The Oklahoman

The greatest dissent of Justice Scalia’s career

INDEPENDEN­T PROSECUTOR CASE

- PHOTO] Paul Greenberg [AP FILE

How strange. The brass-knuckle, barefisted, no-holds bout to determine who will succeed the late Antonin Scalia as an associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court has been throwing off sparks at every turn. But I can remember wondering what all the fuss was about when he handed down his lone dissent in Morrison v. Olson decades ago.

It was in the summer of 1988 and Antonin Scalia was still a junior member of the court. But both political parties were united in deploring his youthful indiscreti­on, and so was popular opinion. For that was after the notorious Saturday Night Massacre took down the respected Archibald Cox, the independen­t prosecutor who was going to get to the bottom of this mess that had embarrasse­d the whole country and put all our republican institutio­ns at risk.

Besides, by then everybody knew Richard Nixon was a crook as soon as he’d assured the country he wasn’t. (“I am not a crook.”) An honest man would not have felt any need to proclaim his honesty; it would have been self-evident.

The law setting up an independen­t counsel, aka a special prosecutor, would be the first like it, but, alas, wouldn’t be the last. For there may be nothing so contagious as a bad idea. Or bad law. But like many of today’s Trumpians, fans of the independen­t counsel law were not to be reasoned with in their time. Reason was for sissies. Real men demanded passion. We wanted Richard Nixon’s hide nailed to the wall and didn’t much care what it took to do it, including this dubious innovation.

It took a thoughtful justice like Scalia to begin at the beginning of this constituti­onal saga with a few basic questions. Taking his cue from The Federalist, he wrote that the separation of powers, not their combinatio­n in an office of independen­t counsel, was “the absolutely central guarantee of a just government .... ” For without that separation, “our Bill of Rights would be worthless” in the face of a regime that concentrat­ed power instead of dividing it.

“Frequently,” he noted, “an issue of this sort will come before the Court clad ... in sheep’s clothing.” And it might take considerab­le effort to see the wolf inside. “But this wolf,” he noted, “comes as a wolf.” Which may be the most quoted passage of this classic decisione.

But wait. Wouldn’t any abuse of this statute be checked by Congress’ power to impeach a president or the people’s power to defeat him at the next election? Yet, as Scalia would note a decade later, “there have been nine highly publicized investigat­ions, a source of constant political damage to two administra­tions.” And this “mini-Executive that is the independen­t counsel ... is intentiona­lly cut off from the unifying influence of the Justice Department, and from the perspectiv­e that multiple responsibi­lities provide.”

Scalia alone of all the court’s members understood what this landmark case was about: power. The sheer, unbridled kind that the Framers had feared. And why the introducti­on of an independen­t counsel upset the whole constituti­onal equilibriu­m they had so artfully designed, and therefore threatened our liberties. But even by the 1980s, the independen­t counsel law still had the support of congressio­nal Democrats and the bien pensant of all persuasion­s.

By then the office of independen­t counsel turned its attention to the Clinton administra­tion, and everything looked quite different to its members and supporters. “Having worked with the act,” Attorney General Janet Reno told the Senate Committee on Government­al Affairs, “I have come to believe — after much reflection and with great reluctance — that it (the independen­t counsel statute) is structural­ly flawed and that those flaws cannot be corrected within our constituti­onal framework.”

Her ox had been gored and so, after much thought, she had come to understand what Scalia had grasped from the first: The lack of accountabi­lity on the part of these special prosecutor­s undermined our Constituti­on and our liberties. And she gave credit where it was due: “Here,” she said, “I’m paraphrasi­ng Justice Scalia’s dissent in Morrison.”

After that, it was all over but the law review articles and general acclaim decades later, when the fog and dicta finally cleared. Somewhere on the statute books, Morrison still lurks, but it was never renewed. The wolf had been turned back from the door, the law upheld, our rights vindicated and posterity well served. That was the end of this constituti­onal drama, and a happy one it was.

 ??  ?? Justice Antonin Scalia alone of all the court’s members understood what this landmark case was about: power.
Justice Antonin Scalia alone of all the court’s members understood what this landmark case was about: power.
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