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“”Resolved ... that the State Legislatures are not the proper tribunals to determine the Constitutionality of the laws of the General Government — that the duty of such decision is properly and exclusively confided to the Judicial department.[1]
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—New Hampshire state legislature, 1800 |
Judicial "activism" is when a judge or court issues a decision you don't like.
By rhetorical convention, judicial activism occurs when the courts issue rulings that make new law rather than merely explicate and interpret existing law. Judicial activism has also been derided as "legislating from the bench."[2] There are two fundamental problems with the accusation of judicial activism. First, the basis for much of English Common Law, which serves as the foundation for all law in England and Wales, 49 of 50 states in the United States, all provinces and territories of Canada except Quebec, and all of Australia and New Zealand, is the accumulation of rulings made by judges in similar cases in the absence of clear or controlling statutes. Second, every judicial decision requires interpretation of the law and every interpretation makes law.
Conservatives like to believe that only liberals and left-wingers engage in judicial activism, and indeed there are some left-wing schools of legal thought that advocate just that. The field of critical legal studies maintains that "all law is politics" and aims to reinterpret law in a fundamental way to serve political ends.[3]
In a historical sense, the most blatant example of judicial activism was the period known as Lochner era in which the Supreme Court used a broad interpretation of due process to strike down economic regulations of working conditions, wages and work hours in favor of a market fundamentalist economic policy.[4] The Lochner Era is descibred by legal scholar Robert Bork as "the symbol of judicial usurpation of power"[5] and John Roberts, in his hearings to become Chief Justice, was critical of this period of the Supreme Court.[6]
Some of the rulings of the Lochner Era include:
Ultimately, the Lochner era came to an end in the late 1930s when President Franklin Roosevelt threatened to pack the court.[9] In spite of its horrid record for protecting corporations and even attacking basic civil liberties, libertarians still defend the Lochner Era as a bastion of economic freedom.[10]
Under the influence of the New Right and libertarianism, judicial activism has been slowly ressurected for partisan reasons.
Take for example the Supreme Court's decision in Michigan v. Long.[11] Until 1983, the Supreme Court routinely refused to hear appeals from state court determinations where the decisions below were based only in part on federal law and were not otherwise in violation of federal law.[12] There were several reasons for this, namely the "case or controversy" requirement of the Federal Constitution[13] as well as the principle of federalism. This all changed with the Court's decision in Long, which established the Supreme Court's authority to hear appeals from state courts regardless of whether the state court's decision violated federal law. Why did the Court do this? Because the Supremes didn't like the fact that the Michigan Supreme Court had afforded a criminal defendant too much protection under the Fourth Amendment.
Furthermore, many studies have shown that conservative judges are far more likely to be "activist" in the sense of overriding elected legislatures. The most "activist" judge on the US Supreme Court has been shown to be Clarence Thomas.[14]
Arch-conservative Antonin Scalia was an outspoken opponent of judicial activism. Nevertheless, Mr. Scalia was balls deep in judicial activism when he joined the majority opinion in Medellin v. Texas,[15] which held that despite the rather explicit language of the Constitution,[16] the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations—to which the United States was a party (ratified, not just signed) at the time of defendant's arrest—did not apply to Medellin. Whoops!
Even more hilarious was Scalia's use of the substantive due process doctrine—which he considers a product of judicial activism—in order to reach a favorable (to him) outcome in McDonald v. Chicago.[17]
Perhaps the most extreme example of recent "judicial activism" was when, in early 2001, the Supreme Court overrode Florida's right to decide how to assign their electoral votes in Bush v. Gore.[18]
The judicial branch's function in government is interpretation of the laws passed by the legislative branch. When a judge's interpretation is seen as liberal, they are labeled an "activist judge". When the interpretation is viewed as conservative, the judge is an originalist or strict-constructionist.