... what unenumerated rights might be swept in by invoking the
[14th Amendment's] privileges or immunities clause [to apply the Second
Amendment's right to the states]?

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg
(paraphrase)



"No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the
privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any
State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due
process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal
protection of the laws."

14th Amendment
Section 1
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourteenth_Amendment_to_the_United_States_Constitution



Gura shot down, but has no regrets
By Tony Mauro *
Contributor
The Recorder (northern CA)
Volume 134; Issue 44; 3
March 8, 2010
http://www.law.com/jsp/ca/index.jsp



WASHINGTON - It seemed like a good idea at the time.

Across a broad spectrum of scholars and advocacy groups, it was agreed
that the case of McDonald v. City of Chicago presented the best -- and
possibly the last - chance to revive the argument that the "privileges
or immunities" clause of the 14th Amendment was the soundest way to
apply individual rights like the Second Amendment right to bear arms to
states and localities.

So when Alan Gura rose at the U.S. Supreme Court on March 2 to assert
that the clause was a "simpler, more essential" path than the
traditional due process clause, he had the wind at his back in the form
of liberals and conservatives alike cheering him on from the packed
audience.

Then reality struck. First, Chief Justice John Roberts, and then Justice
Antonin Scalia, brusquely swept the argument aside in favor of the tried
and true path of due process. Scalia was derisive in his criticism of
Gura, noting that the privileges or immunities argument was the "darling
of the professoriate" and hinting that Gura was "bucking for a place on
some law school faculty" by advancing it. Even Justice Ruth Bader
Ginsburg seemed worried about unforeseen consequences of Gura's
approach, asking him what unenumerated rights might be swept in by
invoking the privileges or immunities clause.

Soon, Gura beat a retreat to safe ground, telling the court that "we
would be extremely happy" if the court used the due process approach.
Former Solicitor General Paul Clement followed Gura to the lectern to
reassure the justices that the due process approach was "remarkably
straightforward."

In the space of a dramatic few minutes, an entire movement in the law
seemingly crashed and burned, a casualty of the sudden fear of the
unknown that key justices felt over trying an untested way to achieve
constitutional goals.

"It's very sad, but I don't regret it," said Gura of Gura & Possessky in
Alexandria, Va., a day after the argument. "I'm not a kitchen sink
litigator. I don't bring in an argument unless I think it's truly
correct. It's not something we just made up. It's what the framers had
in mind."

Clark Neily of the Institute for Justice, which also advocated Gura's
approach, said, "If you're a textualist and an originalist, this is the
most principled approach, but they were beating him up. It was a little
surreal."

But in the aftermath of the dramatic oral argument, there has been
remarkably little regret or recrimination, a minimum of the kind of
second-guessing that can occur when a strategy runs aground so visibly.
The fact that gun rights advocates are still likely to win, via the due
process route, helps reduce the finger-pointing.

"We'll keep at it," said Doug Kendall of the liberal Constitutional
Accountability Center. "The fact that the court is talking about
privileges or immunities for the first time in 70 years -- we're
delighted to be part of that." Even if the court does not base its
ultimate ruling on the clause, he said, "the ruling may create other
opportunities to continue the conversation."

Kendall's group showcased the privileges or immunities clause as if it
were a spiffy new product, putting on conferences and issuing a major
report celebrating the clause as "the gem of the Constitution." He
played a key role in building the consensus behind Gura's argument.
Gura, with conservative and libertarian roots, worked closely with
Kendall -- the two jointly lobbied the solicitor general's office for
support -- and encouraged the academic coalition.

But in the process, did that broad support convey the image to the court
of a professoriate joining the latest fad? A scholarly consensus that
might impress some justices sends Scalia running in the other direction
-- as he demonstrated in the gay rights case Lawrence v. Texas in 2003,
when he railed against law schools signing onto the "so-called
homosexual agenda." (In the same dissent Scalia also attacked the due
process approach to protecting rights.)

