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She's the Right Radical
The Cato Institute ^ | 5/23/05 | Roger Pilon

Posted on 09/22/2005 7:35:37 PM PDT by Embraer2004

She's the Right Radical by Roger Pilon

Roger Pilon is vice president for legal affairs at the Cato Institute and director of Cato's Center for Constitutional Studies.

How much longer can we go on playing constitutional pretend — pretending that there's a serious connection between the Constitution and so much of what passes today for "constitutional law"?

Rarely faced head-on, the question arises on the few fortunate times when we're presented with a judicial nominee who's been so bold as to publicly doubt the connection. At the moment that's Janice Rogers Brown.

The pretend game is especially well-played by "moderates" wary of "extremists" like Brown. And no one plays it better in these pages or this town than the wonderfully moderate Stuart Taylor Jr., because no one tries harder than he to find common ground between the warring camps brought forth by such a nominee. Blessed are the peacemakers.

But war is sometimes inevitable, as when great principles are at stake. Witness the procedural battle now going on in the Senate over the judicial filibuster, about which Taylor wrote two weeks ago ("Hit the Brakes!" May 9, Page 60), in truth a battle over the underlying substantive war, about which he wrote the week before when he took an uncharacteristically sharp look at Brown's nomination for a seat on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit ("Radical on the Bench," May 2, Page 70). No moderate she, her thinking is indeed "radical," going to the root of the matter. It's the kind of thinking that awakens Washington from its dogmatic slumbers. That's why the battle today is so vicious — to turn Henry Kissinger's famous bon mot about academia on its head — because the stakes are so high.

What's the Principle?

Like many a moderate, Taylor sees "grave danger" in the Republican effort to bring an end to the unprecedented judicial filibusters that, for two years, have blocked 10 of President George W. Bush's appellate court nominees. But his criticism is evenhanded, not surprisingly: "Both sides," he writes, "are hypocritical to pretend they're driven by principle, not partisanship."

True, on both sides there's enough hypocrisy to go around, and both sides are driven by partisanship — no surprise there. But that doesn't mean that principle is not also at issue. The question is, What's the principle?

For Republicans, it seems to be "that the Senate's Article I power to 'determine the rules of its proceedings' applies . . . less to confirmation proceedings than to legislative proceedings," Taylor tells us, calling the argument "embarrassingly weak." No, it rests on the history of the extraconstitutional filibuster, which until 2003 had never been used to block judicial nominees with clear majority support. By specifying the few things requiring a supermajority vote, the Constitution fairly implies majority rule for the rest, with "rules of its proceedings" meant mainly for housekeeping. Put it this way: Would constitutional alarms sound were the confirmation rule four-fifths or nine-tenths? Then why not when it's three-fifths?

For Democrats, the principle seems to be to temper majority rule when a nominee is "outside the mainstream" — that is, to filibuster nominees who fail to reflect "the core values held by most of our country's citizens," as Sen. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) put it in a 2001 New York Times op-ed, just as he was launching Senate hearings to push for ideological litmus tests for nominees.

Never mind that judges are supposed to apply the law whether or not it's consistent with their own or the citizenry's "core values" (now that is a principle), Schumer's point is captured by Taylor when he concludes his filibuster commentary by invoking the sword of Damocles. The value of the judicial filibuster, Taylor writes, "is not that it should be used, but that it should hang over the process, and serve as a moderating influence on the president."

"Moderating" influence? Moderating toward what? What sense, if any, do terms like "moderate" and "extreme" make in this context? We hear them all the time, yet they serve mostly to end or to cloud — rather than to aid — debate about what a judge should do or what we, and the Constitution, stand for — about matters of principle. In the end, to say that a judge is "outside the mainstream" is simply to make a political appeal, to trade on the pejorative "extremist."

Unwilling to Pretend

We come, then, to that issue of principle, and to Taylor's brief against Janice Rogers Brown, currently a justice on the California Supreme Court. Her chief sin, it seems, is that she stands for something, for principle, not unlike — albeit far from in substance — "the remaining exponents of radical redistributionist and Marxist theories" that Taylor plants opposite her. What is worse, perhaps, is that she is willing to speak truth to constitutional hypocrisy — and plainly, at that. She is unwilling, that is, to play constitutional pretend.

Consider, for example, Taylor's charge that Brown is "a passionate advocate of a radical, anti-regulatory vision of judicially enforced property rights far more absolute than can be squared with the Supreme Court precedents." Quite so, save for the anti-regulatory part (she's actually anti-takings, which is not the same as anti-regulation). But is the problem with her vision or with the Court's precedents — with the "labyrinthine and compartmentalized" case law in this area, as Brown has put it?

Look at Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Commission (1992). Writing for the majority there, Justice Antonin Scalia lamented the Court's 70-odd years of ad-hoc regulatory takings jurisprudence, even as he was adding another year to the string. The implication, plainly, is that the Court still had not found the principle of the matter. And it hadn't.

