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Independent judiciary under attack
By J. Brent Walker
Reflections
April 2005
"It is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial
department to say what the law is." Chief Justice John
Marshall, Marbury vs. Madison (1803)
Many people today—including many politicians—are
ignoring Marshall’s settled principle of our constitutional
heritage. Along with the Bill of Rights, the separation of
powers between the executive, legislative and judicial
branches and the checks and balances among them is
fundamental to the preservation of freedom.
The legislative branch passes laws, the executive
branch enforces the laws and the judicial branch interprets
them. Although the first two branches are thoroughly
and properly political, our Founders sought to
ensure an independent federal judiciary that would be
free from direct political influences.
These long-settled principles are under a withering
attack today. Hateful, inflammatory and irresponsible
words are leveled at the judiciary—even from the highest
offices in the political branches.
In 2004 the House of Representatives passed two bills
to strip the federal courts of jurisdiction to hear certain
constitutional issues simply because the House disagreed
with how it thought the Court would decide them. These
measures present enormous separation of powers issues
and threaten judicial independence. The House passed
the "Pledge Protection Act" to block federal lawsuits
involving the Pledge of Allegiance, even cases involving
actual coercion. It also passed the "Marriage Protection
Act" to strip the federal courts of power to hear challenges
to the federal Defense of Marriage Act. Other
bills—to deprive the federal courts of jurisdiction to hear
Establishment Clause cases involving the Ten
Commandments and other government endorsements of
religion—were also filed. We have every reason to think
these efforts will intensify, particularly if the Supreme
Court strikes down the government-sponsored Ten
Commandment displays in the two cases that are pending
this term.
The recent acts of violence against judges and their
families in Chicago and Atlanta and the tragic Terri
Schiavo case have provided an opportunity for demagogues
to up the ante to a frightening level. Rep. Tom
DeLay, R-Texas, House majority leader, sought to bully
the judges involved in the Schiavo case, declaring, "the
time will come for the men responsible for this to answer
for their behavior." He also leveled a not-so-veiled threat
of reprisals when he said, "Congress for many years has
shirked its responsibility to hold the judiciary accountable.
No longer." Moreover, Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas,
suggested on the floor of the Senate there may be a link
between recent acts of violence against judges and "raw
political and ideological decisions" that judges have
issued. As a former justice of the Texas Supreme Court,
Sen. Cornyn should know better.
Finally, on April 7 and 8 a group called the Judeo-
Christian Council for Constitutional Restoration sponsored
in Washington, D.C., a conference titled
"Confronting the Judicial War on Faith." The promotional
brochure shows a judge's gavel demolishing the second
tablet of the Ten Commandments. It goes on to complain
about "activist judges who are undermining
democracy, devastating families and assaulting ... morality."
Oh really? A war on faith?
Undermining democracy? Devastating families?
I don’t think so. Judges are human
beings who are trying to do their level best
to uphold the Constitution, interpret the
law and mediate competing claims that
come before them. Remember, courts don’t
go fishing for cases to decide. They can act
only when someone asks them to. The raucous
rhetoric surrounding this conference is
simply outrageous.
The decisions courts make may be unpopular.
In fact, the best they can ever hope to do is
please about half the people. And, since federal judges
are often interpreting a "counter-majoritarian" Bill of
Rights, they often raise the ire of a strong majority.
The decisions courts issue are sometimes wrong.
They do not always get it right. I often disagree with the
results in Supreme Court cases. I am not doing my job if
I fail to critique Supreme Court decisions on the issues.
But I do not dispute their right to make those decisions or
the good faith of judges and justices 99 percent of the
time.
Someone has to make these hard decisions. And they
are best made in a non-threatening, relatively apolitical
environment. The panoply of freedoms that we as
Americans have come to enjoy, religious and otherwise,
depend entirely on our understanding that judges, not
politicians, have the final say in interpreting the laws—as
Chief Justice Marshall rightly pointed out more than two
centuries ago.
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