The Myth of "Strict Construction"

     The nomination of Harriet Miers to the Supreme Court has again brought the issue of how judges should interpret our Constitution to the fore. It is an issue that scholars and jurists have wrestled with since our Constitution was written, and for good reason.  As a nation that prides itself on democracy, the idea that a handful of unelected judges can lay down the ultimate law of the land is a potentially scary proposition.  Surely there must be some way to assure that they aren't simply acting on their own personal whims and prejudices.

     President Bush has assured the nation that Ms. Miers will handle this problem by sticking to a "strict construction" of the Constitution.  She will not "legislate" from the bench.  Now this may sound perfectly clear to many Americans, especially those who have been frustrated by the direction the Court has taken in recent times, but there's just one problem: The idea of "strict construction" is a myth.

     The complex truth about the U.S. Constitution is that many of its most important concepts are written in ambiguous terms.  We are all guaranteed the freedom from "unreasonable" searches.  "Equal Protection" and "Due Process" are among our most cherished rights.  Yet while we may all agree that these protections are laudable, we often have considerable difficulty deciding exactly what these terms should mean.  The Constitution surely means what it says, but very often it falls short of saying what it means.    How are we to know what "process" is "due?"  When will we be able to tell that "protection" is "equal?"  What kind of searches are "reasonable" and what kinds are not?  No, the idea of "strict construction" doesn't get you very far when it comes to figuring out what these words, among the most important in our law, are to mean.

    Constitutional scholars will tell you that there are numerous theories about how judges should go about filling in these blanks.  Justice Scalia calls himself an "originalist."  He looks for what the founding fathers would have meant by the term when they adopted it, and that's the meaning he tries to give it.  Yet this approach is also beset with at least two major problems.   First, figuring out what a group of men meant 200 years ago is not always easy.  Where records exist at all, they are often far from clear and frequently contradictory.  The Founders were a spirited bunch and they often disagreed about the meaning of what they were writing.  Second, deferring to the intent of a handful of long-dead men from a different century doesn't seem a great deal more "democratic" than deferring to a group of judges on the bench today.  Is legislating from the grave really better than legislating from the bench?

    "Non-Originalists" take a whole different approach.  Scholars and judges who subscribe to this school take many forms, but generally tend to see the ambiguity of clauses like "due process" and "equal protection" as a good thing.  To their way of thinking, the vagueness of these terms is part of the genius of our Constitution because it invites the Constitution to evolve over time, incorporating changing notions about our most basic principles. Current perceptions of equality would never tolerate making African Americans sit at the back of a bus.  Fairness in this era means we do things like make sure people have a lawyer before we attempt to take away their freedom.  "Non-Originalists" believe it is right and good to interpret the Constitution's ambiguities according to modern realities, even if those realities are in themselves sometimes ambiguous or at odds with the way the Founders might have done things.

    This is but a glance at a subject that has consumed some of our greatest legal minds since the principle of judicial review was first established in Marbury v. Madison in 1803.  It's important and it is not simple.  Neither Harriet Miers nor anyone else who might serve on the Court will be able to "strictly construe" the U.S. Constitution.  To suggest that this is possible is to perpetuate a myth upon the American public.   Harriet Miers, like all Justices, will need to find the meaning of the Constitution's ambiguous but critical guarantees elsewhere.  The "elsewhere" she finds will not derive from any simplistic absolute about how the Constitution should be interpreted.  It will derive from who she is as a person and whether or how she might evolve as a person over time. That's the nature of our Constitutional beast, and it is exactly as simple or complex as the person who is wearing the robe.  



Display:


Incorporation nullifies strict construction (none / 0)

The joke of the supposed concept of strict constructionism -- which is a highly false byword for rewinding the Consistution to a point prior to the 13th and 14th amendments -- is that 14th Amendment incorporation nullifies a huge portion of the strict constructionist argument.

Likewise, the strict constructionists tend to argue against government interventionism.

However, what exactly is the interstate commerce clause written into the articles, not amendments, for?  Shits and grins?

Interventionism and activism.

The GOP is largely split over where they want to reqind America to.  One group wants to go back to before the 13th Amendment (I vote for 1862, when the Southern states went the fuck away for a while).  The other merely wants to go back to before 16th Amendment (income tax).

If you ever want some batshit reading, try http://www.thelawthatneverwas.com/.  Priceless.

Whatever the case, strict constructionism is an argument for ending social progress and justice.

It has little to do with strict construction, because strictly constructed, the 14th Amendment is the most profound requirement the federal government has to live up -- to protect you, the citizen.  So, all the strict constructionist would do well to shut up before they accidentally, but strictly, realize that there is a construct for defending gay marriage, stopping gun violence, and providing hurricane relief.

And those who just hate the 16th Amendment need to grow the hell up and realize that there is no Higway Funding Fairy, no Mechanized Infantry Division Fairy, nor Slush Fund for McJesus Cronies Fairy that makes federal money appear from the ether that suspends their pre-Darwinist universe.

by jcjcjc on Fri Oct 14, 2005 at 12:43:37 AM EST

They want to stop society's evolution.. (none / 0)

To adapt is to survive, and thrive..

To stop evolution is to die.. They know this, but they are so afraid of losing control that they would rather destroy the social contract and destroy what America really is.. teh real America, and replace it with one based on whatever lies will let them rule by domination..

That's a good way to make America extinct.

Bait and Switch.. on a national scale..

The one thing we can rely on is that
THEY ALWAYS LIE..

by ultraworld on Fri Oct 14, 2005 at 02:00:23 AM EST
[ Parent ]

A fundamental flaw exists (none / 0)

When push comes to shove, the average man will burn the GOP in a heartbeat.

What is worse, thanks to Katrina, we all know that when push comes to shove, the GOP will burn the average man first.

Who knows?  We might avert a second Great Depression at this pace.

by jcjcjc on Fri Oct 14, 2005 at 09:57:28 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Since When? (none / 0)

Since when have the courts viewed the Constitution as an instruction manual for government? -- JUST ABOUT NEVER!

Sans the machinations of the unelected judges of the supreme court, all the arguments about "strict constructivism" are 99.9% pointless. I say: All legal precedents should be vetted by randomly elected juries, and made subject to a ten year sunset.

by blues on Fri Oct 14, 2005 at 01:42:37 AM EST

Opposite of Judical Activism is not Strict Constru (none / 0)

The opposite of judicial activism is not strict constructionism as the GOP seems to imply. It is judicial restraintism in the mold of someone like Justice Felix Frankfurter. Restraintism calls for adherence to precedence, rarely striking down state or federal legislation, and looking within the law (sort of a Dworkinian notion) in deciding cases. Strict Constructionism is not restraintism and strict constructionists could engage in activism to roll back laws and precedence they don't believe are explicitly stated in the constitution (the philosophy of an originalist like scalia). This is why in a piece by the NYT that examined judicial activism among today's court they found the most conservative memebers to be the most activist
Tennesseans for Russ Feingold
by schwompa on Fri Oct 14, 2005 at 11:55:31 AM EST


You are not logged in.

In order to post a comment, you must be logged in. If you have a member account, please log in to comment.

If not, you can make an account right here. It's quick and free.