Obama Thumbs His Nose at Congress, His Constitutional Duty with Stand on DOMA
President Obama has said his view of same-sex "marriage" is "evolving." Apparently he thinks that the law should be based on a kind of Darwinian jurisprudence which allows it to "evolve" and become whatever the ruling politicians at a given moment say it is (or isn't).
How else to explain the decision by the president and his attorney general, Eric Holder, not to defend the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), signed into law by President Bill Clinton in 1996? The Senate vote was 85-14; the vote in the House was 342-67, an indication of overwhelming public support to keep marriage for opposite-sex couples.
Let's leave aside for the moment any moral, religious, historical or cultural reasons for maintaining the legal status quo on marriage, which has precedent dating to biblical times. The president and his attorney general have concluded that because DOMA is being challenged before the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, which they say "has no established or binding standard for how laws concerning sexual orientation should be treated" -- they will circumvent or overrule judicial authority and decide the matter for themselves. This "we are the law" thinking is what we oppose in Middle East dictators.
Holder contends that because of past "discrimination" against gays, the Second Circuit Court will, or should, apply a more "rigorous standard" to such cases and when they do, DOMA will be found unconstitutional.
Doesn't this sound strangely like Richard Nixon's approach to the law? It was Nixon who told David Frost in 1977, "When the president does it, that means that it is not illegal." So when the president and his attorney general refuse to defend a law they have taken an oath to uphold, isn't that the other side of the same coin? Imagine the reaction from the Left had George W. Bush announced his administration would no longer defend Roe v. Wade because he thought it unconstitutional and it would eventually be overturned by the Supreme Court.
Former Speaker Newt Gingrich in an interview with Newsmax.TV on Friday said he thought the Obama-Holder decision not to defend DOMA in the courts might be an impeachable offense and that the House may "zero out (defund) the office of attorney general and take other steps as necessary until the president agrees to do his job." He later softened his stance on the issue of impeachment, saying instead in a statement to reporters that, though impeachment is clearly not an appropriate action, "Congress has every responsibility to demand President Obama live up to his constitutional obligations."
The president and attorney general believe there are no "reasonable" arguments in favor of retaining DOMA. Constitutional attorney John Whitehead disagrees. Whitehead tells me he thinks the Obama-Holder tactic is "an attempt to provide cover for the president's decision to achieve a repeal of DOMA through the courts as opposed to an even-handed evaluation of the strengths of the legal arguments."
Whitehead notes that Holder has acknowledged a binding circuit court precedent which holds that "classifications based on sexual orientation are subject to 'rational basis' scrutiny." Under such scrutiny, Whitehead says, "a legislative classification based on sexual orientation would be upheld if there is any conceivable basis to support the distinction; a court is not to judge the wisdom, fairness, or logic of the legislative choice."
Whitehead adds, "Because rational basis scrutiny is extremely deferential to the decision of the legislature, the determination that it applies to a particular classification basis is usually outcome determinative; where rational basis scrutiny applies, that equal protection challenge is almost always denied."
That is why President Obama and Attorney General Holder are wrong to pre-judge the outcome of this case in the courts, not to mention their rejection of congressional authority. Isn't this ultimately about the separation of powers?
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Comments
Holder has "his people" and Obama has "his people"
Submitted by SickofLibs on Wed, 03/02/2011 - 11:06am.
Just imagine the power a "New Gay Black Panthers" organization could wield.
A distinction
Submitted by KC Mulville on Wed, 03/02/2011 - 11:19am.
The travesty here is not the notion that law evolves.
Law is about how we agree to live together. As we go along, we make agreements on how we're going to do this or that, how we'll settle disputes about this or that. The essence of the law is agreement, what we call the consent of the governed. As we go along, we can make new agreements, and revise old ones. Nothing special about that.
But just like any common contract, one side can't change the agreement unilaterally. If you make a contract and then violate the agreement, you can't excuse yourself on the grounds that you changed your mind. Change your mind all you want, but that doesn't change the contract.
The travesty here is that Obama has simply decided to unilaterally change the contract. When we passed the DOMA, that was what we agreed to. Obama doesn't want to agree to it, claiming that he's struggling with the issue. Well, sorry, the law isn't based on Obama's feelings. We had an agreement.
