Souter Confirms Republicans' Worst Fears

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In summary: Souter seems to be arguing that the Constitution should be rewritten to reflect his personal values, rather than the values of the people who ratified it. This is disturbing.
  • #1
russ_watters
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This is disturbing.

It has long been a conservative fear/criticism that liberal justices are "legislating from the bench" in what is often termed "judicial activism": in essence, writing the law instead of interpreting it. In a speech to this year's graduating class of Harvard, Souter acknowledged in shockingly explicit terms that this was, in fact, how he viewed his duty as a (now retired) USSC justice:
Souter said:
We will as a consequence be hearing and discussing a particular sort of criticism that is frequently aimed at the more controversial Supreme Court decisions: criticism that the court is making up the law, that the court is announcing constitutional rules that cannot be found in the Constitution, and that the court is engaging in activism to extend civil liberties. A good many of us, I’m sure a good many of us here, intuitively react that this sort of commentary tends to miss the mark. But we don’t often pause to consider in any detail the conceptions of the Constitution and of constitutional judging that underlie the critical rhetoric, or to compare them with the notions that lie behind our own intuitive responses...

But this explanation hardly scratches the surface. The reasons that constitutional judging is not a mere combination of fair reading and simple facts extend way beyond the recognition that constitutions have to have a lot of general language in order to be useful over long stretches of time...

There are, of course, constitutional claims that would be decided just about the way this fair reading model would have it...But cases like this do not usually come to court, or at least the Supreme Court. And for the ones that do get there, for the cases that tend to raise the national blood pressure, the fair reading model has only a tenuous connection to reality...

The court has to decide which of our approved desires has the better claim, right here, right now, and a court has to do more than read fairly when it makes this kind of choice.
http://news.harvard.edu/gazette/sto...ce-david-souters-speech/?loc=interstitialskip

Not only is this an acknowlegement that he, as a matter of policy throughout his career, violated his oath, but it is an argument that this is the way it should be and a campaign for Obama to appoint a replacement for him who follows in his footsteps - and for the graduates of Harvard Law to do the same.

Souter gives two examples, one being Plessy vs. Ferguson vs Brown vs Board of Education (the "separate but equal" cases):
For those whose exclusive norm for constitutional judging is merely fair reading of language applied to facts objectively viewed, Brown must either be flat-out wrong or a very mystifying decision. Those who look to that model are not likely to think that a federal court back in 1896 should have declared legally mandated racial segregation unconstitutional.
Here he's applying his own incorrect standard in order to prove his case, in essence assuming the outcome instead of arguing it. The second sentence requires a logical argument to support it: [in response] Why not? The answer, presumably, is that the judges of 1896 were racist and therefore used their own values to judge the issue - the same mistake Souter is saying he based his life's work on and should continue. But a faithful reading of the Constitution reveals that the flaw in the morality of the men of 1896, which certainly also existed in 1787, does not appear in the Constitution. The constitution guarantees equal protection under the law -a protection that was superflouously reiterated with the 14th Amemndment. So "separate but equal" was against the Constitution in 1896 and the court erred. It is shocking for him to argue that the court was correct in both 1896 and in 1954.

Further, one of the racist justices is 1896 recognized his own duty and looked past his own racism in crafting a dissenting opinion:
Justice John Marshall Harlan ("the Elder") was a man who passionately believed that the "white race" was superior to all others. Yet, as Justice Clarence Thomas likes to point out, Harlan looked into the Constitution and could not find there, in its words as fairly construed, any basis for separate but equal. The Constitution, Harlan wrote, says the government must guarantee the equal protection of the laws to all. That is what it said, and that is what it meant. Harlan was, of course, vindicated in 1954, when the Supreme Court overruled Plessy and rejected the notion of "separate but equal" in Brown v. Board of Education.

The bottom line is that bad constitutional decisions, far from being the result of the Constitution's frailty, are caused by the frailties of judges who depart from it.
http://www.usatoday.com/news/opinion/forum/2010-06-16-column16_ST_N.htm

And, of course, if a flaw exists in the Constitution, a process already exists and has proven successful for fixing those flaws. Though equal protection itself wasn't one of those flaws, slavery introduced others, such as the 3/5ths compromise.

The above quote was paraphrased from an op-ed about the Souter speech, which also says:
It would be difficult to articulate a decision-making model more antithetical to American democracy and the Constitution's own design. It is often said — by the Supreme Court among others — that we have a "government of laws and not of men." Judges are people, not the living embodiment of the law. When a judge makes the choices Souter suggests, without regard to the Constitution's words and their original meaning, it is the judges who rule and not the law.
I couldn't agree more. Souter's model would have full national sovereignty residing in the hands of a panel of 9 lifetime-appointed rulers. His vision is not democracy and it is not what this country is about.

