Which of the following is an accurate comparison of the checks held by the legislative and judicial branches?

Powers not granted to the federal government are reserved for states and the people, which are divided between state and local governments. 

Most Americans have more daily contact with their state and local governments than with the federal government. Police departments, libraries, and schools — not to mention driver's licenses and parking tickets — usually fall under the oversight of state and local governments. Each state has its own written constitution, and these documents are often far more elaborate than their federal counterpart. The Alabama Constitution, for example, contains 310,296 words — more than 40 times as many as the U.S. Constitution.

State Government

Under the Tenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, all powers not granted to the federal government are reserved for the states and the people. All state governments are modeled after the federal government and consist of three branches: executive, legislative, and judicial. The U.S. Constitution mandates that all states uphold a "republican form" of government, although the three-branch structure is not required.

Executive Branch

In every state, the executive branch is headed by a governor who is directly elected by the people. In most states, the other leaders in the executive branch are also directly elected, including the lieutenant governor, the attorney general, the secretary of state, and auditors and commissioners. States reserve the right to organize in any way, so they often vary greatly with regard to executive structure. No two state executive organizations are identical.

Legislative Branch

All 50 states have legislatures made up of elected representatives, who consider matters brought forth by the governor or introduced by its members to create legislation that becomes law. The legislature also approves a state's budget and initiates tax legislation and articles of impeachment. The latter is part of a system of checks and balances among the three branches of government that mirrors the federal system and prevents any branch from abusing its power.

Except for one state, Nebraska, all states have a bicameral legislature made up of two chambers: a smaller upper house and a larger lower house. Together the two chambers make state laws and fulfill other governing responsibilities. (Nebraska is the lone state that has just one chamber in its legislature.) The smaller upper chamber is always called the Senate, and its members generally serve longer terms, usually four years. The larger lower chamber is most often called the House of Representatives, but some states call it the Assembly or the House of Delegates. Its members usually serve shorter terms, often two years.

Judicial Branch

State judicial branches are usually led by the state supreme court, which hears appeals from lower-level state courts. Court structures and judicial appointments/elections are determined either by legislation or the state constitution. The Supreme Court focuses on correcting errors made in lower courts and therefore holds no trials. Rulings made in state supreme courts are normally binding; however, when questions are raised regarding consistency with the U.S. Constitution, matters may be appealed directly to the United States Supreme Court.

Local Government

Local governments generally include two tiers: counties, also known as boroughs in Alaska and parishes in Louisiana, and municipalities, or cities/towns. In some states, counties are divided into townships. Municipalities can be structured in many ways, as defined by state constitutions, and are called, variously, townships, villages, boroughs, cities, or towns. Various kinds of districts also provide functions in local government outside county or municipal boundaries, such as school districts or fire protection districts.

Municipal governments — those defined as cities, towns, boroughs (except in Alaska), villages, and townships — are generally organized around a population center and in most cases correspond to the geographical designations used by the United States Census Bureau for reporting of housing and population statistics. Municipalities vary greatly in size, from the millions of residents of New York City and Los Angeles to the 287 people who live in Jenkins, Minnesota.

Municipalities generally take responsibility for parks and recreation services, police and fire departments, housing services, emergency medical services, municipal courts, transportation services (including public transportation), and public works (streets, sewers, snow removal, signage, and so forth).

Whereas the federal government and state governments share power in countless ways, a local government must be granted power by the state. In general, mayors, city councils, and other governing bodies are directly elected by the people.

In theory, the judiciary provides the least ideal forum for the development of many health policies. Certainly, judges are thought to be impartial and able to assess evidence and arguments from a variety of sources objectively. However, many judges are insulated from public accountability. They are appointed by political figures, often for their political ideologies; they may have long-term or life appointments; and many are not subject to election or reappointment. Judges usually bring legal skills to the bench; they may lack experience with scientific or ethical thinking. They rarely receive education or training in health issues.7

More importantly, the adversarial nature of judicial proceedings militates against a prominent role for judges in health care policy formulation. The information that judges receive is often partial and incomplete; also, attorneys usually present narrow legal arguments that may not endorse the most desirable policy position. The legal system frequently assumes judges can produce a balanced, accurate decision after hearing two extremist versions of an issue. Yet, each version may be biased or unreliable. Courts lack the tools for assessing the validity of complex scientific or technological evidence and arguments. Courts rely on "expert" witnesses. However, expert witnesses are usually paid for their testimony; this presents a conflict of interest. Also, they may not be the most qualified in their fields, and they may offer opinions that the majority of their peers do not accept and/or that may not have been subjected to adequate scientific inquiry.

In Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled for the first time on the place of scientific evidence in federal proceedings.8 The decision involved an appeal about whether the drug Bendectin caused birth defects. The federal district court and the court of appeals had dismissed the lawsuit, ruling that data concerning birth defects were inadmissible because they were not "generally accepted" in the scientific community.

The Supreme Court rejected the "general acceptance" standard that looked to the conclusions of the expert witness, and it took a broader view of the scientific process, with an emphasis on "methods and procedures." The Court established judges as active gatekeepers charged with insuring that "any and all scientific testimony or evidence admitted is not only relevant, but reliable." It asked judges to screen out ill-founded or speculative scientific theories. The Court held that judges should focus on the reasoning or methodology behind scientific testimony, rather than on whether the conclusions of an expert witness have won general acceptance in the scientific community. Speaking for the Court, Justice Blackmun said, "In order to qualify as scientific knowledge, an inference or assertion must be derived by the scientific method" and must have been tested or at least subject to testing. While publication in a peer reviewed journal was not essential, it was relevant.''9 In dissent, Chief Justice Rehnquist, joined by Justice Stevens, warned that the decision would require judges to become "amateur scientists."

The Daubert case may well enable judges to assess expert testimony with somewhat greater reliability by reference to the scientific method. But, as Justice Blackmun stated, "There are important differences between the quest for truth in the courtroom and the quest for truth in the laboratory." These differences still place courts in a uniquely difficult position to assess health policy. Courts must frame their questions under the terms of a case or controversy and the applicable law. Courts do not adopt criteria to help them assess the benefits and harms of a health policy; they only resolve whether a policy is lawful. Also, courts rarely appoint neutral experts. Accordingly, even if they are able to filter out confounded scientific theories, they lack access to the objective expertise necessary for developing health policy. Courts could considerably enhance their ability to assess scientific questions if they systematically appointed neutral experts paid only by the state. Appointed experts could help the court perform a thorough, objective examination of the state of the science, which is essential for sound decision making.

Despite these numerous disadvantages courts have been instrumental in developing several important health policies. I will discuss three areas where courts have made major contributions to health policy-reproductive rights, the right to die, and mental health. The important role of the judiciary in the field of reproductive rights has been well discussed.10 Beginning with the seminal cases of Griswold v. Connecticut 11 and, later, Roe v. Wade,12 the courts for nearly two decades defended the reproductive rights of women. The Supreme Court found a constitutional right to "privacy" even though no mention of the concept appears in the Bill of Rights. The courts used the newly construed right to privacy to prevent the state from interfering with the sale and distribution of contraception.13 The Supreme Court explained that contraception concerns "the most intimate of human activities and relationships."14

The Supreme Court stated that the constitutional promise of privacy protects not only the right to use contraception, but also the right to decide whether to carry a fetus to term.15 It defended a woman's right to choose, and the privacy of her relationship with her physician, through the mid-1980s.16

In recent years, the changing composition of the Supreme Court has led to a significant erosion of reproductive rights and medical privacy. The Court upheld the authority of the state to restrict the use of public employees and facilities for the performance of nontherapeutic abortions.17 The Court also upheld a Department of Health and Human Services regulation prohibiting federally funded family planning clinics from counseling or referring women for abortions.18 The DHHS regulation became known as the "gag rule" because it prohibited funded programs from providing women with objective clinical information about reproductive choices. In Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey,19 the Supreme Court changed the legal standard by which to evaluate restrictions on abortion. This decision will have a profound effect on access to reproductive health care.20 It will allow states to place restrictions on access, such as requirements that abortions be performed in hospitals that are not publicly funded; restrictions on the timing, such as waiting periods for abortions; and mandatory justification and information requirements, such as limiting the reasons women can use for an abortion and requiring the doctor to present state-approved information.21 This shift in the composition and decision of the Supreme Court vividly shows how changeable the courts can be in assessing health policy and defending human rights.22

