A CLINTON WIN WOULD ENSURE THE MOST LIBERAL SUPREME COURT IN 80 YEARS
Posted
on September
14, 2016
A Clinton win would ensure the most liberal Supreme Court in 80 years
The next president’s picks mean the difference between democracy and tyranny
By
Senator Orrin Hatch
The
outcome of this November’s election will determine the direction of
the Supreme Court for a generation. The next president will have
at least one, and as many as four or five, vacancies to fill. There
is no more important issue in this election than the Supreme Court.
This
is because Supreme Court justices do more than just decide legal
cases. To a great extent, they shape the kind of country we have.
Judges
come in two basic varieties — those who follow the law as enacted
by the people’s representatives, and those who effectively rewrite
the law to match their own personal preferences. The first type of
judge seeks to implement the law as passed by Congress or state
legislatures. The second kind of judge seeks to control the law by
making the words in statutes and the Constitution mean what the judge
wants them to mean.
The
first kind of judge allows the people and their elected
representatives to run the country and define our culture, while the
second kind of judge prefers to take that role for himself. In this
sense, the second type of judge acts as a sort of philosopher-king,
deciding what sorts of laws and activities will be allowed,
regardless of whether anything in the Constitution or existing law
actually addresses the question. Supreme Court decisions restricting
religious freedom, greatly expanding federal power, and legalizing
abortion and same-sex marriage nationwide offer examples of the
second type of judge in action.
The
most critical issue in this year’s presidential election is which
kind of judge each candidate is likely to appoint.
Donald
Trump has said he would appoint the first kind of judge, one who
follows the law and doesn’t seek to inject his or her personal
views into policy debates. He’s pointed to the late Justice Antonin
Scalia as the kind of judge he will select, one committed to
faithfully implementing the laws Congress has actually passed. Mr.
Trump has backed up that promise with a list of federal and state
court judges who, he said, are “representative of the kind of
constitutional principles I value.” That list was well received by
those of us in the conservative legal movement who believe judges
must enforce the law as written.
Hillary
Clinton’s record, by contrast, shows that she would appoint a very
different kind of judge. When she was a senator, she voted 24 times
to filibuster President George W. Bush’s judicial nominees,
including current Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito, an outstanding
jurist. In
fact, a comprehensive statistical analysis, based on a widely used
measure of judicial ideology, concluded that if Hillary Clinton is
elected, “the court may quickly become the most liberal it’s been
in at least 80 years.”
No
one today can predict with certainty who the next president will
appoint to the Supreme Court. But here’s what we do know: The
federal judiciary is more powerful than ever, and the Supreme Court
will continue to have an enormous impact on our country and on our
liberties. The next president will tip the court’s balance,
installing a court majority that is either anchored in the text of
our statutes and Constitution, or adrift on a sea of “undiscovered”
rights and liberal policy ambitions.
We
know one other important thing: While the Supreme Court gets much of
the attention, the lower federal courts have the last word in the
vast majority of cases. During his time in office, President Obama
has appointed nearly 40 percent of the entire judiciary. These judges
will serve an average of more than 20 years, with the power either to
follow or rewrite the law.
A
president’s lower court judges frequently serve as a “farm team”
for future Supreme Court nominations. Last month, one popular legal
blog offered a list of potential Hillary Clinton Supreme Court
nominees. Each of the federal judges on the list was either nominated
or appointed by President Obama.
Columnist
Thomas Sowell hit the nail on the head when he said, “The issue is
judges that stick to the law versus judges who ignore the law. That
is a huge distinction. It is the difference between living in a
self-governing democracy and living under tyrants on the bench.”
Through
his or her appointments, the next president will determine whether
the federal judiciary respects its proper, limited role in our
self-governing democracy, or whether we continue to slide ever
further toward judicial tyranny. There is no more important issue in
this election.
• Orrin
Hatch, a Utah Republican, is president pro tempore of the U.S.
Senate.
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