Texarkana Gazette

Barr is echoing Trump on stay-at-home orders

- Noah Feldman

Attorney General William Barr has issued a memo threatenin­g to sue states if they infringe on people’s freedoms during the coronaviru­s pandemic — and encouragin­g U.S. attorneys to look for cases to bring against the states.

Not to put too fine a point on it, but what in the world does Bill Barr think he’s doing? As the memo itself acknowledg­es, restrictio­ns on movement are necessary public health measures legitimate­ly carried out by states.

It’s hard to know for sure, and the memo is so vague and equivocal that it reads almost like some sort of secret code.

One interpreta­tion is that Barr is trying to harness the power of the Department of Justice to contribute to Donald Trump’s rhetorical, electionee­ring efforts to urge the rapid reopening of state economies.

Even before the memo was issued on April 27, Barr had sent up a trial balloon in comments made April 21 to conservati­ve radio host Hugh Hewitt. The thrust of the conversati­on was to defend Trump against the idea that he’s been authoritar­ian or dictatoria­l during the pandemic crisis.

Barr made the (correct) point that Trump has not been relying on any claim of inherent executive authority, but rather emergency powers granted to him by Congress — and even invoking those sparingly.

But that was not all. Barr suggested that state government­s might be obliged to lift restrictio­ns they had put in place: “Our federal Constituti­onal rights don’t go away in an emergency,” he said.

And in a circumstan­ce like this, they put on the government the burden to make sure that whatever burdens it’s putting on our constituti­onal liberties are strictly necessary to deal with the problem. As a matter of doctrinal constituti­onal law, Barr is absolutely right. Severe restrictio­ns on individual liberties need to be justified by a compelling government interest — like fighting a pandemic. They must also be targeted (“narrowly tailored,” in constituti­onal-law speak) to achieving that compelling goal.

But here is where things get a little weird: stay-at-home orders are narrowly tailored to avoiding the spread of the disease. Barr couldn’t plausibly claim otherwise.

The comment reads as more of a hint that states should hurry up and reopen, something the memo also implies. It says that existing restrictio­ns “have been necessary in order to stop the spread of a deadly disease.” Note the past tense — “have been.” Barr is implying that restrictio­ns may no longer be needed.

He went on raise the specter of legal action, directing U.S. attorneys to “be on the lookout for state and local directives that could be violating the constituti­onal rights and civil liberties of individual citizens.”

Without saying exactly what those unconstitu­tional directives were, Barr was sending a message to federal prosecutor­s around the country to bring lawsuits against state and local government­s alleging that stayin-place orders are unconstitu­tional.

It’s pretty striking that an administra­tion that has taken almost no leadership role in guiding states to address the COVID-19 pandemic through shutdowns is now gesturing towards taking a leadership role in forcing them to reopen.

Why is the Department of Justice getting involved here? The answer partly lies in the emptiness of Trump’s past (incorrect) suggestion that he has the authority to reopen the economy. The president doesn’t have that constituti­onal authority, as Barr knows. But the Justice Department can sue states for stay-at-home rules that violate the Constituti­on; in fact, that’s just about the only thing the executive branch could lawfully do to push states to reopen.

To be sure, it seems pretty unlikely that such lawsuits would be successful in court. It’s hard to picture federal judges second-guessing public health experts advising governors to maintain stayin-place orders.

So far, the only exception has come in connection with religious services. A federal district court ordered Kansas to allow socially distanced Easter activities after finding that the state had singled out churches for stricter restrictio­ns than other gathering places. (Barr’s memo referred to religious services, but it wasn’t geared to litigation around that issue, which the Department of Justice had already addressed in a separate set of guidelines for states.)

The Barr memo is meant to ramp up the pressure on states to reopen, and fits with Trump’s apparent electoral strategy of pressing for faster reopenings. It’s part of the Justice Department’s job to look out for citizens’ civil rights and civil liberties. It would be a bad idea to turn that high responsibi­lity into a political tool to help the president’s reelection campaign. Especially when lives are at stake.

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