Morning Sun

The Bill of Rights needed to be updated — and it was

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Most Americans know the Bill of Rights. But too few Americans know that the way we enjoy those crucial rights today is inextricab­ly linked to the way our Constituti­on was transforme­d after the Civil War.

The first 10 amendments to the Constituti­on mark 10 early steps America took along what we at Constituti­onal Ac- countabili­ty Center call “the arc of constituti­onal progress.” Many people in the founding era opposed ratifying the Constituti­on’s original articles because they believed, as James Madison explained to the first Congress in 1789, it “did not contain effectual provision against encroachme­nts on particular rights.” To remedy these objections, the Bill of Rights, Madison said, “expressly declare(s) the great rights of mankind secured under this constituti­on.”

Today, we know many of these rights by heart. Freedom of speech and press. Freedom from government establishm­ent of religion and free exercise of religion. The right to be secure from unreasonab­le government searches and seizures. The rights to due process of law and against self-incriminat­ion, and many others. In fact, the Ninth Amendment tells us the Bill of Rights isn’t exclusive, and that we, the people, have other rights not specifical­ly mentioned in the Constituti­on.

As advanced as it was for its time, however, the Bill of Rights still fell critically short. It applied only to the actions of the federal government, allowing states to run roughshod over these rights. Even worse, these promised “great rights of mankind” stood in brutally stark contrast to the institutio­n of slavery, ringing as “hollow mockery” in the face of the most fundamenta­l deprivatio­ns of life and liberty.

In the wake of the Civil War, however, African-americans, abolitioni­sts and other Americans joined together to further expound the meaning of freedom. The ratificati­on of the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments to the Constituti­on brought about what has been called a “Second Founding,” revolution­izing our governing charter to prohibit chattel slavery, promise citizenshi­p to all born in America, offer equal protection under the law, and protect the right to vote from racial discrimina­tion.

America’s post-civil War “Second Founders” updated the Bill of Rights in two ways.

First, they widened the umbrella of its majestic protection­s to cover everyone in America, to prevent state and local government­s from violating our rights without fear of consequenc­e. Most of the Supreme Court’s most celebrated rulings vindicatin­g the rights set out in the Bill of Rights — cases such as New York Times v. Sullivan, Gideon v. Wainwright, and Miranda v. Arizona — are actually 14th Amendment cases. Without the 14th Amendment, states would be free to violate every single right listed in the Bill of Rights, as states in fact did to perpetuate the institutio­n of slavery.

It is because of the effort of our Reconstruc­tion framers that our fundamenta­l rights are guaranteed no matter where in the United States you live. To be sure, the promise of the transforme­d Constituti­on has not always translated into a lived reality for far too many in this country. But there is power in the words generation­s of activists fought so hard to write into our national charter — we know what should be ours, and we demand change when constituti­onal promises are illusory.

Second, the 14th Amendment expanded the meaning of freedom beyond the fundamenta­l rights in the Bill of Rights. As my colleague, Constituti­onal Accountabi­lity Center Civil Rights Director David Gans, has explained, the 14th Amendment’s “framers sought to safeguard fundamenta­l rights that have no explicit textual basis in the Bill of Rights but that are crucial to equality and liberty.”

At the Second Founding, in fact, the framers of the 14th Amendment said,

“It is the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce placed immutably and forever in our Constituti­on.”

The Bill of Rights, therefore, remains timeless and essential to our civic life. But it is just part of America’s struggle to become a “more perfect union.” As our ancestors taught us, that work is never finished. Through times of war and peace, and even pandemic, they showed us that America is best when the arc of our Constituti­on bends ever toward progress and liberation.

Elizabeth Wydra is president of Constituti­onal Accountabi­lity Center, a public interest law firm and think tank dedicated to promoting the promise of the Constituti­on’s text, history and values. She wrote this for Insidesour­ces. com.

As advanced as it was for its time, however, the Bill of Rights still fell critically short. It applied only to the actions of the federal government, allowing states to run roughshod over these rights.

 ?? ?? Elizabeth Wydra
Elizabeth Wydra

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