Get FREE NRO Newsletters

 

March 5 Issue  |  Subscribe  |  Renew


New on NRO . . .
Close
Obamacare and the Jurisprudence of Clarence Thomas
Liberals acknowledge the threat he represents.

By Michael Barone


Archive Latest RSS Send

In the glossy pages of The New Yorker, in graceful prose and with good reporting, the dreams and nightmares of the admirers of Barack Obama and his policies lie exposed.

The dreams include Ryan Lizza’s report last April in which he quoted an Obama adviser as saying the president’s policy on Libya was “leading from behind.” This week, as Tripoli seemed about to fall, the magazine’s editor, David Remnick, hailed Obama’s “calculated modesty.”

The nightmare appears in last week’s issue, in Jeffrey Toobin’s lengthy article on Supreme Court jurisprudence, titled “Partners” and subtitled “Will Clarence and Virginia Thomas succeed in killing Obama’s health-care plan?”

It’s possible to read Toobin’s article as a partisan hit job, echoing the demands of 74 Democratic congressmen that Justice Clarence Thomas recuse himself from sitting on a case challenging the constitutionality of Obamacare because of his wife’s involvement in the Tea Party movement.

Never mind that this is a standard neither Toobin nor the Democrats apply to other public officials with spouses active in public affairs — or that they’re not asking justice Elena Kagan to recuse herself because of her work in the Justice Department on the issue.

The bulk of the article is worthy of attention because Toobin, despite his obvious distaste for Justice Thomas’s views, takes him seriously as a judicial thinker and pathfinder.

“In several of the most important areas of constitutional law, Thomas has emerged as an intellectual leader of the Supreme Court,” Toobin writes. “Rarely has a Supreme Court Justice enjoyed such broad or significant vindication.”

Toobin is on particularly strong ground when he discusses the Second Amendment’s right to keep and bear arms. For years, it was considered a dead letter in sophisticated legal circles, protecting only the right to bear arms as a member of the National Guard.

But in 1997, Thomas wrote a concurring opinion in a case invalidating one provision in a 1993 gun-control law. Thomas agreed with the emerging legal scholarship — some of it the product of liberal law professors, such as Sanford Levinson — and argued that the Second Amendment was intended to protect a personal right to own guns.

Toobin notes that Thomas’s concurrence was cited in a 1999 federal appeals court opinion and helped inspire the legal challenge to Washington, D.C.’s, effective ban on handgun possession. In June 2008, the Supreme Court overturned that law as a violation of the Second Amendment, with Justice Antonin Scalia’s opinion closely following Thomas’s reasoning.

Thomas’s leadership on the Second Amendment reflects his frequent forays into history. Many of his opinions track the development of the law from the 18th or even the 17th century, and in many such cases, all or almost all his colleagues concur.

In addition, as Toobin accurately reports, Thomas is the strongest “originalist” on the court, the justice who most consistently seeks to apply the provisions of the Constitution as they originally were understood.

This has led him to take positions, sometimes in lonely dissent, that most New Yorker readers abhor. The 18th-century understanding of what constituted the “cruel and unusual punishments” banned by the Eighth Amendment is not widely shared these days on the Upper East Side of Manhattan.

And Thomas’s interpretation that the three post–Civil War amendments ban all racial quotas and preferences is anathema to the university administrators and corporate apparatchiks who employ them every day.

They might be embarrassed, however, if they actually read the parts of his opinions in which, with searing prose, he draws on his own experiences growing up in segregated Georgia and on his considerable knowledge of the history of oppression of black Americans.

And he brings up the embarrassing fact that the first gun-control laws and limits on corporate campaign contributions were advanced by those who sought to deny rights to blacks.

Toobin’s article represents the end of the fashionable Left’s attempt to portray Thomas as an intellectual lightweight. He admits that Thomas’s silence on the bench, while colleagues pepper lawyers with questions, doesn’t mean he’s stupid.

Instead, he paints Thomas as a brilliant Svengali, ready to disregard precedent and — the president’s nightmare — overturn Obamacare.

Congress has never before passed, and the court has never upheld, a law requiring individuals to buy a commercial product, as Obamacare does. On this, the Obama Democrats, not Clarence Thomas or judges following his lead, are the ones sweeping aside precedent.

Michael Barone, senior political analyst for the Washington Examiner, is a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a Fox News Channel contributor and a co-author of The Almanac of American Politics. © 2011 the Washington Examiner

You Might Also Like...

Nordlinger: One Mo’ Time

Symposium: The Mesa Debate

Trinko: Santorum in Arizona



COMMENTS   40

EXPAND  

   09/01/11 05:24

I don't think the Justice Thomas is an intellectual lightweight. I do think his willingness to disregard previous Supreme Court precedent so lightly when he disagrees is a problem for the stability of law.

When the Supreme Court is full of politicians (I mean justices) who interpret the Constitution according to their preferred methods (none of which are particularly required by the text of the Constitution) while disregarding any precedent that does not follow their preferred methodology, we will have lost the rule of law.

