“Read it in the
writing on the wall”
I confess to being rather tired of
hearing too much about the extremely small minority of individuals actively resisting the Supreme Court’s marriage equality
decision in Obergefell v. Hodges this
summer. But, to quote Justice Scalia’s
acerbic opinion in the Court’s 1992 case Planned
Parenthood v. Casey, “it is beyond human nature to leave unanswered” “a few
of the more outrageous arguments” opposing
marriage equality, specifically, the cluster of attempts to counter Obergefell that invoke the Supreme Court’s
pre-Civil War decision in Dred Scott v.
Sandford.
Dred Scott was an enslaved man of African
descent who sued for his freedom in federal court.
Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, Photographs and Prints Division, The New York Public Library. Dred Scott Retrieved from http://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/8604d9f9-99cb-3204-e040-e00a18063b35
Simplifying a bit, his basic contention was
that because the man holding him enslaved had taken Scott with him to live in a
federal territory in which Congress had prohibited slavery in the statute
widely known as the Missouri Compromise, this acted to free Scott; that his
continued enslavement therefor violated his legal rights; and that the federal
court had jurisdiction over this lawsuit under the terms of Article III of the
Constitution because Scott was a citizen of one state and Sanford who claimed
ownership of Scott was a citizen of a different state. In a 7-to-2 decision where each Justice wrote
his own opinion, the Supreme Court ruled against Dred Scott.
Chief Justice Roger Taney’s lead opinion
became emblematic of the case, and it reasoned first that the federal courts
had no jurisdiction because Dred Scott as a presumed descendant of enslaved
Africans did not count as a citizen, because those who wrote and adopted the
Constitution regarded such persons as so inferior they and their descendants
could never be part of the body politic. This, constitutional scholar and now
Princeton University president Christopher Eisgruber has suggested, may be the
original “originalist” constitutional decision,* one insisting that the
Constitution’s meaning must be strictly limited to what was intended or perhaps
understood by those who framed it.
Second, Chief Justice Taney reasoned that Scott also lost on the merits
because he was not made free by the sojourn to a free territory, because
Congress lacked power to prohibit slavery in the territories; the territories
had to have the same prerogatives as the states, and the states of course chose
whether to be free states or slave states.
Taney also reasoned that not only did the federal Constitution contain
no grant of power to Congress to forbid slavery in the territories, but that
even if it did a law that freed a slave “merely” because a slaveholder took him
or her into a free territory would deprive the slaveholder of property without
due process of law. Hence, the Missouri
Compromise’s ban on slavery in specified federal territory was
unconstitutional.
In his Obergefell dissent, Chief Justice Roberts argued that Justice
Kennedy’s majority opinion was crucially like Taney’s ruling in Dred Scott. Roberts did not argue that Obergefell was like Dred Scott in that both adopted originalist approaches to
constitutional interpretation; that is not true of the Obergefell opinion and, to the contrary, Roberts’s dissent is
fairly congenial toward originalism. Nor, given the factual context of Obergefell, could Roberts repeat the
common anti-abortion analogy between Dred
Scott and Roe v. Wade, that the
opinions wrongly denied full legal status and constitutional protection of life
and liberty to a dramatically powerless segment of the human population. Nor was his criticism that they were similar cases
in that it was as unjust to let same-sex couples marry as it was unjust to deny
African Americans’ citizenship.
Fortunately few in the U.S. have expressly gone so far in their
condemnations of Obergefell.
Rather, the Chief Justice’s invocation of
Dred Scott rested on the same
concerns about how to interpret the Constitution that made Justice Scalia
apoplectic in Planned Parenthood v. Casey,
where in 1992 a majority of Justices refused to overrule Roe v. Wade. Like the Casey majority that protected a woman’s
right to choose to terminate her pregnancy relied on the Due Process Clause,
the Obergefell majority went astray
in Roberts’s eyes in holding that the freedom to marry a person regardless of
gender was a fundamental right protected by the Due Process Clause. For Roberts, the actual right at issue,
framed narrowly as a right to “same-sex marriage” – I am completely dismissing
his laughable claim that the right the Obergefell
plaintiffs were claiming was “a right to make a State change its definition of
marriage” – was not protected by law throughout U.S. history and thus should
not be protected by courts under due process.
