Justice Scalia spent three decades on the Supreme
Court. During his tenure many cases of
great consequence were argued and decided.
Scalia was always part of the conservative bloc on the court, thus it is
not surprising that he will be remembered differently depending on the politics
of the observer. This conclusion
suggests a troubling consequence inevitable for any country that depends on an
ancient constitution incapable of providing guidance on new issues as they
emerge: justices will rule based on social, political, and religious
leanings. Scalia seemed to have been
burdened by all three classes of bias.
It is of interest, and hopefully informative, to collect
a few of the commentaries generated by Scalia’s recent passing in order to
assess the divergence of viewpoints.
Ross Douthat is a politically conservative writer (mildly
so by today’s standards) who produces columns for the New York Times. He is an
admirer of Justice Scalia and his legal philosophy and expressed his thoughts
in Antonin Scalia, Conservative Legal Giant.
Douthat credits Scalia with bringing the concepts of
originalism and textualism to the fore in the arena of constitutional interpretation.
“He was important because of his
intellectual influence. There were and are many legal theories and schools of
constitutional interpretation within the world of American conservatism. But
Scalia’s combination of brilliance, eloquence and good timing — he was
appointed to the court in 1986, a handful of years after the Federalist Society
was founded, and with it the conservative legal movement as we know it —
ensured that his ideas, originalism in constitutional law and textualism in
statutory interpretation, would set the agenda for a serious judicial
conservatism and define the worldview that any ‘living Constitution’ liberal
needed to wrestle with in order to justify his own position.”
In Douthat’s opinion, Scalia’s ideas provided “rigor and
integrity” to constitutional arguments that liberal justices with their
perspectives could not match.
“….Scalia had a long record of
putting originalist principle above a partisan conservatism. And this, too, set
an example for his fellow conservatives: The fact that today the court’s right-leaning
bloc has far more interesting internal disagreements than the often
lock-step-voting liberal wing is itself a testament to the premium its leading
intellectual light placed on philosophical rigor and integrity.”
Douthat also ascribes to Scalia purity when it comes to
partisan thoughts and motives.
“This intellectual importance
was compounded by the way he strained to be consistent, to rule based on
principle rather than on his partisan biases — which made him stand out in an
age when justices often seem as purely partisan as any other office holder.”
The article concludes with a repeat of the claim that
Scalia was above political wrangling and personal bias as Douthat anticipates a
nasty situation awaiting any nominee to replace him.
“The irony is that this kind of
high-stakes collision of law and politics is precisely the thing that Scalia’s
legal philosophy strained to curb and check and roll back, by promoting a more
limited and humble vision of the Supreme Court’s role in our republic.”
Let us examine Scalia and his legal philosophy, and
compare it to the liberal belief in a ‘living Constitution,” in the contentious
area of abortion rights.
Roe v. Wade was
decided in 1974 with a decision that made abortion legal. To fully understand what was happening at the
time, let us recall the situation that led to the Supreme Court decision. Katha Pollitt provides an assessment of the
state of affairs with regard to abortion at the time of the decision in her
book Pro: Reclaiming Abortion Rights.
“Today, the real-life harms Roe
was intended to rectify have receded from memory. Few doctors remember the hospital wards
filled with injured and infected women.
The coat-hanger symbol seems as exotic as the rack and thumbscrew, a
relic waved by gray-haired ‘radical feminists’.”
Prior to Roe v. Wade, the contention by the
factions that today we refer to as “pro-choice” and “pro-life” had been
resolved in vastly different ways around the nation. Abortion was legal in some locations and
illegal in others, a situation that could be easily resolved by the wealthy,
but left others helpless, depending on where they lived. The disparity in laws produced economic and
racial discrimination.
“The more exceptions there were
to the criminalization of abortion, the more glaringly unfair and hypocritical
the whole system was seen to be. By the
time Roe came to court, well-off savvy women could flock to New York or
several other states where laws had been relaxed and get a safe, legal
termination; poor women, trapped in states that banned abortion, bore the brunt
of harm from illegal procedures. There
was a racial angle too: Not only did women of color, then as now, have far more
abortions than whites in proportion to their numbers, they were much more
likely to be injured or die in botched illegal procedures. According to the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, from 1972 to 1974, the mortality rate due to illegal abortion
for nonwhite women was 12 times that for white women. The injustice of a patchwork system, in which
a simple medical procedure could leave a woman dead or injured based purely on
where it took place, was obvious.”
