The New Yorker's
profile of Justice Breyer underscores the need for another
unflinching originalist on the court. Breyer, according to the
piece, has written an ambitious manifesto designed to stamp out
originalism. He asserts on the one hand that originalism is wrong
because the justices couldn't possibly know what the Founding
Fathers meant, then on the other hand that they would approve of
his ad hoc free-wheeling. Breyer smugly grinned when
informed by the New Yorker that a lower court judge
had called his jurisprudence "utterly standardless." He is enjoying
his unchecked power to call the shots, to make things up as he goes
along.Â
But he stresses that he is a very reasonable, mellowÂ
judicial activist. For example, how did he decide to split
his decision on this summer's Ten Commandments cases, ruling
against them inside the court but approving them outside of it? He
decided it by gauging the volume of complaints against theÂ
structures: since no one complained about the Texas marker, he
ruled it constitutional. And who knows, maybe he consulted his
oldest daughter, Chloe. "She's an Episcopal priest, of all
things. And I'm Jewish," he tells the New Yorker.
topics:
Constitution