Tuesday, October 04, 2005

Cold Comfort

In today's press conference, George Bush stated Harriet Miers is a "strict constructionist" who will not "legislate from the bench." If I were a conservative, this would mean nothing to me, unless I thought Bush was winking while he said it, really meaning "she's a conservative who'll always agree with us."

The mantra about interpreting the law, not legislating, has always been a meaningless distinction. No matter which side your "interpretation" comes down on, it will become the (new) law of the land. And even a "strict constructionist" can find what she wants in the Constitution, assuming she wants it badly enough.

No one knows what sort of judge Miers will make, but conservatives (and liberals) should hope for someone guided by more than just interpretative principles, which are pretty thin reeds to hang a whole career on.

ColumbusGuy adds LAGuy has always had trouble with a few relatively simple things, Manhattan Media bias among them, but this also near the top of the list. For him, there is no difference between legislating and interpreting. How odd that the rest of the world seems to disagree, outside of some disingenuous deconstructionists.

In any case, I'm heartened by Roberts' statement, "I view the vote this morning as confirmation of what is for me a bedrock principle, that judging is different from politics."

Is Roberts a cipher? Sure. We won't know how he rules until he rules. But the distinction between legislating and interpreting, difficult though it admittedly is, is surely more clear than "I'll always agree with you, honey," which suggests that LAGuy should enter a prenuptial contract before he enters his nuptials.

BTW: No racing stripes! One Rehnquist tradition dead and buried already. Let's hope Lopez isn't next.

LAGuy notes: Sure, everyone believes there's a difference. In fact, it's because everyone believes this that we can tell the standard means nothing. Here's the true difference, and it's crystal clear--when you decide the way I like, you're interpreting, when you decide the way I don't, you're legislating.

I'd think ColumbusGuy would be more humble. After all, the hallmark of what most people think this whole thing means is deferring to legislators, whereas under ColumbusGuy's view, the Court would be throwing out laws by the hundreds. If the Court actually decided cases the way ColumbusGuy wants, Republicans and Democrats alike would be shouting from the mountaintops that this Court legislates like no other.

ColumbusGuy adds: Hmm. You stand alone against all others with a wacky opinion, but I'm supposed to be more "humble" because (some) Republicans and (some) Democrats would scream about the consequences of my view? How about we add the Ninth Amendment to the mix? That'd give you all the Common Law you're so fond of, and *plenty* of room for interpretation. And as AnnArborGuy has pointed out, it would drive Bork over the edge, and probably a number of others, too.

LAGuy adds: I don't need the Ninth Amendment, the common law is already in the Bill Of Rights.

4 Comments:

Blogger LAGuy said...

"Strict Constructionists" are just as malleable in interpreting the Constitution as most others. The main difference is they're a bit more arrogant.

2:24 AM, October 05, 2005  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

C'mon now. Do you think that if today Scalia and Breyer switched their interpretive philosophy to the other's--i.e. If in good faith Antonin agreed to decide cases on the basis of "active liberty" and Breyer sudddenly fully embraced "original intent", do you really think that their votes in cases would be very different?
The Constitution (and for that matter the Bible and other key holy books and founding documents) is as malleable as the men and women who interpret it. Politicians use words like "strict construction" and "cultural sensitivity" to play to their base.

In fact in our legal culture we reward (through fees or judicial appointments) those who can bend a philosophy to support outcomes desired by their clients.

9:58 AM, October 05, 2005  
Blogger ColumbusGuy said...

See what you've wrought, LAGuy? Anonymous believes it's just about power, and there isn't a principle to be found.

Lawyers, guns and money . . .

11:21 AM, October 05, 2005  
Blogger LAGuy said...

The law is actually pretty clear most of the time, or we couldn't rely on contracts or reasonably reliable policing. It's just that occasionally there is controversy (about the law, not just the facts). And when you have a Constitution, with some lofty and general language, it can make things even trickier.

It's the most controversial cases, then, that come to the Supreme Court. Usually these are cases where serious legal minds are already in dispute. And even then, the most likely result is a 9-0 vote.

Nevertheless, there's enough room to play around that a Justice can find (or ask his clerks to find) a result pleasing to both his philosophy and his politics--and not feel the least bit cynical about it.

11:38 AM, October 05, 2005  

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