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Debates between
presidential candidates are so ballyhooed in advance that they
are always a letdown when they actually happen. But the first
Gore-Bush debate did bring a crucial question to the fore.
Overall, I
thought Gore outperformed Bush. In a word, he took charge. He
controlled the debate and spoke well. Bush was on the
defensive and was less articulate, with small verbal stumbles
(though no major "gaffes").
But at one
point Bush came close to putting an important thought into
words:
"I’ll
put competent judges on the bench, people who will strictly
interpret the Constitution and will not use the bench to write
social policy.... I believe that the judges ought not to take
the place of the legislative branch of government, that
they’re appointed for life, and that they ought to look at
the Constitution as sacred.... I don’t believe in liberal
activist judges. I believe in strict constructionists."
Gore replied
that "in my view the Constitution ought to be interpreted
as a document that grows with our country and our
history."
Neither
candidate explained his position very well. But Bush had it
right, in essence. The Constitution is the fundamental law for
the federal government. If that government’s own courts can
arbitrarily change its meaning, the government becomes a law
unto itself – that is, a lawless government, a government of
men, not of law. Alexander Hamilton said that one of the
advantages of our Constitution over the unwritten British
constitution was that ours would be made by the people and
therefore "unalterable by the government." But we
have grown accustomed to seeing the government alter the
Constitution to suit the preferences of the courts.
Gore’s view
of the Constitution as a document that "grows" is a
liberal cliché. What does it really mean? Organic metaphors
sound nice; they suggest the natural, the gradual, the
harmonious. But in fact, as even thoughtful liberals have
often pointed out, many of the U.S. Supreme Court’s most
important rulings over the last half-century have been
anything but organic. They have imposed sudden and disruptive
changes on the country, usurping the reserved powers of the
states and the people, nullifying self-government, and
uprooting long-standing traditions.
Liberals of the
less thoughtful persuasion try to argue that their pet
positions, as imposed by the judiciary, are somehow implicit
in the Constitution, lurking in "penumbras formed by
emanations" and so forth. If so, why did it take nearly
two centuries for the courts to realize that racial
segregation, school prayer, obscenity laws, and abortion laws,
to take a few examples, were forbidden by the Constitution? Or
did these things merely become "unconstitutional" by
judicial fiat? The answer is obvious.
The
Constitution didn’t "grow"; it was never supposed
to. Written law must be stable, or it isn’t law. A
government that can change the very meaning of old words is
tyrannical.
What really
happened – fairly recently, in historical terms – is that
the courts were taken over by liberal zealots who saw the
judiciary as a potential instrument of raw power. After all,
justices are appointed for life; they don’t face the people
at the polls and can’t be held responsible for the
consequences of their rulings. So by disguising their desires
as constitutional mandates, the courts have been able to
impose their will on the whole country, uninhibited by reason,
tradition, or any other force.
Bush, to his
credit, instinctively opposes arbitrary judicial power. Gore,
a liberal zealot himself, favors it; he wants the federal
courts to keep imposing the liberal agenda, wherever it may
lead. This is a truly important difference between two
candidates who otherwise agree on far too many things.
This is a
subject worthy of a whole evening’s debate by itself. But
neither Bush nor Gore seems capable of giving it the full
discussion it deserves; both talk in slogans that aren’t
backed up by philosophical reasoning.
But at least
Bush recognizes that the Constitution doesn’t
"grow" by itself; that there are real human agents
– "activist liberal judges" – forcing false
meanings on it. To hear Gore talk, you would think the
Constitution was a form of climbing ivy.
October 20,
2000 |