I think Justice Thomas might, quite unintentionally, be a threat to the rule of law itself.

I also do not think it is too much to ask the wife or husband of a Supreme Court justice to take a step back from politics either. It is not as if the position of Supreme Court justice were an ordinary job rather than an extraordinary position.

Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse
1bottlerocket
   09/01/11 09:03

"I don't think..."

Those words say it all.

Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse
   09/01/11 09:14

You just hate it that Thomas doesn't get on his knees and worship stare decisis. For over 200 years, men and women have taken an oath to faithfully defend/interpret the Constitution and then promptly violated that oath. Bravo Justice Thomas!

Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse
   09/01/11 09:30

So CarolinaJimbo,

Since you are so knowledgeable about the Constitution, perhaps you can direct me to the part of the Constitution where it instructs justices on how to properly interpret it.

That you like the results that Justice Thomas is inclined to deliver is not a reason to applaud his rejection of stare decisis.

What goes up, will come down. The one precedent that is likely to be followed when the court ends up politicized like you wish is the rejection of stare decisis by EVERYONE. Which means that future Supreme Courts will not be inclined to follow the great wisdom of Justice Thomas anymore than he saw fit to follow his predecessors.

I also would suggest to you that the politicization of the Supreme Court that you are hoping for is likely to result, at some point, in jurisdiction stripping by Congress. After all, if law is politics, then politicians in Congress are probably going to want to cut down on the influence of the unelected "Super Congress" that you are implicitly proposing (i.e. the Supreme Court which does adhere to the principle of stare decisis, but just decides to do whatever it feels like according to whatever methodology happens to be "in" at the moment).

Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse
   09/01/11 10:06

Ah yes, a liberal court is by definition, not political. But the instant the court turns away from liberalism it becomes political and a danger to the republic.

Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse
   09/01/11 10:05

You don't understand. Stare decisis only applies to liberal precedent.

Applying it to conservative precedents threatens the rule of law, and perhaps even the existence of the universe itself.

Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse
   09/01/11 09:42

Do you mean stare decisis before Wickard v. Filburn or after? Returning to the Constitution's original meaning and doing away with over 100+ years of judicial amendment of the Constitution in the guise of "interpretation" is a good thing. Courts overrule their own decisions all the time.

Progressives are only too happy to see the Court overrule decisions to advance their agenda and are very selective when it comes to the application of stare decisis.

Let those who want a "living constitution" amend it as is set out in Article V not through the back door on one vote of a swing justice.

Justice Thomas is a true giant in restoring the rule of law and the Constitution.

Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse
   09/01/11 11:00

What you apparently fail to comprehend is that disregard of stare decisis is sure to be mutual.

Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse
   09/01/11 11:53

But isn't that the left's biggest fear? That conservative jstices wil take their route in ignoring past decisions? (Lawrence being the most recent example of ignoring previous rulings.)

But hey, if you're for precident being binding, you must support Dred Scott, Plesey v Ferguson and Komitsu.

Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse
   09/01/11 14:09

The case is Korematsu, not Komitsu.

I am not saying old cases should never be overturned. But it used to be kind of a big deal when previous decisions were overturned. Nowadays, not so much.

As a result, we have lost stability in the law. The interpretation of the Constitution is likely to shift dramatically as the ideological makeup of the Supreme Court shifts.

One might argue this is a good thing, although it undermines legal certainty and stability.

Maybe conservatives will trade stability for other goals, if they think they can get something that they call one form of originalism or another 50% (more or less) of the time. It doesn't make for a very stable society, though.

I have mixed feelings myself. After all, I am not a big fan of the rule of the dead hand.

Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse
 Duke
   09/01/11 14:54

Thomas more than any other Justice will discard precedent when he is convinced it lies beyond original meaning. Scalia leaves a thumb on the scale of settled law for stability's sake. But much evil has been done in the name of settled law which rests on sand so I'm in Thomas' camp of a judiciary more constrained by actual legislation.
Rule by the dead hand is IMHO inapposite. There is a path to amend the Constitution. It is intentionally difficult. Judges 'interpreting' against plain text meaning is intentional usurpation of the legislative function.

Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse
f1b0nacc1_112358
   09/01/11 12:09

No, you are evading the issue, to wit: What constitutes settled law? If overturning precedent (for purposes of our discussion, lets use Brown) is fine in some cases, you cannot look down your nose on it at other, less convenient times.

The point of this article is that Thomas is not acting from pique or from whimsy, but rather from a consistent set of principles which has been (sucessfully) communicating to his colleagues. This is, if anything, the model of what a jurist should be, and how a court should work.

It seems that those on the left wish to disregard precedent when it suits them, then 'lock in' their decisions by defending precedent. The notion of settled law is thus used by the left as a tactic, not a principle...surely they dont' respect it when it doesn't suit their ideological preferences. This is not a matter of who started it (a childish reference on your part), but ultimately a question of where law comes from. As an originalist, Thomas argues that law derives from the documents, not the interpetations of whatever vintage. This disempowers the 'right-thinking' folks on the left, who depend upon setting themsleves up as the sole interpeters of what law is, leaving the courts (and for that matter the rest of the government) the sterile job of implementing their ideological preferences.