Many argue that the development of the right to privacy from 1965 through the early to mid-1980s had profound, positive effects on reproductive policy. Neither the legislative nor the executive branch produced similarly clear and consistent policies on contraception and abortion. Current efforts in Congress (e.g., the Freedom of Choice Act) and in state legislatures to protect reproductive privacy use the same "fundamental rights" analysis that the Supreme Court employed in Roe.23 Courts also developed thoughtful rulings on surrogate motherhood 24 and artificial reproduction that some state legislatures are emulating.25

The judiciary has also displayed leadership in formulating policy around the right to withdraw life-sustaining treatment, beginning with the Karen Ann Quinlan decision of the NewJersey Supreme Court in 1976.26 While the U.S. Supreme Court has rarely extended the right to privacy beyond reproductive decisions,27 many state courts have interpreted the federal and state constitutions as conferring a right to refuse life-sustaining medical treatment.28 The court in Bouvia held that a patient's decision to forego medical treatment "is a moral and philosophical decision that, being a competent adult, is hers alone."29 The right to refuse medical intervention has been extended to persons who have become incapable of making a decision30 and those who have always been incapable.31 The courts have almost uniformly respected the decisions of surrogates, particularly family members, in making choices for persons who could not decide for themselves.32

The courts have defined the circumstances under which treatment could be terminated with greater specificity over the years. Most courts have rejected the distinction between withholding and withdrawing treatment, between ordinary and extraordinary treatments, and between terminally ill and nonterminal cases. The courts have protected the right to refuse treatment in cases involving ventilators and blood transfusions, as well as those involving nutrition and hydration.33 Many courts have set out procedures and criteria for decision making ranging from second opinions, prognosis, and ethics committees34 to ombudsmen.35

Despite the courts' own insistence that legislatures would make these decisions better, the judiciary has formulated much of the policy surrounding termination of life-sustaining treatment. Only recently has the locus of policy begun to shift to federal and state legislatures. The Supreme Court's decision in Cruzan provided an impetus for the move to legislative policymaking on the right to die.36 In Cruzan, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the decision of the Missouri Supreme Court to adopt a clear and convincing evidence standard for the termination of life-sustaining treatment. The Supreme Court never mentioned the word "privacy" in its decision. Instead, it found that competent patients had a "liberty interest" to refuse treatments. The Court did not view the individual's liberty interest as "fundamental''; this suggested that the state interest in preserving life could prevail.

Legislatures began to conceive of ways in which the decisions of persons to refuse life-sustaining treatments could be more routinely respected. In her concurrence in Cruzan, Justice O'Connor gave some guidance by suggesting that the Court might in the future constitutionally protect the advance directives of patients. In 1990, Congress enacted the federal Patient Self-Determination Act, with an implementation date of December 1, 1991. The Act conditions health care providers' receipt of Medicare or Medicaid dollars on their provision of written information at the time of admission about patients' rights under state law to accept or refuse medical treatment and to formulate advance directives. Since Cruzan, state law on advance directives has increasingly been crafted by legislatures.

The field of mental health policy shows a similar pattern of judicial leadership followed by legislative enactment. During the 1970s, the courts began a process that would transform mental health policy in America. The courts struck down mental health statutes as unconstitutionally vague and insufficiently related to the states' valid interests in protecting the public from harm.37 The courts refused to allow broad discretionary language in civil commitment statutes if it described psychiatric decision making purely in medical terms, such as "mentally ill," "in need of treatment," personal "welfare," or "best interests." Nor would the courts allow civil commitment in the absence of rigorous due process including the right to notice, counsel, and a hearing.38 The courts constitutionally required the standard of proof at civil commitment hearings to be more than a preponderance of evidence; typically, commitment demands "clear and convincing evidence."39 More recently, the courts also developed standards for refusal of treatment by persons with mental illness.40 Mental health legislation in America has been fundamentally reformed to comply with the constitutional requirements set by the judiciary.

