Sticking to the Constitution Precludes... Having a Sense of Fairness?

by: Hannah McCrea

Sun Feb 08, 2009 at 14:35


(An excellent diary about constitutional law and stupid hegemony tricks. - promoted by Paul Rosenberg)

This week, Matthew Franck, writing at Bench Memos (the legal blog of the National Review) put a predictable conservative spin on results from a recent Rasmussen poll, which asked 1,000 adults the following question:

Should the Supreme Court make decisions based on what's written in the Constitution and legal precedents or should it be guided mostly by a sense of fairness and justice?

Reveling in the indication that "nearly two-thirds of Americans say the sensible thing" (i.e. 64% of respondents chose "what's written in the Constitution"), Franck nevertheless decries the fact that "more than a quarter of respondents, [27%,] have so little understanding of what the Court's job is that they think 'a sense of fairness and justice' should guide the judges." He also points out that 35% of respondents thought President Obama wants the Supreme Court to follow what's written in the Constitution, 38% thought he wants the Court to be guided by "a sense of fairness and justice," and 27% weren't sure what he wants, to which Franck concludes:

[A] lot of Americans appear to distrust or suspect the president where the Court and the Constitution are concerned-and rightly so, I'd say.

There are quite a few things wrong with Franck's post (the comment about "waterboarding" liberal law professors comes to mind) but the first and foremost is the Rasmussen poll itself.

Hannah McCrea :: Sticking to the Constitution Precludes... Having a Sense of Fairness?
Rasmussen predicated its main question on a false choice: the idea that "what's written in the Constitution" and "a sense of fairness and justice" are somehow mutually exclusive.  One need look no further than the first sentence of the Constitution, which lists "establish[ing] justice" and "promot[ing] the general welfare" as two of the five reasons for "ordain[ing] and establish[ing] this Constitution for the United States of America," for a refutation of this premise.  This is precisely why the expression "equal justice under law" is engraved in marble on the front of the U.S. Supreme Court building: judges agree to promote fairness and justice when they swear their oath of allegiance to the U.S. Constitution.

The Rasmussen poll and Franck's piece are designed to suggest a wedge between the results progressives seek from the Supreme Court (including equal justice and fairness) and the commands of the Constitution.  They thus fit right into the much-loved (though easily debunked) conservative claim that progressives want activist judges who consult their feelings and their politics, and possibly their horoscopes, when making rulings.  The problem is that, too often, progressives fall into the conservative trap and fail to link the results we seek from judges to the Constitutional text and history that supports those outcomes.

Better polling done last fall for Constitutional Accountability Center (CAC) by the Mellman Group illustrates the problem and points to the solution.  Using national, split sample polling, Mellman compared language used by both presidential candidates in last year's election on this issue of judging, as well as CAC's alternative message that judges should faithfully uphold the text, history, and principles of the Constitution, including all its Amendments.  The results revealed dramatic swings in public opinion toward the progressive position when the outcomes progressives seek were placed in a constitutional frame.  

For example, Mellman tested traditional conservative rhetoric surrounding "original meaning" against traditional liberal messaging that the Constitution must be interpreted in light of "changing times and current realities."   In this match up, unsurprisingly, Americans favored the conservative position by 12 percent.  However, when the progressive idea of a "living constitution" was reframed with reference to "Amendments that have been made over the past 220 years," the progressive position beat conservative "original meaning" rhetoric by 24 percent.  This represents a whopping 36 percent swing in national public opinion toward the progressive position.   In summarizing these results, Mellman stated:

Across the political spectrum and with nearly all key demographic groups, the American electorate responds powerfully to the invocation of Constitutional text, history, and principles. In questions on judicial nominations, the role of the judiciary, and Supreme Court interpretation, progressive arguments framed in the Constitution are preferred over both traditional progressive and conservative argumentation, providing progressive advocates with powerful language to combat conservative rhetoric. In short, progressives would reach a broader range of the American public by rooting arguments about judicial results in the Constitution's text, history, and principles.

The Mellman poll thus confirms that Americans want judges who will be faithful to the Constitution, but who will not, as Franck does, draw a false distinction between "the Constitution" and "a sense of fairness and justice."

Originally posted at Text & History. Hannah McCrea is proud to work for the Constitutional Accountability Center (CAC).


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hi pot, meet kettle (4.00 / 3)
It's so absurd that conservatives think that they are offering a choice between following the law and following some liberal judge's heart.  As I write about over at my new blog, the story of conservative judging is the story of judges ignoring laws meant to protect consumers, patients and other ordinary Americans:

http://overruledblog.com/2009/...

It is the story of Lilly Ledbetter, who was tossed to the curb by a Supreme Court more concerned with protecting businesses than preventing pay discrimination. It is the story of James Lind, who lost his ability to work and became disabled after his insurance company suddenly refused to pay for the drug that kept his MS at bay-and who was later tossed out of court because of Supreme Court decisions saying that employer provided health insurers may treat their customers this way with impunity. And it is the story of Bridget Robb, who was electrocuted from the inside by a defective device implanted in her heart, and thrown out of court because of a Supreme Court decision giving lawsuit immunity to the makers of dangerous medical devices.

The truth is that the Supreme Court has made a sport out of twisting laws meant to protect people into shields protecting corporations.  Those of us who want to see those laws actually enforced are the ones who are truly loyal to the law.


They're Just Following Precedent (4.00 / 1)
The precedent of the Supreme Court circa 1870-1937.

"You know what they say -- those of us who fail history... doomed to repeat it in summer school." -- Buffy The Vampire Slayer, Season 6, Episode 3

[ Parent ]
Rasmussen is a push poll artist (0.00 / 0)
Although I realize his political race polls are generally very good (though they seem to only come through in the very end with election day looming - at the beginning of races his polls always seem to favor the R more than any other polling firm), most other polls Ras publishes could have been written by Lee Atwater.  Just take a look at his most recent poll on the stimulus package.  I'm not sure how he worded the question (not a subscriber), but he got the results to show 50% of voters saying the package will make things worse and 39% saying it wouldn't.  This is essentially the mirror of what every other pollster is finding (low 50 something support, mid thirty something against).  There is no other way to view this poll than as a push poll.  

While I'm sure you're correct to note many Americans may not recognize the false choice put forward by Ras, the bigger point here is that nobody should put any stock in any poll Rasmussen does outside of political races.  This is just a case of the right coming up with a push poll and then spending time bloviating on how the results show the American public agrees with them.  Let them live in their land of make-believe - the longer they refuse to change, the longer we'll be in charge.  And hopefully someday we'll start realizing we're in charge.  


Franck's full of shit anyway (0.00 / 0)
America was established through revolution when people felt the system of government and laws they were living under was neither fair nor just towards them or their interests.

The Constitution was written to be fair and just, and if it is no longer so then it should be changed.

Forgotten Countries - a foreign policy-focused blog


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