- Constitution in exile
:"This article does not refer to" The Constitution in Exile", a book by Judge
Andrew Napolitano .""The Constitution in Exile" is a controversial term that refers to the situation resulting from provisions of the
United States Constitution allegedly not having been enforced according to their "original intent" or "original meaning". Someoriginalists might argue, for example, that theinterstate commerce clause andnecessary-and-proper clause do not authorise economic legislation dating all the way back to theNew Deal .Origins and meaning
According to an article by Legal Affairs Editor
Jeffrey Rosen in "The New Republic ," "The phrase comes from a 1995 article byDouglas Ginsburg , a federal appeals court judge inWashington, D.C. , whomRonald Reagan unsuccessfully nominated to the Supreme Court after the Senate rejected Bork." [http://www.tnr.com/doc.mhtml?pt=Sms6EeBveHgkYCWg9U4MRw=]According to the same article, reinstating provisions "exiled" from the Constitution would mean "reimposing meaningful limits on
federal power that could strike at the core of theregulatory state for the first time since theNew Deal . These justices could change the shape of laws governing the environment, workplace health and safety, anti-discrimination , andcivil rights , making it difficult for the federal government" to act on these issues. Rosen considers this to be a form ofjudicial activism , though his opponents would argue that it was merely reversing decades of accumulated activism.Rosen's Argument
Rosen argues that one of the most important provisions of the Constitution in Exile is limitations on the
interstate commerce clause , which were undermined by the Supreme Court's "expansive interpretation of Congress's power to regulate interstate commerce... extended to include any activities that might affect commerce indirectly" during theNew Deal . "In 1995, however, the Supreme Court began taking tentative steps toward resurrecting some of the constitutional limitations on the regulatory state that had been dormant since the 1930s. In controversial 5-4 rulings (primarily, "United States v. Lopez " and "United States v. Morrison "), the Court limited Congress's power to ban guns in the area surrounding schools, for example, and to punish violence against women, holding that the laws did not involve commercial activities and therefore couldn't be justified by Congress's authority to regulate interstate commerce." (A later decision in "Gonzales v. Raich ", in which JusticesAntonin Scalia andAnthony Kennedy - integral parts of the "Lopez" and "Morrison" majorities - joined, seemed to show the limits of the court's willingness to curtail commerce clause power.) [http://lsolum.blogspot.com/archives/2005_06_01_lsolum_archive.html#111806792342237189]Most jurists who are identified with the Constitution in Exile call themselves strict constructionists or originalists. They are also considered to be supporters of the
Lochner era Supreme Court.Controversy surrounding the term
Law professors
David Bernstein andOrin Kerr , among others, have criticized Rosen andCass Sunstein , another opponent of the "Constitution in Exile," for using the term, which is now used almost exclusively as apejorative . Kerr writes: "there is no evidence that a conservative has used the phrase 'Constitution in Exile' outside of a single reference in a 1995 book review." Bernstein writes that Sunstein and Rosen have invented a nonexistent cabal as astraw man :I, as someone who knows probably just about every libertarian and most
Federalist Society law professors in the United States (there aren't that many of us), and who teaches on the most libertarian law faculty in the nation, never heard the phrase [...] [T] he phrase "Constitution in Exile movement" implies that there is some organized group that has a specific platform. In fact, what you really have is a very loose-knit group of libertarian-oriented intellectuals with many disagreements among themselves.unstein's View
Sunstein has responded that
Randy Barnett 's book, "Restoring the Lost Constitution ,"Richard Epstein 's constitutional work, and opinions expressed byClarence Thomas andAntonin Scalia all support "restoring the lost constitution, or what Judge Ginsburg calls the Constitution in Exile," so his use of the term is justified.The arguments from this section by Sunstein, Kerr, and Bernstein can all be viewed on [http://volokh.com/posts/chain_1104346631.shtml this page] of
The Volokh Conspiracy weblog.ee also
*
Judicial activism
*Legal formalism
*Living Constitution
*Strict constructionism
*Lochner era
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