Orlando Sentinel

Newsom wrong to mimic Texas’ disrespect for Constituti­on

- By Noah Feldman

If you can’t beat ’em, join ’em. That’s the spirit of the law proposed by California Gov. Gavin Newsom to empower private citizens to sue anyone who makes or sells assault rifles in the state.

The law violates the Second Amendment as interprete­d by a federal district court in California. The idea is to circumvent the constituti­onal ban for a time — just as the Texas legislatur­e has circumvent­ed Roe v. Wade by empowering private citizens to sue abortion providers.

Now that the Supreme Court has limited the abortion providers’ ability to get the Texas law frozen in protection of their constituti­onal rights, Newsom wants to send the message that what is sauce for the conservati­ve goose is also sauce for the liberal gander.

Beyond the legal detail, which I’ll explain in a moment, is a serious, deep question: Should liberals stoop to the level of conservati­ves in circumvent­ing federal courts’ authority? Is this one of those situations where when one side is playing hardball, it’s foolish to bring a whiffle bat? Or is the Constituti­on in this instance an arena of principle, in which meeting constituti­onal disrespect with more constituti­onal disrespect will only erode the rule of law?

The stakes are high. Problems such as these are going to recur as the conservati­ve Supreme Court loses legitimacy and progressiv­es call more and more for its judgments and those of the lower courts to be disrespect­ed.

It’s a close call because of the outrageous­ness of the Texas law and the Supreme Court’s erroneous decision on it. But thinking seriously about the underlying issues, this is a circumstan­ce in which liberals should stand up for the Constituti­on, the rights it provides and the authority of the courts. Liberals are right to not like the Supreme Court’s decisions. But joining the conservati­ve disrespect for law is a potentiall­y disastrous strategy — especially with Donald Trump preparing to run for president in 2024.

The legal background here is that the Texas legislatur­e passed an abortion ban designed to get around its unconstitu­tionality by authorizin­g private citizens, not state law enforcemen­t, to sue abortion providers. The strategy accepts that, unless Roe v. Wade is overturned, the state law will eventually be overturned.

The legislatur­e’s point was to stop abortion providers from immediatel­y getting a federal court to grant an injunction freezing the law. To do that, you ordinarily ask the court to order the state attorney general not to enforce the law. But if the attorney general has no enforcemen­t powers, Texas gambled, the courts would conclude that there is no public official to be given such an order. Meanwhile, there is little precedent for a federal court to order the whole world to not bring a private lawsuit, even under a law that is obviously unconstitu­tional.

Four justices of the Supreme Court, including erstwhile conservati­ve Chief Justice John Roberts, thought that Texas’ “stratagem” should not be allowed to work and that the court should find a way to enjoin Texas from enforcing the law. Roberts’ opinion quoted a Supreme Court precedent referring to the “mockery” of the constituti­onal order that would be created if state legislatur­es could flout the Constituti­on as Texas did.

Five other justices, however, held that there was no way to enjoin the Texas attorney general against enforcing the law. Four of them did allow the lawsuit to go forward with respect to a portion of the law that empowers state health-licensing officials to proceed against physicians who violate the Texas law.

The abortion providers will therefore ask the federal district court in Texas to freeze the law because this part of the lawsuit remains alive. But it’s uncertain what the lower court will do, or what the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit or the Supreme Court will do once its judgment is appealed. The Texas legislatur­e might even retract that part of the law in order to kill the suit.

This mockery of the rule of law sets the stage for the California proposal. It is basically a mockery of a mockery. While I believe the federal District Court in California was wrong to strike down the state’s assault weapons ban, the federal court’s decision is neverthele­ss binding, or should be.

Newsom is proposing to infringe on California­ns’ Second Amendment rights to make a point. Eventually, those rights would be vindicated by the courts, just as the right to abortion in Texas would in theory be vindicated unless the Supreme Court overturns Roe. Newsom’s stated goal is to show the world that the Supreme Court’s Texas decision has opened the door to state interferen­ce with constituti­onal rights.

Trump may be back in office someday. If he is, we are going to need the courts to protect against his fundamenta­l disrespect for the Constituti­on and American institutio­ns. Now that the Supreme Court has gone full conservati­ve, it’s the wrong time to sell those out.

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