For Roberts, and I quote at some length:
“The need for restraint in administering the strong medicine of substantive due
process is a lesson this Court has learned the hard way. The Court first
applied substantive due process to strike down a statute in Dred Scott
v. Sandford.… The Court relied on its own conception of liberty and
property in doing so.… In a dissent that has outlasted the majority opinion,
Justice Curtis explained that when the ‘fixed rules which govern the
interpretation of laws [are] abandoned, and the theoretical opinions of
individuals are allowed to control’ the Constitution's meaning, ‘we have no
longer a Constitution; we are under the government of individual men, who for
the time being have power to declare what the Constitution is, according to
their own views of what it ought to mean.’” So, Roberts objected to the
majority’s holding the Due Process Clause to protect substantive rights unless
it could show that the narrowly framed right to marry a person of the same sex
was “‘objectively, deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition,’ and
‘implicit in the concept of ordered liberty, such that neither liberty nor
justice would exist if they were sacrificed.’”
Brian Brown, head of the marriage inequality group the National
Organization for Marriage (or NOM), also has used Dred Scott to criticize the Obergefell
majority’s use of the Due Process Clause to protect same-sex couples’ access to
civil marriage. “In terms of its legal
reasoning,” he wrote, “Obergefell v. Hodges[] is the Dred Scott decision of our time. It is illegitimate and completing lacking in
constitutional authority. It is the
product of unaccountable judges legislating from the bench, usurping the role
of elected officials and voters and imposing a social policy on the nation
because they think they know best.”
This version of the Dred Scott criticism of Obergefell,
like Chief Justice Roberts’s, flatly ignored the great deal of precedent and
doctrine with which the Obergefell
majority opinion engaged. Roberts and
Brown may not have liked the majority’s interpretive approach, but it was well
grounded in Supreme Court practice and far from lawless. Ignoring this “Dred again” argument might thus be the appropriate response. But it is not the only use of Dred Scott that people resisting
marriage equality are making.
Although the vast majority of those
charged with issuing marriage licenses in the country are complying with the
Constitution and Obergefell, there
are a tiny number of persons like the over-exposed Rowan County Clerk Kim Davis
who have refused to do so. Some of
Davis’s defenders have tried to justify her resistance by reference to President
Lincoln’s example with respect to the Dred
Scott decision. Brian Brown of NOM wrote
that “like Dred Scott, America need
not accept [the Obergefell ruling] as
the final word, the ‘law of the land’ or even a decision worthy of respect,”
and he quoted President Lincoln’s first inaugural address: “‘if the policy of
the government upon vital questions, affecting the whole people, is to be
irrevocably fixed by decisions of the Supreme Court, the instant they are made
… the people will have ceased to be their own rulers, having to that extent
practically resigned their government into the hands of that eminent
tribunal.’” Similarly, Republican
presidential candidate Mike Huckabee, defending Davis’s refusal to issue
marriage licenses because of her religiously-justified belief that a same-sex
couple cannot marry, claimed: “Lincoln
ignored the 1847 Dred Scott decision
that said black people weren’t fully human.
It was a wrong decision. And to
say that we have to surrender to judicial supremacy is to do what Jefferson
warned against, which is, in essence, surrender to judicial tyranny.” And for Huckabee, ignoring odious Supreme
court decisions is a patently appropriate response, a necessary response,
because, he claims, “the Dred Scott decision … still remains to this day the
law of the land.”
There is so much wrong with Huckabee’s Dred Scott defense of Kim Davis that it
is hard to know where to start. Let’s
quickly set aside the fact that the case was decided in 1857, much closer to
the start of the Civil War; Huckabee gets the date right elsewhere. Let’s also set aside that Huckabee is
apparently conflating the case with anti-abortion criticisms of Roe v. Wade, for, however disparaging it
might have been, Dred Scott did not hold
that black people were not fully human; it was about constitutional
citizenship, not personhood.
Additionally, and this is harder to swallow, I realize, let’s set aside
Huckabee’s profoundly ignorant claim that Dred
Scott is the law of the land and so must be ignored. The Supreme Court did not need to overrule
that decision because, as Chief Justice Roberts pithily acknowledged in his Obergefell dissent, “Dred Scott’s
holding was overruled on the battlefields of the Civil War and by
constitutional amendment after Appomattox….”
