PLEDGE CASES STRIPPED FROM COURTS
September 23, 2004
Catholic
League president William Donohue commented on
today’s decision by the House of Representatives to
prevent the federal courts from ruling on whether the
words “under God” should be deleted from the
Pledge of Allegiance:
“Given
the reckless disregard that so many judges have shown
for the plain language of the Constitution, it is
entirely understandable that the House would move to
prohibit the federal courts, including the Supreme
Court, from hearing cases involving the Pledge.
But this is the wrong remedy: much more drastic
action is needed.
“Court
stripping is too tame a remedy given the undemocratic
nature of today’s courts.
What is needed is a constitutional amendment
that would prohibit the Supreme Court from nullifying
congressional legislation unless the opinion were
unanimous.
The Congress should then be allowed to override
a unanimous high court veto by a two-thirds vote in
both houses.
“A
version of this position was first broached by Chief
Justice John Marshall, and was more recently proposed
by the former-Marxist political philosopher Sidney
Hook.
Writing in the early 1960s, Hook argued that
the powers exercised by the federal courts were
profoundly undemocratic and were in need of being
curbed.
That the courts have become even more
undemocratic since is indisputable.
“Those
who doubt the necessity of implementing this change
should read the intellectual arrogance that colors
today’s decision by the Florida Supreme Court
striking down a law that the Florida legislature had
passed regarding the case of Terri Schiavo.
‘It is without question an invasion of the
authority of the judicial branch for the Legislature
to pass a law that allows the executive branch to
interfere with the final judicial determination in a
case,’ wrote Chief Justice Barbara Pariente.
Such hubris is not uncommon among judges these
days, and that is why a constitutional amendment along
the lines advanced by Marshall and Hook is urgently
needed.”
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