| Justice Breyer Throws Down the Gauntlet |
| Richard A. Posner [View as PDF] |
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115 Yale L.J. 1699 (2006) A Supreme Court Justice writing a book about constitutional law is like a dog walking on his hind legs: The wonder is not that it is done well but that it is done at all. The dog's walking is inhibited by anatomical limitations, the Justice's writing by political ones. Supreme Court Justices are powerful political figures; they cannot write with the freedom and candor of more obscure people. But just as Shakespeare managed to write great plays under official censorship, so Justice Breyer has managed to write a good book under self-censorship. In recent years, the initiative in constitutional debate has passed to the conservatives. They have proposed, and to an extent achieved, a rolling back of liberal doctrines (notably in regard to states' rights, police practices, and executive power) and of the methodology of loose construction that enabled liberal Justices to provide a plausible justification for those doctrines. The liberals continue to win a significant share of victories, in such areas as homosexual rights, affirmative action, and capital punishment, but for the most part their stance, their outlook, has been defensive: defense of the Warren Court and Roe v. Wade. Justice Breyer is a liberal (though a moderate one), but he wants to do more than defend liberal decisions, doctrines, and methods piecemeal. He wants an overarching approach to set against the "textualism" and "originalism" of his judicial foes. His book articulates and defends such an approach, which he calls "active liberty." |