US Constitution
Tom Round
TomR at orgo.cad.gu.edu.au
Mon Oct 28 02:23:42 PST 1996
It's highly impertinent for me, a non-US-citizen, to offer a commentary on
two aspects of the US Constitution that have come up recently in this
discussion (and not directly related to voting methods), but I'll do it
anyway; anyone who objects can delete this now.
On Saturday, 26 October 1996, Mike Ossipoff wrote:
And the fact that the electoral college is in the Constitution doesn't mean
that it can't violate the Constitution & be unconstitutional.
DEMOREP wrote:
The U.S. Supreme Court repeatedly upheld slavery before the U.S. Civil War
and the fugitive slave clause (Art. IV, Sec. 2, Cl. 2) especially in the
infamous case of Dred Scott v. Sanford, 19 Howard 393 (1857), ... [snip] The
13th Amendment ratified Dec. 6, 1865 abolished slavery (at the cost of some
620,000 dead). The Court tries to uphold everything in the Constitution
based on the principle that repeals by implication are not favored. The
equal protection clause in the 14th Amendment, Sec. 1 only applies to
laws within a State, not between States.
DEMOREP is right legally. Slavery was not abolished by Supreme Court
reinterpretation of the existing Constitution, but instead by amendment of
the Constitution. Mike is right, however, that the letter of one part of a
Constitution can violate the spirit of another part, as a moral and
political issue. If the spirit of the US Constitution can be said to embody
justice, due process and human equality (drawing on its preamble and on the
Declaration of Independence), then the Fugitive Slave Clause certainly
violates it. Some legal philosophers, pre-eminently Prof Ronald Dworkin,
would go even further and argue that an immoral clause which contravenes the
moral spirit of the document ought to be read down as narrowly as possible,
or even interpreted in a way that renders it a dead letter. However most
judges would baulk at actually setting aside the black-letter words of the
document they are supposed to be interpreting.
[Might I say parenthetically that I find it tricky at times to work out
exactly which parts of the Constitution are repealed or altered by the
Amendments, due to the practice of adding them as separate articles on the
end. (Eg, the 15th Amt originally penalised states which denied the vote to
free male inhabitants over 21; is this amended by the Nineteenth Amendment,
which gave women the vote in 1920? Probably it is, but how much then of the
15th remains?) Here in Australia, we adopt the simpler expedient of changing
the wording of existing sections, striking out omitted words and/or
inserting new words.]
Certainly you can make a political argument, addressed to whichever body has
power to ratify amendments to a Constitution, based on consistency: "The
Constitution requires equality of voting power for all local, state and
other federal elections, so to be consistent we ought to abolish the
Electoral College and make the Senate population-based." An outdated lacuna
that sits oddly with the rest of the Constitution may well become an
embarrassment, though that doesn't make it invalid.
The reason for this is that "leges speciales de generalibus abrogant" -
Latin for "specific clauses override general clauses". If one clause says
"All elections shall be by equal suffrage" while another says "Each State
shall have three Senators", then you have to stretch the general rule of
equality to accomodate the specific rule about equal Senate representation
for states unequal in population ... not vice versa. Likewise, as DEMOREP
said, the 14th Amt only prevents a state from denying "any person within its
jurisdiction" the equal protection of the laws. If California's block vote
system gives every Californian more effective voting power than every Rhode
Islander, well, too bad legally, Rhode Islanders aren't within California's
jurisdiction. I think Delaware tried to sue New York (??) in the 1960s to
make it adopt either a district or a proportional system for allocating
Electoral votes, but the Supreme Court threw it out.
Which leads to the second point - about the "reformed States" adopting a
better Presidential electoral system by uniform laws. Someone raised the
point that this may require the consent of Congress under Article 1, Section
10, Clause 3, being a "Compact or Agreement", and that a big-party-dominated
Congress might not grant such consent. Others suggested ways around this:
eg, that a voluntary agreement to standardise laws is not a binding
"Compact", that there may be accepted exceptions such as extradition or
waste dumps, etc. (I read that the purpose of the clause was that the
Founders feared that inter-state agreements might become the basis for
cabals and plots against the Union. Well, the clause didn't stop the
Confederacy getting kicked off!)
I suggest, with all modesty as an outsider, another avenue. That is, the
Constitution says simply that "each State shall appoint, in such manner as
the Legislature thereof may direct, a number of Electors ..." This
discretion would be subject to a few constraints (eg, no poll taxes, no
equal protection denials) but otherwise it leaves each State with wide
discretion to direct the manner of "appointing" its Electors.
I submit that this specific clause would prevail, in case of conflict, over
the Compacts clause, and thus that a State's decision to base the election
of its Presidential Electors on the results of a "Memorandum of
Understanding" among the reformed states would not count as a "Compact" that
requires the approval of Congress.
Otherwise the Compacts Clause could get ludicrously wide in its breadth - it
could, perhaps, even strike down the accepted practice of having all or most
State's elections on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November
..?
Tom Round
-------------------
Overflow-Cc: TomR at orgo.cad.gu.edu.au (Tom Round),
100245.2440 at compuserve.com ('Geoff Powell'),
afreeman at acslink.net.au ('Andrew Freeman'),
BMusidla at email.dot.gov.au ('Bogey Musidlak'),
crabb.deane at pi.sa.gov.au ('Deane Crabb'),
dunnmj at ozemail.com.au ('Martin Dunn'),
GGoode at VTRLMEL1.TRL.OZ.AU (Goode, Geoff),
j.pyke at qut.edu.au (John Pyke, QUT Law School),
jhtaplin at cygnus.uwa.edu.au ('John H Taplin'),
lee at cs.mu.oz.au ('Lee Naish'),
martinw at cse.unsw.edu.au ('Martin Willis'),
MDT at ozemail.com.au ('Matthew Townsend')
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