I do not argue here about whether judicial policies in these three areas have been effective. Some have claimed that abortion cases too rigidly adhered to the scientifically and socially questionable trimester framework; that the right to die cases gave insufficient weight to the need to preserve life; and that the mental health cases led to a decade of deinstitutionalization that increased human suffering, homelessness, and violence in America. I do observe that the judiciary has had a profound, lasting effect in these and other areas of health policy, which other branches of government have emulated.

What factors made these issues particularly suited for judicial decision making? At least one of three factors was common to each of these areas of health policy. First, each issue involved emotionally charged social questions that divided the public. The right to life is perhaps the single most controversial and enduring problem in health policy formulation. The issue of preservation of life is central to both abortion and termination of life-sustaining treatment. While the mental health cases do not engender the same emotion, they still involve sharp differences between professionals and civil libertarians about the right of society to confine and to treat persons with mental illness. Indeed, the culture of the time influenced much of the discourse, and ultimately, litigation. Rosenhan's " On Being Sane in Insane Places,"41 Szasz's "Myth of Mental Illness,"42 and Goffman's "Asylums"43 each symbolized the antipsychiatry movement of the day. Courts in some ways are uniquely suited for dealing with such areas of social divisiveness. They can often remain aloof from the controversy and rely on "neutral'' legal doctrine. The legislative and executive branches of government are more vulnerable to interest groups, lobbyists, and financial pressures.

The second factor common to at least one of these health issues is the absence of formal policy existing at the time of the litigation. When the NewJersey Supreme Court was deciding Karen Quinlan's case, there was little legislative or executive guidance on the termination of life-sustaining treatment. The court was simply deciding the case with which it was presented. It had to craft a reasoned decision based upon traditional legal and ethical principles: respect for persons, autonomy, and privacy. The courts that followed Quinlan had to look to prior judicial decisions in other jurisdictions because the legislatures, for the most part, still had not acted.44 The courts in the right-to-die cases appeared to be filling a vacuum in policy. This second factor suggests that the courts are more likely to intervene in areas where there was lack of consensus or established policy.

Prior to 1973, some liberalization in the scope of lawful abortions was evident in several legislatures, but few statutes approached the breadth of the privacy right decreed by the court in Roe. Most of the existing legislation was haphazard and inconsistent. It often did not balance individual interests with those of the state.45 It is an open question as to whether the Supreme Court would have intervened in quite so decisive a manner if more settled policy on abortion rights had existed. The Court moved, at least in part, because of the absence of a national consensus on the issue.

Judicial decisions in mental health cases, unlike abortion or right-to-die cases, did not simply fill a policy vacuum. At the time of this litigation, all 50 states had civil commitment statutes that were fairly uniform in content. The courts appeared to usurp the field by requiring the legislatures to enact new statutes to comply with constitutional guarantees.

The judiciary, then, has sometimes acted as a pathfinder when there was a paucity of established policy. In an atmosphere of uncertainty in health policy, the courts can answer questions on a case-by-case basis. It is only after years of case law that a consistent policy emerges and gains public acceptance. At that time, the legislature can begin its work in clarifying and codifying policy choices.

A third characteristic shared by all three health issues is the presence of a fundamental claim to human rights by individuals and groups. These human rights claims weighed heavily in the balance of scientific, social, and ethical issues. In the fields of reproductive rights and the right to die, the courts repeatedly echoed the theme of individual choice, self-determination, and privacy. In the mental health cases, the courts emphasized fundamental claims to due process and liberty. This third factor (i.e., the central importance of human rights) is likely to be the most important in deciding whether the courts will, or should, intervene in significant cases of health policy. Unlike the executive and legislative branches of government, the courts are suited to protect the rights of individuals or groups. They are less concerned with pleasing the majority and less likely to give in to majoritarian pressures that may oppress vulnerable individuals or groups or restrict their rights. The judiciary also has appropriate criteria and procedures for ensuring the protection of individual rights. Courts can invalidate oppressive state action through constitutional review, and can protect minorities through civil rights decisions.46 While the legislature or executive may focus more strongly on using science to promote the health of the community, these two branches sometimes overlook or insufficiently weigh human rights concerns. Where human rights become a defining value in health policy, courts may be the most appropriate body to make decisions.

