15 March 2008

Constitutional Proposals Part III: The Judiciary

Continuing my critique of our Constitution as a tool of government, I proceed now to the issue of the judiciary. Dahl points out the power of the federal judiciary in what has developed as judicial review as being, in essence, “judicial legislation” or policy-making (19). Although there is an apparent, even critical, benefit to having a judiciary with the jurisdiction to review laws for the purpose of assuring their constitutionality, it is, as Dahl notes, a rather undemocratic notion that a group of nine individuals, appointed (not elected) for life, has the authority to “declare as unconstitutional laws that (have) been properly passed by Congress and signed by the president” (18). In order to amend for this constitutional deficiency, I propose the following.
I do not see a need to change the basic structure and jurisdiction of the Supreme Court and the federal judiciary. Nor do I propose the abolishing of judicial review, but rather, simply a limit to the scope of its power. I believe, as Dahl suggests, that the Supreme Court should have the authority to declare as unconstitutional laws which impinge upon the most basic tenants of democratic belief and practice, such as the protection of rights and civil liberties, political equality, universal suffrage, etc. However, in a departure from current judicial precedence and practice, I would propose a constitutional amendment limiting binding decisions by the Supreme Court to cases in which there is unanimity among the ruling justices and constitutionality is clearly threatened (that is, a unanimous court may bindingly rule a law unconstitutional only by demonstration that it is so according to the strict construction of the constitution). This is not to say that the court can not rule upon laws in which constitutionality is vague or in which there is not unanimity among the justices. The difference would be that in such cases, the court's decision would be non-binding. A non-binding decision would serve the purpose of calling attention to an issue which the court deemed as being unconstitutional. Following such a ruling, if there was in fact broad consensus in the media, among politicians, and in the general public, then there would be a strong likelihood of the measure in question being overturned, via the democratic procedure. By the same token, the likelihood of rulings leading to the repeal of laws that are generally accepted as being constitutional would be almost non-existent, while judicial policy-making would be practically impossible.

3 comments:

Hercules Mulligan said...

Now such an amendment doesn't sound like such a bad idea! I think that it's about time the judiciary was put back in its place.

I am not aware, however, of any place in the Constitution that gives the Supreme Court the power of "judicial review" per se; I remember that the question of giving the judiciary taht power did come up during the Constitutional Convention, but they did not give the judicial branch that power, nor did they necessarily forbid it. I think that it is a concept that has grown over the years, and has been taken to extremities thanks to 20th century revisionism.

I wanted to let you know that I am passing on an award that my Hamilton blog received, to your blog. The award is called the "Interesting Blog" award, and the one who receives the award gets to pick out other blogs to receive it also. You receive the award just by being named. So learn about th award, and to accept it if you so wish, visit my post here. Be sure to leave a comment there, letting me know that you accept it, and put the picture in your sidebar. You may also write a post on your blog announcing that you received the award, who gave it to you, and which blogs you pass the award on to.

Congratulations!

God bless you.

Lindsey Shuman said...

Mr. Scot:

My name is Lindsey Shuman and I am a graduate student of history in Colorado. I am writing to let you know a couple of things: First off I love you blog! I've followed it for a while and really enjoy it. Second, I wanted to let you know about a new project that a few of us bloggers have put together. It is a new group blog dedicated exclusively to the role of religion in early American history. Since you seem very informed on the issue, we would like to invite you to check us out. If you like what you see, we would love to have you as a contributor. The blog is: www.americancreation.blogspot.com

Hope to see you there!

Rob Scot said...

Thanks for the invite, Lindsey. I will definately check it out.