The Supreme Court, the majority of the population, and
most religious groups were in favor of relaxing the laws against abortion and
decriminalizing it in many situations.
“If you assume the churches were
united against abortion, think again: Beginning in 1967, the Clergy
Consultation Service founded by the Reverend Howard R. Moody, a Baptist….helped
thousands of women across the country find their way to safe illegal
abortions. In the years leading up to Roe,
legalization of abortion under at least some circumstances was endorsed by the
Union for Reform Judaism, the Southern Baptist Convention, the National
Association of Evangelicals, the United Methodist Church, the Presbyterian
Church USA, the Episcopal Church, and other mainstream denominations.”
“You would never know that Ayn
Rand and Barry Goldwater were pro-choice, and that in 1967, the governor of
California, Ronald Reagan, signed what was then the most liberal abortion law
in the nation.”
Abortion is as old as history. Whether for economic, medical, or personal
reasons, women have been willing to risk their lives to attain one. That is fact.
Women were dying in large numbers because there was no definitive ruling
on the matter, and the majority of the people were in favor of addressing this
problem. The Constitution says nothing
about abortion, so what is one to do?
Jeffrey Toobin provides a very concise description of how
liberals and conservatives approached this issue in his book The Oath: The Obama White House and the Supreme Court.
“Starting in the 1960s, liberals
on the Supreme Court and elsewhere developed a theory built around the idea of “enumerated
rights.” Even if a right was not
specifically mentioned in the Constitution, the Court could draw on the
implications of the explicit provisions of the Constitution, prior decisions,
and the broader evolution of American society to expand the liberties of
Americans. Most famously (or notoriously)
during this period, the Court recognized a constitutional right to privacy,
which became the basis for protecting a woman’s right to choose abortion.”
The selection of privacy as the justification was
considered the weakest of arguments in support of the abortion right. Women justices seem to have a better idea of
women’s issues than men. When they had
their chance, they produced better justifications, with women’s equality
perhaps the favorite. The concept of
equal rights for women is also not found in the Constitution.
“On the Supreme Court, Antonin Scalia
and Clarence Thomas had led the charge for what became known as ‘textualism,’
which said that if the Constitution did not explicitly create a right, it did
not exist. A close cousin to textualism
was originalism, which asserted that the words of the Constitution must be
interpreted as they were understood by the men who wrote and ratified it. Under either textualism or originalism, there
was no such thing as a right to privacy and, of course, no constitutional right
to abortion.”
While it might appear that Scalia and friends had an
approach laden with “rigor and integrity,” it was, in fact, a shield to hide
behind as they proceeded to negate any Court precedent that they found
inconvenient, and to create any “right” that was necessary to forward their
agenda. Corporations were not mentioned
in the Constitution, but they managed to provide them the same rights as
individuals and override Congressional legislation limiting their ability to
spend their vast wealth influencing elections.
Somehow, the opinions and intentions of the men who wrote and ratified
the Constitution always seemed to be the same as those of the Republican Party.
Toobin also tells the tale of Scalia’s forced admission
that his originalist philosophy led to absurdities.
Scalia was selected write the majority opinion on District of Columbia v. Heller, the
decision that was supposed to finally decide on the meaning of the Second Amendment
as to the right to bear arms. The wording
of this amendment is simple.
“A well
regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of
the People to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.”
For over 200 years this was interpreted
as associating the right to bear arms with militia duty, along with plenty of “originalist”
documentation to support that assumption.
However, the agenda required that that perception be changed and Scalia
had to justify that change within the constraints of originalism. This he labored mightily to do, but there was
one problem he could not dodge: our founding fathers associated the right to
bear arms with the desire for them to be used in military activities.
“In the uniform
militia Act of 1792, Congress compelled militia members to purchase muskets,
bayonets, and other weapons that were needed in military combat. The true originalist would, presumably,
assert that the Constitution protected an individual right to possess military
weapons.”
Even Scalia could not deal with a
population set free to own machine guns, bazookas, flamethrowers, and other
such things. He limited the Court ruling
to handguns. The decision to rule that
it was only handguns that the District of Columbia could not prohibit was a
compromise between the desired agenda and the realities of modern life. It left no one happy; the gun-rights
activists were particularly disturbed.
The focus on handguns clearly had nothing to do with anything related to
the intentions of the framers of the Constitution.
