Our Undemocratic Democracy
Paul Craig Roberts
Wednesday, April 9, 2003
While American neoconservatives use "the war on terror" to
impose democracy on the Middle East, two New York Law School professors urge
us to rescue democracy here at home. In a newly released book from Yale
University Press, "Democracy by Decree," Ross Sandler and David Schoenbrod
show how the plaintiff's bar and judges have used consent decrees to take
government away from elected officials.
The two law professors know of what they speak. The careers of
both as "public interest" attorneys contributed to creating the situation
that they now deplore.
Rule by coercive court decree originated with the public school
desegregation case, Brown vs. Board of Education. Prior to this case, reform
relied on persuasion, a balancing of contending interests and appeals to
public opinion. Brown inaugurated a new era of reform coerced by
class-action lawsuits and judicial decrees.
The result, according to Sandler and Schoenbrod, is that law in
the United States is no longer accountable to the people, because state and
local governments have lost both legislative and administrative powers.
Schools, welfare agencies, prisons -- indeed, practically the entire range
of state and local public institutions -- are actually controlled by
attorneys and judges, not by governors, mayors and the voting public.
A number of constitutional and political developments combined
to create an environment that enabled judicial coercion to push aside
persuasion and the legislative balancing of interests. The Seventeenth
Amendment to the Constitution provided for the direct election of senators
and terminated the constitutional function of the U.S. Senate, which was to
protect the states from a central government overlord.
The New Deal destroyed the "enumerated powers" limit that the
Supreme Court had placed on Congress' authority. The rise of national
interest groups and cause-oriented politicians destroyed the political party
coalitions of federal, state and local legislators.
In 1963, the Ford Foundation funded the first public interest
law firm. By 1967, the federal Office of Economic Opportunity had funded 300
local legal services organizations and a dozen national law reform centers.
Numerous private "public interest" law firms sprung into
existence. Many, such as the Environmental Defense Fund and the Children's
Defense Fund, are now household names. Over a wide range of issues, reform
moved from legislative bodies to the courtroom. Judges became legislators in
response to their "public" -- class action attorneys.
The reform revolution is so complete, write Sandler and
Schoenbrod, that lawyers today are enculturated with the belief that
compassion and justice are achieved only through judicial coercion. The
revolution gave public power to private attorneys, who are able to impact
citizens' lives more forcibly than the people's elected representatives.
Sandler and Schoebrod write that "the basic premise of democracy
by decree is that government can be made more compassionate only if judges
impose their will on elected officials." The reform revolution has destroyed
the separation of powers and the American model of democracy.
Sandler and Schoenbrod offer measures that they believe would
restore politically accountable law, but American democracy might be too far
gone. The will to fight has departed from legislative bodies, and the
American people are distracted and uninformed. Legislators, mayors and
governors have learned that they can avoid making political enemies by
letting judges decide divisive issues.
Judges are so accustomed to legislating in response to interest
groups that they routinely set aside democratic outcomes. Legislating from
the bench was once confined to high-profile state or regional desegregation
rulings. It now invades local zoning ordinances. Recently in Walton County,
Fla., a local judge, William F. Stone, legislated justice for a developer by
throwing out the county's compatibility standards for real estate
development.
The standards barred the developer from erecting a multi-story
condo building in a community of single-family houses. The judge dismissed
the compatibility requirement on the basis of his personal opinion that the
compatibility standards were "vague" and that the county commissioners had
used "subjective judgment" when they voted down the developer's project.
Local attorneys believe that Stone over-reached his judicial
powers. The county commission had followed the recommendation of the county
planning commission, which after a public hearing rejected the project on
compatibility grounds. At the public hearing, the local community had
presented extensive photographic evidence of the existing character of the
community and argued convincingly that the proposed project would so alter
the character of the neighborhood that the definition of compatibility
itself would change.
The only issue was whether high-density condos are compatible
with a unique community of low-density single-family homes. What the public
wanted and law provided meant nothing to the judge, accustomed as judges are
to ruling like Roman emperors.
If we export our broken-down version of democracy to Iraq,
Iraqis might see similarities between their old and new governments.
Dr. Roberts' latest book, "The Tyranny of Good Intentions," has been published by Prima Publishers. Copyright 2002 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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