Part of the mythology that has enveloped our Constitution is the
idea that its adoption was inevitable. Time and distance have made
it difficult to imagine that the convention Thomas Jefferson called
a gathering of "demigods" could have produced a charter
unacceptable to the people, with the wisdom and insight that is our
founding document tossed on the ash heap of history.
Our forefathers, however, suffered no such delusions. They
understood that the ratification debate was about first things,
fundamental principles, ideas purchased with patriots' blood.
Alexander Hamilton predicted that a "torrent of angry and malignant
passions" would be awakened by the debate. He was not
disappointed.
In Virginia, Patrick Henry decried the new Constitution, calling
it a "resolution as radical as that which separated us from [the
Crown]." In New England, opponents worried aloud about liberties
lost, rights eroded, judicial power left like a "boundless
ocean."
But Hamilton and his allies would not yield to these sharply
expressed fears of judicial despotism. Rejecting such concerns,
Hamilton proffered his now famous phrase, "Here, Sir, the people
govern."
A Pattern of Usurpation
But "here" in America today, can it still be said that the
"people govern"? Can it still be said that citizens control that
which matters most? Or have people's lives and fortunes been
relinquished to renegade judges--a robed, contemptuous,
intellectual elite that has turned the courts into "nurser[ies] of
vice and the bane of liberty"? Consider just how far the federal
judiciary has strayed.
The power to tax
In 1987, the federal courts assumed the right to tax the
American people. District Judge Russell Clark ordered a tax
increase to "remedy vestiges of segregation" in the Kansas City,
Missouri, school system. The decree--and two billion tax
dollars--turned the city's school district into a gold-plated Taj
Mahal, complete with editing and animation labs, vivariums and
greenhouses, temperature-controlled art galleries, and a model
United Nations wired for language translation.
While satiating the judge's thirst for educational
intermeddling, the reforms left student achievement unchanged. And
so today, the planetariums, pools, and pay increases stand only as
a testament to tyranny, an appalling judicial activism that is
contrary to all that the Framers held dear. As Supreme Court
Justice Clarence Thomas indignantly opined, "[Clark] has trampled
upon the principle of federalism" and, in turn, the Constitution
itself.
Deciding when life begins
Or consider 1992, when the Supreme Court challenged God's
ability to mark when life begins and ends. Three Reagan appointees
joined the majority in Planned Parenthood of Southeastern
Pennsylvania v.Casey to uphold a "woman's right to
choose." So much for recapturing the Court. Together, Roe,
Casey, and their illegitimate progeny have occasioned the
slaughter of 35 million children--35 million innocents denied
standing before the law.
My friends, when the Court intervenes in such matters, debate in
the public square does not end. The divide only deepens. Who among
us would suggest that abortion is less divisive today than when the
Court wrested control from the 50 states and the people? As Judge
Robert Bork asserts, the abortion rulings represent "nothing more
than the decision of a Court majority to enlist on one side of the
culture war."
The right of self-determination
In 1995, the Supreme Court stole the right of
self-determination from the people, throwing out Arkansas's
congressional term limit law. No matter your thinking on the
reform, consider only this: The Constitution is silent on limited
tenure. And, as Justice Thomas recognized, "where the Constitution
is silent it raises no bar to action by the states or the
people."
Equality under the law
In 1996, the courts removed from the people the ability to
establish equality under the law. District Court Judge Thelton
Henderson prohibited the state of California from implementing
Proposition 209. A Carter appointee who served on the board of
directors of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), Henderson
held that if the California Civil Rights Initiative were
implemented, minorities would "face an immediate possibility of
irreparable harm." But, Judge Henderson, what of the "irreparable
harm" racial preference programs are inflicting right now? What of
the Asian high school students routinely rejected at Berkeley based
solely on the color of their skin? And what of the "irreparable
harm" activist judges have visited upon the U.S.
Constitution?
Perhaps someone should remind Judge Henderson that the
constituting doctrine of all truly free societies is that rights
belong to individuals, not groups. This was the essence of Justice
Harlan's dissent in Plessy v.Ferguson just over a
century ago. "The Constitution is color-blind," wrote Harlan, "and
neither knows nor tolerates classes among citizens." Tragically,
the courts have turned individual rights into group rights as the
aggrieved rush to our least representative branch in search of
entitlement.
These cases are but a page of snapshots in an album of liberties
lost. Over the past half century, the federal courts have usurped
from school boards the power to determine what a child can learn,
removed from the people the ability to establish equality under the
law, and challenged God's ability to mark when life begins and
ends. The courts have made liars of Hamilton, Madison, and Morris,
and confirmed the worst fears of the Anti-Federalists. For what the
Framers intended to be the weakest branch of government has become
the most powerful.
