Attorney General Barr’s Landmark Speech
Robin Smith: Prescient — adjective: having or showing knowledge of events before they take place.
Warnings that a day would come in which the federal government would far exceed its constitutional bounds and that this centralized government would be overbearing at best and tyrannical at worst were issued during the window of time from September 1787, just eight days after the Constitution was signed, through the 1790s in the form of published essays. The group serving as the day’s town criers was the anti-Federalists. Included among them were a few notable names: Patrick Henry, Samuel Adams, Richard Henry Lee, Thomas Jefferson, and James Monroe.
The anti-Federalists composed and published arguments that were made available to the public via the newspapers arguing for the addition to the Constitution of the Bill of Rights — the first 10 amendments ratified that include key enumerated individual liberties such as the freedom of speech and worship, the right to bear arms, and assurances of judicial protections and private property. The most popularly known of these writings were the 16 essays that were the point-counterpoint to the more renowned Federalist Papers, written, as one would guess, by Founders supporting the U.S. Constitution without the Bill of Rights. It was the compromise between these two groups of intellects in a brand-new America that gave us today’s form of government.
An analysis published by the Foundation of Economic Education of the debate between Federalism and Anti-Federalism composed by Dr. Gary Galles, a Pepperdine University economics professor, posited the astute stance that the anti-Federalists were indeed prescient.
Declaring in the title, “The Antifederalists Were Eerily Prophetic,” Galles assigns a value to these leaders that, while their efforts appeared to be subordinate to those who struck the Federalist position, demonstrates either supernatural clairvoyance or an insightful awareness of human nature … or maybe a bit of both.
Focusing on the rise of judicial tyranny and the ability for courts “to make law, manipulating the meanings of arguably vague clauses to justify it,” Dr. Galles cited Brutus, the nom de plume of a little-known judge from New York, Robert Yates in this critical time of America’s founding. Yates had been selected as a delegate to the Constitutional Convention but withdrew claiming that the assembled body was “exceeding its instructions.”
Brutus reasoned in the anti-Federalist essays that, not only would the judiciary be unaccountable to the citizenry, the legislative branch, or the executive branch in writing its own law, but that federal power would grow dangerously by expansive interpretations to promote “the general welfare” and the “all laws necessary and proper” clause that would certainly be abused.
Brutus, writing only as the first 10 amendments were ultimately ratified, couldn’t have imagined today’s judiciary in its wide variances of the law that actually encourages lawyers to shop various circuits of the judiciary knowing that the political leanings and interpretations of the Constitution and law materially impact rulings. Brutus could not likely appreciate that the early arguments for a centralized government to pay off its war debt of the Revolutionary War would malignantly grow to confiscate the earnings of the productive and redistribute to the idle via the 16th Amendment, which permitted the income tax.
The expanded interpretation of the Commerce Clause, in Article I, Section 8, Clause 3 has been part of the absolute rejection of the powers of the 10th Amendment, that of state’s rights and an infringement of personal Liberty. Originally, the Founders meant to regulate the free exchange of goods between the states and eliminate the possibility of tariffs that existed in the sovereign states under the Articles of Confederation, before the passage of the U.S. Constitution.
The implementation of Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New Deal gets a pretty consistent nod to be one of the largest expansions of the Commerce Clause and a snapshot at the value of the Supreme Court relative to political leanings. Initially, much of the New Deal was ruled unconstitutional by SCOTUS. FDR, in turn, introduced a proposal to expand the number of justices — called his “court-packing plan,” to appoint a new jurist for each existing one turning 70 years of age and failing to retire. Despite the legislation failing, the churn of the Court, as well as the growing sentiment to view the Constitution as changing to reflect the times and circumstances versus a document cast as a standard for all time, much of the New Deal was upheld. The courts justified this expansion of power with the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment. It was stretched, as just one example, in the name of Commerce and community good in the “excessive condemnation” of private property as recorded by the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Federal Highway Administration.
Pepperdine’s Galles was concise, “The Antifederalists warned us that the cost Americans would bear in both liberty and resources for the government that would evolve under the Constitution would rise sharply. That is why their objections led to the Bill of Rights, to limit that tendency.”
Has this evolution occurred because the federal government is so efficient, effective, and trustworthy?
As oft cited in The Patriot Post, John Adams opined, “Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.” A limited government is adequate when its people self-govern with the understanding that rights are coupled with personal responsibility and that one’s rights end when they infringe upon another’s rights of property and depend upon another’s indulgence and patronage.
