Amy Coney Barrett’s malignant view of the Constitution
One of the chief dividing lines in American politics is how Supreme
Court justices interpret the Constitution. Rarely has that line been brighter than today. The enthusiasm for Amy Coney Barrett grows froma belief among conservatives that the court has been too creative in reading the Constitution and that her arrival will put a stop to such abuses.
Upon her nomination to the court, the WhiteHouse said she “has demonstrated a steadfast dedication to upholding the Constitution as written, and not legislating fromthe bench.” Barrett, said Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, supports “an independent judiciary that interprets the lawand Constitution as-written.”
Barrett is of the school of legal thought knownas originalism, which emphasizes rigorous adherence to the text of the Constitution and the intentions of thosewho brought it into being. Among its adherents are Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch and the late Antonin Scalia, for whom Barrett clerked.
In its usual billing, this approach sounds unassailable. Who wants judges to ignore thewords of the Constitution? Who wants judges to effectively legislate fromthe bench according to their own whims?
Even liberal justices and scholars give considerable weight to the literal text of the Constitution and what it meant at the time itwas ratified. But strict fidelity to originalism is a bit like strict compliance with all traffic laws: more appealing in theory than in practice.
The attacks on “legislating fromthe bench” go back to the 1950s, when the court, under Chief Justice Earl Warren, banned racial segregation in public schools. William F. Buckley’s conservative magazine National Review called the decision “an act of judicial usurpation” that “ran patently counter to the intent of the Constitution.” In some respects, thatwas true, but itwas also the right decision.
Warren was vilified on the right as long as hewas on the bench. But where would we be without the Warren Court? Before it acted, as University of Chicago law professors Geoffrey Stone and David Strauss wrote in their book “Democracy and Equality,” states were free to ban interracial marriage, impose poll taxes that disenfranchised African Americans, forbid the sale of contraceptives and violate the principle of “one person, one vote.” Police didn’t have to inform suspects of their rights, and evidence seized in illegal searches could be used in court.
Would conservatives really want to restore the unconscionable practices this liberal court ruled against? If so, they aren’t likely to admit it.
Maybe they think it’s the more recent “activist” decisions that really deserve to be overturned. But they have to contend with the fact that most Americans wouldn’t agree.
It has only been in recent decades that the court has held that theConstitution forbids discrimination on the basis of sex. Not until 1996 did it decide that state universities can’t banwomen. Almost everything Ruth Bader Ginsburg achieved in her celebrated life came about because the court departed from originalism.
Without rulings that exemplify judicial activism, gays could be put in jail for sodomy, barred frommarrying and fired fromtheir jobs for being gay. The viewing of pornography could be criminalized. Families of brain-dead patients could be blocked fromterminating life support. Therewould be no constitutional right to privacy.
When Donald Trump and otherGOP politicians talk about the role of the Supreme Court, they rely on vague generalities such as the intent of the framers, judicial restraint and strict construction. They rarely venture to praise the oppressive laws thatwere struck downby liberal justices. Funny thing: They have no stomach for defending the indefensible.
Conservatives opposed these decisions. Once theywere issued, though, Americans quickly accepted the outcome as just and sensible and showed no desire to go back towhat prevailed before. The sanctioning of discrimination againstwomen seemed natural to many people before the courtmoved against it. Today, itwould seem intolerable.
Any principled theory of constitutional interpretation applied by the court will sometimes yield unfortunate policy results. Otherwise, it’s just policymaking masquerading as jurisprudence. But when your mode of interpretation consistently leads to bad conclusions, the clear implication is that there is something fundamentally wrong with your mode of interpretation— the very one championed byAmy Coney Barrett.
“A good tree cannot bear bad fruit,” said Jesus ofNazareth, “and a bad tree cannot bear good fruit.” Hewasn’t talking about horticulture. Hewas talking about false prophets.