If the judiciary is the least suited branch of government to develop health policy in many areas, the legislature may be the most suited. The legislature is thought to be impartial and publicly accountable; it has the capacity to collect full information from a wide range of objective sources; part of its mandate is to protect and promote the health of the public; and it has the power to engage in a lengthy and deliberative process in enacting legislation. Classic American federalism suggests that the legislature possesses special authority to develop policy.47 In essence, the power to make law reposes exclusively in the legislature, though it may delegate rule-making and regulatory powers to departments in the executive branch. The judiciary and the executive (apart from the veto power) are not permitted to intrude into its legislative powers. Article I, Clause 8, of the U.S. Constitution empowers Congress to "make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution.... the powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any Department or Offices thereof." The state legislatures have police powers to protect and promote the health, safety, and morals of the community.48 This power may establish the legislature as the appropriate policymaking body in most circumstances.

In theory, neither the executive nor the judiciary has a mandate to create health policy. The court system, apart from its historic role of constitutional or judicial review,49 principally interprets, construes, and applies the law. Moreover, the federal courts exercise their powers only to resolve "cases" or "controversies" (Article III). The principal power of the executive in domestic affairs is to carry the laws into effect and secure their observance.50 The scope of executive rule making cannot constitutionally reach beyond the bounds of the applicable legislation.51 Thus, while the various agencies of the federal and state governments that deal with health can powerfully affect policy through rule making, the direction and limits are placed by the legislature.

Democracies usually pride themselves on having elected legislatures that are independent and fully accountable to the public. It is for this reason that so much concern is focused on tightening legal and ethical rules for financing campaigns, controlling lobbyists and pressure groups, and prohibiting conflicts of interest. To be sure, questions remain about whether legislators have financial conflicts of interest or have been unduly influenced. Nevertheless, legislators must meet increasingly strong legal and ethical standards and are subject to periodic elections.

Legislatures are also appropriate policymakers because they draw on the experience of a diverse membership and staff. Importantly, they can collect information from a wide variety of sources. Legislative committees receive written and verbal suggestions from interested groups, and often request information from more objective sources.

Legislatures, if provided with adequate resources, can establish standing bodies designed to help gather and analyze the scientific data necessary for sound policy development. They can also create commissions to advise on particular health policy issues such as AIDS52 or bioethics. Congress's Office of Technology Assessment (OTA)53 provides an apt model of a standing advisory body. The OTA is an analytical support agency of the U.S. Congress. It helps congressional committees understand policy that often involves highly complex technological issues. Congress can frame health policy questions that are most useful to its legislative agenda and receive timely assistance. The OTA can issue contracts and assemble interdisciplinary working groups to obtain specialized information. The OTA has provided extensive data and analysis to Congress in numerous areas of health policy ranging from the human genome to HIV disease54 and tuberculosis.55

Congress can also request studies from the U.S. General Accounting Office on health policy issues. Recent reports of the General Accounting Office include studies of organ transplantation,56 needle exchange programs,57 and Medicaid.58

While legislatures rarely operate according to clear, written criteria, their constitutional mission to preserve the health, safety, and morals of the community sets the parameters for their activities. Moreover, legislatures can require committees to observe the criteria for sound decision making that have already been suggested-i.e., to establish policies that are effective, well-targeted, and minimally burdensome of human rights.

Legislatures have the capacity to follow a rigorous, fair decision making process. Legislative hearings can be thorough and expansive in ways that are simply not feasible in other branches of government. While judicial hearings are adversarial in nature, legislative committees may use many methods to gather information and hear from interested parties. Legislatures may provide forums to review societal perspectives, as Congress did in the hearings involving Justice Clarence Thomas; they also can invite interest groups, consumers, professionals, and academics to present testimony. In sum, legislatures can garner a massive amount of information in open, impartial ways that make them strong candidates for sound policymakers.