What would Taylor have? Less passion from Brown? A less "radical" approach — one that avoids going to the root of the matter? The virtue of someone like Brown is that she's willing and able to go to first principles to straighten out the mess the Court has here, as in so many other areas of our law. In a word, she has a vision. It's a vision of the Constitution, and of the yawning gap between it and much of our modern constitutional law.

A Vision Lost

Therein lies the problem, of course, because the "mainstream" has largely lost sight of that vision. Indeed, Taylor himself recognizes that when he frames his critique with a question that speaks volumes about modern constitutional confusions. Drawing on charges that Brown, were she on the Supreme Court, would be active in holding Congress to its enumerated powers, he asks: Where is the conservative outrage over the president's having nominated someone who believes the Court has authority to find so many of the administration's programs to be without constitutional authority?

Conservatives like Robert Bork and Scalia, after all, have made careers railing against "judicial activists." Yet here comes Brown, who believes the Court should "actively" hold the federal government to its enumerated powers while securing our rights, both enumerated and unenumerated, against every government — federal, state, and local.

Modern liberals recoil against the first of those — "the Supreme Court's recent 5-4 decisions that constrain Congressional power," as Schumer put it in that New York Times piece. Yet what else could James Madison have meant except limited government when he wrote in Federalist 45 that the powers of Congress would be "few and defined"? Modern conservatives recoil against judicial enforcement of unenumerated rights, fearing "judicial activism." Yet what is the Ninth Amendment about if not unenumerated rights? Or the 14th Amendment's privileges or immunities clause? Or the very structure of the Constitution itself? If we're going to be originalists, let's do it right.

To answer Taylor's question, then, it would seem that there are enough thoughtful people in the Bush administration to have appreciated the constitutional dilemma before the nation — the crisis of legitimacy — and the need to bring it out in the open. In a word, we have a Constitution authorizing limited government, yet Leviathan surrounds us — and Justice Brown is perceptive and secure enough to say so, as Taylor amply notes. For that she should be commended, not criticized.

Yes, she believes that Lochner v. New York (1905) was rightly decided. It was. Let's remember that the case was not brought by overworked bakers, as modern myth would have it. Indeed, the statute at issue was a classic example of special-interest pandering — large bakeries "rent-seeking" at the public trough. Brown grasps that because she understands public choice economics. That's more than can be said of the sainted Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., who could not have been more wrong in dissent when he contended that the Constitution is neutral between capitalism and socialism. Among its many limits on power, our fundamental law speaks explicitly of property and contract. That's the stuff of capitalism, not socialism.

In a similar vein, Taylor is struck that Brown has "called for a new 'conceptual approach' that would invalidate laws redistributing wealth from one group to another." Yet the Court itself took that approach in 1936 in United States v. Butler, when Justice Owen Roberts held the taxing power at issue to be unconstitutional, "the expropriation of money from one group for the benefit of another."

To be sure, that was one year before the constitutional revolution that is primarily responsible for the constitutional dilemma we have today. Following fast upon President Franklin Roosevelt's notorious Court-packing scheme, the Court caved to political pressure in 1937 and opened the floodgates for the modern welfare state. That's when politics trumped law on a grand scale, and it's never been the same since.

Boston University's Gary Lawson put the upshot well in the 1994 Harvard Law Review: "The post-New Deal administrative state is unconstitutional, and its validation by the legal system amounts to nothing less than a bloodless constitutional revolution." But take it from someone who was there, Rexford Tugwell, one of the principal architects of the New Deal: "To the extent that these [New Deal policies] developed, they were tortured interpretations of a document intended to prevent them."

The New Dealers knew exactly what they were doing to the Constitution. Janice Rogers Brown understands that, too. We're fortunate to have so radical a nominee before us.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: cato; janicerogersbrown; judicialnominees; news
Interesting reading
1 posted on 09/22/2005 7:35:47 PM PDT by Embraer2004
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To: Embraer2004

I just don't see Olympia Snowe, Arlen Specter, Lincoln Chafee, Susan Collins, John Warner, or John McCain voting for her.

We can't forget that the RINOs hold the ultimate power, here.


2 posted on 09/22/2005 7:39:07 PM PDT by nj26
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To: Embraer2004
Boston University's Gary Lawson put the upshot well in the 1994 Harvard Law Review: "The post-New Deal administrative state is unconstitutional, and its validation by the legal system amounts to nothing less than a bloodless constitutional revolution."

I agree. Therefor I am out of the mainstream, and proud of it.

3 posted on 09/22/2005 7:39:17 PM PDT by NeoCaveman (I support Mike Pence and Operation Offset)
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To: Embraer2004

Yet Judicature's study said she was less conservative than the other potential nominees.

Click the PDF file, it's #2 on this google search

http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&ie=UTF-8&rls=RNWE,RNWE:2005-09,RNWE:en&q=Judicature+bruce+carroll+supreme+court


4 posted on 09/22/2005 7:41:16 PM PDT by NeoCaveman (I support Mike Pence and Operation Offset)
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To: Embraer2004

It's pity she won't be nominated. I'd make book on that. And no, I don't have info.


