A Tale of Two Constitutions
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Posted: 06/20/05
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A Tale of Two Constitutions
by David Barton
The subject of constitutional interpretation
may seem like a topic best fitted for an ivory-tower debate, but it actually
has a very real and dramatic impact on daily life (as will be demonstrated
shortly). In recent years, two competing viewpoints have emerged.
Probably the first exposure
most citizens had to the two views came during the 2000 presidential debates.
When asked what type of judges should be placed on the bench, candidate Bush
responded: "I believe that the judges ought not to take the place of the
legislative branch of government . . . and that they ought to look at the
Constitution as sacred. . . . I don't believe in liberal, activist judges; I
believe in strict constructionists."1 Candidate Gore countered, "The
Constitution ought to be interpreted as a document that grows."2 Gore later
stated, "I believe the Constitution is a living and breathing document. . .
. We have interpreted our founding charter over the years, and found deeper
meanings in it in light of the subsequent experience in American life."3 So,
the two choices are . . . follow original intent, or construct a living
constitution.
Proponents of a living constitution believe
that we should not be bound by what dead white guys wrote two centuries ago
when slavery was legal, women could not vote, and horses were the fastest
means of transportation. Instead, we should live under a constitution that is
alive and vibrant, reflecting today's values and beliefs.
Such rhetoric makes a living constitution sound
appealing, but it is actually a complete misportrayal of the difference
between the two philosophies. In reality, both accommodate an evolving
society; in fact, under the strict construction (or originalist) viewpoint,
Article V of the Constitution requires that the Constitution be
a living document. The real difference between the two approaches is not whether
the Constitution should evolve, but rather how those changes
should occur - and who should make them.
Under the living constitution approach, history
and precedent are largely irrelevant; instead, unelected judges create policy
to reflect modern needs through the constitution they themselves write. As
explained by Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes:
We are under a constitution,
but the constitution is what the judges say it is.4
Ironically, under this modern approach,
judicial policy-makers are regularly out of step with modern society. For
example, although 80 percent of the nation currently opposes flag desecration,
living constitution judges have ruled that the people are wrong on this issue
and that the flag cannot be protected. Similarly, 90 percent of citizens in
the federal Ninth Circuit supported keeping "under God" in the Pledge of
Allegiance, but their living constitution judges pronounced them wrong.
Equally striking is the number of recent
occasions in which living constitution judges have overturned statewide votes
wherein the People clearly expressed their will (e.g., striking down votes in
New York and Washington that banned physician-assisted suicides; in Arkansas
and Washington that enacted term limits; in Missouri that rejected a tax
increase; etc.).
Each of these popular votes would be valid
under original intent because in that approach, the People - not unelected
judges - determine their policies and values. And whenever the People want a
change, they do not rely on a judge to make it; instead, they update their
Constitution to reflect their views - as they have done on over two-dozen
occasions. Samuel Adams pointed out the strength of this approach:
[T]he people alone have an
incontestable, unalienable, and indefeasible right to institute government
and to reform, alter, or totally change the same when their protection,
safety, prosperity, and happiness require it. And the federal Constitution
- according to the mode prescribed therein [Article V] - has
already undergone such amendments in several parts of it as from experience
has been judged necessary.5 (emphasis added)
This unique American guiding principle made its
appearance in the Declaration of Independence as "the consent of the
governed." The State constitutions penned after the Declaration reiterated
this precept - as, for example, in Massachusetts in 1780:
All power residing
originally in the people and being derived from them, the several
magistrates and officers of government vested with authority - whether
Legislative, Executive, or Judicial - are their substitutes and agents and
are at all times accountable to them.6
The same axiom was then established in the
Constitution through the three-word phrase that begins its text: "We The
People."
Today's living document proponents decry this
approach as majoritarianism - the so-called "tyranny of the majority."
Perhaps, but what is the alternative? Minoritarism? That a small group should
be able to annul the will of the People and enforce its own desires upon the
masses? Such an option is unacceptable under original intent. As explained by
George Washington:
The fundamental principle of
our Constitution . . . enjoins [requires] that the will of the majority
shall prevail.7
Thomas Jefferson agreed:
The will of the majority
[is] the natural law of every society [and] is the only sure guardian of the
rights of man. Perhaps even this may sometimes err. But its errors are
honest, solitary and short-lived.8
Does this original principle therefore mean
that minorities are to be disregarded or trodden upon? Of course not. As
Jefferson further explained:
Though the will of the
majority is in all cases to prevail, that will to be rightful must be
reasonable - the minority possess their equal rights which equal law must
protect.9
While the minority is not to prevail, with its
constitutional guarantee of "free speech," it does have the "equal
right" to attempt to persuade the majority to its point of view. The
minority does have equal rights, but equal right is not the same as equal
power; the minority is never the equivalent of the majority and should never
exercise control over it.
