Wednesday, July 24, 2013
DeGirolami, on "why standing matters", at Commonweal
Adding to the recent pieces at Commonweal by Michael Perry and me commenting on the Windsor and Perry decisions is Marc's excellent essay, "Why Standing Matters" (and, it does). Here is a taste:
The Supreme Court wields its power within the constitutional structure only as long as it also retains a firm sense of the limits of that power. When it exceeds those limits, it disrupts the constitutional order and threatens its own authority. As always, Tocqueville saw this clearly: The political power which the Americans have intrusted to their courts of justice is therefore immense, but the evils of this power are considerably diminished by the obligation which has been imposed of attacking the laws through the courts of justice alone. If the judge had been empowered to contest the laws on the ground of theoretical generalities, if he had been enabled to open an attack or to pass a censure on the legislator, he would have played a prominent part in the political sphere; and as the champion or the antagonist of a party, he would have arrayed the hostile passions of the nation in the conflict. Or, as Justice Antonin Scalia put it in his dissent in the DOMA case, a free-floating power to say what the law is would be “an assertion of judicial supremacy over the people’s representatives in Congress and the executive”—an unsustainable exercise of judicial force that risks destroying the constitutional separation of powers. - See more at: http://www.commonwealmagazine.org/why-standing-matters#sthash.1NvZ6LCb.dpuf
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2013/07/degirolami-on-why-standing-matters-at-commonweal.html