Colbert King, one of the WaPo editorial page editors, is
up in arms today about the values baggage a Supreme Court
nominee may carry. In his column, though, he points out a
distressing problem with one of the Dems' only two issues.
Writing about constitutional lawyer John Davis's argument in
favor of the "separate but equal" doctrine of Plessy v.
Ferguson in the Brown v. Board of Education case,
King says:
This constitutional giant and lawyer of enormous
analytical powers stood before the Supreme Court in December 1953
and argued that racial segregation was not only constitutional but
also better for blacks. Defending the "separate but equal" doctrine
in Plessy v. Ferguson, Davis proclaimed to the justices:
"Somewhere, some time, to every principle there comes a moment of
repose when it has been so often pronounced, so confidently relied
upon, so long continued, that it passes the limits of judicial
discretion and disturbance." Fortunately, the Warren Court,
examining the Constitution, saw otherwise and in 1954 outlawed
segregation -- Davis's legal brilliance
notwithstanding.
Hmm. I wonder if King will say the same on some future day if
the Roberts court, with soon-to-be Justice Alito aboard, overturns
or limits Roe. When Sen. Specter starts talking about
"super duper precedents," can someone -- maybe Joe Biden or Chuckie
Schumer -- please hand him King's column?
topics:
Education, Joe Biden, Constitution, Law, Supreme Court