Goldberg: Barrett's 'originalist' stance is the only one that makes sense

Photo by Erin Schaff of The New York Times / Judge Amy Coney Barrett during the third day of her Senate confirmation hearing to the Supreme Court on Capitol Hill in Washington, Oct. 14, 2020.
Photo by Erin Schaff of The New York Times / Judge Amy Coney Barrett during the third day of her Senate confirmation hearing to the Supreme Court on Capitol Hill in Washington, Oct. 14, 2020.

Amy Coney Barrett, President Donald Trump's Supreme Court nominee, is an "originalist." Given that originalism is a term coined by lawyers, it shouldn't surprise anyone that there are many different flavors of originalism. But, as Barrett explained in her confirmation hearings, they all share the basic idea that the meaning of the Constitution can be found in the Constitution.

"So in English," she explained, "that means that I interpret the Constitution as a law, that I interpret its text as text and I understand it to have the meaning that it had at the time people ratified it. So that meaning doesn't change over time. And it's not up to me to update it or infuse my own policy views into it."

I don't understand why this should be a difficult concept to understand. And yet for some people, it remains not only incomprehensible but utterly contemptible.

Dan Rather, who for decades at CBS News cast himself as a neutral reporter of facts, declared on Twitter the other day: "If you want to be an 'originalist' in law, maybe you should go all the way. Cooking on a hearth. Leeches for medicine. An old mule for transportation. Or maybe you can recognize that the world changes."

Rep. Barbara Lee, D-California, tweeted this gem of an insight: "An 'originalist' reading of the Constitution would disqualify Judge Barrett, or any woman, from serving on the Supreme Court or from owning property or voting. 'Originalism' is a cover for deeply unpopular & un-democratic policies, not some kind of serious judicial philosophy."

People who mock originalism subscribe to the view that the Constitution is a "living, breathing" document whose meaning changes with every generation. When I object to this idea, I often hear the kind of nonsense offered by Rather and Lee: that if the Constitution didn't change over time, Black people would still be in chains, women wouldn't be able to vote, etc.

The problem is that they're letting the "living Constitution" take credit for battles it didn't win. Women have the vote because of the 19th Amendment. It was the 13th Amendment that ended slavery, not the good intentions of Supreme Court justices.

When you amend the Constitution, you're changing its meaning according to the rules of the Constitution. No one "breathed" new meaning into the words; they added more words.

Now, I would argue that those new words were in the spirit of the ideas that gave birth to this country and the Constitution. But that's another debate, and people are free to disagree. Either way, these improvements to the Constitution weren't discovered in some literary seminar reinterpreting the existing text. We changed the text.

By the way, if you believe that justices can invent new meanings for the text, what would be your principled argument against the court ruling that a four-year term for presidents is simply another vestige of bygone days when we used leeches for medicine and cooked on a hearth?

Yes, of course things have changed since the founding era. Of course it takes serious legal and intellectual effort to figure out how, for example, free speech principles work in an era of social media and the internet. That's one reason originalists often come to different conclusions about how to interpret the Constitution and the relevant precedents.

But here's the thing: They're interpreting the actual Constitution.

What is the alternative? To listen to many Democrats in the Barrett hearings, the alternative is to simply look for the policy outcomes you want and declare them constitutional.

If that's how it should work, why have a court at all?

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