Tuesday, January 24, 2006
Rick Garnett's letter and Cathy Kaveny's response ... from COMMONWEAL
The following correspondence appeared in the January 27th issue of Commonweal:
Rick Garnett writes:
I appreciate Cathleen Kaveny's timely essay, Letter v. Spirit (December
16, 2005). Kaveny is right, of course, that good judges do far more than
apply the law and that the real question is how--not whether--a justice
will approach the task of constitutional interpretation. But President
Bus'hs mantra that Kaveny criticizes--that he wants judges who will not
legislate from the bench--is quite consistent with her observation. To
want a judge who will not legislate is not to demand, or to imagine, a
judge who refuses to interpret; it is to want a judge who will interpret
the Constitution appropriately--that is, in a way that is democratically
legitimate and that is consistent with the text, history, and structure of
that document and the government it constitutes.
Kaveny notes that we have to ask how we should make sense of the basic
law of our country today, which faces responsibilities and challenges the
Founding Fathers could never have imagined. The primary challenge we face,
though--one that the founders could and did imagine--remains the challenge of
exercising self-government responsibly under and through a written
Constitution. That many of the difficult moral and policy questions
presented today were not contemplated even by the most engaged minds of the
eighteenth century is not surprising. Still, the Constitution they drafted
and ratified is more about structuring government and allocating
decision-making and legislative authority than about providing--or
authorizing federal judges to provid--eanswers on the merits of difficult
new moral questions.
Yes, an approach rigidly focused on the explicit provisions of the text
and the intention of the framers is both theoretically and practically
inadequate, but rigidity usually is. The question is whether a different
approach--one that would authorize and encourage judicial invalidation of
democratically crafted policy choices on the basis of unelected judges'
understanding of political realities--is legitimate. To insist on the
importance of this question is not to define the right approach to
constitutional interpretation solely in terms of outcome or to raise
doubts about the justice of the holding in Brown v. Board of Education.
richard w. garnett
Notre Dame, Ind.
Cathy Kaveny replies:
My colleague Richard Garnett thinks my complaint is misplaced because Bush's
mantra reasonably protests legislating from the bench. But he quotes only
half the mantra. Bush repeatedly calls for judges who will strictly apply
the Constitution and laws, not legislate from the bench. As I stated in my
first paragraph, I object to that mantra because it creates a false
dichotomy. Garnett thinks it obvious that the president didnt mean to rule
out the essential tertium quid of interpretation. Obvious to whom? Many
non-lawyers aren't familiar with the disciplined creativity that legal
interpretation regularly involves. I fear that Bushs mantra misleads
voters by implying that much legitimate interpretation is illegitimate
judicial legislation.
The rest of Garnett's letter raises issues I didn't address in my column;
they deserve brief comment. He suggests the Constitution is more concerned
with setting up government structures and establishing lines of authority
than with addressing moral issues and social realities. I don't agree. What
about the Bill of Rights? Or the Antislavery Amendments? And even
structural questions have controversial moral and social implications. We
can't ignore the torture memos, where Bush administration lawyers argued
that Congress has no constitutional authority to outlaw torture authorized
by the president in prosecuting the war on terror.
Garnett's main worry is judicial tyranny; he fears judges will usurp the
rightful place of democratically elected representatives in making policy
on controversial moral and social issues like abortion or gay marriage.
That is certainly a reasonable worry. But I don't think its best addressed
by adopting a truncated approach to constitutional interpretation, such as
Scalia's textualism or Garnett's own prioritization of governmental
structure over moral substance. Furthermore, untempered focus on the
dangers of an activist judiciary can make us less vigilant against other
sources of tyranny equally repugnant to the framers. Congress has
threatened to eliminate federal court jurisdiction over petitions for the
writ of habeas corpus filed by suspected terrorists. The president has
defended domestic spying without judicial authorization. With all due
respect, I don't think that tyranny of the judicial branch poses the most
immediate threat to our constitutional democracy.
cathleen kaveny
_______________
mp
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2006/01/rick_garnetts_l.html