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Our Political Federal Courts
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
The
nomination of White House lawyer Harriet Miers to the Supreme Court
has raised questions about her qualifications and political ideology.
Conservatives and liberals alike fear that Ms. Miers will not represent
their views, and will rule on issues in ways that harm our nation.
But clearly we are not asking the right questions about Supreme
Court nominees. The issue is not how candidates intend to wield
judicial power, but rather whether they understand that the Constitution
imposes limits on that power in the first place. We are guilty of
permitting our federal courts to become politicized, when the proper
role of those courts is to protect us from the very abuses that
arise from politics.
Instead
of viewing federal judicial nominees as liberals or conservatives,
we ought to be viewing them as activists or originalists. Judicial
activism is a popular and often misused term in politics today,
but if we define it properly we can better understand the problem
with our courts. Judicial activism is the practice of judges legislating
from the bench, by interpreting law in a manner that creates an
outcome to fit their political views. But judicial activism is more
than this. Activist federal judges not only craft laws, they also
ignore the laws in place particularly the enumerated powers listed
in Article I of the Constitution and underscored by the 9th and
10th amendments. By ignoring the strict constitutional limits placed
on the federal government and bulldozing states rights, federal
judges opened the door to the growth of wildly extra-constitutional
government in the 20th century. Activist courts enable activist
government.
The
bitterness and controversy that often surround the nomination of
Supreme Court justices in recent decades makes perfect sense when
we consider the lawmaking and lawbreaking power that activist federal
courts possess. Federal courts in general, and the Supreme Court
in particular, have long since ceased serving as referees who guard
against government overreaching. Instead they have become unelected,
unaccountable purveyors of social policy for the entire nation.
Bitter partisan fights over Supreme Court nominees are inevitable
simply because so much is at stake.
How
did this come to pass? Unfortunately, our nation has embraced the
flawed notion that only scholars, judges, or attorneys are qualified
to understand and interpret the Constitution. We have come to accept
that constitutional law must be revealed to us from on high by our
black-robed masters. Yet nothing could be further from the ideal
of constitutional jurisprudence envisioned by our founders. The
Constitution is written in plain, forthright text, and there is
nothing mystical about it. It simply establishes a system of shared,
limited power between the three branches of the federal government,
while reserving most government power to the states themselves.
It
seems that schoolchildren once knew far more about the Constitution
than many adults do today. Yet we cannot hold intelligent opinions
about Supreme Court nominees unless we understand this basic constitutional
framework. It is therefore incumbent upon every American to read
the text of the Constitution, study the history of its drafting
and ratification, and consider whether federal judicial nominees
will properly abide by their originally intended roles.
The
Constitution above all is a document that limits the power of the
federal government. The fundamental point that has been lost in
our national discourse is this: the Constitution prohibits the federal
government, including the federal judiciary, from doing all kind
of things. Until we have federal judges who understand this, it
matters little what political stripes or experience they bring to
the bench. The Constitution does not empower government and grant
rights, it restricts government in order to safeguard preexisting
rights. When federal courts disregard this principle, acting as
legislatures or failing to enforce constitutional limitations, we
get the worst kind of unaccountable government.
October
11, 2005
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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