March
8, 2005
High Noon For Judges - Part I
By Thomas
Sowell
It is painfully
ironic that we should be promoting the spread of democracy abroad
when democracy is shrinking at home. Over the years, the outcomes
of our elections have meant less and less, as judges have taken
more and more decisions out of the hands of elected officials.
Judges have
imposed their own notions on everything from school administration
to gay marriage, and have ordered both state and federal agencies
to spend billions of dollars to carry out policies favored by
the judges or have even ordered a state legislature to raise taxes.
This naked
exercise of judicial power has been covered by the fig leaf of
pretense to be "interpreting" laws and the Constitution
by stretching and twisting words beyond recognition.
The merits
of the particular policies or expenditures is not the issue. The
real issue is much bigger: Are the people to have the right to
elect their own representatives to decide issues or are unelected
judges to take over an ever-increasing share of the power to rule?
This has
happened gradually but steadily. Just as the late Senator Daniel
Patrick Moynihan referred to our growing acceptance of immoral
behavior as "defining deviancy downward," so we have
come to accept the steady erosion of democratic government as
judges have defined democracy downward.
While people
in various countries in the Middle East are beginning to stir
as they see democracy start to take root in Iraq, our own political
system is moving steadily in the opposite direction, toward rule
by unelected judicial ayatollahs, acting like the ayatollahs in
Iran.
That is what
makes the impending Senate battle over judicial nominees something
much bigger than a current political squabble or a clash of Senatorial
egos.
One way to
stop the continuing erosion of the American people's right to
govern themselves would be to appoint judges who follow the great
Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes' doctrine that his
job was to see that the game is played by the rules, "whether
I like them or not."
Judges with
that philosophy are anathema to liberal Democrats in the Senate
today. They know that the only way many liberal policies can become
law is by having them imposed by judges, because voters have increasingly
rejected such policies and the candidates who espouse them.
The Senate's
Constitutional right and duty to "advise and consent"
on the President's judicial nominees is being denied by a minority
of Democratic Senators who refuse to let these nominees be voted
on. Since Republicans have a majority in the Senate, they have
the power to change Senate rules, so that a minority of Senators
can no longer prevent the full Senate from voting on judicial
nominees.
Such a rule
change is referred to as "the nuclear option," since
it would be a major change that could provoke major retaliation
by the Democrats, both in obstructing current legislation and
in the future using that same rule to ride roughshod over Republicans
whenever the Democrats gain control of the Senate.
An aging
Supreme Court means that there is now a perhaps once-in-a-lifetime
opportunity to stop the erosion of democratic self-government
by putting advocates of judicial restraint, rather than judicial
activism, on the federal courts, including the Supreme Court.
Senate Democrats
understand how high the stakes are. But do the Republicans? President
Bush clearly does but Republican Senator Arlen Specter, chairman
of the Senate Judiciary Committee, either doesn't know or doesn't
care about the larger Constitutional issues. He is siding with
the Democrats in the name of compromise.
Senator William
Frist, the Republican majority leader, says he has the votes to
change Senate rules to prevent a minority from denying the full
Senate the right to vote on judicial nominees. Senator Frist also
had the votes to prevent Senator Specter from becoming chairman
of the Senate Judiciary Committee but he didn't do it. He chose
to avoid a fight.
That is not
a hopeful sign for what to expect when high noon comes on the
President's judicial nominees.
Copyright
2005 Creators Syndicate
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