There are, of course, major determents to legislative policymaking. First, most legislators belong to political parties whose partisan character may lead them to view policy issues through a narrow lens. Rather than independently seeking the most effective health policy, leaders of a political party may powerfully influence legislators. For example, the 1992 presidential candidates spent a great deal of time discussing the "gridlock" in Congress. On almost every policy issue of consequence, political parties found little common ground. Indeed, when particularly divisive issues such as abortion policy or fetal tissue research are at stake, entire pieces of legislation can be thwarted through noncooperation, filibusters, and threats of a presidential veto from the opposing political party.

Second, legislators may be indebted to particular individuals and groups that helped them to get elected. Financing modern political campaigns is extraordinarily expensive. Legislators may have to think long and hard before making decisions against the interests of large contributors. For example, substantial contributions from the pharmaceutical, tobacco, agricultural, or automobile industries can strongly influence legislators' judgments on policies affecting the public health and safety.

Third, legislators are highly sensitive to well-organized interest groups. These include professional associations such as the American Medical Association (AMA) or American Bar Association (ABA). These organizations are perceived to be able to influence a large number of voters. A legislator may be concerned as much with the way he or she will be viewed by powerful interest groups as with the impact of the health policy under consideration. Many health policy analysts, for example, believe that Medicare benefits should be modified to provide more cost effective coverage for persons who can least afford health insurance. Yet, this is a politically difficult area to tackle because of the influence of organizations representing older populations. Similarly, legislators often give deference to the plaintiff's bar on medical malpractice or the AMA or health insurers on health care reform.

Fourth, legislators frequently operate on a limited horizon. Legislators are elected for a short term, and may not be interested in the longer term benefits of a policy. They may, for example, be concerned more with the immediate electoral problems caused by increased taxes necessary to provide universal health care coverage, than with the long-term health and financial benefits of reforming the health care system.

The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) provides an illustration of a statute that fulfills all of the promise of the legislature as an effective policymaker. While the ADA provides a strong weapon against discrimination against persons with disabilities, its impact on the health care system is less well understood. Several areas of impact on the health care system have been observed by courts and commentators: the duty of health care professionals to treat patients with disfavored health conditions such as AIDS, the duty not to discriminate in health care benefits coverage, and the duty to exercise compulsory public health powers fairly.59

The ADA was born of a remarkable coalescence of the interests of a large and diverse group of people. The act was supported by groups representing persons with disabilities, civil liberties groups, AIDS advocacy organizations, and mental health associations. It was supported on a broad bipartisan basis with leadership from Republicans (e.g., Senators Dole and Weicker) as well as Democrats (e.g., Senator Kennedy and Congressman Waxman). Notably, it had the support of President Bush, who signed legislation passed by a Democratic Congress.60,61

The ADA is the latest in a series of statutes enacted by Congress that proscribe discrimination on the basis of race, sex, age, and disability. These accomplishments in the field of civil rights are widely perceived as critically important policies that have been the preserve of the legislative branch of government. More recently, many state legislatures have enacted antidiscrimination statutes to protect persons with HIV infection or disease62 or persons with genetic traits or conditions.63

What are the qualities of the legislative process that made it possible to achieve the social good that has emerged from civil rights legislation? And why has the legislature had such difficulty replicating this success in other areas where social change is equally imperative, such as health care reform?

The success of legislatures in the field of civil rights is largely attributable to the growing consensus in society about the evils of discrimination based upon personal characteristics such as race, sex, disability, or health status. Historians may well observe one striking feature in the passage of the ADA. There was widespread consensus around the antidiscrimination principles inherent in the legislation. The legislative debates literally rang with the virtues of equal opportunity and human rights for persons with disabilities in society;64 diverse interest groups came together and worked in a coordinated fashion in their lobbying efforts; and there was an absence of a vocal and organized opposition.

