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Impeachment Of Federal Judges
WallBuilders ^ | David Barton

Posted on 01/10/2005 4:00:39 PM PST by Lindykim

Impeachment of Federal Judges   by David Barton

The Founders' intent for impeachment was to protect the fundamental principle of "the consent of the governed." The Constitution carries no title but "We the People," and impeachment removes from office those officials who ignore that standard. (Recall that the Constitution does not guarantee a federal judge his position for life, but only for the duration of "good behavior." Art. III, Sec. 1)

For this reason impeachment was used whenever judges disregarded public interests, affronted the will of the people, or introduced arbitrary power by seizing the role of policy-maker. Previous generations used this tool far more frequently than today's generation; and because the grounds for impeachment were deliberately kept broad, articles of impeachment have described everything from drunkenness and profanity to judicial high-handedness and bribery as reasons for removal from the bench. (Sixty-one federal judges or Supreme Court Justices have been investigated for impeachment, of whom thirteen have been impeached and seven convicted.)

Today's judiciary, not having experienced any serious threat of impeachment as judges in earlier generations, repeatedly flaunts its contempt for the will of the people. It recently has overturned direct elections in Washington, New York, California, Arkansas, Texas, Missouri, etc., simply because it preferred a different outcome. This is not to suggest that the results of all citizen elections are final and infallible, for it is the duty of the Court to protect the Constitution. However, the above elections violated at most the judiciary's ideological leanings rather than any manifest provision of the Constitution (e.g., English as a State's official language, ending government assistance for illegal immigrants, enacting term-limits, prohibiting physician-assisted suicides).

Examples of Judicial Abuses

While most are aware of the 9th Circuit's recent decision that saying "under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance threatens our American form of government, there are numerous additional examples, some staggeringly unbelievable. For example, in Jane Doe v. Santa Fe, a federal judge ruled that graduation prayers must not include any mention of "Jesus" or other "specific deities" and that any student offering such a prayer would face immediate arrest and up to six months in jail. The judge threatened "violators" by saying they would wish they "had died as a child" once his court finished with them.

In a Texas county where conservatives narrowly won multiple seats in an election, a federal judge reversed that outcome by arbitrarily throwing out the 800 votes cast by U.S. military personnel, saying they had no right to vote in local elections. A federal judge in Nashville reviews the verdict of any jury in Tennessee that awards the death penalty.

This judge has openly declared his personal opposition to the death penalty and has set aside every jury decision on this issue, despite the Constitution's explicit language to the contrary. The judge even allows nine years to pass, on average, before overturning the jury's sentence, thus disregarding the Constitution's guarantee to a speedy trial.

After citizens in a statewide election voted down a proposed tax-increase in Missouri, a federal judge, in direct violation of Article I of the Constitution, unilaterally set aside the election results and instead decreed that the tax be levied in order to finance his own personal plan for education in the State. Interestingly, this judge's plan (which funded the "Taj Majal" of public education) proved to be a dismal failure - at the continuing economic expense of the entire State.

There are many other examples; today's judiciary is now so arrogant that the Supreme Court's own Justices have described it as "a super board of education for every school district in the nation," as amateur psychologists on a "psycho-journey," and as "a national theology board."

The Supreme Court versus Congress

Even though the Constitution gave the lawmaking powers to the Congress, courts have become the predominant policy making body in the nation. In fact, on public tours of the Supreme Court, one often hears the ridiculous claim that "this is the building from which all the laws in the land emanate." The Supreme Court, fully believing its own propaganda, regularly strikes down or rewrites the laws of Congress to conform to its own predilections and edicts.

For example, in 1993, Congress passed the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) to correct an earlier Supreme Court decision that weakened a long-standing First Amendment protection for religious groups. That Congressional act reinstituted protection declaring that a government entity must not interfere with a religious body unless it had "a compelling state interest" for doing so. When a Catholic church in Boerne, Texas, sought to accommodate its burgeoning membership but was denied a building permit to expand its facilities, the church invoked relief under RFRA, claiming the city had no "compelling state interest" in denying the church expansion. The Court ruled otherwise, striking down Congress' attempt to protect religious bodies from government intrusion. While most decried this decision for weakening the rights of religious bodies, there was a far greater question at stake.

Congress invoked Section 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution in passing RFRA to protect religious freedoms from further governmental encroachment. Yet even though the Congress had acted on the power explicitly given it in the Constitution, the Court struck down the law, refusing to be corrected by Congress and warning that Congress should not attempt to correct a Court ruling.