The Thirteenth Amendment abolished slavery, the condition Mr. Scott
unsuccessfully challenged, and the very first sentence of the Fourteenth
Amendment guaranteed birthright citizenship to all regardless of race, thereby
overruling the case’s primary, citizenship holding.
More fundamentally off-base as far as the
Davis controversy goes, though, Huckabee is wrong to claim bluntly without
qualification, repeatedly in multiple venues, that “Lincoln ignored” Dred Scott. For the President took pains in his First
Inaugural to note: “nor do I deny that
such decisions must be binding in any case upon the parties to a suit, as to
the object of that suit.” Lincoln never
acted as though Dred Scott was a free citizen.
Indeed, he even went so far as to say – something opponents of Obergefell conveniently overlook – that
even as to non-parties, the Supreme Court’s constitutional decisions “are also
entitled to very high respect and consideration, in all parallel cases, by all
other departments of the government.”
Let me be clear. Kim Davis is one of the “parties to a suit”
for access to civil marriage in Rowan County, Kentucky, and she was under a
federal court order to issue licenses.
Her refusal to comply with that order while she was seeking its
extremely unlikely reversal on appeal is thus in no way sanctioned by President
Lincoln’s position on the permissibility of government officials who have not been bound by a court’s judgment not
following Dred Scott. Davis’s actions have been lawless, not in our
constitutional order a lawful mode of resisting marriage equality. And the American public sees it that way,
with a new poll showing that almost two-thirds of respondents believe that Kim Davis should be
required to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples, and when asked more
abstractly almost three-quarters of respondents believed in general that the
obligation to treat everyone equally is more important than accommodating
religious beliefs that conflict with the equality principle.
A constitutional amendment to override Obergefell would be a different matter
from flat disregard of the decision, and it is another potential avenue of
resistance to the Supreme Court’s constitutional interpretation there. Dred
Scott was overruled by two such amendments, the Thirteenth and
Fourteenth. Hypothetically, a
Twenty-Eighth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution could be adopted to undo Obergefell. There have already been calls for exactly
that. Recent Republican presidential
candidate Scott Walker responded to what he sees as the wrong of Obergefell: “the only alternative left
for the American people is to support an amendment to the U.S. Constitution to
reaffirm the ability of the states to continue to define marriage.” Republican presidential candidate Senator Ted
Cruz takes the same position. Republican presidential candidate – anyone see a
pattern here? – Rick Santorum one-ups them, espousing a federal constitutional amendment to limit marriage to couples with one man
and one woman, echoing earlier anti-marriage equality proposals that would
spawn a host of problems. Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee has
agreed. Indeed, the Republican Party
Platform from 2012 calls for precisely such a marriage-defining amendment. And of course the National Organization for
Marriage says it will “[l]end support to other efforts to amend the constitution [sic] to
repeal” Obergefell.
Not to be smug,
but even without a crystal ball I am confident: It’s not happening, as
Republican presidential candidates Jeb Bush and Sen. Lindsey Graham have
recognized and so called for the Republican party to remove theanti-same-sex-marriage plank from its platform. They understand that marriage for same-sex
couples is not an issue that divides the people of the U.S. the way abortion
has been. The country has been relatively close to evenly split over abortion,
with fluctuations, since at least 1997. Contrast marriage equality. JulyGallup polling, about two weeks after the Obergefell
decision, showed 58% of surveyed respondents supporting marriage equality (with
only 40% opposing), not statistically lower than the numbers in May before the
Court ruled. Of equal importance, since Gallup started
polling on the issue in 1996 support for marriage equality has been increasing,
opposition has been decreasing, and support is highest among younger
respondents, with more than three quarters of adults under 30 supportive in the
July polling. All indications are that opposition to marriage for same-sex couples is
not simply a function of age, but rather of the time during which one grew up
and formed early opinions. Younger people have difficulty understanding why so
many have been hung up on keeping lesbigay people from marrying. And the
younger people of today are the influential voters, legislators, and jurists of
tomorrow. So perhaps this is an area where the Reverend Doctor Martin Luther
King, Jr.’s observation rings true: “The arc of the moral universe is long, but
it bends toward justice.”
* Christopher L. Eisgruber, “Dred
Again: Originalism’s Forgotten Past,” Constitutional Commentary, Volume 10,
Issue 1 (Winter 1993), http://conservancy.umn.edu/bitstream/handle/11299/166878/10_01_Eisgruber.pdf