
The FMA: Why Amend the
Constitution...?
Reprinted from
The Federalist [www.federalist.com]
July 16, 2004
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There was much
pontification this week among the Beltway chattering class, and it centered on
the 50-48 Senate vote to support a filibuster against a floor vote on the
Federal Marriage Amendment. Alas, the FMA -- that proposed constitutional
amendment purporting to establish the legal definition of marriage as it has
long been instituted by God and nature, not to mention common sense -- had
failed to even get off the ground.
The FMA states:
"Marriage in the United States shall consist only of the union of a man
and a woman. Neither this Constitution, nor the constitution of any State,
shall be construed to require that marriage or the legal incidents thereof be
conferred upon any union other than the union of a man and a woman."
Despite the amendment's
simple language, a floor vote would likely have fallen well short of the
two-thirds majority needed to send the FMA to the states for ratification. But
that has not silenced proponents of the FMA who characterize the whole issue as
a "national crisis."
Indeed, there is a
national crisis, but it is not confined to the definition of marriage. Rather,
it represents the larger scope of the Leftjudicial assault on our national and
state constitutions -- an assault that has penetrated so far into the heart of
our republic that the mere determination of what constitutes an institution as
fundamental as "marriage" must now be constitutionally defined.
Ironically, the judicial
mischief undermining marriage, which inspired the FMA's proposition, is also
its "Achilles' heel." Why amend what's left of our much-maligned
Constitution when the Leftjudiciary -- that cadre of judicial activists bent on
amending the Constitution by judicial diktat -- would simply twist the FMA by
"interpretation" into whatever shape they, and their ilk, desired.
(The Defense of Marriage Act, overwhelmingly passed into law in 1996, has
provided no gauntlet against judicial activists.)
Sadly, our constitutional
Republic as envisioned by our Founders -- a government "to ... establish
Justice" -- has devolved into little more than a system of government by
judicial decree. Imagine the audacity of our Founders -- who expected judges to
honor our Constitution; to be constitutional constructionists bound by the
letter of that venerable document and its proper amendments; and to be
accountable to the law as written, not interpreted as if they had, themselves,
written it.
To be sure, such
interpretative mutilation of the Constitution is in clear violation of the
original intent of our Founders. This becomes painfully clear upon examining
the most definitive explication of the Constitution itself, The Federalist
Papers.
The Federalist Papers,
authored by Founders James Madison (who drafted the Constitution), John Jay and
Alexander Hamilton, were and remain lucid about the proper role of the
judiciary. Indeed, they had to be, because the method by which the Constitution
of the United States was to be interpreted was one of the most pressing
obstacles to its ratification. The concern among constitutional opponents was
that the document gave the judiciary the power to interpret the laws according
to the spirit of the Constitution, which, as they said, would "enable that
court to mold the laws into whatever shape it may think proper, especially as
its decisions will not be in any manner subject to the revision or correction
of the legislature."
"This," said
The Federalist authors, "was as unprecedented as it was dangerous."
Continuing, "There is not a syllable in the plan...which directly empowers
the national courts to construe the laws according to the spirit of the
Constitution." (Federalist No. 81)
But Thomas Jefferson
realized that even given the clear restraints on judicial activism, the federal
bench would eventually devolve into a political forum for the expression of
group ideology. Jefferson, in fact, warned of the potential tyranny of the
"despotic branch": "Over the Judiciary department, the
Constitution [has] deprived [the people] of their control. ... The original
error [was in] establishing a judiciary independent of the nation, and which,
from the citadel of the law, can turn its guns on those they were meant to
defend, and control and fashion their proceedings to its own will. ... The
opinion which gives to the judges the right to decide what laws are
constitutional and what not, not only for themselves in their own sphere of
action but for the Legislature and Executive also in their spheres, would make
the Judiciary a despotic branch. ... It is a misnomer to call a government
republican in which a branch of the supreme power [the judiciary] is
independent of the nation. ... It has long, however, been my opinion, and I have
never shrunk from its expression...that the germ of dissolution of our federal
government is in the constitution of the federal Judiciary; working like
gravity by night and by day, gaining a little today and a little tomorrow, and
advancing its noiseless step like a thief, over the field of jurisdiction,
until all shall be usurped."
Indeed, virtually all has
been usurped. Jefferson, in his great wisdom, knew that human nature being what
it is, federal judges would eventually abandon the plain language of the
Constitution in favor of their own interpretations. Thus, the FMA, should it
ever pass and be ratified, would do little more than bandage a lesion on a body
already consumed with cancer.
In short, the real
crisis in America is the undermining of our Constitution by the "despotic
branch." Accordingly, then, the only constitutional amendment we should be
considering is one that addresses judicial activism. For that reason, please
devote your attention to "The Enumerated Powers Amendment" (inspired by the "Enumerated
Powers Act" now before Congress). This Amendment mandates that our
Constitution and its amendments be construed in the national courts according
to its "original intent." Significantly, this Amendment calls on the
House of Representatives to remove from office, by majority vote, any judge not
in compliance with a strict adherence to the letter of our Constitution.
For more information on
the Enumerated Powers Amendment, link to -- http://patriotpetitions.us/amendment28/
Quote of the week...
"I am deeply
disappointed that the effort to pass a constitutional amendment affirming the
sanctity of marriage as being between a man and a woman was temporarily blocked
in the Senate. Activist judges and local officials in some parts of the country
are not letting up in their efforts to redefine marriage for the rest of
America -- and neither should defenders of traditional marriage flag in their
efforts." --President George W. Bush
Open query...
"Will activist judges not elected by the American people destroy the institution of marriage, or will the people protect marriage as the best way to raise children? My vote is with the people." --Senator Bill Frist