Monday, December 15, 2014

The Bill of Rights: historical context and strict construction



"The enumeration [or "listing"] in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people."

- Ninth Amendment to the United States Constitution (ratified 1791), a sometimes-forgotten amendment in the Bill of Rights

It's the most familiar part of the Constitution - the one that the most people can quote. It's the most disputed part of the Constitution - the one whose meaning is most debated. And it's the most tangible part of the Constitution - the one that writes into stone the rights we use every day, and which is thus easiest to apply to everyday life.


The Constitutional Convention

The original Constitution didn't have a Bill of Rights

The portion is, of course, the Bill of Rights; but it was not a part of the original Constitution at all. The United States Bill of Rights was the first ten amendments to the Constitution. For those who don't know, an amendment is just another word for a change. The Constitution has been amended (or changed) 27 times since its adoption, and the first ten amendments written into it were the ones we today call our "Bill of Rights." They can today be seen in the context of the ratification debates, or the debates over whether or not to ratify the Constitution as the "supreme law of the land". The Constitution did not become law until it was approved by nine of the original thirteen states, and the states fiercely debated about whether or not we should have this Constitution.




Alexander Hamilton

The controversy over the Bill of Rights

The biggest objection to the Constitution during the ratification debates was precisely that it lacked a Bill of Rights. Although Alexander Hamilton deals with this objection in the Federalist Papers by saying that there was no need for a Bill of Rights, because all of the thirteen states already had one, James Madison never disagrees with the need for one in the Federalist Papers. (I'm not blaming Alexander Hamilton for arguing the wrong side of this issue, because even though I disagree with what he said, I think it was more important for him to argue for the Constitution at that time than to attack its greatest weakness.) But James Madison, quite interestingly, asks rhetorically if "a bill of rights [is] essential to liberty," and follows it up by saying that "The Confederation has no bill of rights" (Source: Federalist No. 38). Thus, he was pointing out the irony of opposing the Constitution for lacking a Bill of Rights, when the existing system of government (today called the Articles of Confederation) had no Bill of Rights, either.


James Madison

Who got to write the Bill of Rights?

The opponents of the Constitution were, of course, right that the document needed a Bill of Rights. It was probably even more important for it to have one than it was for the weaker Articles of Confederation to have one, because the Articles had less power in government that needed to be checked in this way. But ironically, it was the Father of the Constitution himself (James Madison) who wrote the Bill of Rights - rather than the objectors to the Constitution, who had argued so strenuously against the Constitution for its lacking such a bill. It's a measure of how much the pro-Constitution side won the debate, that the only concession obtained by the Constitution's opponents after the document was ratified - namely, the Bill of Rights - was written not only by a pro-Constitution person, but by the Father of the Constitution himself. The pro-Constitution side won the debate. Nonetheless, we owe a great deal to the opponents of the Constitution for ensuring that we got a Bill of Rights, because they were absolutely right that the document needed one, and we are protected today by its stipulations.


United States Bill of Rights

Getting through the amendment process

Like all constitutional amendments, the Bill of Rights had to go through a difficult amendment process before it became a part of the original Constitution. This amendment process is found in Article V of the original Constitution, and is as follows: "The Congress, whenever two thirds of both houses shall deem it necessary, shall propose amendments to this Constitution, or, on the application of the legislatures of two thirds of the several states, shall call a convention for proposing amendments, which, in either case, shall be valid to all intents and purposes, as part of this Constitution, when ratified by the legislatures of three fourths of the several states, or by conventions in three fourths thereof, as the one or the other mode of ratification may be proposed by the Congress." The article then ends with the two officially mandated exceptions to this, one of which said that two portions of the original Constitution that protected slavery could not be changed before the year 1808 (twenty years afterward), and the other of which said that "no state, without its consent, shall be deprived of its equal suffrage in the Senate." (Source: Article V) The Bill of Rights did not fall under either of these two exceptions, and so was ratified as the law of the land on December 15th, 1791, with all ten amendments ratified simultaneously at this time.


U.S. Supreme Court

And the debates continue ...

