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The
Battle Begins over the Meaning of the
U.S. Constitution
WASHINGTON & SANTA FE, NM (By
Ben Smith and Byron Tau,
Politico) January 29,
2011 —
The federal lawsuits against last year’s
health care overhaul were greeted with
eye-rolling and snickers from many
conventional legal scholars.
Nobody’s laughing now.
A federal judge in Virginia ruled late
last year a key underpinning of the
health care law stretches the Commerce
Clause of the U.S. Constitution past the
breaking point, while another judge in
Florida is expected to rule on Monday.
Both cases are likely to proceed toward
the Supreme Court.
And the challenges to the health care
reform law are just the most visible
sign of a broad, national flowering of
state efforts to find shelter from the
federal government in
sometimes-neglected corners of the
Constitution that touch conventional
political hot buttons such as
immigration and gun control, and exotic
ones, such as citizenship and currency.
“This has been brewing for decades, and
it just needed a catalyst to set it off.
The Obama health care package happened
to be that catalyst,” said Texas
Attorney General Greg Abbott. “It
emboldened us to assert states’ rights
with regard to an array of different
issues in which we are feeling that the
federal government has overstepped its
bounds.”
The model for this revival is the
transformation of the Second Amendment
from a hazily interpreted legal
backwater to the core of a new
gun-rights movement. And while the
Constitution is often invoked, and even
misquoted, for all manner of
conservative causes, perhaps the truest
meaning of the new phrase constitutional
conservatism is found in the broad,
imaginative and sometimes quirky new
efforts to hem in the power of the
federal government.
The Supremacy Clause, which asserts the
primary role of the federal courts and
the Constitution, could stymie much of
this activity. But it’s all part of a
movement Bruce Ackerman, a liberal
constitutional scholar from Yale Law
School, told POLITICO constitutes “the
most serious challenge” to the current
constitutional regime since it took
shape in the New Deal and the Civil
Rights era.
The new constitutional moves on the
right have two distinct factions.
From the top, coastal law professors,
members of Congress and state attorneys
general have developed cases against
health care, environmental and campaign
finance regulation designed to appeal to
at least five justices of the Supreme
Court. Meanwhile, from the bottom up,
state legislators and lawyers such as
newly elected Kansas Secretary of State
Kris Kobach, who helped draft Arizona’s
controversial immigration law, are
pushing the boundaries of federal-state
relations into new frontiers.
“The overwhelming, unifying theme of the
tea parties was the restoration of the
constitutional order and the balance of
state and federal power,” said Kobach.
“I’ve heard more discussion of the 10th
Amendment in the last two years than I
had in my proceeding 14 years as a law
professor.”
The law professors, many of them at
elite universities, and attorneys
general view the grass-roots activism
with some hesitancy. Virginia Attorney
General Ken Cuccinelli, who has filed a
motion against the Environmental
Protection Agency over carbon
regulation, said his office had yet to
examine a proposal being studied in
Virginia to create an alternative
currency.
But the two movements share a new
creativity about the Constitution that
had previously been confined to corners
of the political debate, notably the
medical marijuana movement.
“If the health care lawsuit succeeds,
that’s going to both change the legal
precedent — and it will change people’s
perception of the possible,” said UCLA
law professor Eugene Volokh.
Randy Barnett, a Georgetown law
professor who has helped shape
conservatives’ legal strategy against
health care reform, said he’s already
felt the ground shift.
“A year ago, pretty much all law
professors dismissed the argument as
frivolous. They don’t dismiss it as
frivolous any more,” he said. “The law
professors had a failure of
imagination.”
And they weren’t the only ones.
Then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi famously
brushed off a question about the
constitutionality of the mandate during
the health care debate.
“People have realized — once they set
what might be their policy preferences
aside — there are real arguments to
contend with that deal with not so much
what is the proper role of government,
but what is the proper role of this
government,” said newly elected Sen.
Mike Lee (R-Utah).
And now, imaginations are running wild.
Beneath the health care fight and suits
such as Cuccinelli’s challenge to EPA
regulations are a wild range of attempts
to return power to the states.
Atop activists’ reading lists:
libertarian historian Thomas Woods’s
book, “Nullification: How to Resist
Federal Tyranny in the 21st Century.”
One Idaho state senator tried to give
the book as a gift to Gov. Butch Otter,
Associated Press recently reported, but
Otter declined: He already had a copy.
“The book has been passed around,” Woods
told POLITICO.
The ideological roots of this movement
range from the Jim Crow South to the
libertarian fringes of the Republican
Party.
