By Daniel J. Flynn on 8.14.08 @ 12:07AM
Two bestselling authors offer a constitutional whodunit.
Who Killed the Constitution? The Fate of
American Liberty from World War I to George W. Bush
By Thomas E. Woods Jr & Kevin R.C. Gutzman
(Crown Forum, 272 pages, $25.95)
In Who Killed the Constitution?, bestselling authors
Thomas Woods and Kevin Gutzman provide their largely conservative
readership a valuable service on two counts.
First, the book disabuses Republicans of the self-serving notion
that they are always the heroes and Democrats always the villains.
Infidelity to Constitutional writ is a bipartisan sin. Second, by
stressing the affronts to the Constitution by all three branches of
government, instead of obfuscating the abuses of the legislative
and executive by a miasmic obsession with the judiciary, the book
gives readers the broad picture.
For any liberals who crack these pages, the even-handed book
imparts the hard lesson that entrusting unconstitutional powers to
ephemerally governing administrations inevitably backfires. Three
cheers for undeclared war under Harry Truman becomes outrage when
George W. Bush similarly usurps that Congressional power.
The authors point out the difficulty in taking "seriously the
arguments of Bush administration critics from the Brennan Center or
the Nation magazine[.] They have pulled the very rug out
from under themselves. Their sudden interest in obedience to the
Constitution rings hollow."
One transgression in which the executive wore the black hat and
the judiciary the white hat was President Harry Truman's
nationalization of the steel mills in 1952. Like so many of the
"dirty dozen" abuses against the Constitution that comprise the
book, President Truman justified his tyrannical assault on private
property by an ongoing "national emergency" -- i.e., the Korean
War.
In response to a threatened strike by steel workers, Woods and
Gutzman write, "The owners of the nation's steel mills had refused
to negotiate any wage increase until they received assurances from
the federal government's Office of Price Stabilization -- yes,
there really was such a thing in 1951 -- that they would be
permitted to increase steel prices adequately at the same
time."
The Wage Stabilization Board ("yes, that also existed," the
authors quip) submitted a plan unfavorable to the steel companies.
With a strike looming, a heavy-handed Truman grabbed the steel
mills. With an arrogance seldom witnessed in American history,
representatives of the executive touted the president's absolute
power.
The Supreme Court balked, in a decision unfortunately more
concerned with the particular than with the principle, and
overturned Truman's power grab.
THE JUDICIARY NEVER so clearly wears the black hat than when it
interprets unambiguous law to mean the very opposite of its stated
purpose. The authors note that "the Civil Rights Act of 1964 had
specifically forbidden court-ordered busing schemes to achieve
racial balance." The courts exhibited no inhibition to flouting the
prohibition.
Putting entire city school systems under judge-administered
federal receiverships, the busing schemes intended to integrate
schools. Instead, they facilitated white flight and left the
schools in worse shape than they had found them.
Perhaps more so than civil rights statutes, the commerce clause
has acted as putty in the hands of Constitutional
deconstructionists. "In 1942, the Supreme Court outdid itself in
its Commerce Clause jurisprudence with Wickard v.
Filburn," Woods and Gutzman write. In that case, the Court
found "found that a farmer growing wheat for his own use on his own
land was subject to federal regulation..."
Why? "[B]ecause he affected interstate commerce: had he not
grown his own wheat, he might have purchased it from another state.
Thus his abstention from purchasing wheat from other states affects
interstate commerce, and thereby makes his activity subject to
federal control."
Six decades later, the authors see all three branches employing
a perverse reading of the commerce clause in cracking down on
California growers of medicinal marijuana who violate no state law
and do not transport it across state lines.
Though the Constitution only empowers Congress "To regulate
Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and
with the Indian Tribes," Congress, the president, and the courts
have consistently acted as though it empowers them to regulate
intrastate commerce as well.
MORE CONTROVERSIAL to Woods' and Gutzman's audience may be their
attack upon presidential signing statements. They single out the
current president, claiming that "instead of vetoing legislation,
Bush found he could sign it into law and simply refuse to carry out
those provisions that -- under his expansive view of executive
power -- he considered unconstitutional."
Does not the Constitution outline a specific oath for presidents
-- and not for legislators or judges -- vowing to "preserve,
protect, and defend" the Constitution? In other words, the
president has a specific duty not to execute unconstitutional laws.
One can see the authors' point regarding the potential for abuse.
But signing statements, rather than antithetical to Constitutional
government, can, if not used whimsically, be an integral part of
it.
In an unhelpful conclusion entitled "Can Anything Be Done?," the
authors essentially answer "no." "The Constitution is dead," they
state in the chapter's opening line.
Amidst the gloom, there is reason for hope. Many of the most
egregious offenses against the Constitution cited in this book have
been eradicated. Where is the Office of Price Stabilization? Are
individuals still prohibited from owning gold? Do government run
steel mills exist anymore? What federal restrictions on speech
occur amidst today's wars that remotely compare to those during
World War I? The answers to these questions suggest that something
can be done. Believing the situation hopeless is a self-fulfilling
prophecy.
This pessimistic conclusion fortunately precedes an optimistic
appendix, a copy of the Constitution, which certainly gives the
riled-up readers of the informative Who Killed the
Constitution? a start on what must be done.
topics:
Constitution, Law, Supreme Court