“It was clear….that
for all its rhetoric and historical citations, Scalia’s decision had little to
do with the original meaning of the Second Amendment. It was an improvisation designed to reach a
policy goal, which was, not coincidentally, one of the top priorities of the
modern Republican Party.”
“Notwithstanding
his denials, Scalia had demonstrated precisely how the Constitution is not dead
at all—but a vibrant living thing. In
other words, there was less to the originalism revolution than met the
eye. Originalism was no more principled
or honorable than any other way of interpreting the Constitution. It was, as Heller demonstrated, just another way for justices to achieve their
political goals.”
Scalia is best known for his social views such as his
antiabortion stance and his revulsion towards homosexuality. James Surowiecki penned a note in The New Yorker, Courting Business, to remind us that his most lasting damage to
society may arise from his pro-business and anti-consumer decisions.
“Yet Scalia’s death will have
only a limited impact on the culture wars, because regarding many social issues
he was already in the minority on the Court. But there is one area where the
question of his replacement has huge consequences: business. As a member of the
Court’s conservative majority, Scalia played a key role in moving American law
in a more corporate-friendly direction.”
“In Citizens United, it famously
ruled that corporations had free-speech rights and that many restrictions on
corporate spending in elections were therefore unconstitutional. It has
overturned long-standing antitrust restrictions. It has limited liability for
corporate fraud and made it harder for workers to successfully sue for age and
gender discrimination. It has made suing businesses and governments more
difficult, especially in class-action suits.”
Scalia wrote the majority opinion in a few cases that
received little publicity but have far-reaching consequences. The N.Y.U. law professor Arthur R. Miller and
Brian Fitzpatrick a Vanderbilt law professor are quoted.
“In these cases, both of which
turned on an interpretation of a once obscure 1925 law, the Court ruled that
companies could require customers to give up their right to sue in open court,
with disputes to be settled by a private arbitrator instead. ‘These cases don’t
get people’s attention the way things like abortion and same-sex marriage do,’
Miller said. But, if the decisions stand, Fitzpatrick argues, ‘they have the
potential to literally wipe out the class-action lawsuit’.”
And why is access
to class-actions so important?
“….in an era when regulators are
routinely falling down on the job, lawsuits play a crucial role in deterring
corporate misbehavior. Miller calls them a ‘private enforcement of public policies.’
And when it comes to big corporations class-action suits are often the only
kind that make any economic sense. If every individual defrauded by a company
loses fifty dollars, the collective harm can be immense, but it’s not
worthwhile for any single victim or lawyer to bother. Fitzpatrick says that
obstacles to filing class-action lawsuits make it more likely that ‘companies
will not be held accountable for hurting people, for cheating people, for
defrauding people, for discriminating against people.’ In that sense, the
battle over access to the courtroom is, as Miller puts it, ‘a kind of class
conflict between ordinary individuals and corporate power.’ And in that
conflict there’s no question which side Scalia was on.”
Surowiecki points out that consequences have already been
observed from Scalia’s disappearance from the Court.
“….just last week, Dow Chemical
settled a major class-action suit, saying that Scalia’s death increased the
chances of ‘unfavorable outcomes for business’.”
And there is his final note on Scalia’s passing.
“It’s unlikely that Scalia will
be replaced anytime soon. But let’s hope that, when a successor is finally
appointed, it is someone willing to give ordinary citizens the day in court
that Scalia worked so hard to deny them.”
Jeffrey Toobin also contributed a piece in The New Yorker commenting on Scalia’s
passing: Looking Back. Here are a few relevant comments.
“Antonin Scalia, who died this
month, after nearly three decades on the Supreme Court, devoted his
professional life to making the United States a less fair, less tolerant, and
less admirable democracy. Fortunately, he mostly failed. Belligerent with his
colleagues, dismissive of his critics, nostalgic for a world where outsiders
knew their place and stayed there, Scalia represents a perfect model for
everything that President Obama should avoid in a successor.”
“The great Justices of the
Supreme Court have always looked forward; their words both anticipated and
helped shape the nation that the United States was becoming. Chief Justice John
Marshall read the new Constitution to allow for a vibrant and progressive
federal government. Louis Brandeis understood the need for that government to
regulate an industrializing economy. Earl Warren saw that segregation was
poison in the modern world. Scalia, in contrast, looked backward.”
