The Perils of 'Rule by Indefinite Emergency Edict'
Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch highlights a vital lesson from the COVID-19 pandemic.

On March 15, 2020, two days after then-President Donald Trump declared a national COVID-19 emergency, Cornell law professor Michael C. Dorf urged Congress to impose a nationwide lockdown and suspend the writ of habeas corpus. Congress never took either of those constitutionally dubious steps, which Dorf said were necessary to "save the nation."
Instead, as Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch noted last week, "executive officials across the country issued emergency decrees on a breathtaking scale," amounting to one of "the greatest intrusions on civil liberties" in U.S. history. That experience made it clear that legislators needed to reconsider the definition of emergencies and impose limits on the powers they confer.
The context of Gorsuch's comments was a case involving public health orders that allowed immediate expulsion of unauthorized immigrants, including asylum seekers, ostensibly based on the fear that they would exacerbate the COVID-19 epidemic in the United States. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued the first such order in March 2020, citing the authority granted by 42 USC 265, and the policy was repeatedly extended by the Trump and Biden administrations.
Those Title 42 orders inspired litigation by opponents and supporters, resulting in conflicting district court decisions. Meanwhile, the public health rationale for the orders, never very persuasive, became steadily less credible.
Ultimately, it became clear that maintaining the orders had nothing to do with curtailing the spread of COVID-19. As Gorsuch remarked in December at an earlier stage of this case, "the current border crisis is not a COVID crisis," and "courts should not be in the business of perpetuating administrative edicts designed for one emergency only because elected officials have failed to address a different emergency."
The COVID-19 connection was likewise debatable when the CDC imposed a nationwide eviction moratorium in September 2020 and repeatedly extended it, citing another section of Title 42. That startling power grab, the Supreme Court eventually ruled, was beyond the authority that Congress had granted the agency.
The Court reached a similar conclusion when it considered the vaccine mandate that the Biden administration tried to impose by treating COVID-19 transmission as a workplace hazard. Meanwhile, however, local and state officials had ordered sweeping, long-lasting restrictions on social and economic activity, impeded only occasionally by judicial intervention.
Those orders often involved scientifically senseless rules and arbitrary distinctions between "essential" and "nonessential" businesses. They impinged on fundamental rights, including freedom of movement, freedom of association, the free exercise of religion, and the right to armed self-defense.
Worse, all of these restrictions had the force of law, sometimes backed by criminal as well as civil penalties, even though the elected representatives charged with lawmaking did not participate in formulating or approving them. The orders were based on statutes that granted governors vast powers during emergencies that they themselves declared and extended.
That end run, which became increasingly untenable as emergency declarations dragged on for many months, provoked a flurry of legislative activity in 2020, 2021, and 2022. According to a tally by the National Conference of State Legislatures, at least 47 states considered limits and conditions on governors' emergency powers, and more than two dozen approved them.
Some of those laws set time limits on emergency declarations, allow legislators to override them, and/or require legislative approval to extend them. Kentucky also imposed more-specific constraints, barring emergency orders that interfere with prayer or protest.
The pandemic demonstrated that "states have these very broad emergency powers available to governors with very little in the way of limitations," Daniel Dew, director of legal policy at the Pacific Legal Foundation, told my Reason colleague Eric Boehm in 2021. Legislators who take their jobs seriously should address that hazard to freedom before the next emergency rolls around.
"If emergency decrees promise to solve some problems, they threaten to generate others," Gorsuch warns. "Rule by indefinite emergency edict risks leaving all of us with a shell of a democracy and civil liberties just as hollow."
© Copyright 2023 by Creators Syndicate Inc.
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"Rule by indefinite emergency edict risks leaving all of us with a shell of a democracy and civil liberties just as hollow."
Rule by continuing resolution risks leaving all of us with a shell of a democracy and civil liberties just as hollow.
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Michael C. Dorf urged Congress to impose a nationwide lockdown and suspend the writ of habeas corpus...
Instead... "executive officials across the country issued emergency decrees on a breathtaking scale," amounting to one of "the greatest intrusions on civil liberties" in U.S. history.
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Here was the thread here on Reason the day Trump declared the state of emergency.
Your ilk was still in denial about everything covid starting with ‘just the flu’. And you still are. You had nothing to offer then. Or now. Or ever. You can’t even fucking do hindsight.
I was talking about a proven way to make sure emergencies end because people want to go home (militia). About a way to ensure no federal mandates (via interstate compact). That states – not fed – should drive the process. Even the triage problem (though my idea about solving that came much later after the vaccine)
Your ilk is useless and irrelevant. And incapable of anything other than lies.
