Child labor laws hurt children. Social Security is an anchor dragging down economic growth, and Medicare should be abolished.
Those are the lessons I learn in a room full of conservative lawyers
snacking on lamb sausage and Gorgonzola fondue — a room that’s
absolutely packed with top practitioners, right-wing intellectuals and
judges. I walked into the room alongside a Texas Supreme Court justice.
When I reach to ladle some of the fondue onto a plate full of croutons,
my hand accidentally brushes the arm of a federal court of appeals
judge.
My sparring partner during much of this closing reception for the Federalist Society’s annual lawyer’s convention, is Ilya Somin, who is a law professor and writer for the Volokh Conspiracy,
a popular legal blog that thousands of lawyers, law clerks and judges
read every day. As Ilya lays out Social Security’s supposed vices, I
wonder if his readers are aware of the breadth of his agenda. I also
chide him that voters would have an easy time making up their minds if
Republicans campaigned openly on promises to abolish child labor laws
and kill Medicare, but he is completely unapologetic for his beliefs.
This is not a man who pretends to care about the poor and the middle
class in order to sell policies that will lower his own taxes. I leave
the reception convinced that he sincerely believes that America’s poor
would be better off if they only embraced his vision for a libertarian
utopia.
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Showing posts with label judicial restraint. Show all posts
Showing posts with label judicial restraint. Show all posts
An Obama Supreme Court Versus a Romney High Court

The most important legal development in the last decade is the
Republican Party’s wholesale abandonment of judicial restraint. Less
than a decade ago, President George W. Bush campaigned against “activist
judges” who seize the power to “issue new laws from the bench.” And
Bush’s Supreme Court appointees peppered their confirmation hearings
with the rhetoric of restraint. Chief Justice John Roberts said that he
would “prefer to be known as a modest judge,” and he emphasized that
when judges make policy judgments, “they lose their legitimacy.” Justice
Samuel Alito expressed similar sentiments, warning that judicial
decisions should be narrow and focused on the facts of a particular
case:
“[I]f judges begin to go further and announce and decide questions that aren’t before them or issue opinions or statements about questions that aren’t before them, from my personal experience, what happens when you do that is that you magnify the chances of getting something wrong. . . . [I]t makes for a better decision if you just focus on the matter that is at hand and what you have to decide and not speak more broadly.Whatever Justices Roberts and Alito believed during their confirmation hearings, however, it rapidly became clear that they have little interest in restraining themselves. In their first full term together, both justices joined an opinion overruling a very recent abortion precedent because “some women come to regret” their own choices when they are allowed to make them.They claimed that a plan to desegregate public schools violates Brown v. Board of Education. And they infamously cut back on women’s right to equal pay for equal work in the Ledbetter decision that was later overturned by an Act of Congress.
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