Friday, January 4, 2013

Should we give up on the Constitution?

Mike Seidman, a law professor at Georgetown, recently published a thought-provoking op-ed in the New York Times. Seidman argues in essence that we ought to ignore the Constitution, though he is notably vague about what should take its place. See also some letters to the editor in response to Seidman's piece.

Seidman is right to raise the question of whether we ought to obey the Constitution (which many legal theorists refer to as the question of the Constitution's "authority"). I asked that question myself in a book I published in 2011, called "A Matter of Dispute: Morality, Democracy, and Law." (You can see a description of the book, and even purchase it if you like, here or in the other usual places.) In the book, I offer a conditionally affirmative answer to the question of the Constitution's authority: I think we ought to obey it, though not always or at all costs.

My arguments in the book, as you might imagine, are pretty involved, but let me make a few comments in response to Seidman's piece before I get back to grading (sigh).

Seidman's main beef seems to be, not with the Constitution itself, but with two contemporary pathologies in our interpretation and invocation of the Constitution. One pathology is a loose family of methods for interpreting the Constitution known as "originalism" -- the search for some original intent or understanding of the people who framed the Constitution or of the public alive at the time of the framing. Why, Seidman asks, should we try to resolve pressing current problems by reference to the views of "a group of white propertied men who have been dead for two centuries, knew nothing of our present situation, acted illegally under existing law and thought it was fine to own slaves"?

And indeed, the sort of mindless deference to the views of the Framers advocated by many "originalists" is difficult, perhaps impossible, to defend. There are good reasons to pay attention to what the Framers did -- more on this point in a moment -- but the idea that the Framers were really smart people or possessed superior moral wisdom is not among them. Seidman is right to reject a blind adherence to original understanding or intent. But this doesn't imply rejecting the Constitution itself; it implies only the rejection of a particularly hidebound way of interpreting the Constitution.

The other, related pathology that I think bothers Seidman is the phenomenon of Constitution-worship: the quasi-religious treatment of the Constitution as an end in itself, not a means to other ends, and the resulting use of the Constitution as a sort of trump card to stifle substantive political discussion. I often perceive this phenomenon myself in contemporary American political and popular discourse, and like Seidman I'm disturbed by it. The Framers were not gods and the Constitution is not holy writ. It is instead a functional (and sometimes dysfunctional) charter of pragmatic democratic government. How well it works to achieve its ends -- the establishment of a fair, effective, participatory system of democracy -- ultimately is a matter for us, the living citizens of that democracy, to judge for ourselves. We owe no indefeasible allegiance to the Constitution.

But this doesn't mean, as Seidman suggests, that we ought to jettison the Constitution when it produces results that are inconvenient, even seemingly unjust or ridiculous. Law, after all, often produces outcomes with which we disagree; that's not an excuse to abandon law. Rejecting Constitution-worship implies only that we should not be afraid to question the Constitution's authority -- to ask whether our constitutional system is, on the whole, doing a reasonably good job at its function, which is maintaining the kind of democratic system we want. We ought to ask ourselves, as citizens, whether the Constitution is worthy of our obedience. But asking this question does not necessitate a negative answer.

And in fact I think there are reasons to give an affirmative answer to the question of whether the Constitution deserves our obedience. The main one is this: There are some questions about democracy that we cannot trust ordinary democracy itself to resolve. And the Constitution does, not a perfect job, but a reasonably good job of resolving them.

Consider the recent phenomenon of recurring games of fiscal "chicken" in Washington: the high-stakes partisan fights over debt ceilings, "fiscal cliffs," and the like that seem to arise now every few months or so. These battles are symptomatic of a larger problem of vehement partisanship in Washington. And that problem is not primarily the fault of the Constitution, as Seidman suggests when he blames that document for our "dysfunctional political system." Instead the chief culprit is better described as a *lack* of constitutional law, or rather the failure of the current Supreme Court to enforce the constitutional requirements of equal protection and a republican form of government in the context of partisan gerrymandering. The Court has refused to hold state legislatures accountable for redistricting decisions that intentionally create many "safe" Republican or Democratic legislative districts, districts that tend to elect extremists because there is no pressure to move toward the center in the general election. The result has been a constantly increasing polarization in our politics.

The problem of partisan gerrymandering illustrates (by omission) perhaps the principal function of constitutional law in our system. We can't trust elected politicians to maintain fairly participatory systems of elections -- precisely because they have so much to gain when elections are unfairly stacked in their favor. Only a relatively impartial system of constitutional law -- principles laid down many years in the past, by Framers who could not predict precisely who would benefit from them in the future, and interpreted by a relatively apolitical Supreme Court -- can be trusted to set and enforce the ground rules of a fair democracy.

This is not to say that our constitutional system always functions in this relatively impartial way. My own view is that it has worked reasonably well over the years, usually correcting itself when it gets too far out of whack, very occasionally needing an external corrective (e.g., the Civil War) when it is too broken to repair itself. I doubt we are at such a point now; I tend to think that our main constitutional problem at the moment is the membership of the Supreme Court, not the underlying constitutional structure itself. But I might be wrong about this; the point is certainly debatable.

Seidman's piece is valuable in reminding us that there is nothing wrong with having an honest debate about the value of the Constitution. There may in fact be something very wrong about failing to do so; this is the danger of the kind of Constitution-worship that Seidman rightly abhors. But while one possible result of such a debate is trashing the Constitution altogether, that is hardly a foregone conclusion. Let's not throw out the baby with the bathwater.


Welcome to MODblog

Welcome to MODblog.  "MOD" as in Matter Of Dispute, which is the title of my 2011 book and also, roughly, the main theme of this blog.  I'll post here occasional comments on legal and political issues, with a special emphasis on issues relating to U.S. constitutional law, which is what I teach at the University of Baltimore School of law.

"MOD" also as in "modest," which this blog certainly is, at least at the moment, even if its author sometimes isn't.

And "MOD" as in the occasional post relating to my interest in modern architecture and design or to my other various interests, including photography, jazz and rock music, travel, and food.  With perhaps a little about the Detroit Tigers and the University of Michigan Wolverines thrown into the mix.

More to come; stay tuned.  Thanks for reading, and for your patience.

C.J. Peters