“Living Constitution” philosophy dead?
Since the Senate confirmed Sonia Sotomayor, chatter about judges has died down. But here is an insightful and heartening post from the Committee for Justice today:

In an article that otherwise reads much like a White House press release, Jeffrey Toobin’s piece in the September 21 New Yorker gives conservatives several reasons for cheer about the judges issue.
Toobin’s main themes are that President Obama has embraced the notion of judicial restraint, has “distanced himself” from activist Justices like William Brennan and Thurgood Marshall, prefers pragmatism to ideology in selecting judges, and intended the Sotomayor nomination to be a “post-partisan choice.” Rather than focus on the trouble we have buying Toobin’s spin, we’ll go right to the reasons for cheer.
First, Toobin’s observation about this summer’s Sotomayor hearings…
“Sotomayor’s words amounted to an acknowledgment that conservative rhetoric, if not conservative views, had become the default mode for Supreme Court nominees. In the hearings of… Ginsburg and Breyer… both candidates said, essentially, that the meaning of the Constitution had evolved with the times…. Sotomayor and the Democratic senators who supported her portrayed a much less dynamic process of constitutional change.”
This largely mirrors the “huge silver lining” we found in the Sotomayor hearings:
“[T]he living Constitution is now dead as a defensible judicial philosophy outside academe. No doubt judicial activism will live on surreptitiously in the courts, but it is doubtful we will ever again see a Supreme Court nominee who has openly espoused it, no less one willing to defend it during their confirmation hearings.”
Toobin also comments on Dawn Johnsen’s stalled Justice Dept. nomination and the long delays in confirming Obama nominees Cass Sunstein and Harold Koh to OMB and the State Dept. respectively. Toobin concludes:
“The trouble that these outspoken [liberal] academics have had in winning confirmation for Administration posts offers another augury of major battles ahead if Obama nominates any of them, or anyone like them, for judgeships.”
The problems encountered by these nominees reinforce a point we have been making all year, namely that all it takes to put an Obama nominee in serious jeopardy is the opposition of a few red or purple state Democrats. This point is especially true for judicial nominees, who are given less deference by the Senate than executive branch nominees like Johnsen, Sunstein and Koh.
Conservatives should also take heart from Toobin’s endorsement of a point made by law professor David Strauss:
“The Republican coalition cares a lot more about [the courts] at this point [than the Democratic coalition], because [Republicans] want the Court to change on issues like abortion, affirmative action, school prayer, gun rights. If the courts stay right where they are, that’s fine with the Democrats.”
Combine that point with Roll Call’s observation yesterday that, if there’s a Supreme Court vacancy next year – a high probability given Justice Stevens’ decision to hire only one clerk and Justice Ginsburg’s illness – “it would not only dominate Beltway politics, but also serve as a major topic of the 2010 midterm elections.”
Together, these 2 points mean that the judges issue is likely to favor Republican turnout and otherwise be a winning issue for the GOP in 2010.



I believe it would be preferable to have these ‘justice wannabees’ say what they really believe rather than calculate and measure their words in order to deceive gullible and naive people.
I have never heard of a ‘conservative’ who tried to hide from that label, (I have heard moderates and liberals attempt to claim that label.), but liberals are all the time trying to find some new term to obfuscate who they really are and what they really believe.
If socialists/liberals/progressives are so convinced they hold ‘the’ enlightened and superior view then conceal and obscure it?
Wear your identity proudly! Promote your ideology openly. Don’t hide behind your focus shopped sound bites and bumper sticker slogans.
Let everyone know who you really are and what you really believe.
yor bro ken
Where should us social conservatives stand on the definition of torturing humans? The Court has yet to really lay down a twenty first century framework for dealing with international torture situations. Why do some Americans seem to value Life of Americans more than the Life of those from other countries?
Posted by: Bill at September 15, 2009 8:09 PM
“Where should us social conservatives stand on the definition of torturing humans?”
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All people, not just ‘social conservatives’ should follow the dictates of their own conscience when law or public policy conflicts with their understanding of right or wrong.
There will be a price to be paid no matter what you do, but a clean conscience is ‘priceless’.
yor bro ken
Why do some Americans seem to value Life of Americans more than the Life of those from other countries?
Posted by: Bill at September 15, 2009 8:09 PM
Because some French people seem to value the lives of the French more than the lives of those from other countries. Because Russians value the lives of other Russians more than the lives of those from other countries. BECAUSE WE LIVE IN OUR RESPECTIVE NATIONS. DUH. It’s our job to take care of our citizens, and no one else’s.
A couple of points from beyond the right wing echo chamber.
(1) Five of the current Supremes (Thomas, Alito, Roberts, Kennedy & Scalia) are among the top ten most conservative justices to serve since 1936. That is the central finding of research carried out by conservatives at Chicago Law School. The court now is populated by an extremist majority.
(2) These justices also are extremely activist. A summary of recent research on this matter conducted at Yale Law School suggests “that those justices often considered more “liberal” . . . vote least frequently to overturn Congressional statutes, while those often labeled “conservative” vote more frequently to do so.” An ‘activist’ judge here is one that regularly votes to override the elected branches. Sometimes this is warranted. But The extremists on the court now do so habitually.
In short liberal and activist are hardly synonyms (as you imply above). So, it seems as though you cannot quite have it both ways. What you really want – it seems to me – is to make an end run around democratic processes in order to impose your ‘social conservatism’ on others. You just don’t want to say so.
Best,
JJ