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Supreme Court

Amy Coney Barrett Is Right To Reject 'Common Good Constitutionalism'

Limits on government power are a venerable and beneficial feature of our system.

Damon Root | 10.9.2025 7:00 AM

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Amy Coney Barrett and the U.S. Supreme Court | Illustration: Eddie Marshall | Rachel Malehorn | Wikimedia Commons | Midjourney
(Illustration: Eddie Marshall | Rachel Malehorn | Wikimedia Commons | Midjourney)

Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett has been out on tour lately promoting her interesting yet flawed new book, Listening to the Law. During a recent interview with National Review's Dan McLaughlin, Barrett made a point about the current state of conservative legal thought that is worth a closer look.

You’re reading Injustice System from Damon Root and Reason. Get more of Damon’s commentary on constitutional law and American history.

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Here is the relevant exchange between McLaughlin and Barrett:

NR: We're now in a position where there are critics of originalism from the right — people who say: It's too legally positivist. It doesn't consider enough of the common good to achieve everything that the right wants to do. How do you think about or respond to those kind of critiques?

JUSTICE BARRETT: I don't like this common good constitutionalism movement.

It feels to me like it's just results-oriented, and I think that it has all of the defects that originalists critiqued when originalism first became a self-conscious theory in the 1980s…. I just think that common good constitutionalism is just kind of results-oriented jurisprudence from the right.

Barrett is wise to reject "common good constitutionalism." The innocuous-sounding concept largely stems from the work of right-wing Harvard law professor Adrian Vermeule, who has urged conservatives to reject originalism and embrace "authoritative rule for the common good" in its place.

What counts as the "common good"? For Vermeule, it seems to mean aggressive government action in support of various right-wing goals, all to be carried out free from any pesky restrictions imposed by the original meaning of the Constitution.

Indeed, one of the chief reasons why Vermeule has come to oppose originalism is because he dislikes the fact that originalism sometimes leads the judiciary to place meaningful limits on government power. Vermeule would prefer to see such limits disappear.

"Under a regime of common good constitutionalism," Vermeule has argued, "libertarian assumptions central to free-speech law and free-speech ideology" must necessarily "fall under the ax." Furthermore, "libertarian conceptions of property rights and economic rights will also have to go, insofar as they bar the state from enforcing duties of community and solidarity in the use and distribution of resources."

To avoid the libertarian policy results that he does not like, in other words, Vermeule would have the conservative legal movement abandon originalism and ignore the restrictions on government authority that originalism at least sometimes demands.

Personally, I have always smiled at that part of Vermeule's argument, since it basically concedes that a certain number of libertarian results will occur if conservatives actually follow through on originalism. Vermeule's attack thus seems like a pretty good advertisement for the soundness of the libertarian originalist position.

I would also just add that the libertarian outcomes that Vermeule dislikes—such as robust judicial protections for freedom of speech—are not bugs to be removed from our constitutional system; they are venerable and beneficial features of our constitutional system.


Odds & Ends: What Horror Movies Are You Watching This Month?

The glorious month of October is finally in swing, which means that it's time for many of us to watch even more horror movies than usual. I tend to rewatch a bunch of my personal favorites during the Halloween season, a list that includes O.G. Universal monsters like The Bride of Frankenstein, John Carpenter's indelible The Thing, Bruce Campbell's The Evil Dead trilogy, and George A. Romero's unbeatable Night of the Living Dead and Dawn of the Dead, to name but a few. What's on your horror movie watch list this month?

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NEXT: Rep. Chip Roy on Spending, Immigration, and the American Dream

Damon Root is a senior editor at Reason and the author of A Glorious Liberty: Frederick Douglass and the Fight for an Antislavery Constitution (Potomac Books).

Supreme CourtAmy Coney BarrettConstitutionJudiciaryFree SpeechLaw & Government
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  1. Chumby   8 hours ago

    Common good like who will work the farms if the illegals all go home?

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    1. scotterbee   3 hours ago

      Common good like airstriking boats in international waters to save the children?

