings, and HIV prevention medication.
  • Supreme Court upholds constitutionality of preventive care task force
  • Wide range of preventive care coverage upheld
  • Includes screenings, medications, and treatments

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The Supreme Court weighs in on Obamacare again.

From Marketplace, I'm Nancy Marshall-Genzer in for David Boncaccio. The Supreme Court released an important decision involving the Affordable Care Act last week. It involves what types of preventive care can be mandated for coverage as part of health insurance plans and who gets to decide that. Marketplace's Mitchell Hartman joins me now with the details. Hi, Nancy. So the Affordable Care Act has ended up in front of the Supreme Court three times before this. What was this case about? Well, it was a case about

Well, it was basically a dispute about what kinds of preventive health care so that screenings, medications and treatments have to be covered for free as part of private health insurance plans. It was an argument brought by conservative opponents. They claimed that the federal task force of independent medical experts that was set up to determine

So what are we talking about here? What types of care?

Well, the plaintiffs, a group of employers and individuals, objected in particular to having to pay for coverage of things like PrEP, which is a pre-exposure prophylactic treatment that can be used to prevent HIV transmission. But under this ruling, the task force's inclusion of that treatment is legal because the task force itself is constitutional. So what else is at stake here then?

Well, advocates for preventive care are cheering because, by extension, a whole range of care is also upheld and free. So that's cancer and diabetes screening, meds for stroke prevention and heart health, even ointments given to newborns to prevent eye infections. Well, thanks, Mitchell. You're welcome.

With a big travel period coming up this Fourth of July weekend, some travelers will be swapping pricier, busier destinations for lesser-known locations with a similar vibe, like, say, Albania instead of Italy. These are called destination dupes, and they're among this year's travel trends. Marketplace's Elizabeth Troval reports. Sometimes a dupe can be better than the original. That was true for Mary Heinz Drosch with Bank of America after she went to the crowded, exquisite

expensive Greek island of Santorini, she checked out its lesser-known counterpart, Poros. I got a really nice hotel at a fraction of the cost. The food was just as great and really emerged myself in the Greek culture at a

at a much lower price. Millennials are leading this trend, according to Bank of America survey data. Six in 10 say they'd choose a budget-friendly destination over a more popular spot. Everyone has felt the impact of inflation and travel has become very, very expensive. And so when you do something that's lesser known, it's less expensive and that helps. And you don't have to go abroad to experience the destination dupe. Melanie Fish with Expedia recommends Charleston, South Carolina.

It's Europe without the jet lag. It has that Lisbon charm and elegance, but no passport required. She says the hunt for a just-as-cool hidden gem is an enduring trend, one that's been amplified by social media. I'm Elizabeth Troval for Marketplace.

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Greetings, Marketplace listeners. It's Neil Scarborough, Vice President and General Manager of your favorite business shows. I'm coming to you today with an opportunity to help shape the future of economic journalism and philanthropy. Marketplace's parent company, American Public Media, is looking for board members, and we'd like to invite listeners like you to join either the APM Board of Trustees or the Marketplace Philanthropic Council.

If you believe in our mission to raise the economic intelligence of the nation, and if you love building community through public media, we're looking for strategic, innovative leaders to help ensure that Marketplace continues to evolve and expand its reach and impact across the country. Applications are open now through July 6th. Visit marketplace.org slash board to learn more. Thanks for your consideration and thanks for listening.

Lawyers all over the country spent the weekend sorting out what the latest Supreme Court rulings will mean for the U.S. and the economy. One of Friday's decisions limits the circumstances under which lower courts can issue nationwide injunctions. The case was about the executive order related to birthright citizenship. But Marketplace's Kimberly Adams reports there are also consequences for businesses and consumers.

The Supreme Court didn't outright ban lower courts from putting a nationwide stop on federal policies while the cases play out, but the majority argues class action lawsuits are a better way to make that happen. Andre Harris is general counsel at the Competitive Enterprise Institute.

If the class is big enough, they can still get a national injunction. But the court's ruling just helps narrowly tailor injunctions for those who should be properly covered.

Before, let's say there was a business rule or environmental regulation a bunch of people or businesses didn't like. A group representing them could go to court and seek a nationwide injunction on their behalf. Groups such as the Sierra Club or the ACLU that have members across the entire nation say, we as entities aren't being harmed by this legal provision, but our members are. My

Michael T. Morley is a law professor at Florida State University. And so we're suing to enforce our members' rights. We have lots of members. They're spread across the entire country. But now the Supreme Court wants lower courts to limit their rulings to the people actually involved in the case and to be careful about what constitutes a class. So moving forward... We may see multiple injunctions applying only to named plaintiffs. ...

Becca Brett is an associate at the law firm Clifford Chance.

Which could result in kind of a fragmented judicial environment, causing businesses to have to react in different ways depending on which jurisdiction they're in. Whereas in the past, a trade association could get a nationwide injunction by arguing that a bunch of businesses could be harmed by something, now it looks like individual businesses would have to get together in a class and really prove they would be harmed to argue for a broader hold on a policy.

We're going to see a lot more class actions in the future on behalf of businesses, which may sound ironic because we always hear about businesses defending against plaintiff class actions. Anthony Sanders is with the Institute for Justice, a nonprofit public interest law firm. That's not always practical, though. Class actions add all kinds of costs to lawsuits.

With all the extra costs and paperwork, Sanders expects what's more likely to happen is that fewer people and companies will even bother challenging policies at all. In Washington, I'm Kimberly Adams for Marketplace. In a Fox News interview on Sunday, President Trump said he's found a buyer for TikTok. He said the unnamed buyer was a group of very wealthy people. He went on to say the deal is still developing and would probably need China's approval.

I'm Nancy Marshall-Genzer with the Marketplace Morning Report from APM American Public Media.

Hey there, it's Ryan, co-host of Million Bazillion, a podcast that answers your kids' big questions about money. This week, we're kicking it old school and taking questions from Million Bazillionaires in this super special show. I was wondering how much people in the government, like the president, make and how do they decide? How do airlines determine the price of a ticket? Where did the penny get its name? Plus, Bridget and I put some old cassette tapes to good use. Listen to Million Bazillion wherever you get your podcasts.