Posted on 08/29/2005 4:25:58 AM PDT by rdb3
A couple of weeks ago, I wrote in these pages that Senator Chuck Schumer broke his own record for ignorance of the judicial system following President Bushs announcement of John Roberts nomination to the Supreme Court. In insisting that Roberts articulate positions on current legal issues confronting the Court, Schumer proved that he does not understand Separation of Powers, and thus the Constitutions mandated role for a judge in the American system of government, believing instead that the judiciary is simply another political branch. I observed that Roberts is a nominee to a judgeship, where his task is not to legislate (Article I of the Constitution), but rather to serve under Article III: The judicial power of the United States, shall be vested in one supreme Court . . . . That judicial power is the power to interpret and apply the Constitution and laws promulgated not by judges, but by legislatorsprovided, however, that the latter do their job right.
Which brings us to Senate Judiciary Committee Chairperson, Republican Arlen Specter. He has apparently informed Judge Roberts to expect tough questions about the Courts judicial activism and alleged lack of respect for Congress. Proving that he does not understand Federalism, Specter cited as an example of judicial activism the case of United States v. Morrisona 5-4 Supreme Court decision pitting a Rehnquist, OConnor, Scalia, Kennedy, and Thomas majority against a Stevens, Souter, Ginsburg, and Breyer minority.
Article I of the Constitution provides that The Congress shall have the Power . . . To regulate Commerce . . . among the several States . . . . Supreme Court decisions have ruled that the exercise of this delegated power requires more than a nominalsome cases say substantialconnection between the subject of the legislation and commerce that is interstate. Thus, it would [probably] be unconstitutional for Congress to pass a law prohibiting barbershops from giving shaves.
Purportedly pursuant to that power, Congress passed the Violence Against Women Act, which provided a federal civil damages remedy for the victims of gender-motivated violence. After Christy Brzonkala was viciously raped by three fellow students at Virginia Polytechnic Institute, she sued. The question for the Supreme Court was not whether such uncivilized behavior should be punishable, but whether the federal government possessed the power to punish itwhether, in other words, Congress had the constitutional authority to enact under the Commerce Clause the Violence Against Women Act.
If Specter had read Rehnquists opinion, the Chairperson would have seen that the Chief Justice began by expressly recognizing that [d]ue respect for the decisions of a coordinate branch of Government demands that we invalidate a congressional enactment only upon a plain showing that Congress has exceeded its constitutional bounds. Thus, there is a presumption of constitutionality.
Next, Rehnquist acknowledged that in the years since [1937] Congress has had considerably greater latitude in regulating conduct and transactions under the Commerce Clause than our previous case law permitted. (Presumably, the judicial activism of the post-New Deal Courts that approved of engorged Congressional power was not something Specter was complaining about).
In sum, the Court treads gently on Congressional enactments, which are presumed to be constitutional. Over the past sixty years, the power of Congress had been allowed to grow exponentially.
However, applying Supreme Court precedents and their tests for what constitutes interstate and commerce, Rehnquists Morrison majority concluded that Gender-motivated crimes of violence are not, in any sense of the phrase, economic activity. * * * We accordingly reject the argument that Congress may regulate noneconomic, violent criminal conduct . . . . The Constitution requires a distinction between what is truly national and what is truly local. * * * In recognizing this fact we preserve one of the few principles that has been consistent since the Clause was adopted.
In echoing the judicial activism charges against the Court made by his democrat colleagues, Specter, like them, reveals himself to be a hypocrite and a fool. A hypocrite, because he embraces the gold standard judicial activism of the Warren Courtwhich largely amended the Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Amendments and invented the right of privacy that later, in Roe v. Wade, wiped out fifty state laws and allowed for the murder of millions of the unborn. Thats judicial activism! He is a fool (someone regarded as lacking good sense or judgment) because, despite decades of Supreme Court obeisance to Congressional projections of legislative power using the Commerce Clause as a justification (e.g., the public accommodations provision of the Johnson-era Civil Rights Act), all the Court did in Morrison was prevent Congress from enacting what was, in reality, only local-type legislation.
And lest Specter ask Judge Roberts to defend, as well, an alleged callousness by Rehnquist and his majority colleagues about what befell Miss Brzonkala, the Chairperson should read the last two sentences of their opinion:
If the allegations [of her complaint] are true, no civilized system of Justice could fail to provide her a remedy for the conduct of [defendant] Morrison. But under our federal system that remedy must be provided by the Commonwealth of Virginia, and not by the United States [i.e., the federal government].
That, Mr. Chairman of the Judiciary Committee of the United States Senate, is but another way of saying that one of the three structural pillars of American constitutionalismalong with Separation of Powers and Judicial Reviewis Federalism: a concept too important to be sacrificed in the name of politically correct Congressional overreaching.
mark
Spector is one strange bird.
To liberals judicial activism means applying the Constitution. Liberals love to redefine terms that are effective against them. Liberals are never honest about what they really stand for.
Yeah, except for consistently getting re-elected, having this president plus Santorum (who may not be re-elected) campaign for him, and being appointed Chairman of the Judiciary committee, he's a fool.
I suspect that there are many more like him roosting on the Hill and a few in the SCOTUS as well. (Souter for one)
"Chairperson".
Gaaaagg.
That's being nice about it.

If you REALLY look at the congressional record.. Not only does Spector not understand the Constitution.. Neither does the majority of the House or Senate.
But Spector is sort of stange.. I will never deny that.
Of course not...he's an expert on the laws of Scotland.
Thanks for raising the kind of questions the Senate should really be concerned with. Namely, how Judge Roberts views the Constitution and the structure of government; not how he will vote on their pet Liberal issues.
I always thought that he was the guy that the X-files writers used to create the "smoking man" character. Specter has been on every Congressional Commission that has any "conspiracy" aspect to it, like the Warren Commission, Waco, Ruby Ridge, investigations of Ron Brown's death, 9-11, etc. Though he's a Republican, he doesn't follow his party. There's just something creepy about him.
Jinx!
Don't like haggis a bit,
you must acquit!
I kinda like it... lest anyone confuse him with a chairman.
Back when he was Prosecutor in Philadelphia, he was a democrat. By reputation at that time, he would prosecute his own mother.
ping
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