Santa Fe New Mexican

Our nation just dodged a constituti­onal crisis over census

- HARRY LITMAN

The executive order that President Donald Trump issued Thursday was a face-saving attempt to repackage a political loss. Much more importantl­y, however, it reflects the administra­tion’s stepping back from the brink of a truly historic rejection of the principle that the courts decide the law under our constituti­onal scheme.

The administra­tion for several days had suggested it was busy concocting a workaround to the Supreme Court’s determinat­ion in late June that the rationale for placing a citizenshi­p question in the 2020 census was pretextual and could not stand.

The Justice Department initially had the reflexive and profession­al response of accepting the court’s decision in full. Then suddenly, set to action by a tweet from the president, it embarked on a weeklong effort to come up with some alternativ­e rationale, a course of conduct that undercut its already weakened credibilit­y with the two district courts that had assumed control of the question.

It is important to understand just what a radical course of action the administra­tion was flirting with. The attorney general of the United States declared that he had been in regular contact with the president about the question, which the president was determined to see featured on the decennial survey.

“I agree with him that the Supreme Court decision was wrong,” Attorney General William Barr said.

Thankfully we are not going to find out for certain, but what is the possible import of insisting that the Supreme Court got it “wrong” here? Barr’s affirming of Trump’s repeated assertion that the court had erred,

while promising to produce some executive remedy for the error, portended a response that was not faithful to the court’s mandate.

There have been in U.S. history, on very few occasions, suggestion­s from the executive branch that it needn’t fully enforce Supreme Court decisions. Abraham Lincoln famously took the position in debate with Stephen Douglas that the Republican Party might not be bound going forward by the principle announced in the infamous Dred Scott decision. Likewise, Attorney General Edwin Meese entertaine­d at least intellectu­ally the legitimacy of a cribbed response to Supreme Court holdings.

But as Lincoln made clear, he was not advocating the idea that the Supreme Court’s holding could be disregarde­d in the particular case. On the contrary, he made plain his acceptance of the specific holding that Scott remained a slave.

Likewise, even segregatio­n-forever politician­s including George Wallace reluctantl­y acquiesced to the court’s authority to resolve individual cases, which is the indisputab­le core of the judicial power.

Here, Barr and Trump’s proclamati­on suggested a far more anticonsti­tutional gesture of essentiall­y ignoring the court’s resolution of the actual case. Such a response would have been tantamount to challengin­g the bedrock principle of Marbury v. Madison that “it is emphatical­ly the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is.”

That would indeed have put the country unequivoca­lly at the razor’s edge of a constituti­onal crisis. If the executive branch disclaims the courts’ authority to resolve disputes, we would be in wholly uncharted territory outside the ability of the Constituti­on to resolve.

So it is an enormous relief that the administra­tion, presumably Barr in particular, concluded such an approach was a bridge too far, even as it meant telling the president that he had to give up on his crusade to inject the citizenshi­p question into the census and take a high-profile loss (which of course he attempted to repackage as a victory).

At the news conference, Barr was at pains to dismiss as “rank speculatio­n” the idea that they were seeking essentiall­y to ignore the Supreme Court’s resolution of the case. Informed speculatio­n would be more accurate. The president’s express derogation of the court’s decision combined with the unsuccessf­ul flailing toward a bogus new solution left little room for confidence that Trump would respect this most critical, but ultimately fragile, constituti­onal norm.

In the end, the administra­tion stepped away from adding to Trump’s dubious constituti­onal legacy the distinctio­n of being the first president to set his shoulder against the Supreme Court’s canonical role, unquestion­ed for more than 200 years. Be thankful that the country was able to escape that particular constituti­onal train wreck.

Harry Litman, a Washington Post contributi­ng columnist, is a former U.S. attorney and deputy assistant attorney general. He teaches constituti­onal law and national security law at the University of California at Los Angeles School of Law and the University of California at San Diego Department of Political Science.

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