Significantly, Congress cited the Constitution as its authority for passing RFRA, but the Court did not cite the Constitution as its authority for striking RFRA down. The Court instead pointed to its own previous decisions, thus elevating its rulings higher than the Constitution itself. As it explained, "Any suggestion that Congress has a substantive, non-remedial power under the Fourteenth Amendment is not supported by our case law." The Court then rebuked Congress, warning that its judicial edicts must be treated "with the respect due them." In short, we the Court demand that you the Congress adhere to our opinions regardless of what the Constitution says.

Obviously, the Supreme Court considers both itself and its decisions supreme over Congress. However, the Constitution disagrees - it deliberately empowers Congress with greater power. For example, the Constitution gives Congress the authority to set the salaries for judges, determine the size of the Judiciary, establish the scope of the Judiciary's jurisdiction and the types of cases which come before it. Furthermore, judges cannot serve without the approval of Congress, and Congress may remove judges with whom it is dissatisfied. These are just some of the "constitutional arms" for Congress' "powers of self-defense" (Federalist 73, Alexander Hamilton).

The Constitution clearly places many of the operations of the Judiciary under the oversight of Congress - a power not granted reciprocally to the Judiciary. This is made clear in the Federalist Papers (described by James Madison as "the most authentic exposition of the heart of the federal Constitution"), which confirm that subjugating the Judiciary to Congress was deliberate and intentional. Federalist #51 declares: The legislative authority necessarily predominates.

Federalist #78 then proclaims: The Judiciary is beyond comparison the weakest of the three departments of power.

Furthermore, Federalist #49 declares that Congress - not the Court - is "the confidential guardians of [the people's] rights and liberties." Why? Because the Legislature - not the unelected judiciary - is closest to the people and most responsive to them. In fact, the Court's own history proves that it is not a proficient guardian of the people's rights. For example, after the Civil War, Congress passed civil rights laws forbidding segregation, but the Court struck down these laws and instead instituted "separate but equal" in Plessey v. Ferguson. (While the Court eventually ended this racial segregation in Brown v. Board of Education, that decision was merely the Court's reversal of its own segregation standard previously established in Plessey.)

Moreover, had it been up to the Court, slavery would have never ended: in 1857, the Court declared it unconstitutional for the other branches to end slavery or to free slaves. Fortunately, Congress ignored that decision by declaring freedom for slaves in 1862 and President Lincoln also ignored that decision by issuing the "Emancipation Proclamation" in 1863. All substantive progress in civil rights after the Civil War was accomplished only after Congress used Article III, Section 2 of the Constitution to remove all Reconstruction issues from the Court's reach. Indeed, history demonstrates that the Court is less than a faithful guardian of the people's rights, violating the people's liberties as often as it protects them. As Thomas Jefferson pointed out:

Our judges are as honest as other men and not more so. They have, with others, the same passions for party, for power, and the privilege of their corps. . . . and their power the more dangerous as they are in office for life and not responsible, as the other functionaries are, to the elective control.

Today, the Court claims that it is the only body capable of interpreting the Constitution - that Congress is incapable of determining constitutionality. However, the Founding Fathers vehemently disagreed. For example, James Madison declared: [T]he meaning of the Constitution may as well be ascertained by the Legislative as by the Judicial authority.

Constitutional Convention delegate Luther Martin similarly attested: A knowledge of mankind and of legislative affairs cannot be presumed to belong in a higher degree to the Judges than to the Legislature.

The Founders consistently opposed the Court being the final word on constitutionality. For example, Thomas Jefferson declared: [T]o consider the judges as the ultimate arbiters of all constitutional questions [is] a very dangerous doctrine indeed, and one which would place us under the despotism of an oligarchy. . . . The Constitution has erected no such single tribunal.

He further explained that if the Court was left unchecked:

The Constitution . . . [would be] a mere thing of wax in the hands of the judiciary which they may twist and shape into any form they please. Allowing the Court to enlarge its own sphere of power beyond what the Constitution authorizes, permitting the Court to usurp the powers of Congress, and tolerating the Courts' disregard of constitutional separation of powers moves America ever further from being a representative republic and ever closer toward the oligarchy against which Jefferson warned. The Court must be resisted in these attempts.

