Legal questions
often display remarkable resistance to permanent resolution,
and new facts constantly invite reexamination of old
law. So it is not surprising that the Rehnquist Court
has encountered many of the same issues faced by its
predecessors. If often occupied more with refining the
law than with establishing broad new principles, the
current Court continues to decide issues relating to,
for example, the death penalty, abortion, school desegregation,
freedom of religion, and civil rights. Yet fundamental
changes in American society have frequently required
the Rehnquist Court to venture into relatively uncharted
legal terrain as well. For instance, the Court is regularly
called upon to decide whether, and to what extent, the
nations civil rights laws protect not just groups
defined by race, ethnicity, or religion, but by gender,
sexual orientation and physical ability as well. At
the same time, new and rapidly evolving technologies
have forced the Court to consider when medical care
must give way to a patients right to die, whether
speech on the internet should be as free
as it is in more traditional media, and when law enforcements
use of new investigative technologies becomes an unreasonable
invasion of constitutional rights.
Considering more familiar legal terrain first, the Rehnquist
Court has issued a number of important First Amendment
decisions involving both speech and religion. For instance,
in the 1989 flag-burning case, Texas v. Johnson, the
Court confirmed that the First Amendment protects even
the most unpopular forms of speech, including speech
viscerally distasteful to many of the Justices themselves.
Arguably, however, the Rehnquist Courts most important
free-speech cases have involved commercial rather than
political or other non-commercial speech. Although long
considered of little social value, the Courts
recent decisions reflect a growing respect for the importance
of commercial speech. As a result, the Court now evaluates
restrictions on commercial speech by increasingly exacting
standards. Accordingly, the Court has struck down a
city ordinance used to ban the placement of certain
newsracks on public property where there were less burdensome
alternatives for achieving the citys aesthetic
and safety goals, and where the city discriminated between
newsracks distributing advertising circulars on the
one hand, and regular newspapers on the other. In another
case, the Court rejected a state law prohibiting liquor
sellers from advertising the price of alcoholic beverages
as an unconstitutional restriction on truthful, nonmisleading
advertising. Separately, the Court struck down a federal
law prohibiting brewers from displaying alcohol content
on beer labels.
Other First Amendment cases have illustrated the potential
tension between its protection of free speech on the
one hand, and freedom of religion on the other. In one
case, for instance, fear of unconstitutionally endorsing
religion caused the University of Virginia to deny funding
to student-run religious publications on equal terms
with other student publications. When the students sued,
the Court held that the University had violated their
right to free speech.
At the same time, the Court itself has faced the difficult
task of maintaining the often elusive balance between
government not endorsing religion on the one hand, but
not penalizing it on the other. Thus, the Court has
held that a State may not create a school district for
the particular benefit of a specific religious sects
disabled children. Neither may a state deny certain
generally available public benefits to students merely
because they attend a private, religious school rather
than a public or other secular school. Ultimately, however,
the Rehnquist Courts religious-freedom jurisprudence
might best be viewed as an ongoing effort to establish
usable criteria for determining when government action
crosses the constitutional line in one direction or
the other. For example, in County of Allegheny v. ACLU
(1989) a fractured Court held that a crèche standing
alone inside a county courthouse impermissibly endorses
religion, but a menorah displayed next to a Christmas
tree on the lawn outside does not.
A similar effort is discernable in the Courts
recent attempts to define when government regulations
that affect the use of private property become a constitutional
taking of that property. As with so many
issues, the primary difficulty in establishing fixed
and usable criteria lies in the need to establish the
appropriate balance between important but competing
interests here the property owners interest
in unrestricted use of private property, and the governments
interest in controlling how such use affects the greater,
common good.
In 1987, the Court made it clear that property owners
are entitled to compensation even if a regulation takes
their property only temporarily. But subsequent decisions
have yet to clarify exactly when a regulatory
taking occurs, although some guiding principles
have emerged. Thus, a compensible taking occurs when
regulations impose burdens on private property that
are unrelated to the public interest those regulations
are intended to serve. For instance, conditioning a
building permit for beachfront property on an easement
allowing people already on the beach to cross from one
side of the property to the other would not substantially
further the States claimed interest in providing
adequate public access to reach the beach in the first
place. Moreover, the burdens of regulatory restrictions
on private property must be not only related to, but
also reasonably proportionate to, the public interests
they are purported to serve. Finally, regardless of
relationship and proportion, a regulatory burden is
a taking if it deprives owners of all economically beneficial
use of their property (unless the regulation merely
prohibits activities traditionally considered to be
a public nuisance or noxious use). That will not occur,
however, if part of the property can be developed despite
the regulation, even if the remainder cannot.
In
1996 the Court ruled that the Virginia Military
Institute must open its doors to women ~
Courtesy of Virginia
Military Institute |
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On
First Amendment grounds the Court overturned the
conviction of Gregory Johnson (above) for flag
burning in 1989 ~
Bill Pearce |
More definite rules have emerged from recent decisions
regarding the Constitutions equal-protection guarantees.
It has long been clear, of course, that any government
law or action that discriminates against certain classes
of people (e.g., racial minorities) is subject to the
strictest judicial scrutiny. In judicial shorthand,
such discrimination is valid only if it is very narrowly
tailored to fulfill a compelling government interest.