When law becomes unmoored from the original sources, the rule of law is threatened. Attempting to argue that returning law to those original anchors (and sheilding it from the whims of those who would substitute their own preferences for the clear intent of the framers) represents a rejection of the rule of law is bizarre at best.

As for the comment regarding Ginny Thomas, why is it that a spouse who is overtly engaged in political activity (as Ginny clearly is) is unacceptable, but one who is as deeply committed, but does so covertly (Hillary Clinton, for instance, or for that matter Michelle Obama) is laudable? Once again, I see this as a question of whose ox is being gored (Gored?) more than any consistent principle at work. I have no problem with a politically engaged spouse...I concede the problem, but acknowlege the fact that all of our leaders (in any branch) are influenced by those around them, and their opinions and judgements reflect this. How do you proposed we 'purify' those thoughts?

In short, your comments reek of double standards, special pleading, and condescention. A perfect liberal

Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse
   09/01/11 10:03

I might have more respect for people criticizing the disregard previous precedent if I had heard one, just one criticize Lawrence on those grounds. If the explanation is "Bowers v. Hardwick was too young to be established" why was it so import that Casey respect Roe which was of similar vintage when Casey came to the court. Also, if the "too young" explanation suffices how is it that Brown and Gideon (which much older precedent) were not reckless? If they were too old why was it okay for Williamson v. Lee Optical of Oklahoma to overturn Lochner.

It seems when people claim the importance of precedence it's only for rulings they like. If Thomas, by adopting the rule the left has so long endorsed, is a threat to the rule of law why are the proponents of Lawrence who showed us the way?

Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse
   09/01/11 11:07

You aren't exactly denying the issue.

"The liberals started it!" isn't exactly a solution to the dilemma.

Of course, the fact that there are no easy solutions doesn't elude me either. So, I will try to cut you some slack on your "the liberals started it" line.

Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse
   09/01/11 11:56

This statement is humourous in the light of the previous post:
"What you apparently fail to comprehend is that disregard of stare decisis is sure to be mutual."

So if the left started it it's fine to let them continue. If the right starts firing back, then it's ok that the left started it because it's sure to be mutual...

Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse
   09/01/11 13:59

The norm in the Warren Court era was to respect stare decisis.

There is no denying some level of, shall we say, "creativity," in the jurisprudence of the Warren Court. But it did not usually overturn precedent.

Here is the thing about stare decisis. Everyone agrees it can't trump everything else. Otherwise "separate but equal" would still be the law of the land. But it should be discarded only sparingly. Justice Thomas, based on a desire to arrive at "perfect" interpretations of the Constitution which have never, will never, and cannot ever be achieved, disregards stare decisis excessively.

It is a judgment call. There is no denying that. But once you start to ignore stare decisis "too much" and pay very little deference to previous decisions that would otherwise bind your discretion and start doing whatever you want, you have become more of a politician than a judge. I think Justice Thomas has crossed that line.

Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse
   09/01/11 10:11

Precedent is a subtle way saying submission. And precedent only swings one way: In liberals' favor. I do believe that the right to bear arms has been upheld as precedent, yet liberals are continuing to undermine it with "gun control" laws. Also, the minute campaign finance was partially declared unconstitutional, liberals immediately panned it and the Senate tried to pass legislation to get around it.

Don't come in here talking about precedent. You come in with garbled messages about justices interpreting the Constitution however they see fit; then you must be itching for them to overturn Brown v. Board, Roe v. Wade, Griswold v. Connecticut, and the precedent that expanded the Congress' regulatory power under a loose definition of the Commerce Clause.

Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse
   09/01/11 12:07

"...I also do not think it is too much to ask the wife or husband of a Supreme Court justice to take a step back from politics either... ."

Then you wouldn't object Elena Kagan being recused from involvement in any opinions resulting from any and all questions brought to the court involving Obama-actions, considering her involvement with his admnistration.

Likewise, you wouldn't object to Sonya Sotomayer being recused from involvement given her penchant for minority bias.

I believe these two women are far more of a "threat to the rule of law" then anything Thomas, or his wife (both strict Constitutionalists)could say or do.

Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse
   09/01/11 14:10

Is Elena Kagan or Sonya Sotomayer the wife of a Supreme Court justice?

Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse
Chuckwagon
   09/01/11 14:36
Load More Comments

Add a Comment

Already Registered? Log In Here.


The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.


* Designates a required field.
© National Review Online 2012
All Rights Reserved.
Subscriptions
NR / Print
NR / Digital

Gift Subscriptions
NR / Print
NR / Digital
NR Apps
iPhone/iPad
Android

NRO Apps
iPhone
Support Us
Donate
Media Kit
Contact