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Conservatives and the Courts
by
Sheldon Richman,
August 23, 2006
It is always amusing to watch conservatives react to court decisions they dont like. They were firmly in character last week when Federal District Judge Anna Diggs Taylor ruled that the Bush administration broke the law and violated the Constitution when it began wiretapping, without warrants, international phone calls between Americans and suspected terrorists.
Shes a Carter appointee, they said. Shes a liberal. What did you expect?
It doesnt take much to see that this is not a refutation of Judge Taylors ruling. It is misdirection. Constitutional scholar Robert Levy of the libertarian Cato Institute also thinks the wiretapping is illegal. He points out that it is well-established law that the presidents power is most circumscribed in areas where Congress has expressly spoken. Well, Congress has spoken on the matter of warrantless wiretaps. The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) declares them illegal, with only two exceptions: during the 15 days after a declaration of war and for 72 hours in an emergency. Over the years the special FISA court has been most accommodating of presidents requests for warrants. President Bush had many opportunities after 9/11 to ask Congress to change the law, but he didnt. Now he claims that the authorization of force in Iraq contained an implied change. But no such congressional intent can be shown.
Neither do any inherent war powers permit a president to defy an outright congressional ban. Congress too has war-related powers under the Constitution.
Levy cant be dismissed as a Carterite or a liberal. So those labels do nothing to rebut Judge Taylors ruling, weakly argued as it may be.
Invalidation of the National Security Agencys intrusive program is well grounded in established legal principle. (Her ruling is being appealed.)
Conservatives still dont get the constitutional
game. (Not that so-called liberals are much better.) In
that game you put your money down and you take your
chances. You know going in you can lose. Judge Taylor did
not break into a courthouse, steal a judges robe,
and begin issuing rulings. President Jimmy Carter
didnt break into the White House and start
appointing judges. (Some people still believe that George
W. Bush essentially did that.) They got into office by
constitutional means. Conservatives just
dont like the results. They might like to
take their Constitution and go home, except
its not their Constitution. As a
political document, its up for interpretation, and
Judge Taylor has been constitutionally empowered to
interpret it.
Conservatives pride themselves on being strict
constructionists, the keepers of the one true
interpretation of the Constitution. But this claim rests
on a weak foundation. There is no one true
interpretation. The historian Merrill Jensen noted that
Alexander Hamilton, a staunch nationalist, and Thomas
Jefferson, a staunch decentralist, looked at the same
Constitution and saw two contradictory things. Each saw a
plan of government consistent with his own predilections.
These days conservatives oppose implied
congressional powers while seeing implied
presidential powers everywhere (as long as they
like the president). I smell an agenda.
What are they to make of James Madison, one of the
architects of the Constitution? He told the public that
Congresss powers are few and defined.
But during debate over the Bill of Rights he told his
fellow congressmen it was impossible to confine a
government to the exercise of express powers; there must
necessarily be admitted powers by implication,
unless the constitution descended to recount every
minutiae (emphasis added).
He had a point. A Constitution cant list everything
the government may do. But the alternative, as Madison
acknowledged, is to look for implied powers. How do you
contain that process?
The only way conservatives could hope to contain it to
their exact liking would be to make Rush Limbaugh, Mark
Levin, or Ann Coulter the absolute dictator. Heaven help
us.
Sheldon Richman is senior fellow at The Future of Freedom Foundation, author of Tethered Citizens: Time to Repeal the Welfare State, and editor of The Freeman magazine. Visit his blog Free Association at www.sheldonrichman.com. Send him email.
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