The Rise of the Libertarian Legal Movement
SCOTUSBlog is currently hosting an online symposium devoted to this year's 50th anniversary of the publication of Yale law professor Alexander Bickel's influential book The Least Dangerous Branch: The Supreme Court at the Bar of Politics. The whole symposium is well worth reading, but I wanted to draw particular attention to the fascinating contribution of Roger Pilon, founder and director of the Cato Institute's Center for Constitutional Studies, who explains how the spread of Bickel's ideas helped to galvanize the founders of today's libertarian legal movement.
As Pilon notes, Bickel had a very significant influence on the thinking of his one-time Yale colleague Robert Bork, particularly when it came to the issue of judicial restraint. And it was on that very issue that the libertarians started challenging Bork and other legal conservatives. Pilon writes:
Bork, after he left Yale, and whatever his several differences with Bickel, drew nonetheless on Bickel's two main themes – the "countermajoritarian difficulty" and the "passive virtues" – to become the dominant figure in the rising conservative legal movement, with its call for "judicial restraint" – a direct response to the "judicial activism" and the "rights revolution" conservatives saw coming from the Warren and Burger Courts. Whether in the pages of National Review from the late 1950s, in the aftermath of the Goldwater takeover of the Republican Party in the late '60s and on through the '70s, the emergence of the Federalist Society in 1982, or through the Reagan administration's judicial appointments, Bickel's influence on the Bork brief for "judicial restraint" was at the center of the increasingly influential conservative political debate concerning the courts.
But a funny thing happened along the way. During the mid-'70s a tiny band of libertarians, rooted for the most part in that emerging conservative political movement and, in academia, in philosophy and law, began to question the conservative thesis. After all, didn't the nation spring from the idea of natural rights? And weren't courts instituted to secure those rights by limiting government power? Indeed, what was it with this judicial "deference" to majoritarian democracy, the very process that had given us the Leviathan against which conservatives (and libertarians) were otherwise railing?
Thus the debate over the conservative movement's jurisprudential soul began. Long dominated by Borkian conservatives, it has slowly shifted over the years in the libertarian direction – not entirely, to be sure, but significantly.
Read the whole thing here. I discuss Bork's influence on the conservative/libertarian legal division here.
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alt-text contest?
"Kelsey Grammer is already on board to play this guy in the movie."
I'm seeing Paul Giamatti for the role.
What are you talking about? Nobody casts Paul Giamatti for the lead role in a major movie. If he's cast, production will shift to a miniseries; you can bet on it!
"Both of my hands are on the table, yet I am masturbating. How do you explain that, Congresswoman?"
+42
"Judge Colonel Sanders, what is your opinion of the case Classic vs. Honey-Smoked?"
OT: Tom Morello hates his biggest fan.
Old news, but it's still ridiculously funny.
The bow-flex?
No, the Insane-o-flex.
He went on to say, "Hold on while I cash this royalty check the evil machine sends me every quarter."
"Morello was most recently seen supporting Occupy L.A. last year and protesting the opening of a Chinatown Wal-Mart...."
Dude fuck you and the other hundred OTs poeple have been posting today.
I have the internet. I know how to read the news.
Jesus Christ at least the actual topic be explored a bit before tossing this shit in here.
Okay, I'll knock it off. Just wanted to lulz to brighten the mood after last night's tragic news.
What happened last night?
Denzel Washington's shelf-life took a significant hit.
Sorry, I don't get it.
Tony Scott committed suicide.
Oh, that. Meh.
Tony Scott took a flyer off the Vincent Thomas Bridge yesterday. That' s about 8 minutes from my place. Fucking shame.
Holy shit you are a fucking baby.
No, he's right. Like I said, I'll quit it.
Holy shit you are a fucking baby.
There is an art to OTing a thread.
And you are no where near mastering it.
resist...
urge...
to...
post...
off...
topic...
[Holds up battered old rag doll]: "Show us on the doll where the OT posters touched you."
I'd rather show you where they didn't touch me.
What ads?
First, we came for the lawyers...
Also, turn off the goddamn autoplayer on the Obama ad. WTF? Squirrels!
Oops. I guess its an anti-Obama ad.
I have the same reaction whenever I see Dear Leader.
I'll try again.
What ads?
There was some ad that had an automatic sound loop with it. I didn't get it this time.
Nope. Still here.
A lot of ads now do mouseover stuff. Ie, all you have to do is move your mouse over the ad, and a little video starts playing blasting out sound.
Very embarassing when you're at work surreptitiously browsing the internet.
That's what headphones are for.
The left now use judicial restraint as a cudgel to beat the crap out of conservatives every chance they get.
Libertarian legal arguments do take the biggest hit. Conservatives oppose change and the left play the concern troll. "Oh no you want to use the constitution to strike down laws...but that goes against your whole judicial restraint doctrine"
Still it is funny watching conservatives get the shit kicked out of them for being their idiotic selves.
Tom Morello sucks donkey balls.
Ahh, Robert Bork. That was back when liberals believed in the first amendment. How times done changed.