Living constitution judges, however, view the
majority as inherently wicked and depraved - always seeking deliberately to
violate the rights of the minority with only judges standing between the
minority and total annihilation. Therefore, under this anti-majoritarian view,
the greater the public support for a position, the more likely a living
constitution judge is to strike it down.
Yet American history has proven that the best
protector of minority rights is not the courts but rather the People. For
example, former slaves received their constitutional rights not from the
courts but by the majority consent of non-slaves; women were similarly
accorded the constitutional right to vote not by the courts but by the
majority approval of men; the constitutional rights accorded to the poor by
the abolition of the poll tax came at the majority approval of those who were
not poor; and the constitutional right allowing eighteen-year-olds to vote was
given by the majority approval of voters not eighteen-years-old. Additionally,
all of the constitutional protections for individuals and minorities
established in the original Bill of Rights (e.g., speech, religion, petition,
assembly, bearing of arms, etc.) were also enacted by majority consent. In
other words, all minority rights in the Constitution have in all cases been
established by majority consent.
In fact, the courts have a very poor record of
protecting minority rights. Although living constitution proponents love to
point to the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision that ended
segregation as proof that the courts protects minority rights, they
conveniently forget to tell the rest of the story. In 1875, Congress - by
majority vote - banned racial segregation, but in 1882, the unelected
Supreme Court struck down that anti-segregation law; in 1896, the Supreme
Court reaffirmed its pro-segregation position; but in 1954, the Court finally
reversed itself and struck down segregation - eighty years after "We The
People" had abolished segregation.
It is not surprising that judges are fallible,
for as Jefferson pointed out:
Our judges are as honest as
other men, and not more so. They have - with others - the same passions
for party, for power, and the privilege of their corps. . . . And their
power the more dangerous as they are in office for life and not responsible
- as the other functionaries are - to the elective control.10
Certainly, the majority will sometimes err, but
as Jefferson observed, "its errors are honest, solitary, and short-lived"
and can be remedied by "elective control." However, the errors created by
judicial decisions are more severe and long-lasting.
While living document enthusiasts disparage
strict constructionists as being narrow or restrictive, Justice Antonin Scalia
counters:
Don't think the originalist
interpretation constrains you. To the contrary, my [originalist]
Constitution is a very flexible Constitution. You want a right to abortion?
Create it the way all rights are created in a democracy: pass a law. The
death penalty? Pass a law. That's flexibility.11
Scalia points out that it is just the opposite
with living constitution judges:
They want the whole country
to do it their way, from coast to coast. They want to drive one issue after
another off the stage of political debate.12
In short, then, the living constitution
approach empowers an unaccountable elite to make decisions on behalf of the
People; original intent empowers the People themselves.
[For more information on this topic please see
David Barton's book Restraining
Judicial Activism or his audio presentation Impeachment!
Restraining an Overactive Judiciary on cassette.]
Endnotes
1. Commission on Presidential Debates, "2000 Debate
Transcript" (at http://www.debates.org/pages/trans2000a.html).
2. Commission on Presidential Debates, "2000 Debate Transcript"
(at http://www.debates.org/pages/trans2000a.html).
3. PBS.org, "Online News Hour: Al Gore" (at http://www.pbs.org/newshour/election2000/candidates/gore_3-14c.html).
4. Charles Evans Hughes, The Autobiographical Notes of
Charles Evans Hughes, David J. Danelski and Joseph S. Tulchin, editors
(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1973), p. 144, speech at Elmira on May
3, 1907.5. Samuel Adams, The Writings of Samuel Adams,
Harry Alonzo Cushing, editor (New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1904), Vol. IV,
p. 388, to the Legislature of Massachusetts on January 19, 1796.6.
A Constitution or Frame of Government Agreed Upon by the Delegates of
the People of the State of Massachusetts-Bay (Boston: Benjamin Edes &
Sons, 1780), p. 9, Massachusetts, 1780, Part I, Article V.
7. James D. Richardson, A Compilation of the Messages and
Papers of the Presidents, 1789-1897 (Published by Authority of Congress,
1899), Vol. I, p. 164, from the "Sixth Annual Address" of November
19, 1794.
8. Thomas Jefferson, The Papers of Thomas Jefferson,
Julian P. Boyd, editor (NJ: Princeton University Press, 1961), Vol. XVI, p.
179, "Response to the Citizens of Albermarle," February 12, 1790.
9. James D. Richardson, A Compilation of the Messages and
Papers of the Presidents, 1789-1897 (Published by Authority of Congress,
1899), Vol. I, p. 322, from Jefferson's First Inaugural on March 11, 1801.10.
Thomas Jefferson, Writings of Thomas Jefferson, Albert Ellery Bergh,
editor (Washington D. C.: Thomas Jefferson Memorial Association, 1904), Vol.
XV, p. 277, to William Charles Jarvis on September 28, 1820.
11. About, "Scalia on the Constitution" (at http://usgovinfo.about.com/library/weekly/aa022701a.htm).
12. About, "Scalia on the Constitution" (at http://usgovinfo.about.com/library/weekly/aa022701a.htm).
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