Ohio and Missouri share the distinction of being the first states to hit back against Obamacare legislatively. Ohio amended their constitution to block implementation and Missouri passed two propositions to block everything from penalties to Medicaid expansion. Both states passed these measures by overwhelming majorities. Now the two states are introducing yet another legislative safeguard, a proposal titled the Health Care Freedom Act 2.0.

From Cato:

Ohio Reps. Ron Young (R-Leroy Twp.) and Andy Thompson (R-Marietta), and Missouri Sen. John Lamping (R-St. Louis County), have introduced legislation—we call it the Health Care Freedom Act 2.0—that would suspend the licenses of insurance carriers who accept federal subsidies through one of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act’s (PPACA) health insurance Exchanges. At first glance, that might seem to conflict with or otherwise be preempted by the PPACA. Neither is the case. Instead, the HCFA 2.0 would require the IRS to implement the PPACA as Congress intended.

Here’s why. Under the PPACA, if an employer doesn’t purchase a government-prescribed level of health benefits, some of its workers may become eligible to purchase subsidized coverage through a health insurance “exchange.” When the IRS issues the subsidy to an insurance company on behalf of one of those workers, that payment triggers penalties against the employer. Firms with 100 employees could face penalties as high as $140,000.

Congress authorized those subsides, and therefore those penalties, only in states that establish a health insurance Exchange. If a state defers that task to the federal government, as 33 states including Missouri and Ohio have done, the PPACA clearly provides that there can be no subsidies and therefore no penalties against employers. The IRS has nevertheless announced it will implement those subsidies and penalties in the 33 states that have refused to establish Exchanges. Applying those measures in non-establishing states violates the clear language of the PPACA and congressional intent.

Missouri, which passed the Health Care Freedom Act during 2010 midterms (thanks in large part to former state Senator Jane Cunningham), prevented the federal government from applying fines and other penalties to Missourians who chose choose to opt out of Obamacare.