The obscure 10th Amendment Center, for
instance, has become a clearinghouse for
many of these small government-issue
areas that are suddenly in vogue, and
its founder defies easy political
characterization.
“To sum everything up, I would use the
word ‘weed.’” said Michael Boldin,
founder of the center. “I think this
whole idea of states standing up to
resist the federal government starts
with the medical marijuana movement.”
Boldin’s group has become a hub among
small-government groups. It is trying to
connect the disparate strands of a
freewheeling coalition of anti-federal
activists that includes marijuana
activists, gun-rights advocates,
alternative-currency gurus and
immigration hard-liners. Boldin became
infamous among small-government types
for standing in front of gun-rights
supporters and encouraging them to pass
gun nullification laws, asking them “Are
you as brave as the pot smokers?”
The small-government activists’ ideas
are making their way into state
legislatures.
Seven states are considering or have
passed versions of a “health care
freedom act” — a proposal that would, if
upheld, which scholars say is
vanishingly unlikely — prevent some or
all aspects of President Barack Obama’s
signature health care law from applying
within state borders.
GOP Texas state Rep. Leo Berman, who
introduced his version of the bill in
Texas, said his legislation was just one
tool in the fight against the health
care law.
“My nullification bill here against
Obamacare is just another way of showing
the president and Congress we don’t want
it,” said Berman. “We think it’s a bad
bill.”
States across the country are also
preparing to launch a renewed
counter-assault on the 14th Amendment’s
guarantee of automatic citizenship.
The health care freedom acts are modeled
on similar legislation that dealt with
gun control, called the firearms
freedoms act. The first version of the
bill was passed in Montana in 2010 and
declared all firearms manufactured and
sold within the state of Montana did not
fall under federal gun control laws.
Seven states have followed Montana’s
lead, while almost two dozen more are
considering the proposal. In the latest
version of the bill being considered by
New Hampshire, it would be a felony for
a U.S. attorney to bring gun charges in
New Hampshire if they conflict with
state law.
Other proposals deal with the hot-button
topic of immigration.
The group State Legislators for Legal
Immigration is pursuing the idea of a
state compact — an agreement among the
states that would need congressional
approval but not a presidential
signature — to circumvent the 14th
Amendment’s guarantee of automatic
citizenship, which they believe is being
misapplied. The group says it has
lawmakers in as many as 40 states
prepared to introduce the compact
legislation.
“A lot of citizens have recognized and
expressed interest in having their
rights protected from the intrusion of
the federal government that’s been
continually growing and infringing on
the individual liberties of the citizens
across the country,” said state Rep.
Daryl Metcalfe, a Pennsylvania
legislator who formed the group.
And there are even proposals for states
to begin minting their own currencies.
One Virginia delegate has proposed the
state make preparations for the collapse
of the Federal Reserve system by
developing its own currency.
“We can’t mint coins — but we can
require the debt be paid in these
things. This is an exploratory effort,”
said Virgina lawmaker Bob Marshall, who
has introduced the proposal.
“When you’ve got printing presses
running amok, state legislators have
some responsibility to see if we can
address this,” said Marshall.
The interest in devolution isn’t
entirely new. A few years ago, liberal
city councils and state legislatures,
for instance, found ways to dissent from
the Iraq war. Some serious scholars see
the current activity as a sideshow.
“It’s mainly symbolic,” said Orin Kerr,
a law professor at The George Washington
University.
But liberals are also beginning to arm
themselves for the battle over the
meaning of the Constitution.
“Our Constitution is a remarkably
progressive document that establishes a
strong national government while still
preserving a role for the states” said
Elizabeth Wydra of the liberal
Constitutional Accountability Center, a
legal organization created in 2008 to
promote defend liberal policies from
constitutional assault. “I think that
the tea party likes to pick and choose
the parts of the constitution that they
like — notably the 10th Amendment and
the Second Amendment. … It’s important
to remember that those enumerated powers
are significant and quite broad.”
The future, though, is hazy, and much
depends on the Supreme Court, the key
mover in the constitutional wars.
“The period we’re going through is
testing all these muscles. I don’t think
we’ve worked this all out,” said Seth
Lipsky, a conservative editor and the
author of “The Citizen’s Constitution.”
“There are all these sinews. It’s like
if you go horseback riding for the first
time in five years and you get off the
horse and a day later you’ve got muscle
pain in muscles you just haven’t used
before.”
Conservative officials will keep trying
to push the envelope.
The legal experimentation is a mark of
“the pendulum swinging back to the
center, and maybe across the center in
the other way,” said Cuccinelli, the
Virginia attorney general. “The worst
you can do is lose.”
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