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350 pages, Hardcover
First published March 24, 2015
Recall that the Constitution provides that no one may be deprived on "life, liberty, or property, without due process of law," yet it provides virtually no guidance on what "liberty" means. The fundamental premise of decisions like Lochner [a very pro-business, anti-employee decision] and Roe [i.e. the famous Roe v Wade upholding a woman's right to an abortion] is that judges--and ultimately the Supreme Court--have the right to decide for themselves what "liberty" means, and to make that decision for the entire nation.And as unelected officials whose tenure is for life they can undo the will of the legislature enacting legislation they, the legislature, were elected to pass.
The Supreme Court's opinion in the sugar trust case came just months before its unanimous opinion in Debs holding that courts can restrain workers from joining together to seek higher wages, even in the absence of any congressional authorization to do so. So, the justices twisted the Constitution in knots to protect combinations of capital at the same time that they were asserting unrestrained authority to thwart combinations of workers. ... With its holding that "manufacture, agriculture, mining [and] production" typically could not be regulated by Congress, the Court took away the federal government's power to protect workers in factories, farms, mines and in other jobs removed from the actual transportation and selling of goods. Many of the most abusive workplaces in the country were now beyond the reach of federal officials.So the Supreme Court struck down laws prohibiting child labour:
Justice McReynolds was the fifth vote to declare that child labour laws unconstitutional... Congress [could legislate] to ban a specific harmful item -- be it lottery tickets, prostitutes or adulterated foods -- from travelling in interstate commerce. [However, the] goods barred from commerce by the child labour law, by contrast, were not themselves harmful goods.As well as laws requiring employers to ensure worker health and safety, all on the premise that such laws were an unconstitutional prohibition against the sacred right to contract:
Peckham found a similar freedom from laws improving workplace conditions within the Fourteenth Amendment's vague language. "The general right to make a contract in relation to his business is part of the liberty of the individual protected by the Fourteenth Amendment of the Federal Constitution," Peckham wrote--despite the fact that this so-called right is never mentioned in this amendment--so judges must treat any effort to protect workers from exploitation with great skepticism.Interestingly, the arguments to uphold the exploitation of the poor and the weak by the rich and powerful are premised on principles dear to Americans as a whole, both on the left AND on the right: the suspicion that government is an inherent evil that must be kept in check:
Nothing animated Brewer's opinions more than this general suspicion of government--at least when government power was invoked on behalf of the powerless...Brewer authored two opinions [i.e., judgements] claiming that progressive taxation--in which the wealthy pay a greater percentage than the less fortunate--is unconstitutional.And a belief that the majority will tyrannize the minority if left unchecked:
Professor Tiedeman warned that "the conservative classes stand in constant fear of the advent of an absolutism more tyrannical and more unreasoning than any before experienced by man -- the absolutism of a democratic majority." To combat this risk that democratically elected lawmakers might believe that the will of the people gives them a mandate to govern, Tiedeman urged to courts to "lay their interdict upon all legislative acts" that violated his conception of liberty, "even though these acts do not violate any specific or special provision of the Constitution." Many judges were more than happy to comply.Of course, who are the minority and what constitutes evil will depend on who is interpreting "minority" and "evil". There is nothing to prevent a court from seeing the rich as a minority (which in numerical terms they certainly are -- it's not the 1% or the 0.01% for nothing) and "evil" is most certainly in the eye of the beholder, as today's fractured and splintered American polity amply demonstrates.
“There is no shortage of problems with this decision, but the most significant is that it has absolutely no basis whatsoever in the text of the Constitution. The Fifteenth Amendment provides that the “right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude,” and it gives Congress “power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.” Nothing in the Constitution’s text supports the idea that Congress cannot treat states with a history of race discrimination differently than others, or that it must periodically update the list of states subject to the full force of the Voting Rights Act to bring them in line with “current conditions.” Shelby County has no more basis in the Constitution than Lochner did.”The chapter titled “The Constitution Has Always Been at War With Eurasia” deals ominously with the court challenges to the Affordable Care Act (ACA). Millhiser confirms in the Acknowledgements sections that his assignment, with the Center for American Progress, to write a brief in support of the law, was the genesis of this book. Millhiser follows the same exegesis as previously noted. After passing immediately from the anecdotal horrors of pre-ACA American healthcare system, into discussion of the significance of the ruling, he writes
“The remarkable thing about the Obamacare litigation isn’t the fact that Roberts changed his vote, and it certainly isn’t the fact that a legal argument that was widely perceived as absurd by the legal community ultimately did not carry the day. The remarkable thing about the Obamacare litigation is that the justices took it so seriously despite the fact that it had no basis “in either the text of the Constitution or Supreme Court precedent.”Lochner, recall, is the case where SCOTUS ruled that the state had no power to regulate working hours. This is a serious and important message by Millhiser, a message that seems to have been partially buried by his over-ambitious attempt to put it in full historical context.
“…four justices wholeheartedly accepted the methodology of cases like Lochner. In voting to strike down Obamacare, these justices implicitly called for the Court to embrace Professor Christopher Tiedeman’s century-old warnings against the “absolutism of a democratic majority,” and they adopted Tiedeman’s remedy against this absolutism to strike down law enacted by the people’s democratically elected leaders “even though these acts do not violate any specific or special provision of the Constitution.”