Los Angeles Times

The future of ‘originalis­m’

-

Re “‘Originalis­m’ on the stand with Gorsuch,” March 19

The best refutation of the myth of “originalis­m” being espoused by Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch was explained by the late Justice William Brennan. He pointed out that trying to “find legitimacy in fidelity” to the intentions of the framers of the U.S. Constituti­on was “little more than arrogance cloaked as humility.”

“It is arrogant,” Brennan said, “to pretend that from our vantage we can gauge accurately the intent of the framers on applicatio­n of principle to specific, contempora­ry questions.” For him, the Constituti­on had no “static meaning it might have had in a world that is dead and gone, but in the adaptabili­ty of its great principles to cope with current problems and current needs.”

To defend and protect the Constituti­on, we need justices on the court today like Brennan and Stephen G. Breyer, who believes “the court should regard the Constituti­on as containing unwavering values that must be applied flexibly

to ever-changing circumstan­ces.” Stephen F. Rohde

Los Angeles The writer is a constituti­onal lawyer and a former president of the ACLU of Southern California.

Even the framers were not originalis­ts. They certainly did not believe that the Constituti­on should be interprete­d throughout the centuries according to the meaning as they understood it. That’s precisely why they allowed for amendments.

Thomas Jefferson would beg to differ with Gorsuch’s assessment of a rigid, inflexible document that Gorsuch presumes our Constituti­on to be. He believed that the law must advance to keep pace with the times, as we become more enlightene­d and new truths are discovered.

To say that Gorsuch is stuck in the past would be doing an injustice to Jefferson. Jill Chapin

Santa Monica

When the Constituti­on was first written, the framers did not explicitly give the Supreme Court the right to review the constituti­onality of a law. This right was establishe­d only later, in the case of Marbury vs. Madison, and was considered by many to be a broad overreach of the authority of the court.

It seems to me that a true originalis­t would have to recuse himself from any case that decided a constituti­onal issue, simply because it was not the framers’ intent that such an issue be decided by the court. David Weisenberg

Altadena

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States