Overruling Democracy The Supreme Court Versus the American People

Author/creator Raskin, Jamin B. Author
Format Electronic
Publication InfoNew York : Routledge Florence : Taylor & Francis Group [Distributor]
Description312 p. ill 00.900 x 00.600 in.
Supplemental ContentFull text available from Ebook Central - Academic Complete
Subjects

Summary Annotation Thanks to a strong, bipartisan freedom of speech movement, the First Amendment is in good shape. But where's America's movement to protect political democracy? Certainly not on the Supreme Court, where the current five-Justice conservative majority has created one of the most ferociously activist and anti-democratic Courts in history. No American expects the justices to uphold every law passed by a popular majority, but we do expect them at least to defend basic democratic process and values. For the Court to decide that the "individual citizen has no federal constitutional right to vote" -- as it did in Bush v. Gore -- undermines basic principles Americans have been fighting for since the nation began. By measuring the Rehnquist court against earlier twentieth-century courts, Raskin cuts through the flabby reasoning, double standards, and "moral dyslexia" of the current majority. Other decisions, some famous and some obscure, have announced that citizens have no constitutionally protected right to an education (much less an equal one), that geometrically imperfect congressional districts with an African American or Hispanic majority are presumptively unconstitutional, that public television channels can sponsor closed debates between Democrats and Republicans which exclude Independent candidates, and that private corporations have a constitutional right to spend unlimited amounts of cash to influence public initiative and referendum campaigns. While skewing our politics, the conservative Court routinely strikes down progressive federal legislation, turning the Constitution thoroughly against national democratic purposes. Taking on the elitist and reactionary impulses of contemporary conservatism, Overruling Democracy lays out a compelling plan for "we, the people" to overrule the Court with some basic constitutional changes in the new century. Raskin's aggressive "constitutional patriotism" shows the way forward to a more democratic constitution, judiciary, and nation. Book jacket.
Access restrictionAvailable only to authorized users.
Technical detailsMode of access: World Wide Web
Genre/formElectronic books.
LCCN 2002011222
ISBN9780415934398
ISBN0415934397 (Trade Cloth) Active Record
Standard identifier# 9780415934398
Stock number00081154

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