Strauss makes the case for a common law approach to interpreting the
Constitution. This treats the decisions of judges as an important source
of the law. As judges interpret the Constitution in the light of their
predecessor’s interpretations, they will develop new doctrines that, in
turn, will become part of the law. That is why he describes his view as
a defense of the living Constitution.
As an illustration of how this works, Strauss gives us a history of
the development of the law surrounding the First Amendment to the
Constitution. Here is each and every word of the First Amendment.
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion,
or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to
assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of
grievances.
Strauss identifies what he claims are three basic principles that
courts use to interpret the First Amendment and he argues that it is
impossible to derive those principles from the original meaning of the
Amendment (Strauss
2010, 53–55).
Where do those principles come from? Court decisions in the twentieth
century. Those three principles are now part of the Constitutional law
even though they were not part of the original meaning of the
Constitution.
Strauss vs. Scalia
On the face of it, Scalia and Strauss should be completely at odds.
Strauss defends the idea of a living Constitution while Scalia famously
said he prefers the dead one. Accordingly, Strauss takes originalism to
be the primary alternative to his common law method of interpreting the
Constitution.
However, if Scalia is going to accept the validity of past Court
decisions, that is, precedents, then they might be a lot closer to one
another than they seem to be. Justice Thomas is willing to question the
First Amendment cases on originalist
grounds. Scalia, by contrast, seems to be willing to give past court
decisions significant weight.
In any event, since Scalia and Strauss think they disagree
with one another, maybe we should take them at their word and see how it
goes.
Scalia gave us three basic reasons for favoring originalism over the
living Constitution.
The only sensible way of interpreting an old document is to look
at what its words meant to people at the time it was written.
Fairness requires that people know what the laws mean: you can’t
expect someone to obey a law whose meaning is determined by something
private like the legislator’s intent.
Originalism is more democratic than the living Constitution. If
judges stick to it, then changes in the law have to come from the
elected branches rather than judges.
I think that we should see how well Strauss’s living Constitution
stacks up against each of those points.
Strauss vs. Dworkin
Since Dworkin claims that his moral reading of the Constitution
reflects its original meaning, Strauss and Dworkin appear to be at odds.
In practice, it’s not so clear how far apart they are as they both think
that the correct interpretation of the Constitution can diverge pretty
significantly from how it was originally understood.
One point where they would probably disagree concerns the wisdom of
the ages. Strauss says that the fact that a law is old, or “worked out
over an extended period” is a good reason to obey it (Strauss 2010, 37).
I think Dworkin would say that the age of a law has nothing to do with
whether it is justified. The justification of law, for Dworkin, depends
on its substance. If the law makes for good policy or reflects
appropriate principles, it is a good law. If it does not, it is not. The
age of a law or legal doctrine, by contrast, adds no weight, as Dworkin
sees it. Some legal doctrines are worked out over an extended period of
time and are still wrong, after all.
To put it another way, it is the wisdom of the ages that
counts for Dworkin, not the fact that the wisdom comes from the
ages.
If I were Dworkin, I would say that Strauss’s argument appears to be
strong because he picked an area of the law where the common law method
got what we think is a good result. The First Amendment doctrines he
discusses work pretty well, after all. But if we were to consider
another area of the law that seemed to work very badly or to have
substantively mistaken decisions, the fact that this area of law had
been developed over a long period of time would not give us any reason
to think that it is OK.
For example, one area of First Amendment law that Strauss doesn’t
mention is campaign finance. Some of his readers will think that the
court has been too protective of individual political speech, expressed
as campaign donations, and that it has given too little weight to the
importance of preventing corruption. But that is just as much a
historical development as the decisions that we like more.
Main points
These are the things that you should be familiar with or have an
opinion about after today’s class.
What the common law approach is and why it yields a living
Constitution.
How Strauss uses the First Amendment to support his theory.
How Strauss and Scalia differ.
How Strauss and Dworkin differ.
First Amendment Podcast
If you’re interested in the development of the First Amendment, I
would like to recommend a podcast called Make No
Law. It is very well done and I have learned quite a lot from
listening to it. It is a rare case of something that is enjoyable and
good for you at the same time.
References
Strauss, David A. 2010. The Living Constitution. Oxford: Oxford
University Press.