Scalia’s social views were formed from a 1950s Catholic
upbringing, while his politics was unabashedly Republican and pro-business.
“Scalia described himself as an
advocate of judicial restraint, who believed that the courts should defer to
the democratically elected branches of government. In reality, he lunged at
opportunities to overrule the work of Presidents and of legislators, especially
Democrats. Scalia helped gut the Voting Rights Act, overturn McCain-Feingold
and other campaign-finance rules, and, in his last official act, block
President Obama’s climate-change regulations. Scalia’s reputation, like the
Supreme Court’s, is also stained by his role in the majority in Bush v. Gore.
His oft-repeated advice to critics of the decision was ‘Get over it’.”
In the end, his beloved originalism was becoming a joke.
“Even Scalia’s ideological
allies recognized the folly of trying to divine the ‘intent’ of the authors of
the Constitution concerning questions that those bewigged worthies could never
have anticipated. During the oral argument of a challenge to a California law
that required, among other things, warning labels on violent video games,
Justice Samuel Alito interrupted Scalia’s harangue of a lawyer by quipping, ‘I
think what Justice Scalia wants to know is what James Madison thought about
video games. Did he enjoy them’?”
Toobin provides this epitaph.
“For all that Presidents shape
the Court, the Justices rarely stray too far from public opinion. And, on the
social issues where the Court has the final word, the real problem for Scalia’s
heirs is that they are out of step with the rest of the nation. The public
wants diversity, not intolerance; more marriages and fewer executions; less
money in politics, not more. Justice Scalia’s views—passionately felt and
pungently expressed though they were—now seem like so many boats against the
current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.”
The nation should remember Justice Scalia for who he was
and what he did.
Maybe the Court became mostly irrelevant in the winter of 2001 when they decided a presidential outcome along party lines. Scalia was probably no more or less conservative or liberal than the other 7 justices. He was just more demanding of the spotlight, like a child, a puppy or an Italian.
ReplyDeleteNicely written.
Dewayne
Those were some interesting leftist talking points you put forth, but many key facts were left out.
ReplyDelete- Scalia's primary arguments about abortion was it was not a question for the federal courts. As the Constitution is mute about it, this is something to be decided legislatively. The fact the courts made this issue their own and beyond the reach of mere mortals explains why there is still so much controversy and violence over this issue to this day.
-The Heller case was limited in scope by the question the court was tasked with answering. For your reference the question before the Court was, "Do the provisions of the District of Columbia Code that restrict the licensing of handguns and require licensed firearms kept in the home to be kept nonfunctional violate the Second Amendment?" Scalia's opinion was not a compromise verdict, nor was it an "absurdity." The Court was limited to ruling on that specific question--nothing more. (Were that not the case the Supreme Court could simply have declared all forms of racial discrimination illegal in Brown v. Board of Education. Instead, they had to rule separately on Bolling v. Sharpe, Cooper v. Aaron, Baker v. Carr, Heart of Atlanta v. US, Loving v. Virginia, Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools, etc.).
-Citizens United is the most maligned, misunderstood decision in modern times. If you look into the facts of the case it should have been 9-0 in favor of Citizens United.
Citizens United is an advocacy organization (think ACLU, People For the American Way, etc.). They took a page out of the Michael Moore playbook and produced a documentary that was not flattering to Hillary Clinton and attempted to distribute it in the run-up to a primary. The Federal Election Commission declared they couldn't distribute it because it violated the timing restrictions of McCain-Feingold. They replied they were doing what Michael Moore does through his production company--he produces documentaries that are unflattering to anybody to the right of V.I. Lenin. The FEC said that was too bad, the government had the right to censor Citizen United's film.
During oral arguments at the Supreme Court Justice Roberts put it to the solicitor general when he asked a hypothetical question about a war hero is about to publish his memoirs and in his 600 page book there is a page or two devoted to somebody he served with who happens to be a candidate for office. Should the government be able to halt publication? The solicitor general said yes, Congress has that power!
If Congress has the power to stop publication of something because it falls within the 30/90 day time frame of general and primary elections, what's to stop them from extending it to 180 days? 1 year? 2 years? Until anybody mentioned in any publication is out of office? What limits does the left concede Congress has?
If you'll recall, the first amendment says Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press...
There is nothing in that amendment carving out exceptions for groups or types of people (corporations are a legal fiction assigned to groups of people).