Impeachment: The Founders' Solution

As noted earlier, judges in previous generations who usurped powers from Congress or the people faced impeachment. But today's critics claim that the use of impeachment would either make the judiciary a "political" branch (as if it were not already a political branch) or that it would violate the "independence of the judiciary." Yet, as Thomas Jefferson so accurately cautioned, It should be remembered as an axiom of eternal truth in politics that whatever power . . . is independent is absolute also. . . . Independence can be trusted nowhere but with the people in mass.

No judge should ever be so independent that he is unaccountable to the Congress, and thereby the people. As Justice James Iredell (placed on the Court by President George Washington) so clearly explained:

Every government requires it [impeachment]. Every man ought to be amenable for his conduct. Iredell further noted that some officials will behave themselves only under "the very terror of punishment" that impeachment provides. Recent events suggest he was right.

In 1996, six members of the Supreme Court voted to overturn the Colorado election forbidding special (rather than just equal) rights for homosexuals. Following that flagrant display of contempt for the will of Colorado voters, there was a national call for the impeachment of those six Justices. After this clamor for their removal, those same six Justices suddenly became ardent defenders of the people's elections and in a subsequent decision unexpectedly and unanimously chastised a lower court that had overturned a statewide election in Arizona. (Interestingly, Thomas Jefferson on multiple occasions called impeachment a "scarecrow" - something used to frighten predators - and the threat of impeachment certainly had that effect on the Supreme Court.)

Similarly, after a federal judge overturned a binding referendum by the voters of California ("Proposition 209"), national leaders called for the impeachment of that judge. Later, the 9th Circuit ordered the results of the election reinstated and criticized that judge for ignoring the will of the people. Yet, this same 9th Circuit Court had itself shortly before overturned at least three similar elections. Why the flip-flop? The "scarecrow" had been forcefully raised by Congress to make judges accountable for their decisions by returning to the original constitutional uses of impeachment.

It is true that impeachment is a cumbersome process, and achieving a conviction is difficult. However, on most occasions, just the threat of impeachment produces results. In fact, there are several examples of federal judges correcting their own decisions after hearing Congressional calls for their impeachment; and an actual impeachment sends an even more powerful message to all other wayward leaning judges.

Although Congress is ultimately responsible for the discipline of judges, far too many of our Congressmen (like far too many of our citizens) have no understanding of the proper use of impeachment.

However, a wise political axiom declares that "Congress sees the light when it feels the heat," and this is especially true on this issue. As citizens, we need to educate ourselves on the proper use of judicial impeachment, and then we need to educate our Representatives, reminding them of the need for judicial reform and alerting them to those judges showing a pattern of abuse. The time for encouraging judicial accountability is once again ripe. This is a golden opportunity for citizens to weigh in and make a difference.

Copyright © 2002 David Barton, WallBuilders (An excellent tool for educating yourself and your Congressional representative is the book Restraining Judicial Activisim . This work documents both the Founders writings on this issue and how impeachment was used in America in previous generations. Get a copy for yourself and an extra copy for your Representative and Senators!)


TOPICS: Government
KEYWORDS:
snip....Today, the Court claims that it is the only body capable of interpreting the Constitution - that Congress is......

The following quote is from 'Rare Jewel,' Oct-Nov issue:

'Law profesor G. Edward White summarizes Chief Justice John Marshall's perspective: "(Marshall and the other Framers) assumed that 'law' was a universal body of principles, that those principles were 'discoverable' by technically skilled persons such as judges, and that in 'discovering,' judges were merely stating 'what the law was.' The only power judges had, under Marshall's views, was their professional power; their technical expertise enabled them to be better finders of law than other persons."

LK....Marshall and the rest of the Founders were men who believed in a Creator and in eternally unchanging transcendant moral law, or Natural Law and/or Ten Commandments. The Rule of Law is a temporalized version of transcendant natural law. However, humanist gnostics have excised temporal law from its' foundation, with the result that laws have become the whimsical playthings of whoever has the 'power' to force their personal opinions upon the rest of us.

Quoting again from 'Rare Jewel":

'Courts have taken specific Constitutional guarantees, forced them through the grid of the Humanistic worldview, and corrupted both the Constitution and the culture. They have:

(a)...Degraded 'persons' to the low estate of animals

(b)...Transmogrified the right to life into the right to 'death'

(c)...Morphed the right to liberty into a 'right to licentiousness.'

(d)...Twisted the right to liberty of thought and expression into a governmental power of repression and brainwashing

(e)...Reversed the right to religious freedoms to worship God into a 'right to idolatry.'

