Chattanooga Times Free Press

TIME FOR CHOOSING: TRUMP OR JOHN PAUL STEVENS

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WASHINGTON — It was by chance that former Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens died on the same day that the House of Representa­tives voted — sadly, very nearly along party lines — to condemn President Trump for racism in a resolution laden with quotations from Ronald Reagan. This accident of timing was highly instructiv­e.

It can make you heartsick for our country that the discussion of Trump’s genuinely vile comments about four congresswo­men of color moved so quickly from outrage to detached analysis about what the divider-in-chief was trying to accomplish politicall­y. He knows the GOP’s spineless congressio­nal cheering squad will always fall into line and that dissenters will be isolated.

Let’s not lose track of the moment we are in. Over the course of our nation’s history, we have had moments of great progress toward racial equality and periods of betrayal and reaction. The freeing of the slaves and the empowermen­t of African Americans during Reconstruc­tion after the Civil War was a triumph for justice. It was quickly followed by a loss of nerve among northern white liberals, which allowed the imposition of Jim Crow, and racial subjugatio­n in the South once Federal troops were withdrawn in 1877.

The Second Reconstruc­tion of the 1960s once again took up the work of living up to the words of our Declaratio­n of Independen­ce. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 were accompanie­d by what many of us thought (or, at least, wanted to hope) were decisive changes among white Americans in their attitudes toward race. The Immigratio­n and Nationalit­y Act of 1965 reflected this new dispositio­n, ending deep racial biases in our system for welcoming newcomers.

Perhaps it was inevitable that the Second Reconstruc­tion would be followed by a second period of white backlash, and in truth, it has been building for decades.

Still, this backlash was relatively restrained when compared with the terrorist violence in the South that overthrew the first Reconstruc­tion. And many Republican­s still remembered their party’s historical role in achieving racial justice. Now, with the rise of Trump, Lincoln’s heirs are ready to embrace a full-on racist.

Which brings us to Justice Stevens, a Republican appointed to the Court by Republican President Gerald Ford in 1975. There is much to honor about Stevens.

One of his singular contributi­ons was a 1985 speech to the Federal Bar Associatio­n in Chicago taking on the conservati­ve judicial theory known as “originalis­m.”

He gently mocked the idea of a “founding generation” at one in its views about what the Constituti­on meant. After all, he said, its ranks included “apostles of intoleranc­e as well as tolerance, advocates of differing points of view in religion as well as politics.”

More importantl­y, in a critique of then Attorney General Ed Meese’s defense of “a jurisprude­nce of original intention,” Stevens argued that originalis­m typically “overlooks the profound importance of the Civil War and the postwar amendments on the structure of our government.” The 13th, 14th and 15th Amendments finally wrote racial equality into our Constituti­on and gave the federal government authority it didn’t have before.

The 14th Amendment in particular so profoundly changed our original document that legal scholars have called it “the Second Constituti­on.” But the promise of the Reconstruc­tion Era amendments was cut short and did not fully come to life until the Civil Rights Movement sparked the Second Reconstruc­tion in the 1960s.

So Trump’s despicable use of a street bigot’s language must not be treated as just another opportunis­tic political ploy. His undisguise­d prejudice reminds us that we can choose his vision of America, or the vision championed by John Paul Stevens, a very different kind of Republican. Our forebears tried to vindicate our country’s promise in the original Reconstruc­tion, and then retreated. We dare not allow our country to retreat the second time around.

 ??  ?? E.J. Dionne
E.J. Dionne

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