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by Jeffrey
A. Tucker
The Left thinks
it has hit a rhetorical home run accusing the majority of the
Supreme Court of hypocrisy on states rights. As the slogan on
the placard displayed on Salon.com says, "Whatever
Happened to States Rights!" A Yale University law
professor speaking on National Public Radio went so far as to
decry that the court’s "intellectual consistency"
as the key reason that a vote to stop the recount won’t be
credible with voters.
It is certainly
true that this current court has been more attentive to the
rights of the states than any previous one in the postwar
period. That’s not to say states rights in a constitutional
sense are back. It only means that in some narrow areas of
government regulation and judicial authority, the court has
turned back some cases to the states claiming that the
Constitution permits no federal oversight.
In taking on
the voting dispute in Florida, is the Court being
hypocritical? Better to ask the question from another angle.
Under a Constitutional system, would the Florida Court be able
to force a hand-count of disputed ballots without the
authority of the Florida legislature? The answer is no.
In the first
American elections, the electors were appointed by
legislatures without any popular vote whatsoever. The movement
toward mass voting for the president didn’t commence until
the 1820s. And the movement that brought it about, written
about by Professor
Holcombe in his piece "Origins of the Electoral
College," was instigated by Andrew Jackson who
believed a popular election would propel him to power.
Thus, the point
made by the Left cuts both ways, and more seriously against
the Left than it does the Right. If we really adhered to
states rights, the Florida legislature would simply appoint
the electors that it wanted and be done with it. There would
be no recounting of votes, much less an attempt to divine the
intentions of anonymous voters who turned in spoiled ballots.
The electors would be instructed to vote for the president
that the legislature wanted, and, given the party makeup of
the Florida legislature, that choice would certainly be George
W. Bush.
Given this
history, you can’t at the same time trumpet the fact that
Gore "won the popular vote" and then invoke the
rights of the state of Florida. If Florida really had rights
against the federal government as it once did, there would
have been no popular election and there would be no
controversy today.
Moreover, under
the original Constitutional structure, the U.S. Senate would
not quarrel with the choice of the state legislature since the
same body would have appointed the Senator in the first place.
That’s because the popular election of senators did come
along until the Progressive Era. And as John
MacMullin has pointed out, the change imposed by
the 17th amendment dealt a fatal blow to full representation
by the states in shaping federal policy.
A final change
from the original structure we see today is that the president
has vastly more authority over the affairs of the nation than
he did at the beginning. His powers vastly exceed those
enumerated in the Constitution, which circumscribed him
drastically. His every decision was to be ratified by the
Senate, which is to say the states, particularly his power to
make war. He was also constantly subject to the impeachment
threat, which the framers believed would operate as an
ever-present sword of Damocles hanging over his head.
What these
changes to the original constitutional structure did was
nationalize the process by which the president is chosen. That
change would imply a concomitant responsibility of the U.S.
Supreme Court to have some authority in overseeing the
elections, because, of course, he now has vast authority to
overrule the states, go to war, regulate the economy, and
otherwise intervene in the affairs of all Americans.
What the
supporters of Gore seem to want, then, is a Supreme Court that
adheres to the original model of the Constitution in this one
rare instance, while retaining all violations of states rights
and the nationalizations of the office inherent in our present
system. It is they, therefore, who are hypocrites in this case
who celebrate federal intervention in all state and local
affairs, except when such interventions would seat a president
they oppose. And after Gore is seated, you can bet that all
talk of the rights of the states would again be consigned to
the history books.
What
does survive from the original Constitution is Article
II, sec 1, clause 2, which, as the Bush brief to the Supreme
Court points out, grants to the state legislature the exclusive
control over the appointment of electors. That a court in
Florida has stolen that constitutional right does indeed
suggest a case for intervention, if only to protect the people
against an unruly, pro-centralization court that cares nothing
about the rights of the state as traditionally understood.
If we want to
restore states rights in the fullest sense, let’s do it. But
let’s do it across the board. Repeal the 17th
amendment. Abolish the imperial powers of the president.
Restore the power of the state legislatures to pick electors
independent of the popular vote. End popular elections for the
President and return to the days when it was largely a
ceremonial office held by a person anointed by the state
legislatures and ratified by the U.S. House of
Representatives.
That, however,
his not the vision of those now waving "States
Rights" placards outside the U.S. Supreme Court to
protest the courts decision to intervene in the dispute over
the election. In their model of states rights, the power flows
only one direction: toward the center. It is the placard
wavers, then, who are the real source of intellectual
inconsistency.
December 12,
2000
Jeffrey
Tucker is manager of www.Mises.org |