Roberts has a clear record of rejecting strict construction (as well as original intent and following established precedent) when it gets in the way of reaching the results he is after, according to a 2003 report that cites his own words to contradict the image of what Bush says he is giving the American people.
Just one day after completely reversing his position on firing anyone involved in exposing a covert CIA Agent, Bush has once again revealed that his so-called "principles" are a mere sham intended to sound good on the evening news, with no relationship at all to reality.
A report on Roberts by the Alliance For Justice, prepared in response to his 2003 nomination to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit contains clear examples showing that, in the Alliance's words, "Roberts' non-literal interpretation of the [takings] clause seems to fly in the face of President Bush's pledge to nominate judges who would strictly interpret the law, not make it."
Gory details on the flip...
In the first article, Roberts offered his view of the Takings Clause, which requires that the government give "just compensation" for takings of "private property." Roberts claimed that courts trying to ascertain its meaning, "have not been significantly aided by the words of the clause, which are incapable of being given simple, clear-cut meaning... Indeed, the very phrase `just compensation' suggests that the language of the clause must be informed by changing norms of justice."40 After rejecting on various grounds several interpretations of the clause traditionally used by courts - i.e. physical intrusion onto an owner's property as anachronistic in a largely non-agrarian society, "noxious use" as too value-laden, and Justice Holmes' 1922 "diminution of value" test as too vague, Roberts argued for a "constrained" model based on a utility-based test proposed by Professor Frank Michelman. Under that model, parties made unwhole or "insecure" by regulation should be compensated accordingly.
Roberts is arguing to overturn not just 200 years of American jurisprudence, but centuries of English Common Law before it. It is a breathtakingly bold act of judicial activism, throwing out every major tenent of conservative jurisprudence--it ignores precedent, original intent, and plain language.
There may indeed be times when this is morally and legally necessary, of course. Brown v. Board of Education swept away centurie of racial subjugation, and is justly seen as one of the greatest Supreme Court decisions of all time.
But they men who wrote and joined in that decision did not pretend to be mere machines following the unambiguous dictates of law, holding their own views in restraint. They fully acknowledged, even agonized, over the moral responsibilities they had to discharge, some of which were in contradiction with one another. They acknowledged that they were judges not automatons.
The Bush pretense is that he will appoint automatons, who will somehow interpret the law, without "tainting" it with their own judgement. Not only is this a practical impossibility, it is a standard that his own nominee openly flouts--without the honesty, integrity and guts to simply stand up and be counted for what he is clearly doing.
The Alliance continues (still on p. 12):
The bolded portions of the above passage are a key point that we need to pound home again, and again, and again. Not in a way that implies that Bush's standard is right. We need to present it as showing, quite clearly, that Bush's so-called "standard" is a sham, which he only embraces because Karl Rove tells him that it sounds good to the American people. Just like telling them that Saddam Hussein has nuclear weapons.
|
|
|
Permalink :: 34 Comments :: Post a Comment
|
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.