Even the individuals and groups that would have been expected to stand in the way of these changes refrained from doing so. Conservative persons in Congress never actively opposed the legislation, but narrowed their objections to certain "undeserving" groups such as drug users, homosexuals, and persons with psychiatric disorders involving antisocial behavior or gender identity.65 They also objected to parts of the ADA that fed directly into the fears of the public, even though those fears were not supported by the epidemiologic evidence. Considerable congressional debate was engendered concerning food handlers with HIV infection. A compromise was ultimately reached to direct the Secretary of Health and Human Services to prepare a list of food-borne diseases where persons could be restricted from working in the food service industry.66 Predictably, when the list was published a year after the passage of the ADA, HIV disease was not mentioned by the Secretary.*

The absence of significant opposition to the ADA was due, in part, to the fact that in wider society it was becoming culturally and socially inappropriate to vocally oppose civil rights for persons with disabilities.

The experience of the passage of the ADA suggests that the legislature can most effectively act in situations where it is implementing the will of society, where pressure groups act in unity, and the opposition is muted. This is true majoritarian politics. When it works, it can provide powerful and lasting benefits to society. The problem, however, is that legislative processes rarely work in an atmosphere of consensus, especially in the highly controversial health policy arena.

In health policy, the issues are often bitterly contested and divisive. One disease may be pitted against another. For example, legislators may be lobbied to divide scarce resources between competing diseases such as AIDS, tuberculosis, cancer, heart disease, and mental illness67 or between competing segments of the health care industry such as prevention, acute care, long-term care, and research. The interests of patients may be pitted against those of health care professionals. A pertinent case is the ongoing struggle between doctors and patients for the "right to know" the HIV status of the other. Struggles between generations are even apparent as debates ensue about who should bear the financial burden of paying for health care and who should receive the benefits-the young versus the old, the poor versus the rich, the healthy versus the sick.

A classic example of legislative failure to produce a badly needed public benefit is in health care reform.68 Health care reform, on its face, ought not to be inordinately difficult for legislatures. A substantial majority of Americans express dissatisfaction with the health care system.69 Indeed, both candidates in the 1992 presidential campaign supported health care reform.70,71

The current system has failed to provide universal access to health care with an equitable sharing of benefits and burdens. An estimated 37 million people do not have health care coverage, with many more people inadequately covered.72 Disparities in access to health care and poor health outcomes have been shown on grounds of socioeconomic status,73,74 race and ethnicity,75 and gender.76

The current system has also failed to control escalating health care costs relative to health care expenditures in other countries. The United States spent more than $666 billion on health care in 1990, approximately 12 percent of the nation's gross national product.77 Health care expenditures are projected to reach $1.6 trillion, between 16 and 18 perent of the gross domestic product by the end of the decade if effective controls are not instituted.78

Given the fact that the current system appears not to serve the interests of large numbers of individuals, as well as the fiscal interests of American society, one would have expected Congress to act. Prominent members of Congress have worked on commissions and other initiatives to accomplish that objective,79 and congressional committees have conducted many hearings. The gridlock can probably be attributed to the powerful interest groups whose vision of reform differs substantially. Organized medicine is concerned with limits on the doctor's income and freedom to practice; the organized bar is concerned about malpractice reform; the health insurance industry is concerned about its survival and the ability to continue traditional underwriting practices; consumers worry about loss of the absolute right to choose their doctor; and the business community and taxpayers are concerned about the cost. The ability of Congress to rise above the strong competing interests and influences to provide a fair and effective health care system remains in doubt.

The executive branch of government brings to health policy formation many of the same benefits as the legislature. The executive branch can be both objective and accountable. Certainly, the chief executive is a political party figure subject to many of the ingrained ideologies that many politicians bring to their decision making. Yet, as the head of his or her party, the chief executive may be free to divert from party political positions or to change those positions. The executive branch, moreover, usually has many agencies concerned with health and social policy. Individuals who work in those agencies often are not connected to political parties and bring a wide body of knowledge and expertise to their fields. This creates enormous possibilities for impartial, accountable, and comprehensive assessments of health policy.

