Are John Roberts’ conservative critics more interested in the
results than the law? Before the July 4th holiday, some of his
conservative and libertarian defenders made that case. Matthew
Franck
tees off on Jan Crawford’s Roberts
vote-switching story:
But what does Crawford actually claim to know? Just the
following:
- that Roberts held one view in March, and a different one in
May;
- that one or more of the four conservative justices, notably
including Kennedy, tried to win him back to their view;
- that a month of trying to persuade him failed;
- that Chief Justice Roberts “pays attention to media
coverage.”
That’s it. Sadly, for such a talented (and obviously
well-placed) reporter, Crawford seems to work hard to achieve a
certain effect in her story, namely that Roberts decided as he did
for reasons that had nothing to do with the merits of the arguments
in the case.
Doug Mataconis
concurs, writing:
One need only look at the gun control cases (District of
Columbia v. Heller and Chicago v. McCormack) or
Citizens United for evidence of that. Why would he
suddenly be so concerned now about what the media elite or the
New York Times Editorial Board thinks of him or the
Court?
First, the gulf between the Kennedy-Scalia-Thomas-Alito (and
maybe Roberts?) opinion and Roberts’ final destination is
pretty wide. It’s a big swing within a relatively short period of
time from someone whose overall judicial philosophy appears to have
remain unchanged. If on top of that you think his reading of the
statute is strained, not an act of judicial restraint, and not as
persuasive as the rest of his opinion, it’s natural to ask whether
he was trying to force this conclusion.
Second, the examples of Heller and Citzens
United cut both ways. They reveal Roberts is willing to strike
down laws and portions of laws he clearly finds unconstitutional
rather than err on the side of judicial restraint. But gun control
and campaign finance reform, as important as they remain in some
circles, have receded as political issues compared to health care
reform. There is simply no comparison between McCain-Feingold or
the restrictive gun laws of liberal cities and the signature
domestic legislation of the sitting president of the United
States.
But while it’s intellectually interesting to speculate why
Roberts voted the way he did, ultimately what matters is how he
voted. A lot of legal conservatives, perhaps including Roberts,
apply originalism and textualism in a very limited way. If you
understand the entire Constitution to be saying that whatever the
federal government isn’t authorized to do is prohibited, you don’t
have to be results-oriented to realize that the number of
constitutionally acceptable results is limited.
Bob Tyrrell takes a
different view, and Roberts will look like a genius if the
health care law ends up being repealed without the Supreme Court
being pulled into a political morass. But if you understand the
Constitution to be establishing a federal government with powers
that are few and defined, this really wasn’t a close call.