A Word on Behalf of Justice Alito


Justice Samuel Alito has been unfairly criticized by several legislators, as well as by media commentators, following his reaction to a surprising rebuke to the Supreme Court delivered during the State of the Union Address.  The rebuke, directed at the majority of the Court that issued the recent Citizens United campaign finance decision, was a surprise not only because of the venue in which it was delivered, but also because it mischaracterized that decision as “revers[ing] a century of law.” 

The reaction caught by the cameras was so subdued that it strains credulity to suggest that the Justice was trying to do anything remotely distracting or disruptive.  That did not stop Senators Russ Feingold (D-WI) and Ted Kaufman (D-DE) from pointedly accusing Justice Alito of acting inappropriately.  Judiciary Committee Chairman Pat Leahy (D-VT) went as far as to single out Justice Alito in a floor speech with a snide attack on the Justice for supposedly going back on his testimony during his nomination hearings about the limited role of judges.  Sen. Leahy proceeded to make the same mischaracterization of Citizens United as the State of the Union Address with an uninformed reference to “100 years of the Supreme Court’s own precedents.

There is a century-old federal statute that prohibits direct contributions to campaigns by corporations, but the Court’s decision did not touch that.  It struck down a more controversial 1947 provision banning independent expenditures by corporations and labor unions.  That provision only became law over the veto of President Harry Truman, who warned that the ban was “a dangerous intrusion on free speech.”  In cases that arose during the 1940’s and 1950’s, Justices Hugo Black, William O. Douglas, Frank Murphy, Wiley Rutledge, and Chief Justice Earl Warren reached the same conclusion that the Court would in Citizens United.  Although a majority of the Court did not decide the issue back then, no one would consider those names of the past—all considered liberals in their time—to be pawns of corporations.  Regardless of whether you ultimately agree with their conclusion, the justices who joined the recent decision deserve credit for taking seriously the weighty free speech considerations involved in the case.

As a constitutional law counsel on the Senate Judiciary Committee who worked on Justice Alito’s nomination, I was glad to see the nomination prevail over bitter party-line opposition, but disturbed by the tactics used against him.  Before and after his nomination, Justice Alito has consistently displayed the decorum and respect that was sadly denied him by opponents of his nomination when he faced the Senate.  He did not deserve this latest round of demagoguery, particularly from the body that handled his nomination.

Note: Frank Scaturro, currently a Visiting Assistant Professor of Law at Hofstra Law School, served as Counsel for the Constitution on the Senate Judiciary Committee from 2005 to 2009.  He is a candidate for the United States House of Representatives in New York’s 4th Congressional District.



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6 Comments Leave a comment

Heh. I'm not really sure what the Dems hope to gain by going after a Supreme Court Justice...

randy streu (Diary) Saturday, February 13th at 1:50PM EST (link)

It’s not like he can lose an election.

Besides, the more I see, the more I’m convinced that “not true” WASN’T what he was mouthing at the President.

At least, that’s not what -I’m- mouthing to the President when he talks. Looks the same from a distance, though.

LOL

Leopard1996 (Diary) Saturday, February 13th at 2:29PM EST (link)

Yeah, Justice Alito is a better man than I. I think I would have said loudly what you think he mouthed, as well as probably attempted to jump over the podium and handle that insult to my honor a little more personally.

“The accumluated filth of all their sex and murder will foam up about their waists and all the whores and politicians will look up and shout, “Save Us!”….and I’ll look down and whisper, “No”…The Watchmen

 
 

Frank,

Viet71 (Diary) Saturday, February 13th at 2:33PM EST (link)

as a lawyer, I couldn’t agree more.

I spent an hour on the phone explaining pre- and post-Citizens United law to a colleague, who is trained as a lawyer and who thought, from what he had read and heard, that he understood Citizens United.

He was dumbfounded to learn that corporations and unions STILL ccannot give directly to candidates or their campaigns.

A light came on for him. He saw the media had deceived him.

I pointed him in the direction of MCFL and WRTL, as well as the ACLU amicus brief and the IRA Glasser post on C.U. at Huffpo.

I’m new here but have posted several diaries here on Citizens United. I’d be interested in your reaction to them.

Thanks for a fine diary, and thank God for Sam Alito and the four other members of the Court who constituted the majority in Citizens United.

hey Viet71...

mbecker908 (Diary) Saturday, February 13th at 2:40PM EST (link)

small administrative note…

When you reference things – especially diaries you’ve published at RS – please provide links. Some of us old people know how to root them out but I’m guessing that about 95% of the folks here couldn’t find one of your old diaries if their lives depended on it.

Thanks. And welcome to RS even if you are a lawyer.

Thanks.

Viet71 (Diary) Saturday, February 13th at 3:01PM EST (link)

I’m doing my best to behave.

This isn't about behavior, you're very well house broken.

mbecker908 (Diary) Saturday, February 13th at 3:24PM EST (link)

It’s just about site convenience for newbies or old lazy guys (me).