[edit] Also, though not typically considered the "swing vote" because despite being appointed by/as a conservative he became fairly heavily grounded in liberalism, with the knowledge of the above, he should be considered in that light. And since many of his decisions were apparently based on an improper view of his mandate, a great many of the decisions of the court over the past 20 years must now be called into question.
 
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  • #2
russ_watters said:
It has long been a conservative fear/criticism that liberal justices are "legislating from the bench" in what is often termed "judicial activism": in essence, writing the law instead of interpreting it. In a speech to this year's graduating class of Harvard, Souter acknowledged in shockingly explicit terms that this was, in fact, how he viewed his duty as a (now retired) USSC justice:
Either I fail at reading comprehension, or the quote that follows is a far cry from an acknowledgment in "shocking explicit terms" that Souter legislated from the bench.
 
  • #3
These two excerpts:
Souter said:
[...]constitutional judging is not a mere combination of fair reading and simple facts
and
Souter said:
[...]The court has to decide which of our approved desires has the better claim
strike me as tantamount admission of bench legislation, especially the second. If 'approved desires' means conflicts in the constitution, such as the 3/5 rule and equal protection, then he's off the hook. But I believe by 'desires' he means otherwise: legislation, societal norms.

And this
[constitutional judging] extend way beyond the recognition that constitutions have to have a lot of general language in order to be useful over long stretches of time...
is a tendentious rationalization, ignoring the amendment process, allowing the judge to play hero, riding to the rescue of general language in need of his interpretation.
 
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  • #4
Great! Another neo-con thread that will be tolerated on PF with insufficient parsing or moderation. Souter is not an idiot. He realizes that the Constitution has to be interpreted in light of the present time. That is not a revolutionary idea.

The present-day's neo-con faction on the court has extended the natural rights of citizens to corporations, enabling them to pour billions of dollars into our elections and buy our government even more effectively than they have done in the past. Is that not "legislating from the bench", or is that perjorative label only applied to justices that value the rights of individuals?
 
  • #5
Hurkyl said:
Either I fail at reading comprehension, or the quote that follows is a far cry from an acknowledgment in "shocking explicit terms" that Souter legislated from the bench.
He gives the two models and then says which he uses and provides a long argument in favor of it. The traditional model is the self-explanatory "fair reading model", which he is clearly arguing against. What he's arguing for doesn't really have a name that he identifies, but he alludes to it with "criticism that the court is making up the law" and I gave the common descriptions such as "legislating from the bench" and "judicial activism". The fact that he doesn't apply a label to it shouldn't make it any less clear which model he is arguing for and which he is arguing against.

The last two sentences I quoted are probably the most explicit where he is arguing that the "fair reading model" doesn't work and he does (and the court should do) something different.
 
  • #6
mheslep said:
If 'approved desires' means conflicts in the constitution, such as the 3/5 rule and equal protection, then he's off the hook. But I believe by 'desires' he means otherwise: legislation, societal norms.
Since he uses separate but equal as his example, clearly he does mean societal norms (and personal opinions of judges), but I wouldn't let him off the hook even with those two clearly contradictory parts of the Constitution. When the Court finds a law that appears to contradict the Constitution but isn't crystal clear, it doesn't just strike the law down and wash its hands: it sends the law back to the legislature for clarification/rewriting, with an explicit explanation of where the contradiction or ambiguity lies and often even instructions for how to rectify the problem. The Court's responsibility when it comes to a contradiction/ambiguity in the Constitution itself is no different.
 
  • #7
russ_watters said:
He gives the two models and then says which he uses and provides a long argument in favor of it. The traditional model is the self-explanatory "fair reading model", which he is clearly arguing against. What he's arguing for doesn't really have a name that he identifies, but he alludes to it with "criticism that the court is making up the law" and I gave the common descriptions such as "legislating from the bench" and "judicial activism". The fact that he doesn't apply a label to it shouldn't make it any less clear which model he is arguing for and which he is arguing against.

The last two sentences I quoted are probably the most explicit where he is arguing that the "fair reading model" doesn't work and he does (and the court should do) something different.
You're misreading him, I believe. His thesis is that "criticism that the court is making up the law" is a misinterpretation of reality. He believes such criticism is based on an oversimplified view that judging is little more than an exercise in unambiguous, consistent, deductive logic.