Kendall, who filed a brief on behalf of professors ranging from Yale Law
School's Jack Balkin on the left to Northwestern University School of
Law's Steve Calabresi on the right, has no regrets. "These scholars are
doing precisely the type of 'original meaning' scholarship that Scalia
relies on in other areas," said Kendall. "Belittling the argument and
impugning its motives is not what I expected from the court's most
outspoken proponent of originalism."

Clement, the King & Spalding partner who presented the due process
argument after the court had shot down Gura's alternative, also defended
the strategy of presenting a scholarly consensus. "If you're going to
make an argument, make it with the broadest coalition you can." Asked
about Scalia's remark about the professoriate, Clement, who once clerked
for Scalia, said, "He can really turn a phrase."

Before the arguments, Gura opposed Clement's motion to share Gura's
argument time on behalf of the National Rifle Association. After the
argument, Gura said Clement "did a great job," but he still thinks
Clement should not have argued. "It subtracted from the time I could
devote" to the privileges or immunities gambit.

For his part, Clement said, "I do think we were able to be helpful to
the court" in presenting the due process argument. "But I'm biased."

Meanwhile, Georgetown University Law Center professor Randy Barnett --
one of the professors who joined Kendall's brief -- thinks that the
Gura/Clement one-two punch "was, as a tactical matter, brilliant." The
privileges or immunities argument scared the justices to such a degree,
Barnett said, that Clement's due process argument seemed tame and
agreeable -- even though a few years ago, the due process argument might
have turned off Scalia and others.

"Given how afraid they were" of Gura's argument, said Barnett, "Clement
looked good because he told them what they wanted to hear."

THE SOUND OF SILENCE

If all the accounts of the McDonald argument make you want to hear the
audiotape, well, you'll have to wait until next summer.

A request by news media organizations asking the court for same-day
release of argument audiotapes in the McDonald case -- along with
Skilling v. U.S., argued the day before -- was turned down without
explanation. As a result, the audiotape will be handled in the routine
way -- transferred to the National Archives at the end of the term for
processing and release, usually months after the term is over.

As it has many times before, a coalition led by C-SPAN and joined by the
bureau chiefs of ABC, CBS, Fox and NBC made the request, asserting that
"these are both important cases and have generated enough public
interest to warrant their expedited release."

The court has turned down six other requests this term -- approving none
-- and last term only two of nine requests for sameday release were
approved. Those were for the audio in Citizens United v. Federal
Election Commission and Northwest Austin Municipal Utility District No.
One v. Holder. The court has sporadically allowed sameday release since
Bush v. Gore in 2000, but only when the media request it.

What makes the rejection of the request for audiotapes in McDonald
especially mystifying is that its predecessor, D.C. v. Heller, was
approved for same-day release -- a case that was comparable in public
interest as well as subject matter.

The court has never articulated the factors it considered in accepting
or rejecting requests for same-day audio release, and Roberts declined
to comment for this story.

"The chief justice has yet to offer a rationalizing principle to explain
why some are in and some are out," said Northwestern University
political scientist Jerry Goldman, founder of the Oyez Project, which
makes audiotapes of Supreme Court arguments available online. Goldman
said he has stopped requesting early release because the process is so
opaque and unexplained.

Whenever the court has allowed the release, Goldman said, "No harm
whatever has come to the court. The world had remained the same."

He added, "It's really a shame because there is a segment of the public
that is really interested in these issues and doesn't have the luxury of
being able to wait on line at the court at 4 a.m. to get inside."



* Tony Mauro is a reporter for The National Law Journal, a Recorder
affiliate. Courtside is an occasional column on developments, large and
small, at the U.S. Supreme Court.


*** End of Article ***



-- 

----------------------------------------------------------
Constitution Society               http://constitution.org
2900 W Anderson Ln C-200-322              Austin, TX 78757
512/299-5001                   [email protected]
----------------------------------------------------------



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Reply via email to