The complication is that the consent of the governed makes the law, and also gives the president his authority. The moment Obama breaks the agreement, he loses his authority. But that's the irrationality of the tyrant. He wants the flexibility to change his side, but he demands that we rigidly adhere to his authority.
It's more than thumbing his nose
Submitted by jon_torlin on Wed, 03/02/2011 - 11:53am.
This is more than just thumbing his nose at Congress and his "stand" with DOMA.
This manchild has been doing many things that, along with this "stand," are unConstitutional and an elected person who aacts like the law(Constitution) doesn't matter thus becomes BY DEFINITION a dictator and an enemy to the US Constitution and the United States.
Holder was recently exposed as a racist because of his views on (not)prosecuting the Black Panthers in the voter intimidation case, when he talks about "his people" during a hearing with the Appropriations Committee. He needs to be held accountable for his actions as well, but he's following the orders of the dictator.
Until the Chairman is removed from power, we have a dictator acting with impunity.
-Jon
Was there any question that
Submitted by Dan The Man 2 on Wed, 03/02/2011 - 11:56am.
Was there any question that Obama would if the opportunity presented itself sink into tyranny?
Defending ObamaCare
Submitted by ecnirP on Wed, 03/02/2011 - 12:15pm.
I can't wait until the next president comes in and declares that he's decided that ObamaCare is unconstitutional and will instruct his (or her) Attorney General to not defend the government in any judicial proceedings on the topic.
I'm sure the media will consider that fair play.
Jumping to conclusions
Submitted by Pickles and Peppers on Wed, 03/02/2011 - 1:20pm.
The Supreme Court has yet to rule on same sex marriage, so the prophecy of PO and AGH disobeying a future ruling is suspect.
Is the law evolving? Only a fool would say otherwise. Each amendment to the Constitution is an evolution of the law. Cyberspace laws, evolution. Voting rights, evolution. National security...yup, evolution.
So when was the last
Submitted by Dan The Man 2 on Wed, 03/02/2011 - 6:29pm.
So when was the last amendment to the Constitution and how many have there been in over 200 plus years? This is no prophecy it is Obama's own words ... and DOMA is law and must be upheld by the surpreme law authority, the POTUS.
1992
Submitted by Pickles and Peppers on Wed, 03/02/2011 - 7:19pm.
27 times nationally. Who knows how many state amendments there have been, but most recently many have ratified amendments defining marriage. Factually speaking the law is evolving.
Should the US Supreme Court decide in favor of same sex marriage, that too would be an evolution of the law. Wouldn't you say?
Link or slink man. If you
Submitted by Dan The Man 2 on Thu, 03/03/2011 - 12:27pm.
IF SCOTUS decides wrongly it is unconstitutional then no it is not.
Good answer
Submitted by SickofLibs on Thu, 03/03/2011 - 12:29pm.
.
And your expertise
Submitted by Pickles and Peppers on Thu, 03/03/2011 - 12:59pm.
In Constitutional law comes from? Let me guess, you read the Constitution so that makes you an expert.
And link what?
I got what he meant. Why didn't you?
Submitted by SickofLibs on Thu, 03/03/2011 - 1:06pm.
..."evolution" is not always an improvement.
Just because judges reach a decision does not mean that decision necessarily benefits society.
Clearly
Submitted by Pickles and Peppers on Thu, 03/03/2011 - 3:35pm.
As illustrated just this week by the Court's ruling over picketing funerals.
I've never thought of evolution as an improvement, only tiny little changes that happen over many years (Scientifically speaking) in that struggle of survival of the fittest.
Constitutionally speaking I am making the argument that each Amendment is a step in the evolution of our sacred writ.
It matters not what a law does or does not "evolve"---
Submitted by matthewdean on Wed, 03/02/2011 - 7:36pm.
into; it only matters that those charged with enforcing the laws are not "involved" in misprision relating to those laws.Holder vs. Reno
Submitted by nemesis on Wed, 03/02/2011 - 10:41pm.
I think AG Holder took a page from AG Reno's play book. She defined her job as "defending the rights of the accused - not the rights of the victim".