This oversimplified view is what he labels as the "fair reading model".
 
  • #8
turbo-1 said:
Souter is not an idiot.
I never said he was.
He realizes that the Constitution has to be interpreted in light of the present time. That is not a revolutionary idea.
Then you should have no trouble referencing your claim or providing a logical argument for it.
The present-day's neo-con faction on the court has extended the natural rights of citizens to corporations, enabling them to pour billions of dollars into our elections and buy our government even more effectively than they have done in the past. Is that not "legislating from the bench", or is that perjorative label only applied to justices that value the rights of individuals?
Legislating from the bench certainly does happen on both sides of the aisle, it just happens more from the left. That's why liberals argue in favor of it and conservatives argue against it.
 
  • #9
Hurkyl said:
You're misreading him, I believe. His thesis is that "criticism that the court is making up the law" is a misinterpretation of reality. He believes such criticism is based on an oversimplified view that judging is little more than an exercise in unambiguous and consistent deductive logic.

This oversimplified view is what he labels as the "fair reading model".
I'm not seeing a disagreement between you and me here. That he believes the "fair reading model" to be an oversimplified view of the duties of a judge is exactly what the issue is.

Critics call it "legislating from the bench". He calls it part of his duties. Whever you label it, it is happening and he is acknowleging that he's doing it.
 
  • #10
russ_watters said:
I'm not seeing a disagreement between you and me here. That he believes the "fair reading model" to be an oversimplified view of the duties of a judge is exactly what the issue is.
Just to clarify, you are making all of the following assertions?
  • There are no ambiguities in the law
  • The letter of the law overrules the spirit of the law
  • There are no conflicts between laws
 
  • #11
I'm going to research further and come up with more info about the subject, but please all note: I'm not the originator of this issue and I'm not making things up here. My interpretation comes primarily from the USA Today op-ed I linked in the OP. The writers are former (Republican) justice department lawyers.
 
  • #12
Hurkyl said:
Just to clarify, you are making all of the following assertions?
  • There are no ambiguities in the law
  • The letter of the law overrules the spirit of the law
  • There are no conflicts between laws
I am most certainly not making any of those assertions!
 
  • #13
russ_watters said:
I am most certainly not making any of those assertions!
Those three assertions -- or even just invoking a single one -- are what I think he means by the "fair reading model".

At the moment, I'm not particularly inclined to argue whether or not I'm right on that point. But can we agree that, if I do happen to be right, the speech is not disturbing?
 
  • #14
"Judicial Activism" has been going on for a couple centuries now. It happens more or less in different eras and under different courts. It is part of the job of the Supreme Court to "make" law. We get it from the british legal system and is generally referred to as "case law".

If you do not like judicial activism perhaps you would be willing to give up those rights you have received due to it? Do you really need any of the Bill of Rights to protect you from the actions of your state? Should states be able to make abortion illegal? Do you value your "right" to privacy? Do you really care much if the police require probable cause to search your home or arrest you? Do you mind officers stopping you for no reason or do you think that they should at least require a reasonable suspicion that you have committed a crime in order to do so?
 
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  • #15
Alexander Hamilton said:
The interpretation of the laws is the proper and peculiar province of the courts. A constitution is, in fact, and must be regarded by the judges as, a fundamental law. It therefore belongs to them to ascertain its meaning as well as the meaning of any particular acts proceeding from the legislative body.

The Federalist, No. 78.
 
  • #16
Souter said:
There are, of course, constitutional claims that would be decided just about the way this fair reading model would have it...But cases like this do not usually come to court, or at least the Supreme Court. And for the ones that do get there, for the cases that tend to raise the national blood pressure, the fair reading model has only a tenuous connection to reality...

Hurkyl said:
Just to clarify, you are making all of the following assertions?
  • There are no ambiguities in the law
  • The letter of the law overrules the spirit of the law
  • There are no conflicts between laws

TheStatutoryApe said:
"Judicial Activism" has been going on for a couple centuries now. It happens more or less in different eras and under different courts. It is part of the job of the Supreme Court to "make" law. We get it from the british legal system and is generally referred to as "case law".

I think Hurkyl and TSA hit on what Souter was alluding to. The overwhelming majority of cases that make it to the US Supreme Court make it there because the Constitution isn't robust enough to give clear guidance to every possible situation that could arise.

Some of the cases the US Supreme Court sees can be resolved by simply reading the Constitution and/or whatever legislation is involved.

