Posted by Ilya Somin:
Jeffrey Toobin Revises His Inaccurate Discussion of Kelo  . . . But Not Nearly 
Enough:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2008_12_14-2008_12_20.shtml#1229830077


   Back in January, eminent domain scholar [1]Gideon Kanner and I (in
   [2]this post) pointed out several inaccuracies in prominent legal
   journalist Jeffrey Toobin's discussion of Kelo v. City of New London
   in his book The Nine. Among other things, we pointed out that Toobin
   was wrong to say that Kelo had attracted little attention until after
   the case came down, and wrong to attribute the enormous political
   backlash generated by Kelo to "the conservative movement." To the
   contrary, many of the strongest denunciations of Kelo came from
   liberals such as Ralph Nader, Bill Clinton, Howard Dean, and Maxine
   Waters. Numerous liberal organizations, including the NAACP, AARP, and
   Southern Christian Leadership Conference filed amicus briefs
   supporting the property owners in the case. In the general population,
   some 77% of self-described liberals stated in polls that they opposed
   the decision (data and quotes documented in [3]this article).

   Jeffrey Toobin apparently read my post, and to his credit e-mailed
   senior conspirator Eugene Volokh, [4]to indicate that he would make
   corrections in the paperback edition of his book. That paperback
   edition is now out, and Toobin did indeed make a minor correction,
   revising the text to note that "[e]ven some liberals, who regarded the
   decision as a symptom of authoritarian government, denounced Steven�s
   opinion."

   This is an improvement over the previous version of the book, where
   the liberal reaction against Kelo was entirely omitted. But for
   [5]reasons noted by Gideon Kanner, Toobin's revised text is still
   highly misleading. I agree with most of Gideon's discussion, and would
   add two additional points.

   First, Toobin's revised text misstates the reason why the liberal
   opponents of Kelo objected to the decision. It was not because they
   thought it was "a symptom of authoritarian government" but because it
   licenses government officials to engage in condemnations that tend to
   victimize the poor, minorities, and the politically weak for the
   benefit of influential developers and other powerful interest groups.
   The NAACP, AARP, and SCLC made these points in [6]their amicus brief
   in the case. I linked that brief in the post that Toobin had read, so
   it was surely available to him.

   Second, the phrase "even some liberals" gives the misleading
   impression that Kelo critics were a minority (perhaps a small one,
   given the brief mention devoted to it, as compared to the much more
   extensive discussion of conservative critics) among liberals. In
   reality, the vast majority of liberal public opinion and liberal
   activist groups disapproved of the Court's decision. Then-Democratic
   National Committee Chair Howard Dean even went so far as to
   misleadingly denounce the decision as the handiwork of "a
   Republican-appointed Supreme Court" in order to disassociate liberal
   Democrats from it (quoted on pp. 7-8 of [7]this article).

   We all make mistakes, and I am not accusing Toobin of deliberate
   deception here. Even so, it is unfortunate that a prominent work on
   the Supreme Court by one of the country's best-known legal journalists
   contains such significant errors about the most important Supreme
   Court property rights decision in many years. As Eugene Volokh pointed
   out in [8]a series of posts, the first edition of the book also had a
   lot of other factual errors (I have not yet had a chance to check if
   these other errors were fixed in the paperback edition).

References

   1. http://gideonstrumpet.info/?p=54
   2. http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2008_01_13-2008_01_19.shtml#1200438252
   3. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=976298
   4. http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2008_01_13-2008_01_19.shtml#1200683289
   5. http://gideonstrumpet.info/?p=54
   6. http://ij.org/images/pdf_folder/private_property/kelo/naacp02.pdf
   7. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=976298
   8. http://volokh.com/posts/chain_1190329191.shtml

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