-------- Original Message --------
Subject:        TO OVERTURN OR LET STAND
Date:   Tue, 21 Oct 2008 15:58:34 -0700
From:   Dan Gifford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:     SECOND AMENDMENT GROUP <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>



When the legislative or executive branch exceeds its legitimate
enumerated powers, the courts have the authority, indeed the duty, to
declare that exercise of power unconstitutional.



DISPUTATIONS: In Opposition to Looseness
When is it proper for courts to overturn legislation?
Robert A. Levy and William Mellor *
Constituional law attorneys
The New Republic
October 21, 2008
<http://www.tnr.com/politics/story.html?id=afe0d2ce-3620-47be-8a30-23b839ddd56c>



Federal appellate judge Richard A. Posner, from the Seventh Circuit,
recently wrote in The New Republic ("In Defense of Looseness," August
27, 2008) that the Heller decision striking down the D.C. gun ban
constituted inappropriate judicial activism. Another
conservative-leaning appellate judge, the Fourth Circuit's J. Harvie
Wilkinson, takes the same position in an article scheduled for
publication in the Virginia Law Review. They join Justice John Paul
Stevens and the other liberal dissenters in Heller, who argued that
Justice Antonin Scalia's majority opinion abandoned true judicial
conservatism by dragging the Court into the "political thicket" of gun
control. "Judicial restraint would be far wiser," wrote Stevens, than
mediating a political process that is "working exactly as it should."

That's quite an astonishing statement coming from Justice Stevens--the
same Justice who had no such reservations just one day earlier when he
voted to invalidate Louisiana's death penalty for child rape and
substitute an outright ban on capital punishment for any crime that
isn't fatal to its victim. Even more disturbing, however, are
protestations from some conservative jurists, such as Wilkinson and
Posner, whose call for "judicial modesty" can have the effect of erasing
rights expressly enumerated in the Constitution. Deference to the
legislature becomes an end in itself, notwithstanding the overriding
objective of judges to interpret the Constitution according to its
meaning and vindicate the promise of liberty that the Constitution embodies.

Reacting to the perceived excesses of the Warren Court and the ability
of liberal interest groups to advance their agendas through the courts,
many conservatives insist that courts must indiscriminately defer to the
decisions of the executive and legislative branch. Yet blanket judicial
deference effectively removes the courts from the meticulously crafted
system of checks and balances that was designed by the Framers to
prevent abuse of power. Over the years, the result of such judicial
abdication has been to expand government, at all levels, at the expense
of individual rights.

When the legislative or executive branch exceeds its legitimate
enumerated powers, the courts have the authority, indeed the duty, to
declare that exercise of power unconstitutional. Deference in the face
of excesses by the political branches, coupled with an allegiance to
precedent, through a cramped interpretation of the Constitution, means
that conservatives are rarely willing to overrule prior cases, leaving
entrenched the very foundations of the regulatory and redistributive
states they rail against. In practice, judicial restraint has mutated
into judicial passivism, with a predictable result: more government
power and fewer constitutionally protected individual rights.

Both liberals and conservatives take comfort in their often unfounded
belief that legislatures will respond to the will of the public and make
informed policy decisions that can be changed as public sentiment
dictates. Though appealing in principle, that trust in the democratic
process ignores the realities of today's governmental institutions.
Through gerrymandering and other means, elected representatives are
increasingly insulated from their constituents. Meanwhile, many policies
are set and enforced by unelected, unaccountable agencies and
commissions. What's more, politically powerful special interests
concentrate their resources to glean benefits from
government--transferring the burden to other taxpayers, who do not
perceive the cumulative cost of multiple schemes, each of which has a
seemingly inconsequential price tag.

The proper role for the court is one of principled engagement--applying
the law and the Constitution to scrutinize the acts of the executive and
legislative branches. Courts would be derelict if they endorsed
unconstitutional acts merely because our elected representatives passed
them. In that respect, overturning the D.C. gun ban was a clear example
of principled judicial engagement.

In contrast, activism that renders legal judgments based on the judge's
public policy preferences should be roundly condemned. Results-oriented
jurisprudence, based on subjective value judgments, may be proper for a
legislator, but not for a judge. A judge's role is to apply the law, not
impose policy preferences.

The trick, of course, is to distinguish proper from improper judicial
intervention. That task is complicated by laws that are often
unclear--either because the legislature has not done its job, or has
intentionally left gaps for the courts to fill; or because the meaning
of the law depends on the meaning of the Constitution, which can also be
unclear. Members of the Court must, therefore, have a theory of the
Constitution--in particular, a respect for limited government and
individual rights. Those were the principles that the Framers applied in
crafting the Constitution. The Heller opinion, true to that framework,
upheld a right based solidly on the text, purpose, structure, and
history of our founding documents.



* Robert A. Levy is chairman of the Cato Institute. William Mellor is
president and general counsel of the Institute for Justice. Levy and
Mellor are co-authors of The Dirty Dozen: How Twelve Supreme Court Cases
Radically Expanded Government and Eroded Freedom, on which this article
is based. Levy also served as co-counsel to Dick Heller in District of
Columbia v. Heller.

###





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