White House judge-pickers
sometimes ask prospective nominees about their favorite Supreme Court justice.
The answers can reveal a potential judge's ideological leanings without
resorting to litmus tests. Republican presidential candidates similarly promise
to appoint more judges like so-and-so to reassure the conservative base.
Since his appointment to the
high court in 2005, the most popular answer was Chief Justice John Roberts. But
that won't remain true after his ruling on Thursday in NFIB v. Sebelius,
which upheld President Barack Obama's signature health-care law.
Justice Roberts served in the
Reagan Justice Department and as a White House lawyer before his appointment to
the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals and then to the Supreme Court by President
George W. Bush. Yet he joined with the court's liberal wing to bless the
greatest expansion of federal power in decades.
Conservatives are scrambling to salvage something from the decision of their once-great judicial hero. Some hope Sebelius covertly represents a "substantial victory," in the words of conservative columnist George Will.
After all, the reasoning goes, Justice Roberts's opinion declared that the Constitution's Commerce Clause does not authorize Congress to regulate inactivity, which would have given the federal government a blank check to regulate any and all private conduct. The court also decided that Congress unconstitutionally coerced the states by threatening to cut off all Medicaid funds if they did not expand this program as far as President Obama wants.
All this is a hollow hope. The
outer limit on the Commerce Clause in Sebelius does not put
any other federal law in jeopardy and is undermined by its ruling on the tax
power (discussed below). The limits on congressional coercion in the case of
Medicaid may apply only because the amount of federal funds at risk in that
program's expansion—more than 20% of most state budgets—was so great. If
Congress threatens to cut off 5%-10% to force states to obey future federal
mandates, will the court strike that down too? Doubtful.
Worse still, Justice Roberts's
opinion provides a constitutional road map for architects of the next great
expansion of the welfare state. Congress may not be able to directly force us
to buy electric cars, eat organic kale, or replace oil heaters with solar
panels. But if it enforces the mandates with a financial penalty then suddenly,
thanks to Justice Roberts's tortured reasoning in Sebelius, the
mandate is transformed into a constitutional exercise of Congress's power to
tax.
Some conservatives
hope that Justice Roberts is pursuing a deeper political game. Charles
Krauthammer, for one, calls his opinion "one of the great constitutional
finesses of all time" by upholding the law on the narrowest grounds
possible—thus doing the least damage to the Constitution—while turning aside
the Democratic Party's partisan attacks on the court.
The comparison here
is to Marbury v. Madison (1803), where Chief Justice John
Marshall deflected President Thomas Jefferson's similar assault on judicial
independence. Of the Federalist Party, which he had defeated in 1800, Jefferson
declared: "They have retired into the judiciary as a stronghold. There the
remains of federalism are to be preserved and fed from the treasury, and from
that battery all the works of republicanism are to be beaten down and
erased." Jeffersonians in Congress responded by eliminating federal judgeships,
and also by impeaching a lower court judge and a Supreme Court judge.
In Marbury,
Justice Marshall struck down section 13 of the Judiciary Act of 1789, thus
depriving his own court of the power to hear a case against Secretary of State
James Madison. Marburyeffectively declared that the court would not
stand in the way of the new president or his congressional majorities. So
Jefferson won a short-term political battle—but Justice Marshall won the war by
securing for the Supreme Court the power to declare federal laws
unconstitutional.
While some conservatives may
think Justice Roberts was following in Justice Marshall's giant footsteps, the
more apt comparison is to the Republican Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes.
Hughes's court struck down the centerpieces of President Franklin Roosevelt's
early New Deal because they extended the Commerce Clause power beyond
interstate trade to intrastate manufacturing and production. Other decisions
blocked Congress's attempt to delegate its legislative powers to federal
agencies.
FDR reacted
furiously. He publicly declared: "We have been relegated to a
horse-and-buggy definition of interstate commerce." After winning a
resounding landslide in the 1936 elections, he responded in February 1937 with
the greatest attack on the courts in American history. His notorious
court-packing plan proposed to add six new justices to the Supreme Court's nine
members, with the obvious aim of overturning the court's opposition to the New
Deal.
After the president's plan was
announced, Hughes and Justice Owen J. Roberts began to switch their positions.
They would vote to uphold the National Labor Relations Act, minimum-wage and
maximum-hour laws, and the rest of the New Deal.
But Hughes
sacrificed fidelity to the Constitution's original meaning in order to repel an
attack on the court. Like Justice Roberts, Hughes blessed the modern welfare
state's expansive powers and unaccountable bureaucracies—the very foundations
for ObamaCare.
Hughes's great constitutional
mistake was made for nothing. While many historians and constitutional scholars
have referred to his abrupt and unprincipled about-face as "the switch in
time that saved nine," the court-packing plan was wildly unpopular right
from the start. It went nowhere in the heavily Democratic Congress. Moreover,
further New Deal initiatives stalled in Congress after the congressional
elections in 1938.
Justice Roberts too may have
sacrificed the Constitution's last remaining limits on federal power for very
little—a little peace and quiet from attacks during a presidential election
year.
Given the advancing age of
several of the justices, an Obama second term may see the appointment of up to
three new Supreme Court members. A new, solidified liberal majority will easily
discard Sebelius's limits on the Commerce Clause and expand
the taxing power even further. After the Hughes court switch, FDR replaced
retiring Justices with a pro-New Deal majority, and the court upheld any and
all expansions of federal power over the economy and society. The court did not
overturn a piece of legislation under the Commerce Clause for 60 years.
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