But a series of decisions by the Rehnquist Court are
important for applying the same exacting standards to
the flip side of the discrimination coin. Thus, the
Court has frequently invalidated even so-called affirmative
discrimination laws and other actions intended
to benefit the victims of past discrimination
where the government has not been able to show both
narrow tailoring and a compelling interest. In 1989,
for example, the Court struck down a Richmond ordinance
that set aside a fixed percentage of all city-contract
work for minority businesses, because the city had not
shown that the set-aside remedied specifically identifiable
effects of past discrimination on a specifically identifiable
class of minorities. The Court has applied the same
rule at the federal level: in Adarand Constructors,
Inc. v. Pena (1995) it rejected the presumption in a
federal contracting program that all minority-owned
businesses are socially and/or economically disadvantaged
as a result of past discrimination. A series of important
voting-rights decisions have similarly rejected attempts
to remedy past discrimination by drawing the boundaries
of congressional districts in an unnatural way to ensure
that members of racial minorities will be elected to
Congress.
In addition to policing the relationship between government
and the people, the Rehnquist Court has issued a number
of important decisions helping to define, and perhaps
even redefine, the relationship between the federal
government and the States. The Court's decisions in
this important area of national life essentially break
down into two important categories. One line of decisions
has substantially narrowed Congress authority
to legislate in the name of regulating interstate commerce.
From the late 1930s until relatively recently, the Courts
formerly narrow view of Congressional authority under
Article 1, Section 8s Commerce Clause expanded
until that authority appeared virtually unlimited. Particularly
since 1995, however, more recent decisions have marked
a sharp reversal in that trend. Accordingly, it is not
enough that the activity being regulated somehow affects
interstate commerce, no matter how minor the effect
or how remote the connection. At a minimum, the object
or activity being regulated must have a substantial
and demonstrable effect on interstate commerce, and
there is some indication that even the activity itself
may have to be fundamentally economic in
nature.
For example, the fact that violence against women may
substantially deter women from engaging in activities
affecting interstate commerce was not enough to save
a 1994 law making all violent acts against women federal
crimes. Despite its good intentions, the Court concluded,
the law impermissibly invaded an area of regulation
constitutionally left to the States. An earlier law
banning the possession of firearms in or around schools,
where it had not been shown that such possession had
any meaningful effect on interstate commerce, met a
similar fate. Importantly, other cases make clear that
even when Congress power to regulate is unquestioned,
it has no power to compel unwilling state agencies and
officials to enforce federal regulatory regimes. For
example, while Congress may have the power to enact
federal laws regulating the sale of handguns, it cannot
compel State law-enforcement personnel to implement
or administer the programs necessary to do so.
Another line of recent decisions has begun to establish
important limits on the power of Congress to abrogate
the States sovereign immunity under the Eleventh
Amendment. In most instances, private citizens have
no right to sue a State for money damages unless the
State consents to be sued. Although Section 5 of the
Fourteenth Amendment gives Congress the power to pass
laws subjecting the States to private suits, it may
only do so as a means of enforcing rights guaranteed
by the Fourteenth Amendment itself. Thus, while Congress
might make a State monetarily liable to a person against
whom it has discriminated on the basis of race in violation
of the Fourteenth Amendment, it has no similar power
where a State discriminates on the basis of age without
triggering the Fourteenth Amendments prohibitions.
Moreover, the power to regulate activity within a State
does not automatically carry the power to abrogate the
States immunity from private suit. For example,
while the Commerce Clause may give Congress the power
to regulate Indian gaming within the States, that does
not mean that Congress can authorize Indian tribes to
sue a State that fails to negotiate a gaming permit
in good faith.
If such decisions revolve around facts and circumstances
similar to those that have faced the Court since the
founding of the Republic, other cases decided by the
Rehnquist Court have been prompted by technological
innovations that its predecessors may never have imagined.
In the 1990 case Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Department
of Health, for instance, the continuing march of medical
progress forced the Court to establish a difficult balance
between a patients right to die and State's interest
in protecting human life. Often discussed in terms of
its economic implications, the internets social
ramifications became of topic of Supreme Court consideration
in Reno v. ACLU (1997) when it rejected Congress
first attempt to regulate speech in cyberspace. And
in 2001, the Court had to decide whether police use
of a thermal imager positioned outside a private home,
to detect heat lamps being used to grow marijuana inside,
violated the homeowners reasonable expectation
of privacy. The Court held that it did in Kyllo v. United
States.
Political developments, too, have required the Court
to decide some particularly novel legal issues in recent
years. In Clinton v. Jones (1997), for example, the
Court had to determine whether, and to what extent,
a sitting President is immune from private lawsuits
seeking damages arising out of unofficial acts that
occurred before he took office. Three years later, in
Bush v. Gore, the Court played a pivotal and
unprecedented role in determining the outcome
of the 2000 presidential election. The ultimate significance
of these decisions, both to the Court and to the country,
remains to be seen.
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In
1990, the Court held that Oregon could deny unemployment
compensation to two Native Americans who were
dismissed from their jobs for smoking peyote as
part of tribal religious rituals under the states
narcotics laws ~
Library of Congress
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