Secular Humanists are determined to Sovietize America and make her into a clone of Canada and the EU. Towards this end, they must eradicate America's founding Christian based worldview because it is antithetical to their own. The Christian worldview is purpose, reason, order, liberty, life, human dignity, decency, hope, and future, while the humanist's is everything which is in opposition.

1 posted on 01/10/2005 4:00:39 PM PST by Lindykim
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To: Lindykim

bump for later reading


2 posted on 01/10/2005 4:01:57 PM PST by BullDog108 (Know Your Enemy! http://bvml.org/webmaster/enemy.html)
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To: All

oops, I orgot the url: http://www.wallbuilders.com/resources/search/detail.php?ResourceID=69


3 posted on 01/10/2005 4:02:38 PM PST by Lindykim
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To: ItsOurTimeNow; Ed Current; little jeremiah

ping


4 posted on 01/10/2005 4:03:50 PM PST by Lindykim
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To: Lindykim

Paradoxically, the USSC got it's first lesson in "living document" revisionism from Congress, in 1937.


5 posted on 01/10/2005 4:08:18 PM PST by tacticalogic
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To: Lindykim

Bump the article and post#1 and to you for posting that vital info.


6 posted on 01/10/2005 4:10:54 PM PST by Ed Current (http://cpforlife.blogspot.com/ PRO-LIFE AND PRO-ARTICLE 3)
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To: Lindykim

The secular atheists are as much of a threat as the terrorists. They are a 5th column in our country that must be eliminated in time of war.


7 posted on 01/10/2005 4:11:52 PM PST by shubi (Peace through superior firepower.)
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To: Lindykim

I never thought about impeaching judges. This is an excellent and informative article. Thanks for posting it. I don't think most Americans really understand how the different branches of government work and that there is a recourse to keep judges in line. I'll definitely be watching the judge in Philadelphia regarding the Christians who were arrested at the homosexual promotional event.


8 posted on 01/10/2005 4:24:47 PM PST by mlc9852
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To: Lindykim
A very interesting website, especially the article on the FBI's ability to reconstruct the original draft of Jefferson's "Wall of Separation" letter. Had Jefferson published his draft the Supreme Court would have had to make up another reason to separate church and state (also notice that two days later Jefferson not only approved a preacher preaching to Congress, in the House chambers, he also attended the service and did so for years thereafter). Thanks.
9 posted on 01/10/2005 4:29:57 PM PST by Founding Father (Another pearl of wisdom from my imaginary mind.)
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To: mlc9852; Founding Father

I highly recommend Rare Jewel as an outstanding source of information: http://www.rarejewelmag.com/home/index.shtml


10 posted on 01/10/2005 4:33:51 PM PST by Lindykim
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To: mlc9852
I don't think most Americans really understand how the different branches of government work and that there is a recourse to keep judges in line.

That might be because a lot of people, myself included, have never even heard of one being impeached.

11 posted on 01/10/2005 4:36:10 PM PST by exnavychick (There's too much youth; how about a fountain of smart.)
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To: Lindykim

bump


12 posted on 01/10/2005 4:38:41 PM PST by blackeagle
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To: Lindykim
Just where are you going to find 67 senators to convict impeached judges?
13 posted on 01/10/2005 4:42:26 PM PST by Paleo Conservative (Hey! Hey! Ho! Ho! Dan Rather's got to go!)
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To: Paleo Conservative

The impeached judges will run as Dems and get elected to Congress ala Alcee Hastings(D)Fla.


14 posted on 01/10/2005 5:28:14 PM PST by digger48
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To: digger48
The impeached judges will run as Dems and get elected to Congress ala Alcee Hastings(D)Fla.

Actually it is possible to prevent anyone who is impeached from ever holding any federal office or employment in the future. The House really dropped the ball by not including these restrictions when they impeached Alcee Hastings.

15 posted on 01/10/2005 5:30:49 PM PST by Paleo Conservative (Hey! Hey! Ho! Ho! Dan Rather's got to go!)
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To: Lindykim

Thanks for posting this article. Bookmarked for reference and re-reading.


16 posted on 01/10/2005 6:07:00 PM PST by little jeremiah (The "Gay Agenda" exists only in the minds of little jeremiah and his cohort. - Modern Man)
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To: Lindykim

bump for later read


17 posted on 01/10/2005 6:51:11 PM PST by MissouriConservative ( Do your duty in all things. You cannot do more; you should never wish to do less. - Robert E. Lee)
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To: Lindykim

BTTT


18 posted on 09/07/2007 10:13:26 AM PDT by XR7
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