Fatality rate is almost definitely significantly lower than the flu. Spread was much worse because it was novel, but the average age of death was still about the same as the life expectancy in the US.
In other words, the vast majority of people commenting back then were correct--it's not scary, those who tend to die from the flu will be at highest risk (and frankly they have about a 10% mortality rate per year regardless of how bad the flu is) and should take extra precautions; everyone else should take reasonable precautions but continue life normally.
We wouldn't have sacrificed the mental, emotional, and intellectual health of an entire generation of children to give grandma and grandpa another few years of assisted living, wouldn't have shuttered the economy and passed inflation-amplifying stimulus bills, and wouldn't have given the executive branch at state and federal levels a hard-on for rule via emergency powers.
You know who else declared an emergency to grab power?
Ida Tarbell?
Khan Noonien Singh? He did offer the world order.
This is why all the republican candidates are so laser focused on restricting emergency decrees as their main platform plank.
Right?
Well, 'restricting' is not a positve measure as you know. So whatever you do you still have Fauci and Biden and the scare mongers.
Find the video where Biden looks all serious and informed and warns the whole time about the OMNIcron virus.
Here is what Biden and Fauci did
South African doctor who discovered Omicron variant SLAMS pressure from countries to make the virus sound worse than it actually is
Dr Angelique Coetzee was one of the first scientists to discover Omicron strain
She said she's been attacked from scientists and politicians around the world
Dr Coetzee said she was told not to describe the Covid variant as 'mild'
Yes, just like they never lost interest in their bill to constrain Federal employees from interfering in social media content.
this maybe furthers the false idea that the Courts need to be more active. But this ‘activity’ is the cause of the rulings too. To me, an amateur but an informed one, it requires of revival of state authority vis a vis the Biden lackies.
Now the article seems to put blame on the States. But Kristi Noem is not Gretchen Whitmer. Elect a fool, get a fool.
Let’s look at the violence side of things, since I am a statistical analyst : It is a methodological error to look at states and not cities since rural areas are always more conservative and cities more violent. What do we get when we adjust accordingly:
27 of Top 30 Crime-Ridden Cities Run by Democrats Samantha Aschieris / @samantharenck / November 04, 2022
"Now you’re cooking with (still legal) gas." 🙂
" But Kristi Noem is not Gretchen Whitmer. Elect a fool, get a fool."
One's a right-wing fool, the other is a left-wing fool. Both support restricting particular freedoms of others.
This article should have been written in the summer of 2020. It was all obviously wrong then, why bring the civil liberties aspect up now as some sort of revelation?
Because Gorusch brought the topic up last week.
So?
COVID panic provided ground cover for a host of unlawful electoral processes, too. Let's not forget those actions.
And hey, did you see where Hillary is now claiming that 2020 election was rigged? On top of still crying that the 2016 election was rigged against her? In a Finanical Times interview...
"He (Trump) is so angry that every one of their maneuvers to win the Electoral College … And remember, the Electoral College, is a terrible anachronism that, you know, has caused like, you know, people like me who win the popular vote not to be president,” she claimed. “But that’s beside the point.”
Clinton claimed she had sources tell her that Trump and his family thought they had Georgia and Arizona “totally set” in 2020.
“They had been, you know, working hand in hand with Republican governors and legislatures to limit the vote as much as they possibly could,” she continued. “And they certainly, you know, thought that Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania were, you know, potential opportunities for them.”
“So, he is angry because his … His game failed,” Clinton said. “His rigged game to steal the election.”
“I mean, you can always tell what Trump is really doing because he will accuse somebody else of doing it. It’s projection unlike anything I’ve seen in public life.”
But not a fact check in sight...
And let's not forget the democrats used the "covid emergency" to help steal a presidential election, removing ballot integrity laws they themselves had passed to prevent fraud.
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No one was a bigger cheerleader for lockdowns, masking and "social distancing" theater and of course vaccine mandates than reason.
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Instead, as Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch noted last week, "executive officials across the country issued emergency decrees on a breathtaking scale," amounting to one of "the greatest intrusions on civil liberties" in U.S. history.
That's a lot of paraphrasing. What he actually wrote,
Since March 2020, we may have experienced the greatest intrusions on civil liberties in the peacetime history of this country.
Regardless of which way it is phrased, it still may be the greatest hyperbole regarding the COVID emergency measures I've ever seen. Greatest intrusion on civil liberties? Greater than slavery? Jim Crow? Denying women the vote?
There was more than enough to criticize about the COVID response without resorting to that level of rhetoric. It opens Gorsuch up to a lot of "white privilege" arguments that have, in fact, been leveled at him because of this. And it would have been entirely foreseeable for it to do so had he taken a moment to reflect on it. Or was getting a rise out of the libs the point?