The Maine Supreme Court dealt a blow to Gov. Paul LePage’s efforts to slow voter-approved Medicaid expansion while also extending a broader legal battle over the constitutionally of the ballot measure.
The state’s high court 6-1
The justices however, did not decide the merits of the case and sent LePage’s appeal of a June Superior Court
“There are substantial unresolved issues surrounding the petitioners’ appeal,” Justice Joseph Jabar wrote in the majority opinion. “It is clear from the limited record before us that those issues must be resolved before we can consider the matter on its merits.”
LePage’s press office did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the ruling or what their next step is.
The term-limited LePage, whose eight-year run as governor ends in January, vetoed legislation in early June to fund the Medicaid expansion with surplus monies and tobacco settlement funds. He later
“Voters, and now the Maine Supreme Court have made it clear – implementation of this law is a responsibility and obligation that needs to be fulfilled," House Speaker Susan Gideon, D-Freeport, said in a statement. "Thousands of Mainers cannot afford to wait any longer for the health care they need to be and stay well."
Maine Superior Court Judge Michaela Murphy had ordered in a June 4
The LePage administration curtailed Medicaid eligibility in 2011 nine years after Maine last expanded the program, citing stresses on liquidity and reserves. Overdue MaineCare payments were paid to hospitals in 2013 from proceeds of a bond that securitized other state revenue and increased state debt.
Moody’s Investors Service estimated in a
Maine has general obligation bond ratings of Aa2 from Moody’s and AA from S&P Global Ratings.