New York Times Supreme Court Analyst Pines for "presumption of constitutionality" for Federal Laws
A revealing passage from Linda Greenhouse about the U.S. District Court ruling against ObamaCare's individual mandate:
Whatever its ultimate fate, the decision has succeeded quite well in shifting the burden of the argument, removing the presumption of constitutionality in which federal laws ordinarily come clothed and that the Obama administration now has to regain, as not only the appeals process, but the public conversation as well, moves forward.
Lest you think Greenhouse's lament covers only economic regulations, the fulcrum of her analysis is the Supreme Court's 7-2 decision in U.S. v. Comstock asserting the federal government's right under the "necessary and proper" clause of the Constitution to imprison "sexually dangerous prisoners" even after their sentences have been served. Like Kelo v. New London and Raich v. Gonzales, the Commerce Clause fight over ObamaCare is proving to be a clarifying moment for liberal deference to state power.
Damon Root on Comstock here; his must-read cover story on Conservatives v. Libertarians here.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Congress, when controlled by Dems, can do anything necessary and proper to regulate anything that may have any impact on any sort of commerce whatsoever, which means everything. Except abortion and gay sex. What, does your copy of the Constitution say something different?
However, if you produced a study demonstrating that only the Wealthy engage in gay sex...
Wasn't there some study somewhere saying gays made more $$ on average than straights? I have a vague memory of hearing about one. The study itself could have been BS - I'm not vouching for it - I just think I remember it.
This article seems to support that http://findarticles.com/p/arti....._17599602/
Key quote: "The Examiner survey found that gay men had a median income of $29,129 whereas non-gay male household heads had an income of $24,550."
The future of anti-poverty initiatives?
Mine resembles a blank check
Hey, Linda!
May your chains sit lightly upon you...
From an Atlantic McMegan thread:
If the commerce powers of Congress are already broad enough to justify the creation of health clinics, then I can't figure out why they needed to specify a power to establish post offices. Surely post offices have at least as much effect on commerce as health care.
I suppose it works out since there is a presumption of idiocy for anything written by NYT op-ed writers.
My God, folks. These people are your betters. Take your complaints to your local 100 Flowers committee if you don't like it.
Conservatism has never been an ally of mine.
proving to be a clarifying moment for liberal deference to state power.
Clarifying for whom? Do you mean they have thrown aside the mask, and wholeheartedly embraced totalitarianism?
Winning the election gave them a "mandate".
And in Comstock, once again Thomas wrote the dessent. And this is over a supposedly "right wing" power. Is there any doubt that Thomas is by far the best justice on the current court?
Has there ever been?
Thomas is an originalist? How can that be, he's black?
Based on the principle of stare decisis, the legal reasoning for upholding or striking down a law amounts to, "we've always decided it that way." Does anybody else find the fallacious appeal to tradition in that?
the Commerce Clause fight over ObamaCare is proving to be a clarifying moment for liberal deference to state power.
Wasn't this already crystal clear?
Presumption of constitutionality implies faith. Having faith in government is like Charlie Brown having faith in Lucy when he attempts to kick the football.
What's wrong with having faith in government? I have plenty of faith in government - when they make a new law I lose a little bit of liberty. They haven't disappointed me yet.
for liberal deference to state power
Deference? Since when does deference mean worship?
State power is to a liberal what brains are to a zombie.
A presumption of constitutionality might be appropriate if congress actually believed it was their job to worry about such things.
Polo ShirtsGuangZHou HuiYuan Leather Manufactory is a fashion bag2010 World Cup Polo Shirts
What you wear ed hardy reflects the type of person you are. Your fashion sense has always been considered to be somethinged hardy uk that is uniquely you.
Forty years ago, Don Ed Hardy blew off a Yale fine-art fellowship to pursue the rogue art of tattoo, a timeless and often taboo tradition that captivated him as a boy in the Orange County beach town of Corona del Mar.
good article
good article