Noemie Emery in "Dems Break Spirit of Law When Enacting Law" for The Washington Examiner, which appeared here, puts the matter this way:
The passage of health care is not the same thing as obstruction of justice, but it has a connection, in nature and kind. Before Scott Brown appeared, the bill, while unpopular, was headed on a legitimate path to enactment, by passing the House and the Senate, and going into a conference committee, after which the revised version would be sent for final affirmation to the Senate and House.
After Brown, this couldn't occur as the Senate would kill it, so it had to sneak by -- against the popular will and by bribes, threats and buy-offs -- through a loophole for which bills of this import were not intended. Big bills aren't supposed to squeak by on a simple majority, and under proper procedure, it would not have happened.
It followed the law, while it shattered its intent. The whole country knows it's a fraud.
You'll want to read the rest at the link.