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Battle for the Bench

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Posted on Jun 30, 2008

By E.J. Dionne

    If the long conservative era that began with Ronald Reagan’s election is over, will the judges appointed during the right’s ascendancy be able to block, frustrate and undermine the efforts of a new progressive majority?

    Consider this analysis from two influential journalists describing Supreme Court justices as “the last hope of the conservative interests in the United States.”

    Imagine, they write, that a new liberal approach to the country’s problems “had been overwhelmingly approved both in Congress and at the polling booths,” so “conservative interests resorted to the courts, starting literally thousands of actions to stay the government’s hand.” Of the ensuing fight, they say: “The liberal justices themselves called their conservative colleagues arbitrary and madly unwise. But while the liberals warned, the conservatives laughed. ...”

    Yes, we may go back to the future. Those words are from a still-compelling 1938 book called “The 168 Days” by legendary Washington journalists Joseph Alsop and Turner Catledge. They were writing about the conservative Supreme Court that struck down so much of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal program and the effort by FDR to be given the power to name additional liberal justices to break the court’s conservative majority.

    Roosevelt’s reach for expanded executive authority was unwise because he made it easy for his opponents to compare him to Hitler and Stalin. FDR lost the court-packing fight, but eventually got to name justices in the normal way, and conservative judicial dominance ebbed.

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    The spate of 5-4 conservative decisions during the Supreme Court’s just-ended term should stand as a warning that we may soon revisit the fights of 70 years ago. Yet almost nobody is talking about this danger. To the extent that judges have been a campaign issue in recent elections, the focus has been on a few hot-button issues, notably abortion. After last week’s sharply contested Second Amendment case, perhaps gun rights will join the list. 

    But the more important question is whether conservative judges will see fit to do exactly what conservative courts did for much of the New Deal era by using a narrow, 19th-century definition of property rights to void progressive economic, environmental and labor regulation.

    Many judicial conservatives view the late 1930s as a disaster because it marked the end of their power on the courts. After the court-packing battle, the Supreme Court began to defer to the democratically elected branches of government and their efforts to regulate the economy in the public interest. Property rights were well protected throughout this time, yet government was allowed to set rules on the uses of property that judicial conservatives of the pre-New Deal period viewed as suspect.

    A new generation of conservatives wants to bring the old order back under the auspices of what’s called the Constitution in Exile movement. Their driving idea is that the thrust of jurisprudence since the late 1930s voided the “real” Constitution.

    As legal scholar Jeffrey Rosen noted in The New Republic, this movement favors “reimposing meaningful limits on federal power that could strike at the core of the regulatory state for the first time since the New Deal.” He wrote that “justices could change the shape of laws governing the environment, workplace health and safety, anti-discrimination, and civil rights, making it difficult for the federal government to address problems for which the public demands a national response.”

    It’s not hard to imagine the cases that conservatives would bring against laws passed by a Democratic Congress and signed by a President Barack Obama. Why wouldn’t a movement that has tried to eviscerate wetlands laws and the Endangered Species Act challenge cap-and-trade legislation aimed at dealing with global warming? 

    If Congress ever passed a “card-check” law to make it easier for unions to organize, those who never much liked the minimum wage or collective bargaining would certainly try to overturn the new labor right in court.

    And what would be the legal fate of new regulations on banking called forth by the economic devastation of the subprime mess, or bank bailouts that may be necessary to keep capitalism on track, or mandatory mortgage renegotiations to keep citizens from being thrown out of their homes?

    The four conservatives on the Supreme Court, when empowered by the swing vote of Justice Anthony Kennedy, have already shown their willingness to overturn the will of Congress and local legislatures when doing so fits their political philosophy. The same majority could keep conservative ideas in the saddle long after the electorate has decided that they don’t work anymore.
   
    E.J. Dionne’s e-mail address is postchat(at)aol.com.
   
    © 2008, Washington Post Writers Group

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By William J Landwehr, July 8, 2008 at 10:19 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

E J Dionne Jr must be a radical nut case. It seems he wants unrestrained judges to establish laws that he favors-i.e., homosexual marriages, affirmative action, greater federal encroachment on state and personal rights through even greater expansion of the commerc clause, seizure of private properties for the so-called greater benefit, card check approval for unions(would he be for the same check for his and everyone else’s votes for political office?)

Forget the Roe v Wade smoke screen that he and others use. Focus on the fact that the so-called progressives believe that individuals are ignorant and victimized while only strong government actions can save them from their foolish actions-i.e., acting in their own self interest.

Yes, I would like to see Breyer, Ginsburg, Souter and Stevens replaced - yesterday! And, hopefully, with justices who can read and correctly understand that powers not granted to the federal government are reserved for the states and to the people.

God Bless America! We need it now more so than in many years.

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By StepenL, July 3, 2008 at 12:24 am #

What we have learned in America is that we can appoint judges who are willing to be “progressive” and re-write the constitution to steal control of the nation from the masses and from their laws. 

The pretense of progressives of course is that somehow the masses want a minority of citizens called progressives to sit on benches and rewrite our laws.  OF course, they will never put that idea before the masses because it would fail.

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By StepenL, July 3, 2008 at 12:12 am #

Nothing like having radicalized extremist left rewrite the constitution by edict from the bench…thus forcing the “unenlightened masses” to live in the country the activist left knows we should really have.

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By Inherit The Wind, July 1, 2008 at 12:08 pm #

On no other issue is it so important to have a Democrat in the WH.

Stevens is old as the hills, Ginzburg is sick, and Kennedy is nearly as old as Stevens.  Breyer’s no spring chicken and even Souter’s in his 70s.  So the whole Liberal wing of the USSC and the swing vote are aging.

Meanwhile, of the reactionaries, only Scalia looks like a health hazard, being obese.  Thomas, Alito and Roberts all appear in excellent health—Roberts will be on the court 30 to 35 years, like Rehnquist was. Aliton is looking at 25-30 years, and only Thomas may have 20 years or less left.  20 years is 2028, 25 years is 2033, 30 years is 2038, 35 years is 2043—and both Roberts and I will turn 88 that year.

So since those 3-4 seats are locked-in for decades to come, the other 5 seats MUST be appointed by a Democrat or kiss Roe, Miranda, and the BOR (except the 2nd amend) bye-bye. 

We have to protect the court for the next 35 years!

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By Conservative Yankee, July 1, 2008 at 11:02 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

Eisenhower gave us William Brennan and Earl Warren, Kennedy gave us Byron (wizzer) White. Ford gave us John Paul Stevens, and GHW Bush gave us David Souter. I am not sure that Democrats are particularly good at selecting Judges. The two Clinton judges are left of Thomas but right of Souter and Stevens.

..and who says “liberal” judges rule in the best interests of “We the People” wasn’t it the “left wing” of the court (five to four) that allowed New London Connecticut to take land from rightful owners and give it to private corporate entities who would pay more taxes?

If the Democrats are planning on winning this election on the basis of their court appointees, they better get a spin-master similar to Lee Atwater.

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By cyrena, July 1, 2008 at 3:20 am #

And if McClone is elected, or otherwise squats in the White House, this is exactly what we can expect. I don’t think it’s gonna turn to that right now, because there’s still that one difference of that one justice.

But if McClone does get in there the same way the others did, we can kiss it all goodbye and head for the Ocean living in international waters. Imagine that. US refugees living on sailboats in an increasingly hostile climate.

Maybe that was the plan all along. To just run us all out of here.

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