Brutus and his anti-Federalist friends could not have possibly imagined the massive role of today’s federal government. Were they prophetic or prescient? Maybe. Or, were they accurate based on some awareness that citizens prefer to be kept up by others with a premonition of moral decline and the inability to see that one’s poor choices cost others when rights are seized with no comprehension of responsibilities? Who knows?
But all seem to apply. ~The Patriot Post
The Left’s Revealing Overreaction toAttorney General Barr’s Landmark Speech
Watching the hysterical reaction of the radical left — such as Ruth Marcus of The Washington Post — to Attorney General William Barr’s thoughtful, well-reasoned, important speech at the Federalist Society convention on the constitutional doctrine of the unitary executive is like history repeating itself.
Liberals had the same overreaction to then-Attorney General Edwin Meese’s 1985 speech to the American Bar Association on the Constitution and originalism.
Only someone as openly partisan and ill-informed as Marcus could possibly claim that a speech explaining the historical basis of the Founders’ views on the importance of a strong executive is “angrily partisan” and “scary.” So what did Barr say that was so alarming to liberals?
First, he cited President Donald Trump’s praise of Meese as one of the “most eloquent champions for following the Constitution as written.”
Praising Meese and originalism is anathema to liberals who believe in a “living” Constitution that can be bent, twisted, and broken by ideological judges to fit their view of what an American utopia should look like, ignoring rights they don’t want (like the Second Amendment) and creating nonexistent rights they do want (like the court-created abortion “amendment” in the Bill of Rights).
But Barr’s real crime in his November speech was detailing the damage being done to the Constitution by Congress and the courts usurping presidential authority.
The American presidency, Barr said, is “one of the great, and remarkable innovations in our Constitution.” It has been “one of the most successful features of the Constitution in protecting the liberties of the American people.” The “steady encroachment on presidential authority” has “substantially weakened the functioning of the executive branch, to the detriment of the nation.”
Many historians mistakenly believe the American Revolution was a rebellion against “monarchical tyranny” and that the Founders wanted a weak executive. By that time, though, the British Parliament had “effectively neutered” the monarchy. In fact, as Barr explained, the Founders understood that their “prime antagonist was an overweening” legislature, a view strengthened by a weak executive during the American Revolution as well as under the Articles of Confederation.
Thus, said Barr, the Founders wanted a strong executive who could “act with energy, consistency, and decisiveness.” As Thomas Jefferson put it, for “the prompt, clear, and consistent action so necessary in an Executive, unity of person is necessary.” And so we have the constitutional doctrine of the unitary executive.
Barr pointed out that one of the “more amusing aspects of modern progressive polemic is the breathless attacks” on the unitary executive as if this doctrine is something new that justifies “executive power of sweeping scope.” But this is also wrong.
Not only isn’t the unitary executive a new idea, but rather than pertaining to “the breadth of presidential power,” it simply means that that the powers of the executive branch, whatever they are, “must be exercised under the president’s supervision.”
Thus, when Congress encroaches on the authority of the executive branch by vesting the “power to enforce the law in someone beyond the control of the president, it contravenes the Framers’ clear intent to vest that power in a single person, the president.” So much, says Barr, “for this supposedly nefarious theory of the unitary executive.”
Barr is deeply concerned that “there has been a steady grinding down of the executive branch’s authority” that damages the ability of the president to carry out his constitutional duties and to protect the liberty and freedom of the American people. With Trump’s election, his opponents launched what Barr called “The Resistance,” an explicit strategy to use “every tool and maneuver available to sabotage the functioning of his administration.”
The word “resistance,” points out Barr, is the word used to “describe insurgency against … an occupying military power” and it “connotes that the government is not legitimate.” Barr warns that this is “a very dangerous — indeed incendiary — notion to import into the politics of a democratic republic.”
Instead of acting as the “loyal opposition” as political opponents have done throughout our history, Trump’s opponents are “engaged in a war to cripple, by any means necessary, a duly elected government.”
This includes the Senate’s “unprecedented abuse of the advice-and-consent process” that is intended “to delay the confirmation process” so the president can’t have a “functional government.”
Congress also has “largely abdicated its core function of legislating on the most pressing issues facing” our country. Even when it does legislate, it punts “the most difficult and critical issues” by “broad delegations to a modern administrative state that they increasingly seek to insulate from presidential control.”
