Guest Essayist: William Morrisey

Introduction: Why Study the Landmark Decisions?

What does it mean to “constitute” America?

How would anyone do that? And why?

And what is “America,” anyway?

“America can mean simply the “New World”—the two American continents, “new to the late-Renaissance Europeans who stumbled upon them en route to China, if not to the Asian settlers who’d lived here for centuries. In that sense, hundreds of millions of Americans now live in dozens of countries, under several distinctive forms of government.

Given the prominent display of the Stars-and-Stripes flag on the Constituting America website, no one reading these words will imagine “America” to mean that, here. We mean the United States of America, a particular country in America, which declared its independence, its self-government, from an empire ruled from Europe. To assert self-government requires one to establish the terms and conditions by which that government will proceed. By leaving home, a young man or woman declares independence from parents: Very well then, but how will you live, under your newfound self-rule? You say you want to live at liberty, pursuing happiness, but what’s your plan?

In declaring their independence from the British Empire, Americans (as they called themselves) asserted unalienable—natural and inherent—rights to those very things. They went on to say that government should be designed to secure the “safety and happiness” of the people it governs. Governments issue commands, often in the form of laws, which they then proceed to execute and to use as criteria for judging disputes that arise under those laws, between citizens, our civil institutions and the commands issued by the persons who hold offices within them rightly aim at protecting the natural rights citizens enjoy by virtue of higher laws—the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God. If civil institutions fail to do this, it is the unalienable right of the people so misruled to alter or abolish them, on the grounds that a government that misgoverns is by definition no real government at all, having failed to fulfill the rightful aim of all government.

The Americans proceeded to do just that. Their first constitution, the Articles of Confederation, proved inadequate to the task of governing. For soldiers and revenues, it depended upon the not-always-good graces of the thirteen state governments. This government couldn’t even settle border disputes between one state and another. These and other controversies threatened the unity of the United States. Without that unity, how would the North American seaboard not become another Europe—a cockpit of war, an incubator of monarchy—and therefore the graveyard of republican self-government?

In re-constituting American republicanism, the framers of the 1787 Constitution aimed to secure Americans’ natural rights better than the framers of the Articles had done. Men being men—not angels, as Alexander Hamilton, no angel himself, had occasion to remark—disputes immediately arose. The worst of these, centering on the existence of slavery in the United States, in contravention of the principle of the equal natural right to liberty, issued in civil war. But many disputes found peaceful resolution in the law courts. Here you have more than seventy of the most important such disputes, along with essays on some of the eminent judges who settled them.

To understand how Americans constituted America, the first step is to read the United States Constitution itself, in light of the principles of the Declaration of Independence. The Constituting America website already features a clause-by-clause analysis of the constitution, articles written by an array of Constitutional scholars. The next step, the one we invite you to take with us now, is to study the ways in which our Supreme Court justices have interpreted the Constitution as they addressed disputes over its meaning brought to them by their fellow citizens.

To dispute the meaning of the Constitution is to dispute the meaning of the American form of government, the American regime. The questions underlying every case that comes before the Supreme Court has always been: What is the American republic?

That being so, it is crucial to notice a change in approach seen in these cases, as they built up over time. Chief Justice John Marshall, justly called “The Great Chief Justice,” understood the Court’s function to be “to say what the law is.” He meant that the Court should attempt to understand the meaning of the supreme law of the land according to the language of that document and the intentions of its framers, as discernible in that language. Over time, as American university professors (including professors in the law schools that became basic training for most lawyers only in the last decade of the nineteenth century) drifted away from the natural-rights foundation of the Constitution, a new ‘reading’ of the Constitution emerged.

Under the new doctrine, which called itself “Progressivism,” human rights were said to derive not from the laws of Nature and of Nature’s God but from “History”—that is, from the ever-changing opinions and actions of human beings as they move through time. Under the Progressive dispensation, rights are not permanent possessions of human beings as such; they evolve, develop, and (Progressives are great optimists) improve. A constitution, therefore, should no longer be understood as a statement unchanging unless amended. It should “grow” along with the ever-improving consciousness of humanity.

This means that the original text of the Constitution as understood by its framers constituted a mere starting-point. To understand American republicanism, not the text but rather the Supreme Court cases themselves make up the bulk of American constitutionalism. Only they track the historical progress of America as it has unfolded; this is what Justice William Brennan, one of the most dedicated of the Court’s Progressives, meant when he described the “living” Constitution. In this view, despite some setbacks along the way, American constitutionalism consists of a long ‘story’ of ever more refined, ever-improving body of case law. Given historical progress, not the intentions of the framers of the Constitution and its amendments so much as the most recent majority opinions of the Justices carry the most authority—as they must, if Progressivism is true.

