Yes, Even Politicians Must Follow The Constitution
Written by Brian Garst, Posted in Liberty & Limited Government
Politicians take various oaths to defend, protect and support the Constitution. You’d think that fact would be enough for some to realize that all political actors have a responsibility to ensure the legislation they pass is legitimate and constitutional. Not so, says a number of liberal commentators. Jonah Goldberg correctly takes them to task:
I have been fascinated by [Delaware Senate candidate] Christine O’Donnell’s constitutional worldview,” Slate magazine’s Dahlia Lithwick confessed. O’Donnell had said, “When I go to Washington, DC, the litmus test by which I cast my vote for every piece of legislation that comes across my desk will be whether or not it is constitutional.”
To which Lithwick, a widely cited expert on the Supreme Court, responded, “How weird is that, I thought. Isn’t it a court’s job to determine whether or not something is, in fact, constitutional? And isn’t that sort of provided for in, well, the Constitution?”
Newsweek’s Ben Adler was aghast at the clause in the GOP’s Pledge to America that Republicans will provide a “citation of constitutional authority” for every proposed law. “We have a mechanism for assessing the constitutionality of legislation, which is the independent judiciary,” Adler wrote. “An extraconstitutional attempt to limit the powers of Congress is dangerous even as a mere suggestion, and it constitutes an encroachment on the judiciary.”
And a progressive blogger writes in U.S. News & World Report that such talk of requiring constitutionality is “just plain wacky.”
Does anyone, anywhere, think legislators should vote for legislation they think is unconstitutional? Should presidents sign such legislation into law?
According to this creepy logic, there’s no reason for congressmen to even consider the supreme law of the land. Re-impose slavery? Sure! Let’s see if we can catch the Supreme Court asleep at the switch. Nationalize the TV stations? It ain’t unconstitutional until the Supreme Court says so!
Of course, reasonable people understand how absurd all of this is.
There’s rarely anything ‘reasonable’ about statism, an ideology to which the Constitution is a clear threat.