Congress & the court: restoring balance
The judicial trend of diminishing deference to Congress鈥檚 power to find facts and then legislate pursuant to those findings deeply concerns many on the Article I side of government.1 To be sure, courts must be able to assess 鈥搘ith total independence鈥搘hen and where Congress has exceeded its constitutionally authorized powers. Indeed there have been times in our history when the courts have been the bulwark against Congress鈥檚 efforts to undermine constitutionally protected rights. However, in recent years the judiciary has abrogated Congress鈥檚 powers to a troubling degree. Starting with United States v. Lopez, the guns in school zones case, running through United States v. Morrison, the Violence Against Women Act case, and including Board of Trustees of the University of Alabama v. Garrett, the disability discrimination case, the courts鈥搈ost significantly the Supreme Court鈥揾ave steadily eroded Congress鈥檚 power to legislate, with the effects felt and often suffered across the nation.
While some recent decisions have fairly noted Congress鈥檚 failure to establish a nexus between a piece of legislation and a source of congressional power, several of the cases, of the new-federalism jurisprudence ilk, ignore serious, studied, and diligent efforts by Congress to make the necessary findings and establish a proper constitutional exercise of power. Congress holds hearings鈥揻or some laws, years鈥 worth of hearings鈥揳nd takes testimony from citizens, academics, state lawmakers, state attorneys general, and an array of other interested parties. In passing many laws that the courts have then struck down on federalism grounds, Congress has specifically solicited input鈥揳nd received a green light 鈥揻rom the states on whether there is a need for the national legislature to act. Generally, actions of the Congress do not attempt to violate or weaken states鈥 . . .