Linda Greenhouse is something of an institution of legal
journalism. She became the New York Times’s Supreme Court
correspondent in 1978. Thirty years later, when she accepted an
early-retirement package from the financially stressed newspaper,
Legal Times reported that a 7–2 majority of the justices
threw a going-away party for her, “complete with cheese, desserts,
and prosecco wine.” She is also the namesake of the Greenhouse
Effect, the hypothesis that “swing” justices like Anthony Kennedy
trended leftward in the hopes of garnering positive coverage from
her.
Greenhouse still writes for the Times, only she’s moved
to the editorial page’s “Opinionator” blog. The week before the
high court heard oral arguments about Obamacare’s
constitutionality, she weighed in with a revealing post. She began
with a close examination of her own venerable navel:
Journalistic convention requires that when there are two
identifiable sides to a story, each side gets its say, in neutral
fashion, without the writer’s thumb on the scale.… Court cases are
trickier. It’s one thing to engage in prediction that flows from
analysis: which side is most likely to win? It’s quite another to
let readers in on the fact that one side’s argument is so
manifestly weak that it doesn’t deserve to win.
The way to do what Greenhouse wishes to do—let readers in on the
“fact” that one side in this litigation “doesn’t deserve to win”—is
by doing what Greenhouse has done, namely become an opinion writer.
A judgment about which side deserves to win a legal case is not a
fact but an opinion. Even when it is authoritative, as it will be
in this case when a majority of the justices hand down a ruling, it
is still an opinion, often accompanied by differing opinions known
as dissents and concurrences.
Greenhouse is not a judge, so her opinions are no more
authoritative than those of your humble columnist. What’s more, on
the merits, her opinion on the Obamacare case is shallow,
disingenuous and silly:
I want to unpack the challengers’ Commerce Clause argument for
what it is: just words.
Basically just one word, in fact: “unprecedented.” Did you know
that the individual mandate is unprecedented? You will after you
read the brief filed by the redoubtable Paul D. Clement, the former
solicitor general, on behalf of the 26 states that filed suit to
challenge the law. The brief uses the word “unprecedented” 10
times, by my count—I probably missed some—not counting such other
formulations of the same thought as “novel” and “first ever.” O.K.,
I get it. I’ll even accept it as true: granted that passage of the
Affordable Care Act ended decades of deadlock over how to reform
the developed world’s most irrational health care system. It should
have happened much earlier.
Unprecedented is a description, not an analysis.…The countless
unprecedented things that Congress has done over the centuries were
not, for that reason, unconstitutional.
Although I’ve elided some of Greenhouse’s verbiage, this is a
fair representation of her argument, if one can call it that. It
boils down to repeatedly sneering at the word “unprecedented” as if
the litigants’ claim were no more than that Obamacare’s individual
mandate is a new development in politics or policy. She simply
ignored the legal significance of Obamacare’s lack of
precedent.
That significance is great. “The command of precedent has deep
roots in Anglo-American legal tradition,” one Supreme Court
observer has noted. “Lawyers and judges often use the Latin phrase
‘stare decisis,’ meaning ‘to stand by things decided.’ ” The court
has never decided the question posed by Obamacare: whether the
Constitution’s Commerce Clause gives Congress the power to require
that individuals purchase a financial instrument, or anything else,
from a private company. Since no existing precedent authorizes the
individual mandate, the court can strike down the Obamacare mandate
without offending stare decisis.
The Supreme Court observer we quoted in the preceding paragraph
was none other than Linda Greenhouse, writing in the Times
in 1991. Unless she has forgotten such an elemental legal
principle, her mockery of the litigants for noting that Obamacare
is unprecedented was not merely ignorant but intellectually
dishonest. She was trying to mislead her readers, and possibly
herself, into thinking that the case against Obamacare is without
merit:
If [as the court held in Gonzales v. Raich in 2005] the commerce
power extends to backyard marijuana growing (as it did to backyard
wheat growing in the famous New Deal case of Wickard v. Filburn),
the notion that Congress somehow lacks the power to regulate,
restructure or basically do whatever it wants in the health care
sector, which accounts for 17 percent of the gross domestic
product, is far-fetched on its face.
The justices may yet uphold Obamacare, but it was clear at oral
arguments that the Greenhouse Effect wasn’t working. Justice
Kennedy asked hard questions of the solicitor general, which
signified that he does not share Greenhouse’s dismissive view of
the arguments against the mandate. Even some of the liberal
justices expressed concern about establishing a “limiting
principle.” By the end of the week, it was the notion that the
Constitution authorizes Congress to “basically do whatever it
wants” that had come to seem far-fetched.
But not to President Obama. The week after the oral
arguments, he told reporters: “I’m confident that the Supreme Court
will not take what would be an unprecedented, extraordinary step of
overturning a law that was passed by a strong majority of a
democratically elected Congress.”
Obama was widely mocked for using Greenhouse’s favorite word,
“unprecedented.” Unlike Clement, he deserved to be. Congress has
been striking down unconstitutional acts of Congress since
Marbury v. Madison in 1803.