Originalism and the Good Constitution
Author
: JOHN O. McGINNIS and MICHAEL B. RAPPAPORT
Subject
: Constitutional law—United States, Constitutional law—Philosophy, Origin
(Philosophy), Judicial review
Publisher
: Harvard University Press
Summary :Originalism—the
view that the Constitution should be interpreted
according to its original meaning—has
been an important principle
of constitutional interpretation since the early republic. James Madison,
the father of the Constitution, wrote: “I entirely concur in the propriety of
resorting to the sense in which the Constitution was accepted and ratified
by the nation. In that sense alone it is the legitimate Constitution. And if
that be not the guide in expounding it, there can be no security for a consistent
and stable . . . exercise of its powers.”1 Today this theory has prominent
adherents on the Supreme Court in Justice Clarence Thomas and, at
least in “faint-hearted”
form, Justice Antonin Scalia. Heller v. District of
Columbia recently featured both majority and dissenting opinions that
were wholly originalist in style. Legal academics across the political spectrum
espouse some version of originalism.2
Nevertheless, originalism continues to be plagued by challenges, the
most salient being how it is to be justified. But originalism is also confronted
by many other fundamental questions. What is the precise nature
of an originalist method of interpretation? Isn’t it wrong for the living to be
governed by the dead hand of the past? How can an originalist jurisprudence
address the hundreds of judicial decisions inconsistent with original
meaning that are now deemed the law of the land?
A more general sense of disquiet underlies these specific questions. Law
in general, and constitutional law in particular, should be measured by its
contribution to our current welfare. Originalism seems to be focused on
the distant past rather than the present and, on its face, does not concern
itself with desirable results. Thus, it seems vulnerable to the central claim
of living constitutionalism—that
interpretation of the Constitution should
be guided by a modern vision of a good society that likely differs substantially
from that of the long-dead
Founders.In this book, we present a new normative defense of constitutional originalism
that connects this interpretive method directly to the concept of a
good constitution. We argue that originalism advances the welfare of the
present-day
citizens of the United States because it promotes constitutional
interpretations that are likely to have better consequences today than those
of nonoriginalist theories. The benefits of ordinary legislation for society
and the proper theory of its interpretation are routinely connected to the
virtues of lawmaking by a democratic legislature. We likewise connect the
benefits of a desirable constitution and the proper theory of constitutional
interpretation to the virtues of the constitution-making
process.
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