In a round-up of conservative reactions to the Supreme Court’s
Obamacare ruling, an Economist blogger (I think Will
Wilkinson based on initials and dateline, but the
Economist is funny about bylines)
mentions my column
from yesterday and concludes, “Of course the constitution
has meaning apart from what the judges say. Actually, it has
lots of meanings apart from what the judges say. Too many
meanings.”
A paragraph above that he writes, “Many conservatives tend to
get fixated on the fantasy that the constitution has a determinate
meaning and that constitutional questions therefore have
determinate answers.” Constitutional questions aren’t always easy
and in some cases there are no final answers. The Framers never
intended the Constitution to be an exhaustive policy agenda for
every conceivable issue that could come up in the history of the
Republic.
But the whole idea behind the Constitution is that it contains
explicit grants of power to the federal government, with some
prohibitions on the states. It wasn’t intended to be an entirely
free-flowing expression of whatever the fertile imaginations of
judges (or the political class) could design. It by definition does
have some exact and discernible limits, and those trying to answer
constitutional questions should try to understand what the
ratifying public thought they were delegating to the federal
government.
I was reminded of this when reading Yuval Levin’s
critique of the ruling: ““The law as the Supreme Court has
rewritten it today would not have passed.” Such rewriting is a
textbook example of judicial activism. It also provides a good test
for constitutional interpretation: if judges must reach their
conclusions by rewriting a constitutional provision in a way that
it would not have been ratified, and is unsupported by any
amendment that was subsequently ratified, they are reaching
conclusions at odds with the concept of a written Constitution.