Most require some ambiguity, conflict, etc to ever make it to the US Supreme Court.

For example, "prohibits the federal government from depriving any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law" sounds pretty straight forward until you have to sit down and decide what a person is and decide whether taking a 10% risk of being deprived is the same as a 100% chance of being deprived in the eyes of the law or decide whether loss of property and loss of life should be considered equal in the eyes of the law, etc.
 
  • #17
BobG said:
For example, "prohibits the [...] government from depriving any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law"

The most often discussed definition here is actually what constitutes "due process". We have protection from state government based on most of the Bill of Rights through the "Due Process" clause of the 14th amendment but it has taken over a century of judicial "activism" for us to get that far. Originally it was interpreted to mean merely that all persons should receive a "fair" trial, though without actually defining what constitutes a "fair trial".

The "Right to Privacy" is a greater example as even the majority opinion for the decision that instituted it admitted that it is not something that could be pointed out in the constitution but that only by cross referencing several clauses could one find it hanging nebulously between the lines. Roe v. Wade being an extension of the "Right to Privacy" is all the more derivative.

Miranda is still being argued among the justices within the last decade I believe. The Miranda decision itself says that it is not a right.

Ensuing tangential discussion moved to https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=411818
 
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  • #18
TheStatutoryApe said:
The most often discussed definition here is actually what constitutes "due process". We have protection from state government based on most of the Bill of Rights through the "Due Process" clause of the 14th amendment but it has taken over a century of judicial "activism" for us to get that far. Originally it was interpreted to mean merely that all persons should receive a "fair" trial, though without actually defining what constitutes a "fair trial".

The "Right to Privacy" is a greater example as even the majority opinion for the decision that instituted it admitted that it is not something that could be pointed out in the constitution but that only by cross referencing several clauses could one find it hanging nebulously between the lines. Roe v. Wade being an extension of the "Right to Privacy" is all the more derivative.

Miranda is still being argued among the justices within the last decade I believe. The Miranda decision itself says that it is not a right.


Roe vs. wade would be the classic example of legislating from the bench. Irregardless of your feelings on abortion, the arguments just aren't found in the constitution.

That said, I do think it is important for judges to interpret the intent of the constitution when ruling, even if such intent is not explicitly found in the document.

An example of a very ambiguous phrase is the general welfare clause, whose inclusion was controversial at the time of the constitution's writing. Taken literally, it can be used to justify any action the government wished to take, except those that are strictly forbidden (and practically this is how it is interpreted in modern times.) Of course most of the constitution's framers assumed such an interpretation would be absurd.

I think the judiciary has done a good job in general of holding the government in check. I am curious, could people give me some examples besides Roe vs. Wade that they consider judicial overreach?
 
  • #19
In my layman opinion, the arguments last year (or the year before - context: DC gun law) that the second clause in the 2nd Amendment is not predicated upon the first, is at least grammatical overreach.

Moderator's note: ensuing tangential discussion moved to https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=411810
 
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  • #20
Galteeth said:
I think the judiciary has done a good job in general of holding the government in check. I am curious, could people give me some examples besides Roe vs. Wade that they consider judicial overreach?
If we take Rand Paul at his word, he would prefer to roll back equal-rights legislation such that private entities would have the right to practice racial discrimination. I'm assuming that he would categorize relevant civil-rights decisions as "judicial activism", though you can draw your own conclusions.
 
  • #21
Galteeth said:
Roe vs. wade would be the classic example of legislating from the bench. Irregardless of your feelings on abortion, the arguments just aren't found in the constitution.

Which arguments?

1) The right to privacy? The court acknowledged that and relied on a long history of case law - a large majority supporting an implied right to privacy, but with quite a few cases denying it or at least limiting it. A majority isn't a consensus, hence making this a legitimate case for the court to hear.

2) The right for a state to regulate medical procedures? I agree that right isn't found in the Constitution. None the less, they didn't find regulating medical procedures as unconstitutional provided they served a legitimate interest. The justification for no restrictions on early abortions was partly based on the fact that they were as safe for the mother as childbirth was.

3) The definition of a person? I agree that isn't found in the Constitution. The court once again used case law (plus a healthy dose of history) to decide there has never been a consensus on when human life begins. In fact, throughout history, most considered life as beginning when visible movement occurred or at birth. One could say the court used at least some judicial restraint by being careful not to define when life began in their ruling.

4) While the court was careful to specifically not define when human life began, their rulings on when the state could consider the "potentiality of human life" would seem to practically define human life as beginning at viability and I agree that definition isn't found in the Constitution.