Today, the Bill of Rights is the part of the Constitution that is most debated. From debates over free speech and freedom of the press, to debates over the rights of the accused in a trial, there is not a single portion of the Bill of Rights that hasn't been debated time and time again since the amendments were ratified. All have been interpreted by Supreme Court cases (good and bad) at some point or another - usually many points. I won't go into the specifics of the debates, or how the amendments' meaning has been distorted, but there is scarcely a portion of the Bill of Rights (or any other portion of the Constitution, for that matter) that is not under attack by liberals. From the gun control policies violating the Second Amendment to attacks on religious rights protected in the First, the Bill of Rights is much under attack by liberals. Its meaning has been distorted, deliberately and otherwise, by the many judges of the left. This is a problem among liberals generally and judges specifically - that they are willing to throw out the meaning of the Constitution, in favor of advancement of their agendas and social policies.


Original Constitution of the United States

The reality that words mean things ...

I won't go into any part of the Constitution specifically, at least not more than I already have. But let me end this post with a plug for strict construction of the Constitution - a following of the words' meanings to the letter, without consideration of their meanings as "flexible" and "adaptable to the times." The only things in the Constitution that were meant to be "adapted to the times" were those changes that were made in accordance with the original amendment process, in Article 5 of the original Constitution. The Constitution gives discretionary power in certain areas about how to apply the policies it gives, but to say that the explicit statements made in other parts can be "adapted" to mean whatever you want is to deny the reality that words mean things. Denial of this reality is the defining characteristic of liberal interpretation of the Constitution, and one that they are forced to make from the reality that their interpretations of the Constitution just don't hold water.

... and specifically, the words of the Constitution have meanings

There's a need for strict construction of the Constitution today, and for judges that will interpret it as it was written. This is true of all parts of the Constitution, but perhaps nowhere moreso than in the disputed Bill of Rights.

Note: I have covered exceptions to this elsewhere, in my in-depth discussion of the "necessary and proper" clause, also known as the "elastic" clause. In certain situations, it is true that a broader interpretation of certain clauses (also known as an "elastic" interpretation) is consistent with the original intent of those clauses. In this sense, the conservative philosophy known as "strict constructionism" may be something of a misnomer in these situations. But what is commonly meant by this phrase is only that one should not read things into the Constitution that its original founders never intended to be there. In this popular sense of the phrase, I am a strict constructionist, and do not believe that the words of the Constitution can be "adapted" to mean whatever you want them to mean.

"This constitution, and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof; and all treaties made, or which shall be made, under the authority of the United States shall be the supreme law of the land; and the judges in every state shall be bound thereby, any thing in the constitution or laws of any state to the contrary notwithstanding."

Article 6, Section 2 of the original United States Constitution

If you liked this post, you might also like:

The federal judiciary serves for life, and can strike down laws

The First Amendment: Protecting religion from government (and not the other way around)

The First Amendment: Protecting freedom of speech and freedom of the press

The Second Amendment: Protecting the gun rights "of the people"

The tyrannical police state: The worst nightmare of the Founding Fathers

Actually, the death penalty is constitutional (as the Fifth Amendment makes clear)

The amendment that never made it into the Bill of Rights

Part of a series about
The Constitution

Introduction

Influences on the Constitution

Hobbes and Locke
Public and private property
Criticisms of social contract theory
Responses to the criticisms
Hypothesized influences
Magna Carta
Sir Edward Coke
Fundamental Orders of Connecticut
Massachusetts Body of Liberties
Sir William Blackstone
Virginia Declaration of Rights
The Declaration of Independence (1776)
Representative government
Polybius
Baron de Montesquieu
Articles of Confederation

The Constitution itself, and the story behind it

Convention at Philadelphia
States' rights
The Congress
Congress versus the president
Powers of Congress
Elected officials
Frequency of elections
Representation
Indigenous policies
Slavery
The presidency
Impeachment and removal
The courts
Amendment process

Debates over the Constitution, then and since

Debates over ratification
The "Federalist Papers"
Who is "Publius"?
Debates over checks & balances
The Bill of Rights
Policies on religion
Freedom of speech and press
Right to bear arms
Rights to fair trial
Rights of the accused
Congressional pay
Abolishing slavery
Backup plans
Voting rights

Epilogue

← Previous page: Debates over checks & balances - Next page: Policies on religion →

Part of a series about
American history

The American Bill of Rights


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