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      1. Chumby   2 hours ago

        Obama (D) should have been impeached, confirmed, tried, convicted, and imprisoned for drone strike murdering a US citizen without due process for similar legal arguments. But nope. That became acceptable. Drugs should not be illegal. Am not a fan of that action. If they had been attacking like say the Somali pirates, then sink them. Smuggling drugs? No.

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  2. Adans smith   8 hours ago

    So the guys a communist, just won't admit it.

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    1. charliehall   39 minutes ago

      Vermeule definitely seems to want the US to be a totalitarian state.

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  3. Keldonric   7 hours ago

    Justice Barrett is correct that “common good constitutionalism” repeats the same flaw originalism was reacting against — results-oriented reasoning dressed up as principle.

    The framers built a system of process constraints because they knew “the good” changes with whoever defines it. A government limited to delegated powers was their version of moral humility.

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  4. Kemuel   7 hours ago

    Nice to see a federal jurist who puts the laws of America ahead of international norms. America’s laws are different from the rest of the world on purpose.

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    1. Quo Usque Tandem   5 hours ago

      Is that the sort of "American exceptionalism" that Michael Moore* pronounced would be the end of us? For some reason or other we're often depicted as being behind a more advanced world [being Europe].

      *[Is that tub-o-lard still alive?]

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    2. charliehall   38 minutes ago

      Indeed the US has more LENIENT laws than international law regarding who is eligible to apply for asylum. Trump of course ignores the law.

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  5. Quo Usque Tandem   5 hours ago

    Common good or living constitution; a turd by any other name would stink just as much.

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    1. Sometimes a Great Notion   58 minutes ago

      ^this

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  6. Roberta   4 hours ago

    Too abstract and vague for me to get any useful info from. I know, you can't honestly (and non-paranoidly) find specificity that's not there, but sometimes you just gotta not bill for a job that's gonna be just so much space-filling.

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    1. Quo Usque Tandem   1 hour ago

      Have you been drinking with Sarc?

      Be it common good or living, the point is [I believe] does a Constitution stand for anything [like establishing inviolable rights, like speech and the sanctity of one's home and belongings, protecting a minority from majority rule, etc.] or is is subject to the whims of the day, be it far right or left?

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      1. charliehall   36 minutes ago

        Your home is no longer a place of sanctity if ICE wants to crash in.

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  7. Liberty_Belle   4 hours ago

    "libertarian conceptions of property rights and economic rights will also have to go, insofar as they bar the state from enforcing duties of community and solidarity in the use and distribution of resources."

    Communism ? At this hour ? Keep your hands to yourself.

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    1. charliehall   36 minutes ago

      Not communism. MAGA.

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  8. Dillinger   3 hours ago

    she's fine in one interview let's see what she does with the 14th

    >>What's on your horror movie watch list this month?

    the first three Halloweens ... happy happy Halloween, Silver Shamrock

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  9. Azathoth!!   3 hours ago

    When you say 'right-wing Harvard law professor' you understand that's far to the left of center, right?

    Likely just to the right of Stalin. About where Hitler stood.

    There's no 'common good constitutionalism' because there's no 'common good'

    The term is a mask for collectivism.

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  10. Uncle Jay   2 hours ago

    The lunatic left believes our beloved US Constitution is a "living, breathing document."
    What they mean by that is the US Constitution can and should be interpreted any way they want.
    That's not the job of the justices on the SCOTUS.
    It is their job to interpret the US Constitution as our Founding Fathers intended it to be interpreted because our Founding Fathers were much wiser than some of the clueless clowns we have on the SCOTUS today or any other time in US history.

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    1. charliehall   29 minutes ago

      The Founding Fathers never imagined that the Constitution gave the federal government the power to impose numeric limits in immigration. They assumed that the First Amendment prohibited government funding of religious institutions but the current Supreme Court now says that it means the opposite. The FFs also never imagined that the Second Amendment would be interpreted to grant an individual right to a firearm; they wanted to prevent the federal government from banning state miltias.

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