I do agree this decision was "legislating from the bench" since there was no need to break pregnancy into trimesters and rule what type of restrictions could be placed on each trimester in order to decide this case. In fact, I think making up policy on when abortions are legal, restricted, or illegal is going far beyond what the Constitution allows the courts to do.

They should have restrained themselves to either upholding the Texas laws or striking them down without taking the extra step they did. A little restraint would have also allowed them to stop safely at "no consensus on when human life begins" without immediately contradicting themselves by using viability as the standard.

I'd also note that simply striking down the Texas law would have made have made abortions legal with no restrictions at least until Texas passed a new abortion law that finally did stand up to USSC scrutiny. Or perhaps some other state, since the states would be passing laws and having them struck down until they hit on a good one through trial and error. Suddenly the "legislating from the bench" argument becomes one of semantics, since one could say the court simply laid out some guidance on what states should consider if they hope to have their laws pass USSC scrutiny. (I'm not sure I like this rationale, but I at least understand the court's thinking.)

I guess the problem I have with most "this was legislating from the bench" arguments is that they then go on to attack parts of the issue that the court should legitimately consider; not the part that really was "legislating from the bench".

People use this argument whenever judges don't restrict themselves to a "fair reading of the Constitution" when deciding a case. Except not restricting themselves to a "fair reading of the Constitution" includes using precedents of case law, which is legitimate, in addition to actually creating new laws in their decision, which is not legitimate.

In this case, I'm not so sure judicial restraint would have satisfied many people, since then the issue would have to be resolved point by point by court case after court case. It was at least expedient. (Not that satisfaction and expediency should be the number one goal of the US Supreme Court when those goals conflict with the court's role under the Constitution.)
 
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  • #22
BobG said:
People use this argument whenever judges don't restrict themselves to a "fair reading of the Constitution" when deciding a case. Except not restricting themselves to a "fair reading of the Constitution" includes using precedents of case law, which is legitimate, in addition to actually creating new laws in their decision, which is not legitimate.

In this case, I'm not so sure judicial restraint would have satisfied many people, since then the issue would have to be resolved point by point by court case after court case. It was at least expedient. (Not that satisfaction and expediency should be the number one goal of the US Supreme Court when those goals conflict with the court's role under the Constitution.)
In the case of Roe v Wade, you'd have to crawl into the heads of the justices to figure out what was behind the decision. For certain, there was always an economic/class distinction that was well-known but poorly-publicized. Women from wealthy families always had access to safe, discrete abortions. Poor women didn't. They were either forced to bear the child (even if conceived through forced incest or rape) or undergo a very risky abortion in dicey conditions. The invocation of personal rights and privacy in regard to abortion was a smoke-screen, IMO, that allowed the court to side-step some potentially touchy motivations while righting a long-standing wrong.
 
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  • #23
turbo-1 said:
In the case of Rowe v Wade, you'd have to crawl into the heads of the justices to figure out what was behind the decision. For certain, there was always an economic/class distinction that was well-known but poorly-publicized. Women from wealthy families always had access to safe, discrete abortions. Poor women didn't. They were either forced to bear the child (even if conceived through forced incest or rape) or undergo a very risky abortion in dicey conditions. The invocation of personal rights and privacy in regard to abortion was a smoke-screen, IMO, that allowed the court to side-step some potentially touchy motivations while righting a long-standing wrong.

It definitely did start to have an impact on the violent crime rate about 18 years later, but that's interesting trivia that both pro-lifers and pro-choicers found to hot to touch. Pro-lifers, because it would seem to suggest abortion has good effects and pro-choicers because aborting mass numbers of those most likely to commit violent crimes seems like a pretty grisly solution.
 
  • #24
turbo-1 said:
If we take Rand Paul at his word, he would prefer to roll back equal-rights legislation such that private entities would have the right to practice racial discrimination. I'm assuming that he would categorize relevant civil-rights decisions as "judicial activism", though you can draw your own conclusions.

This is getting off topic, but what you are referring to was the civil rights act which was congressional legislation.
 
  • #25
BobG said:
Which arguments?

1) The right to privacy? The court acknowledged that and relied on a long history of case law - a large majority supporting an implied right to privacy, but with quite a few cases denying it or at least limiting it. A majority isn't a consensus, hence making this a legitimate case for the court to hear.

2) The right for a state to regulate medical procedures? I agree that right isn't found in the Constitution. None the less, they didn't find regulating medical procedures as unconstitutional provided they served a legitimate interest. The justification for no restrictions on early abortions was partly based on the fact that they were as safe for the mother as childbirth was.

