By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 7.28.05 @ 12:09AM
But Democrat hands sure do shake at the thought of the Federalist Society.
WASHINGTON -- With the nomination of Judge John G. Roberts Jr.
to the Supreme Court by President George W. Bush, Democrats and
liberals -- usually one and the same -- are again fastening their
attention on a national organization composed mainly of libertarian
conservative lawyers and judges called the Federalist Society. The
Society is not open solely to adepts of the law. Others too can
join. I myself have been a member in good standing for some years
and can report that the Society exerts no secret demands on its
members. I have not had to learn any secret handshake or attend
late night meetings in any sacred groves. We learn no mumbo jumbo
save for the usual legal terms known by many Americans, for
instance, malum prohibitum, quid pro quo,
dormio ergo sum.
Nonetheless the Federalist Society fetches Democrats' curiosity
and occasional indignation. Says Professor Erwin Chemerinsky of the
Duke Law School, "I only want the left to have its own Federalist
Society." He is a man of the left, and I hope his aspirations will
be realized. Such groups are vital to the life of the mind and to
the commonweal, whether they adopt secret handshakes or wear funny
hats as do the Shriners and the Elks.
The matter of the handshake has proved to be a particular
sudorific for Democrats, along with the frequent incidence of
Federalist Society members among the President's appointees to the
judiciary. Applying his stethoscope to Judge Roberts, the Hon.
Richard J. Durbin, Democratic Minority Whip has observed, "As we
try to monitor the legal DNA of President Bush's nominees, we find
repeatedly the Federalist Society chromosome" -- another of the
Hon. Durbin's literary flights! "Why is it," he asks, "that
membership in the Federalist Society has become the secret
handshake of the Bush nominees...?" I repeat; there is no
handshake. What there is is an intelligent interest in the law.
Since its beginning in 1982 the Federalist Society, a discussion
group devoted to speculating on the law and promoting certain
principles of judicial behavior, has grown to include more than
25,000 members. Professor Chemerinsky and Senator Durbin are
welcome to join. The reason for the group's growth is to be found
in one of my few idealistic beliefs, to wit, intelligent minds
yearn for intelligent thought. Years ago many of the "best and the
brightest" were on the left and there one would find intelligent
advocacy of at least plausible positions. Now there does not seem
to be a great deal of intelligence on the left, only anger and
name-calling. In part this is because the so-called liberal is
immersed in identity politics often solely to pursue power.
Any dissent from the liberal orthodoxy is greeted with
indignation. The dissenter's motives are always called into
question. In the Federalist Society there is a serious regard for
the law and how a law might square with the Constitution. There is
a sense that judicial restraint must be practiced. If the law does
not conflict with the Constitution it is not a judge's role to
change the law. This, the liberal calls judicial activism, but of
course it is not activism. It is restraint.
Much of the criticism of the Federalist Society issues from what
historians since the 1950s have recognized as "the paranoid style"
of politics, seeing opponents as conspirators not simply opponents.
One so-called liberal group, the Institute for Democracy Studies,
has claimed that the Federalist Society is part of "the
infrastructure underlying the right-wing assault on the democratic
foundations of our legal system." Yet there is no "infrastructure"
and there is no assault on democratic foundations. At the
Federalist Society there is mainly an ongoing debate on the law and
the role of courts. All members of the Society believe that the
courts being the least democratic of our branches of government
must not gain preponderate influence over the elected branches, the
presidency and the legislature.
If any people in the debate are anti-democratic it is those who
denounce opponents as conspirators and advocate a judiciary
superior to elected officials. Thankfully they are in the minority
and they will remain in the minority so long as they propound
unintelligent ideas. That is my idealistic belief. Just call me a
progressive.
topics:
Constitution, Law, Supreme Court, NATO