What, then, can we do to put an end to judicial tyranny? We can
begin by asking ourselves why modern judicial activism exists in
the first place. Could it be that we have been lax in demanding
that judges place our constitutional rights before their policy
objectives? Could it be we have failed to reject judges who are
willing to place their private preferences above the people's will?
Could it be that we have populated the courts with judges who
believe their intellect to be superior to that of the Framers?
Could it be all of the above?
It is time to heed the counsel of former Attorney General Edwin
Meese by scrutinizing fully the nominees who come before the Senate
for "advice and consent." Ed Meese is right: There must be a
dialogue between the President and the Senate regarding judicial
nominees. And if the White House fails to solicit our "advice,"
perhaps we should withhold our "consent."
"Immediate and Irreparable Harm"
What of the current crop of would-be judges? Consider William
Fletcher, nominated by the President to the Ninth Circuit Court of
Appeals. What has Mr. Fletcher done with himself since his Rhodes
Scholar days with the President? Tenure at Berkeley's Boalt Hall
School of Law has provided Fletcher a forum to outline a judicial
vision as bold as it is misguided.
It seems Mr. Fletcher feels judges should be able to use what he
calls "discretionary" powers to achieve desired policy goals. In
other words, Mr. Fletcher wants to use a court appointment as a
license to legislate.
Americans have always believed efforts by the judiciary to
legislate from the bench are illegitimate. To which Fletcher
responds, "The presumption of illegitimacy may be overcome when the
political bodies that should ordinarily exercise such discretion
are seriously and chronically in default." Judge Russell Clark,
meet William Fletcher; you two are sure to be fast friends.
Frankly, the only thing "seriously and chronically in default," Mr.
Fletcher, is your thinking on the United States Constitution.
And then there is Margaret McKeown, another nominee for the
Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. It was McKeown, her ACLU marching
orders in hand, who led the fight to disallow a Washington state
ballot initiative denying special rights to homosexuals.
Now, if McKeown's opposition had been confined to lobbying
against the measure, so be it. That is her constitutionally
protected right. But her efforts were far more sinister: She
attempted to keep Washington voters from deciding on the measure at
all. McKeown argued that the initiative process itself was
unconstitutional and represented an "immediate and irreparable
harm." The mere act of collecting signatures, it seems, would cause
suffering, suicides, and substance abuse. Please! It's time to
expose Mrs. McKeown and her ACLU friends for the liberal elitists
that they are.
Reclaiming a Legacy
Let me be clear: This is not about personality, and it's not
about ideology. It is about preserving our rights as they were
indelibly inscribed in the Constitution itself. It is about not
wanting more Russell Clarks on the federal bench. It is about a
judicial legacy that will live well beyond the year 2000.
We need nominees who care more about preserving and restoring
the Constitution than running schools, parks, and prisons.
That is the essence of the pledge my friend Paul Weyrich is
circulating in the Senate. Paul's pledge simply and clearly offers
the words of Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch. It
says, "Those nominees who are or will be judicial activists should
not be nominated by the President or confirmed by the Senate, and I
personally will do my best to see to it that they are not."
What a tragic state of affairs when conservatives feel compelled
to circulate a pledge to safeguard a Constitution that every
Senator was sworn to "preserve, protect, and defend." Nonetheless,
let me talk to this issue, speaking for no man save myself. When I
laid my hand on the Bible to take the oath of office, I made my
pledge to our Constitution. And as long as I have a voice and a
vote in the U.S. Senate, I will fight the judicial despotism that
stands like a behemoth over this great land.
At its best, the Court is the guardian of the Constitution, a
body to which all Americans look for the ultimate protection of
their rights. At its worst, it is home to a "let-them-eat-cake
elite" that holds the people in the deepest disdain. By guiding the
judicial selection process, we can begin to reestablish the
constitutional balance envisioned by the Framers.
It is also time for us to take a broader, more comprehensive
look at the alarming increase in activism on the Court. As I
announced earlier in March, the Constitution Subcommittee that I
chair will be holding hearings to examine this disturbing trend in
greater detail. Americans should not sit idly by as our individual
rights are surrendered. We should enlist the American people in an
effort to rein in an out-of-control Court.
I am also pleased to announce today that Ed Meese has agreed to
convene a special task force to look at the history of the
judiciary. His group has been charged with the production of a
comprehensive report complete with instances of judicial activism
as well as recommendations on how the Senate might better fulfill
its constitutional prerogative of "advice and consent." I look
forward to working with Ed's task force in the weeks and months
ahead.
Our forefathers were right when they warned against allowing judicial power to become like a "boundless ocean." A half-century of unbridled judicial activism has made that danger clear to all but the intentionally ignorant. Experience is both the best and most expensive teacher. So now that the costly lesson has been learned, "why stand we here idle" while the precious jewel of liberty is lost? Let us lend our voice to this cause so that one day, in the not-so-distant future, we might once again say, "Here, Sir, the people govern."