3) The definition of a person? I agree that isn't found in the Constitution. The court once again used case law (plus a healthy dose of history) to decide there has never been a consensus on when human life begins. In fact, throughout history, most considered life as beginning when visible movement occurred or at birth. One could say the court used at least some judicial restraint by being careful not to define when life began in their ruling.

4) While the court was careful to specifically not define when human life began, their rulings on when the state could consider the "potentiality of human life" would seem to practically define human life as beginning at viability and I agree that definition isn't found in the Constitution.

I do agree this decision was "legislating from the bench" since there was no need to break pregnancy into trimesters and rule what type of restrictions could be placed on each trimester in order to decide this case. In fact, I think making up policy on when abortions are legal, restricted, or illegal is going far beyond what the Constitution allows the courts to do.

They should have restrained themselves to either upholding the Texas laws or striking them down without taking the extra step they did. A little restraint would have also allowed them to stop safely at "no consensus on when human life begins" without immediately contradicting themselves by using viability as the standard.

I'd also note that simply striking down the Texas law would have made have made abortions legal with no restrictions at least until Texas passed a new abortion law that finally did stand up to USSC scrutiny. Or perhaps some other state, since the states would be passing laws and having them struck down until they hit on a good one through trial and error. Suddenly the "legislating from the bench" argument becomes one of semantics, since one could say the court simply laid out some guidance on what states should consider if they hope to have their laws pass USSC scrutiny. (I'm not sure I like this rationale, but I at least understand the court's thinking.)

I guess the problem I have with most "this was legislating from the bench" arguments is that they then go on to attack parts of the issue that the court should legitimately consider; not the part that really was "legislating from the bench".

People use this argument whenever judges don't restrict themselves to a "fair reading of the Constitution" when deciding a case. Except not restricting themselves to a "fair reading of the Constitution" includes using precedents of case law, which is legitimate, in addition to actually creating new laws in their decision, which is not legitimate.

In this case, I'm not so sure judicial restraint would have satisfied many people, since then the issue would have to be resolved point by point by court case after court case. It was at least expedient. (Not that satisfaction and expediency should be the number one goal of the US Supreme Court when those goals conflict with the court's role under the Constitution.)

It is the building of tenuous inference upon inference. Their is first the implied right to privacy, which is then extended as a right to medical privacy, which is then extended to cover privacy on the issue of abortion, which is then extended to define what types of abortion this right covers.

This is certainly, "legislating" from the bench. It is striking down a state law on the basis of constitutional supremacy, while making a series of inferred jumps that are between the lines and based on case laws to basically decide the issue of abortion. This is not properly the province of the courts, but of the states. I can understand the argument of invoking the equal protection clause to set a federal standard, but that would be a matter for congress.EDIT: I recommend we keep this discussion limited to judicial overreach, and possibly how roe v. wade is or is not an example, as opposed to discussion of abortion itself.
 
  • #26
BobG said:
It definitely did start to have an impact on the violent crime rate about 18 years later, but that's interesting trivia that both pro-lifers and pro-choicers found to hot to touch. Pro-lifers, because it would seem to suggest abortion has good effects and pro-choicers because aborting mass numbers of those most likely to commit violent crimes seems like a pretty grisly solution.

That's possible, but it's not the only causative factor. I would recommend if you wish to discuss the topic to start a new thread, as it is not directly relevant to the subject at hand.
 
  • #27
Galteeth said:
This is certainly, "legislating" from the bench. It is striking down a state law on the basis of constitutional supremacy, while making a series of inferred jumps that are between the lines and based on case laws to basically decide the issue of abortion. This is not properly the province of the courts, but of the states.

This is specifically what I mean. Using case law (or common law) has a history that predates the creation of the US. It would be ludicrous to think there was some assumption that courts wouldn't use case law as precedents when the Constitution was written. It would have had to be specifically mentioned when creating the judicial branch if the Constitution intended to make a sudden change in how the courts operated.

That's why I don't like the Roe v Wade example. It's a bait and switch. A case that definitely did legislate from the bench, but not for the reasons most people like to claim.
 
  • #28
BobG said:
This is specifically what I mean. Using case law (or common law) has a history that predates the creation of the US. It would be ludicrous to think there was some assumption that courts wouldn't use case law as precedents when the Constitution was written. It would have had to be specifically mentioned when creating the judicial branch if the Constitution intended to make a sudden change in how the courts operated.