In many ways, the executive branch of government is in the best position to marshall all of the evidence, data, and reasoning necessary for the formulation of sound health policies. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, for example, has an unequaled capacity to obtain data in areas of clinical and policy research (e.g., the National Institutes of Health and the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research), prevention and public health strategies (e.g. the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), and financial impacts (e.g., the Health Care Financing Administration). While the executive branch does not hold hearings like the judiciary or the legislature, it can solicit written and oral comment from organizations and experts. It frequently holds open meetings to discuss public health strategies.80 It can, moreover, receive rigorous assessments of difficult health science and policy questions through contracts and grants with research institutions.

Presidents and governors can use their agencies wisely to achieve substantial health benefits for the public. The Human Genome Initiative, for example, was designed not only to answer many of the essential scientific questions about the detection, prevention, and treatment of genetic conditions, but also the ethical, social, and legal questions.81

The executive branch of government has considerable power to develop, shape, and expand health policy through executive orders, rule making, and interpretive guidance. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), for example, has been active in pursuing claims under federal disability law. The EEOC has recently issued interpretive guidance suggesting that the ADA prohibits discrimination in health insurance coverage against particular individuals or groups with specific diseases.82

Despite the significant potential for the executive branch to develop health policy with all the benefits of the best research and rigorous assessments, it has frequently failed to follow sound scientific recommendations. This has resulted in administrations ignoring or rejecting the advice of scientific and policy commissions. It has also resulted in substantial swings in health policy from one administration to the next. The probable reason for discounting the objective advice of its agencies and commissions is that the executive, perhaps more than any other branch of government, is ideologically driven.

Many illustrations can be found to demonstrate the fragility of the commitment of administrations to neutral scientific assessments of health policy. The Reagan and Bush administrations both refused to allow federal funding for fetal tissue research in spite of the recommendation of an NIH advisory panel. President Reagan barely acknowledged the work of the President's Commission on AIDS. The Commission reported after extensive investigation, and made hundreds of recommendations. The only recognition the Administration gave to the 200-plus-page Commission report was a short press release. The Commission's central recommendations were never implemented.83 Later, the National Commission on AIDS complained vehemently about being ignored by President Bush.84 Very few of the recommendations made in several reports were ever seriously considered in the White House.85

Administrations sometimes act in ideological ways that anger virtually all of the health policy community. In McGann, a federal court of appeals held that an employer who reduced an employee's health coverage from $1 million to $5,000 after he made claims for HIV disease had not unlawfully discriminated under ERISA.86 Many public health and medical organizations filed amicus curiae briefs asking the Supreme Court to overturn the decision. Yet, the court decided not to hear the case largely because the Bush Administration opposed the appeal.87

The disrespect administrations sometimes show for scientific advice is also illustrated by substantial swings in health policy on controversial issues. The behavior of successive administrations on reproductive health policy provides a vivid illustration. For a dozen years Republican administrations developed and maintained highly restrictive policies on abortion rights: (i) in a 1984 order known as the "Mexico City Policy," President Reagan prohibited the United States from providing foreign aid to family planning programs that were involved in abortion-related activities; (ii) in memoranda in 1987 and 1988, the National Institutes of Health placed a moratorium on federal funding of research involving the implantation of fetal tissue from induced abortions; (iii) by memoranda of 1987-1988, the Department of Defense banned all abortions at U.S. military facilities, even where the procedure was privately funded; (iv) in a 1988 regulation known as the "gag rule," the Department of Health and Human Services prohibited family planning clinics funded under Title X of the Public Health Service Act from counseling or referring women for abortion; and (v) in two Import Alerts issued in 1988-1989, the Food and Drug Administration excluded Mifepristone (RU-486) from the list of drugs that individuals can import into the United States.

On the twentieth anniversary of Roe v. Wade, January 23, 1993, President Clinton signed five memoranda that repealed all five of these policies-reversing a dozen years of policy on reproductive rights and medical privacy. The result of these sharp changes in policy by the executive is that America never seems to attain a settled policy on the issue of reproductive rights. The strongly ideological positions of the executive branch often allows it to lose sight of the questions that are central to the development of sound health policy-will the policy be effective in protecting and promoting the health of the public and will it adequately safeguard human rights?