Los Angeles Times

Shift power away from Washington

- By Ilya Shapiro Ilya Shapiro is a senior fellow in constituti­onal studies at the Cato Institute.

The rule of law is supposed to be different from enforcing policy preference­s. Yet attaching partisan labels to judges has become almost inevitable now because methods of legal interpreta­tion largely track with our ideologica­lly sorted parties.

If you’re an originalis­t — if you believe that the meaning of a constituti­onal provision is the same now as when it was ratified — only a Republican president will appoint you. If, on the other hand, you think that the Constituti­on changes to adapt to social norms, then you better hope for a Democratic White House.

The contretemp­s over Brett Kavanaugh is the culminatio­n of a tit-for-tat escalation between these competing camps. It doesn’t really matter where it began. Today’s brinkmansh­ip in the Senate is symptomati­c of a larger problem: the self-corruption of the Supreme Court as it has aided and abetted the expansion of federal power by Congress and the executive branch.

For the nation’s first 150 years, the Supreme Court hardly ever had to strike down a law because Congress generally stayed within its bounds, subject also to the presidenti­al veto. In 1887, for example, President Cleveland vetoed an appropriat­ion of $10,000 for farmers in drought-stricken Texas because he could find no constituti­onal warrant for such action. But as government expanded, so did the laws and regulation­s over which the court has power.

It was during the Progressiv­e Era that the idea emerged that the General Welfare Clause justifies any legislatio­n that gains a congressio­nal majority — as opposed to limiting federal reach to truly national issues. After 1937, the court began approving grandiose legislatio­n of the sort it had previously rejected. It wouldn’t again strike down legislatio­n for exceeding federal power until 1995. The New Deal court thus laid the foundation for politicize­d judicial mischief of every stripe — be it letting laws sail through that should be struck down or striking down laws that should be upheld.

Depolitici­zing judicial nomination­s is a laudable goal, but that’ll happen only when judges stop ratifying the growth of the federal government. And the only lasting solution is to devolve power to the states, so that far fewer big decisions for the whole country are being made in Washington. Federal courts will still need to step in when local government­s violate individual rights, but there will be less political toxicity if the feds aren’t constantly generating onesize-fits-all mandates.

And so whatever one thinks about Sen. Lindsey Graham’s role in the Kavanaugh fight, he — and others, including those who cast critical votes — is wrong to say that senators should defer to any president’s choice, so long as the nominee is qualified to be a justice. For senators and citizens alike, it’s appropriat­e to question judicial philosophy — and to vote accordingl­y.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States