That's why I don't like the Roe v Wade example. It's a bait and switch. A case that definitely did legislate from the bench, but not for the reasons most people like to claim.

Fair enough, and I think I was not clear enough. It is not the reliance on case law, but the building of questionable inference upon questionable inference to arrive at a new law.

I don't see for example, miranda rights as being the same, since the right to a fair trial implies some necessary fairness in the way people are questioned, as well as a logical extension of the intention of the habeas corpus principle.

I suppose it is ultimately subjective, but one seems like a direct inference, while the other seems like a nebulous construction.

To put it a different way, a reasonable person could conclude that miranda protections are necessary from the right to a fair trial principle. It's much harder to get to the conclusions of roe v. wade. Furthermore, the rights outlined in roe v. wade are not applied to areas where they would theoretically be similar, such as medical drug use and euthanasia. It seems like such a narrow and selective application of principles. And why would medical privacy apply only to certain trimesters? I agree with your general assesment. I am a bit confused about the part about the state regulating medical procedures. Are you referring here to the federal government, or the state of Texas?
 
  • #29
Galteeth said:
I am a bit confused about the part about the state regulating medical procedures. Are you referring here to the federal government, or the state of Texas?

Either.

In Roe v Wade, there's a view that if the procedure is safe for the mother, then neither the states nor the federal government should be interfering if the abortion is done before viability of the fetus.

In other words, the states could ban abortions (or at least restrict them since even dangerous medical procedures have less risk than not performing the procedure in some situations) at any time if they were deemed unsafe for the mother or at least risky. But if the procedure is safe, then the mother has a right to do whatever she wants with her body (a right to privacy) - at least until viability and then concerns for health of the fetus begin to come into play.

(The trimester policy the court laid down was a snap shot of the state of medical treatment in 1973 and isn't necessary applicable to today. It was a policy that would surely become obsolete and, hopefully, the states would interpret the policy as guidance and not binding legislation in detail even if in spirit.)

States have no more right to interfere into abortions than they do plastic surgery or nose jobs - unless the procedure or material they're using for the implants is unsafe and then they can ban the unsafe procedure or material. In other words, you can't print safety warnings in small print on your products and then claim your customers have a right to use unsafe products if they want to (Oh, wait! Yes, you can! You can still sell cigarettes!).

I don't think there should be much debate about a state's right to ensure safe medical practices, since the mother's safety was never the real issue anyway. And I don't think the mother's right to privacy was ever a legitimate issue, either, since there's only one reason anyone would even be considering telling her what medical procedures she can have done or can't have done.

Abortion is a conflict between competing interests and how those competing interests are resolved depends on when the fetus begins to deserve some protections of its own rights.

The rest (including the legislating from the bench part) are peripheral issues and attacking them rather than the central issue is just an end around, hoping if the decision is overturned on a technicality, then a new make-up of the court might result in a more favorable decision on the central issue.
 
  • #30
BobG said:
Either.


I don't think there should be much debate about a state's right to ensure safe medical practices, since the mother's safety was never the real issue anyway. And I don't think the mother's right to privacy was ever a legitimate issue, either, since there's only one reason anyone would even be considering telling her what medical procedures she can have done or can't have done.

This is more or less what I was trying to get at it. I was citing this an example of judicial overreach, which i said was not that common. I somewhat disagree in that I think there are other reasons people might want to make medical procedures the government's business, but that's not really relevant.

I am still interested in hearing from people such as the OP some of the examples of judicial overreach (perhaps a bit more recent then Roe v. wade) that they find troubling.
 
  • #31
turbo-1 said:
I'm still waiting for Russ to explain to us how Souter's comments regarding jurisprudence signals the end of the world (according to Limbaugh and Beck). Apparently, Russ' radio can't get frequencies that carry the news and commentary of normal people. Too bad.
Before you get up on your high horse, you should first admit to yourself that Souter made a rather poor choice of words -- if I were his editor, I would have told him he was using "fair reading" exactly wrongly: it should be applied to the sensible model, not the cartoon model.

I admit when skimming the speech, I probably would not have noticed the term was being used counter-intuitively (and would have had a similar initial opinion as Russ) if it weren't for the fact that his speech is very similar to some arguments I recently made in another forum, thus alerting me to the fact something was weird.
 
