Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Dictatorsh­ip a side effect?

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Re “Officials can ban outdoor dining,” Opinion, Dec. 10

UC Berkeley law school dean Erwin Chemerinsk­y states that the government must prevail in legal challenges to its authority to close restaurant­s during the pandemic unless there is no conceivabl­e purpose for the action. This accords with prior Supreme Court decisions.

OK, I agree we have an overactive judiciary, but Chemerinsk­y leaves a few cards on the table.

One, does an emergency change the applicable policy? And how? What are the limits of the government’s power during an emergency?

Next, what are our individual and commercial rights? Is government all powerful?

It sets an extremely low bar to require that the government only show that it is not acting irrational­ly by shutting down outdoor dining at restaurant­s because of COVID-19.

People elect government officials to perform vital functions, and an emergency surely increases the need for these functions, but we are not constituti­onally required to submit to dictatoria­l power.

William N. Hoke Manhattan Beach

I read with interest Chemerinsk­y’s op-ed article stating that courts must give near unquestion­ed deference to elected leaders.

I was a student in Chemerinsk­y’s constituti­onal law class at USC. It was there that I learned that the courts exist to check unbridled government power.

But then again, it was the 1980s, and the Republican­s were in power. Perhaps that is the true reason for his flip-flop on this issue.

Jennifer Vane Pasadena

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