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Tuesday, July 18, 2006
Phyllis Schlafly :: Townhall.com Columnist
Judicial supremacists strike again
by Phyllis Schlafly
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Who could have guessed that Osama bin Laden's driver/bodyguard would be one of the privileged few to be granted a hearing by the high and mighty U.S. Supreme Court. After refusing to hear appeals from thousands of Americans during the past year, the court's liberals jumped at a chance to rule that President George W. Bush was wrong.

It wasn't compassion for Guatanamo Bay prisoner Salim Ahmed Hamdan. It was that Hamdan v. Rumsfeld offered an opportunity to proclaim judicial supremacy over both the other two branches of government and to slap the Bush administration in the process.

The Supreme Court had no business taking the Hamdan case. Congress had passed the Detainee Treatment Act of 2005 withdrawing jurisdiction over Guantanamo prisoners' habeas corpus petitions from every "court, justice, or judge" except the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia.

The Supreme Court did not, and could not, dispute Congress' power to do exactly that. The U.S. Constitution clearly grants this power to Congress.

But the court held that pending cases were exempt from this particular withdrawal of jurisdiction even though the law did not say that. Justice John Paul Stevens' majority decision ignored what Justice Scalia's dissent called a "plain directive," and (in the words of a primary sponsor of the Detainee Act, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.) "made legal contortions to get the result the Court wanted."

Maybe the court was emboldened to tweak Congress's Article III power over the federal courts by Congress's pusillanimity in failing to use it in two obvious hot-button cases. In 2004 the House of Representatives passed two bills withdrawing jurisdiction over the Pledge of Allegiance and the definition of marriage.

One of Chief Justice William Rehnquist's last acts was to acknowledge, but not criticize, efforts to withdraw jurisdiction.

But Congress lost its will to rein in the Court. Not only did the Senate fail to pass those popular bills, but the House failed even to repeat its work and pass them again in the current session.

The court heard the message: Congress is too weak or cowardly to curb judicial power. In the Hamdan case, the court virtually dared Congress to assert its authority to define the Court's powers.

Having thumbed its nose at Congress, the Supreme Court then attempted to invade the last remaining sanctuary thought to be beyond its power: military decisions of the Commander-in-Chief in wartime. The court claimed final authority over international relations and military necessity by presuming to write its own version of the Geneva Conventions. Continued...

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About The Author

Phyllis Schlafly is a national leader of the pro-family movement, a nationally syndicated columnist and author of Feminist Fantasies.
 
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Judicial Supremacists Strike Again
There is a sensible solution [not necessarily an easy one].

A constitutional amendment that would give Congress the power to override a Supreme Court decision with a two-thirds vote of both houses (like overriding a presidential veto).

It may not be easy to get Congress to do that so we may need to look at the alternative. Under Article V the states can call for Congress to convene a Constitutional Convention to offer amendments to the Constitution (mandatory for Congress so to do if two-thirds of the states call for it).

If we have to resort to the latter option, we might want to look at some other issues like term limits, a balanced budget amendment, and a return to federalism with governing power diffused through the states along with (not totally subordinate to) the federal government. This actually was the law for a brief shining moment as a result of President Ronald Reagan's Executive Order No. 12612 [q.v. at http://reagan2020.com/federalism.asp.
It was rescinded by Bill Clinton.

Courts Need to Take a Pill
The courts are expanding beyond their consituttional authority. The other two branches of government needs to stifle them and impeach judges that act beyond the law. No one branch should reign supreme. It is apparent that they are bent on changing the meaning of the Geneva Conventions so they can exert power and change the course of military and executive policy. If we are not careful we will have courts that not only wrongfuly write law but courts that wrongfully govern.
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