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The Legacy of Judicial Activism
By Stephen Pomper, Washington Monthly
Posted on December 16, 2004, Printed on February 8, 2005
http://www.alternet.org/story/20768/

Now, with the ailing William Rehnquist entering his 18th year as chief justice 
of the U.S. Supreme Court, liberals find themselves facing an unexpected truth 
about his legacy: It hasn't been that bad.

To the surprise of the legal left, the Rehnquist Court has refused to overturn 
Roe v. Wade and has broken new ground in protecting the civil rights of 
homosexuals. It has endorsed some forms of affirmative action. In last 
Spring's highly charged enemy detainee cases, it refused to write the 
executive branch a blank check for wartime detention powers. And even in its 
hypertechnical (and therefore less controversial) federalism cases, which 
concern the powers of Congress over the states, the Court has feasted less 
aggressively on Congress' legislative authority than might have been 
anticipated, contenting itself to snack on bits and pieces. In retrospect, 
liberal anxieties about how far this Court would go in implementing the Reagan 
revolution are looking somewhat misplaced if not, on occasion, hysterical.

So how did the Court arrive at such a sane and centrist position? In The Most 
Activist Supreme Court in History (University of Chicago Press, 2004), 
political scientist Thomas Keck gives credit to a practice that has long been 
the rhetorical whipping boy of the legal right: judicial activism. And, in 
particular, he credits the bipartisan activism practiced by the Court's 
powerful swing justice, Sandra Day O'Connor. To find Keck's analysis useful, 
you don't have to accept his conclusion that the Rehnquist Court is in fact 
the most activist Court in history. You do, however, have to accept some of 
his premises about what makes for an "activist" Court. Keck sees Supreme Court 
activism as having three separate prongs, linked by a fundamental disdain for 
Congress. The first is a tendency to invalidate statutes in impressive 
numbers, disregarding Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes's admonition that 
nonelected judges should give great deference to democratically elected 
legislatures. The second is the extent to which the Court asserts its 
supremacy by declaring that it alone may interpret the Constitution . even 
where the Constitution appears to give other branches of government the right 
to share this authority. And the third indicator, argues Keck, is the 
willingness to wander into so-called "political thickets" . messy cases with 
no clear right answer and big-time political implications.

Does Keck fully make the case that the Rehnquist Court (which invalidated a 
record 33 federal statutes on constitutional grounds in eight years, made 
soaring pronouncements about the supremacy of its constitutional views over 
Congress,' and wandered into the mother of all political thickets in Bush v. 
Gore) is more activist than the Warren Court (which invalidated far more state 
and local laws, handed down the catalytic Brown v. Board of Education 
decision, and steered somewhat irresponsibly toward a constitutional guarantee 
of economic equality)? Not really, but it doesn't matter. Even if you think 
the Warren Court should win top activist billing for the breadth and impact of 
its decisions, the Rehnquist Court's voluminous, if tempered, record gives 
Keck more than enough material to chew on.

It also raises the question: How can conservatives possibly square the 
Rehnquist Court's activist legacy with their own anti-activist rhetoric? Well, 
it turns out there's a trick: There are actually two different kinds of 
activism . conservative and liberal . and conservatives don't count decisions 
within their own tradition as, well, activism. In teasing this out, Keck 
explains that the two activist traditions have very different objectives. 
Conservative activists want to achieve limited government . particularly at 
the federal level . and tend to get there by arguing that Congress is 
interfering with economic or states' rights. By contrast, liberal activists 
want to protect the core freedoms that allow vulnerable minorities to 
participate in the political process. They give extra scrutiny to laws that 
affect those minorities, and invalidate those that they judge to put 
politically tinged freedoms at risk. The heyday of conservative activism was 
the early New Deal era, when the Court struck down one after another of FDR's 
legislative initiatives; Roosevelt put an end to that by threatening to pack 
the Court. The heyday of liberal activism was the Warren Court era of the '50s 
and '60s and the early Burger Court period of the '70s, which has left a 
legacy (including Roe v. Wade) that rankles conservatives to this day.

As to how conservatives have developed a guilt-free approach to their own 
brand of activism, the key to understanding this is the doctrine of 
originalism. The idea behind originalism is that the Court can tear a mighty 
swathe through acts of Congress without really engaging in activism if it is 
channeling the original intent of the Framers. This sounds like a wonderfully 
hoary and straight-shooting concept but Keck shows that it's something short 
of that. In fact, the seeds of modern orginalism were planted by Justice Black 
in the 1940s for liberal activist purposes; he was trying to develop a basis 
for expanding the Court's enforcement of the Bill of Rights against state 
governments. Black sparred with Felix Frankfurter (a champion of judicial 
restraint) in an effort to make originalism respectable, but this goal was not 
fully achieved . at least during Black's tenure. It did not help Black's case 
that his historical work concerning the incorporation of the Bill of Rights 
against the states was shot full of holes in the academic press. This helped 
support the critical impression that originalism is a highly corruptible 
doctrine prone to what constitutional scholar Alfred H. Kelly has referred to 
as "law office history" . that is, reverse-engineered speculation about the 
past generated by bright young law clerks who know what their bosses want to 
hear. You can argue the merits and demerits of originalism until you are blue 
in the face, but on the question of whether originalism somehow transforms 
conservative activism into something else, Keck is very persuasive: The 
doctrine does not have a privileged claim on interpreting the Constitution, 
and when the Court invalidates a congressional statute it is in activist mode 
. even if the justices are certain that the Framers themselves (whether 
through the Federalist Papers or by means of Vulcan mindmeld) are commanding 
them to throw Congress' work on the compost pile.

So where do the two activist traditions leave us with respect to the Rehnquist 
Court? Not, it turns out, where the left-leaning bar once feared. Liberals 
feared that the hardcore conservative activists on the court (Scalia, Thomas, 
and Rehnquist) would lead the moderate center (O'Connor and Kennedy) into a 
furious bloodletting against the hallmark legislation of the New Deal and 
Civil Rights eras, as well as against seminal Warren Court and post-Warren 
Court decisions (like Roe v. Wade), all in the name of limited government and 
originalism. It hasn't happened. Instead, as Keck points out, the moderates, 
and particularly O'Connor, have set the tone by zigzagging between liberal 
activist decisions that prop up (and, in the case of gay rights, expand) the 
minority-oriented protections of the Warren Court and conservative activist 
decisions that trim back the authority of Congress over state governments in a 
hodgepodge of areas ranging from patent enforcement to age discrimination. In 
staking out this terrain, Justice O'Connor has frequently sought to limit the 
sweep of her opinions, preserving for the Court the option to rethink itself 
when faced with slightly different facts.

Keck's book is not an easy read . it could use a bit more narrative oomph to 
propel the reader through 300 pages of legal analysis . but it does an 
excellent job of giving Justice O'Connor her due. In particular, Keck 
convincingly defends O'Connor against the criticism (which has come from both 
the left and the right) that her bipartisan activism and her one-off opinions 
have created an ad hoc jurisprudence that gives too little guidance about 
where the law has crystallized, and too little direction about where it is 
headed. While Keck acknowledges that this approach has its imperfections, he 
also makes clear that these may be a small price to pay for what O'Connor has 
achieved. Although the Rehnquist Court may be among the most activist in 
history, its tendencies have been guided by O'Connor's fairly delicate and 
evenhanded scalpel. Given the powerful tradition of conservative activism that 
Keck describes, the alternative might well have been . and could well still be 
. something more like a chainsaw.


© 2005 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/20768/



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