The establishment of an administrative state which itself takes over many of the tasks delegated by the self-governing American people to their legislators, presidents, and Constitutionally-ordained courts has thus found favor with the Supreme Court acting under the doctrine of Progressivism. This transforms American republicanism into a new kind of regime—to be sure, still holding elections, enacting and enforcing laws framed in a Congress of representatives who win those elections, but also a regime largely ruled by a permanent aristocracy or ‘meritocracy’ of university-trained, unelected professional administrators who have a large say in determining what the people’s rights are, and what they are not. Republican self-government, that isn’t.

This is what gives your study of these Supreme Court cases such urgent and immediate importance. We live our lives under laws that are said to mean what the judges say they, the judges, mean. The judges take what they mean as an expression of social and political progress, which has left the intentions of the framers far behind on many key principles, including the principle of American republicanism or self-government. This isn’t what Justice Marshall had in mind when he said he wanted to say what the laws ratified by “We the People” mean.

How do we want to live? Far from being specimens of abstract legal reasoning of interest only to specialists, the Constitution, the case law derived from it, the case law devised against it, and the thinking of the justices who argued the cases discussed here guide our actions and shapes how we think about ourselves. In that sense, at least, we do indeed have a “living” Constitution, one that has turned our way of life in new directions.

Will Morrisey is William and Patricia LaMothe Professor Emeritus of Politics at Hillsdale College, and is a Constituting America Fellow; his books include Self-Government, The American Theme: Presidents of the Founding and Civil War and The Dilemma of Progressivism: How Roosevelt, Taft, and Wilson Reshaped the American Regime of Self-Government.

5 replies
  1. Barb Zack
    Barb Zack says:

    “To dispute the meaning of the Constitution is to dispute the meaning of the American form of government, the American regime. The questions underlying every case that comes before the Supreme Court has always been: What is the American republic?” – This is truly the key to understanding our Nation has undergone a transformation from a TRUE Republic to an almost rule of the Courts. How DO we want to live, and how can we get back to America the Republic?

    I am so excited to begin this latest 90-in-90 Study! I have learned SO much over the last several years from some of the greatest minds in our Country! I look forward to thought-provoking essays and lessons. I also look forward to sharing, hopefully everyone of these essays with my friends.

    Thank you So Much for another 90 day study filled with adventure, learning and a TRUE Love of our Country!

    Reply
  2. Ron
    Ron says:

    Key Phrase in the essay: “The Supreme Court, acting under the doctrine of Progressivism, transforms American republicanism into a new kind of regime, a regime largely ruled by a permanent aristocracy or ‘meritocracy’ of university-trained, unelected professional administrators who have a large say in determining what the people’s rights are, and what they are not. Republican self-government, that isn’t.”

    I wonder, has our Republic, as designed, already been transformed to such an extent over the 125 year history of Progressivism and Liberal Progressivism (as I call the period since the mid-1960s) that the path cannot be halted and reversed? “On the street” questions asked of “we the people” by various TV personalities demonstrate that a significantly large percentage of “we the people” don’t care what is happening to the Republic so long as we can do what we want to do. History, especially Biblical history, suggests to me that free societies eventually self-destruct and that, if there is no remnant to pick up the pieces, they cease to exist.

    How can we halt Liberal Progressivism and even Progressivism?

    Reply
  3. Ron Montesano
    Ron Montesano says:

    Marshall v. Brennan regarding U.S. Constitution — though this past century Brennon’s world view (ie Progressivism) has surely won — it has resulted in meandering and complex laws, particularly in states like New York and California). Perhaps the time is ripe for Marshall’s world view in these and other traditionally “progressive” states.

    Reply
  4. Publius Senex Dassault
    Publius Senex Dassault says:

    I too look forward to the 90 study. Last years 90 days gave me context and understanding as to why the America I live did not seem to square up with the America I understood under the Constitution. The answer was progessivism and the administrative state. It is a conditions I decidedly preferred to not be reality. But since it is I prefer to know and understand it, and hopefully resist/reverse it than live in ignorance of the cause of my frustration.

    So even though I know the upcoming essays will leave me figuratively and literally shaking m y head, I look forward to being educated and armed for intelligent discussions and debate. Thank you in advance to C.A. and the essayists!

    Reply
  5. Sandy Thatcher
    Sandy Thatcher says:

    Every one of the foregoing comments agrees with the premise of the writer, that so-called Progressivism is the root of all evil. That may be a red herring: the real question at issue is how the Constitution, written at a certain time in history, is to be interpreted as the world changes, often in radical ways. The Founders did not know anything about the Internet–hence, by definition, they had nothing to say about it, and therefore the only recourse is to identify the fundamental principles of the Constitution and apply them to changing circumstances. The Constitution itself was a product of compromise; its creators knew that slavery, e.g., would have to be confronted and change undertaken. No sensible person today thinks it to be right to treat blacks as only three fifths citizens, as they were back then. Basic principles of equality and justice embedded in the Constitution need eventually to be applied to new situations, like the treatment of same-sex marriage, transgender rights, women’s rights, etc. If this is Progressivism, it is also progress in a fundamental moral sense, and only by adapting in this way can America remain true to its founding ideas and ideals.

    Reply

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