All this gives Congress the time to “drown the executive branch with ‘oversight’ demands for testimony and documents.” Barr acknowledges congressional oversight authority but says that the “sheer volume” of investigations today is meant to “incapacitate the executive branch,” something members of Congress brag about.
Congress also is now dismissive of the long-recognized doctrine of executive privilege, falsely labeling “good faith attempts to protect executive branch equities” as “obstruction of justice.”
Barr doesn’t just take Congress to task — he also goes after the judicial branch. In fact, he says that the federal courts are “the prime source of the erosion of separation-of-power principles” and “executive branch authority.” The steady encroachment by judges “has substantially undercut the functioning of the presidency.”
By appointing themselves “the ultimate arbiter of separation of powers disputes between Congress and executive,” they are “preempting the political process” and usurping presidential authority in areas that are “considered at the core of presidential power.”
That includes substituting their judgments for the president’s in areas “that only a few decades ago would have been unimaginable — such as matters involving national security or foreign affairs.”
The travel ban case is a good example of that, says Barr, where the lower courts ignored an “explicit legislative grant of authority” to the president, as “well as his constitutional national security role.”
An “especially troubling aspect” of this expanded judicial power is the courts now looking into the “subjective motivation behind governmental action,” something the Supreme Court has traditionally refused to do. Judicial review in the past has focused on executive action, not executive motive.
Barr charges that the courts are now acting “like amateur psychiatrists attempting to discern an executive official’s ‘real motive’ — often after ordering invasive discovery in the executive branch’s privileged decision-making process.” The attorney general says that has “no more foundation in the law than a subpoena to a court to try to determine a judge’s real motive for issuing its decision.”
All of this has been made much worse by another “judicial innovation” — the nationwide injunction, which has “no foundation” in the law and “radically” inflates the otherwise limited power of district court judges.
More than 40 have been issued during the Trump administration, compared to only two against the Obama administration. As a result, “virtually every major policy of the Trump administration has been subjected to immediate freezing by the lower courts.” No other president in our history has been “subjected to such sustained efforts to” stop his policy agenda. These injunctions “disrupt the political process.”
This also happened in the George W. Bush administration, according to Barr, when the Supreme Court, after 9/11, “set itself up as the ultimate arbiter and superintendent of military decisions inherent in prosecuting a military conflict.”
The high court has wrongly taken “the rules that govern our domestic criminal justice process” and “superimposed them on the Nation’s activities when it is engaged in armed conflict with foreign enemies.” This runs “roughshod” over the Constitution and the role played by the president as the commander in chief.
Barr points out the absurdity of the idea that the Constitution, intended to protect the rights of the American people, confers “rights” on our foreign enemies.
Barr charges that the president’s opponents constantly accuse him of “waging a war on the rule of law” and “shredding” the Constitution. But when Barr asks them to explain what they are referring to, all he gets are “vacuous stares, followed by sputtering about the travel ban.”
It is the left that is actually shredding constitutional norms and “undermining” the rule of law with its “scorched earth, no-holds-barred war of ‘resistance’ against this administration” says Barr.
Unfortunately, “so-called progressives treat politics as their religion” and their “holy mission” is to “use the coercive power of the state to remake man and society in their own image, according to an abstract ideal of perfection.” They are willing “to use any means necessary” to achieve those ends, posing a danger to our freedom and liberties.
Fortunately, conservatives don’t think that way because they don’t “seek an earthly paradise.” They are “interested in preserving over the long run the proper balance of freedom and order necessary for healthy development of natural civil society and individual human flourishing.” Thus, conservatives “have more scruple over their political tactics and rarely feel the ends justify the means.”
Barr ends his speech with a call to “not allow the passions of the moment to cause us to permanently disfigure the genius of our constitutional structure.”
Over our history, it has been the presidency that has “provided the leadership, consistency, energy, and perseverance that allowed us to surmount” the challenges we have faced as a nation. It “has brought to our republic a dynamism and effectiveness that other democracies have lacked.”
This was, without doubt, the most important speech given by an attorney general since Meese put us back on the road to restoring the original understanding of the Constitution in 1985.
Barr encapsulated the severe damage being done to the remarkable and extraordinary experiment in self-rule that the Framers of the Constitution created in that long, hot summer of 1787. That damage has been going on for decades, but it has accelerated exponentially during the Trump administration.
Progressive activists and the president’s opponents in Congress, the judiciary, and inside the executive branch itself are so intent on destroying Trump that they are willing to burn down our republic to do it.
~The Patriot Post
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