5 posted on 09/22/2005 7:41:26 PM PDT by Cyber Liberty (© 2005, Ravin' Lunatic since 4/98)
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To: dubyaismypresident

Olympia Snowe, Arlen Specter, Lincoln Chafee, Susan Collins, John Warner, or John McCain.

Not voting for her: Snowe, Chafee, Collins...but I would expect John Warner and John McCain to vote for her (McCain would go kicking and screaming, but will go for JRB. At any case, we only need 50 votes..doesn't Cheney cast the deciding vote?


6 posted on 09/22/2005 7:43:20 PM PDT by Embraer2004
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To: Cyber Liberty

She is the right choice, Bush has to understand that and show some guts in this nomination. Maybe he's heading that way and Arlen knows it, that is why old Specter is having palpitations dreading the upcoming Battle Royal with Leahy and Company.


7 posted on 09/22/2005 7:45:02 PM PDT by Embraer2004
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To: Embraer2004
Oddly enough of the filibustered 3, she got the most votes with 56. Pryor and Owen got less, with Pryor getting the least.

doesn't Cheney cast the deciding vote?

Yes he does on all Senate ties, including the nuclear option.

8 posted on 09/22/2005 7:45:47 PM PDT by NeoCaveman (I support Mike Pence and Operation Offset)
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To: dubyaismypresident

Good!!!!!!! So, like Todd Beamer (RIP) said: "Let's Roll". Let's get Janice Rogers Brown nominated and fasten your seatbelts!


9 posted on 09/22/2005 7:48:22 PM PDT by Embraer2004
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To: Embraer2004

In support of Janice Rogers Brown



Posted: October 27, 2003
1:00 a.m. Eastern


© 2003 WorldNetDaily.com


I don't usually get too excited about judicial nominations by the Bush administration.

But, even a broken clock is right twice a day.

Occasionally, even the Bush administration gets one right.

And that's what has happened with the nomination for a seat on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.

The nominee's name is Janice Rogers Brown.

Repeat that name over and over to yourself. Make sure you know it and you make it known to others. You will want to write it in letters to the editor. You will want to express opinions about her to your senators. You will need to make noise if this important nominee is to have a chance at confirmation.

Janice Rogers Brown is the 54-year-old daughter of an Alabama sharecropper who became a member of the California Supreme Court.

Is she qualified for the job on the federal bench? If anything, she is overqualified. Janice Rogers Brown should be sitting on the U.S. Supreme Court right now.

However, there are a few obstacles blocking her path to the federal bench. There are a few obstructionists in her way. Just like those policemen standing in the schoolhouse doors so many years ago, there are a few racists who will do almost anything to prevent this heroine from assuming her position.

In this case, the racists are Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois and Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts.

They say Brown is just too conservative for the federal bench. What they really mean is no conservative black women allowed.

These are the biggest hypocrites in the world.

The Democrats love to tell you how compassionate they are and how much they support blacks and Hispanics and women. Yet, when a black woman is nominated to the U.S. Court of Appeals, Feinstein, Durbin, Kennedy and the entire Senate Democratic caucus line up in opposition.

How does one explain that?

They say it's Brown's opinions.

Do you want to hear one of the really offensive things Brown said in a speech three years ago? This was cited as prime evidence against her in a hearing last week.

"Where government moves in, community retreats, civil society disintegrates, and our ability to control our destiny atrophies," she told the Federalist Society at the University of Chicago Law School. "The result is: families under siege, war in the streets, unapologetic expropriation of property, the precipitous decline of the rule of law, the rapid rise of corruption, the loss of civility and the triumph of deceit."

Feinstein confronted her by asking: "Do you really believe that?"

"I was referring to the unintended consequences of government," explained Brown.

Feinstein called her an anti-government extremist for those remarks.

I say she should be given a medal for those remarks. I've finally found a hero in California government. One who received 76 percent approval in her last test with voters statewide.

It's time to mobilize to get Brown confirmed. It's time to use her nomination as a way to embarrass every Democrat who dares oppose her.

Right now they plan to filibuster her nomination on the floor of the Senate.

How appropriate that racist Democrats will be demonstrating their plantation mentality for the whole nation to witness – attempting to block the daughter of an Alabama sharecropper from being confirmed for a federal judgeship.

Keep your eye on this one. Remember the name – Janice Rogers Brown. And spread the word.

http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=35277


10 posted on 09/22/2005 8:07:10 PM PDT by Embraer2004
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To: Embraer2004

"The Democrats worst nightmare: a principled, strongly conservative black American woman, who not only may get to sit on the D.C. Court of Appeals, one of the most powerful appeals courts in the nation. But possibly the U.S. Supreme Court. "

She has been talked about for that as well. Meanwhile, though Justice Rogers Brown sits and waits, waiting for that up-or-down vote that may or may not happen.

Rogers Brown’s mom summed it up, saying,” I figure if it's God's will, it'll happen and if it's not, then it won't. And however it goes, we'll live with it. We will have to live with it."

http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/news/050520a.asp


11 posted on 09/22/2005 8:42:16 PM PDT by Embraer2004
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