  • #32
Galteeth said:
I don't see for example, miranda rights as being the same, since the right to a fair trial implies some necessary fairness in the way people are questioned, as well as a logical extension of the intention of the habeas corpus principle.
While I agree with your primary point I would disagree that there is any direct inference as the basis for Miranda. What makes Miranda so singular a decision is that it does not create any law or imply any right. It is a case where the USSC has more or less created a memorandum on procedural conduct extending all the way down to the very lowest rungs of the nation's justice system.

Hurkyl said:
[...]Souter made a rather poor choice of words -- if I were his editor, I would have told him he was using "fair reading" exactly wrongly: it should be applied to the sensible model, not the cartoon model.

I admit when skimming the speech, I probably would not have noticed the term was being used counter-intuitively (and would have had a similar initial opinion as Russ) if it weren't for the fact that his speech is very similar to some arguments I recently made in another forum, thus alerting me to the fact something was weird.
I think that Souter was outlining an ideological divide on constitutional interpretation. The term "fair reading" definitely hints at a preference for the strict textualist approach. Considering his audience I would imagine that he assumed they would be familiar enough with such issues to realize his intent. We can see in the article that some people do not understand the interpretive approaches since the article seemingly notes Plessy v. Ferguson as a case of "judicial activism" (more specifically a departure from the constitution) when it was anything but. Plessy was a classic conservative textual interpretation as there is absolutely nothing in the constitution that would define "equal" to the exclusion of "separate but equal". Brown, that case that the article states vindicated Harlan, is considered a prime example of "judicial activism" as it not only sought to define "equal" outside of any textual or originalist interpretation but also led to the remedial court order which instituted school busing.

More than anything these responses to Souter's comments go a long way in explaining why avoiding public spotlight is so ingrained in the culture of the court.
 
  • #33
Hurkyl said:
Before you get up on your high horse, you should first admit to yourself that Souter made a rather poor choice of words -- if I were his editor, I would have told him he was using "fair reading" exactly wrongly: it should be applied to the sensible model, not the cartoon model.
My point is that there is no way to apply the wording in the Constitution directly to most modern-day legal problems, and that the reactionaries on the right that tout the all-encompassing infallibility and applicability of a 200+ year old document are either ignorant or lying.

Critics on the right generally claim that their less-radical counterparts are engaging in "judicial activism" and "legislating from the bench" though when their own allies do it there is not a peep. The recent court decision that equates "free speech" with unlimited monetary donations AND extends that right to corporations and other monied interests is a particularly egregious example of such activism. There are a lot of young neo-cons on the court right now, with life-time appointments, so any claims that judges appointed by Obama need to pass some kind of "purity test" ought to be taken with a rather large grain of salt. Really! The thought that a quiet, well-balanced justice like Souter is an "activist" is ridiculous on the face of it.

Moderator's note: tangential discussion on Citizen's United split off into https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=411807
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #34
Bob said:
This is specifically what I mean. Using case law (or common law) has a history that predates the creation of the US. It would be ludicrous to think there was some assumption that courts wouldn't use case law as precedents when the Constitution was written. It would have had to be specifically mentioned when creating the judicial branch if the Constitution intended to make a sudden change in how the courts operated.
The section of the constitution defining the judicial branch is the shortest, simplest, and most lacking in particulars of any. There was apparently very little controversy in drafting this section and it is believed that since most of the framers were lawyers they had readily assumed the court would take on the general attitude of the british common law system. The Court was more or less left to its own devices and created its own set of procedures. If there is anything anywhere that says the USSC is only to give "fair reading" of the constitution it is among its own policies.
 
  • #35
turbo-1 said:
[words]
Things would go a lot more smoothly if you would admit that you agree with Russ on the point that the SCOTUS should limit itself to judicial review, rather than engaging in judicial activism.

Your opinions on collection of whatever real or imagined persons you refer to by "reactionaries / critics on the right" probably belong in another thread, however.



The recent court decision that equates "free speech" with unlimited monetary donations AND extends that right to corporations and other monied interests is a particularly egregious example of such activism.
As an incidental aside, this was precisely the issue that was up when I last engaged in this debate: there were an awful lot of people condemning the SCOTUS for failing to ignore that corporations are persons under U.S. law. I even recall one person explicitly condemning the SCOTUS because they should have ruled the other way for the good of the country, no matter what judicial review would have compelled them to do.

This, of course, is one of the kinds of criticism that Souter condemns. People take their own little corner of the law and the constutition, baldly assert their conclusion is obvious (in this case, against Corporate rights) -- i.e. their "fair reading" of the consitution -- and then accuse the SCOTUS of activism because they dared to weigh in other considerations that the critic is staunchly ignoring.
 

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