This Day in Liberal Judicial Activism—June 23

Policy

(AlenaMozhjer/Getty Images)

2005—In an act of judicial passivism, a five-justice majority, in an opinion by Justice Stevens, rules in Kelo v. City of New London that the City of New London satisfies the “public use” requirement of the Takings Clause when it takes private property from homeowners in order to transfer it to another private owner as part of an economic redevelopment plan. The majority correctly observes that its diluted reading of “public use” to mean “public purpose” accords with precedent, but its bare assertion that a genuine “public use” test “proved to be impractical given the diverse and always evolving needs of society” shows how unreliable the “living Constitution” is as a guarantor of rights not favored by the elites from which the Court’s members are drawn.

It’s hardly a surprise that justices who willy-nilly invent rights that aren’t in the Constitution ignore rights that are.

Articles You May Like

Biden Campaign Lies, Claims Trump Will Target “Americans Who Oppose Him” Just Like He Did After Trump Issues Warning to Democrats: “It Comes Back to Bite”
FRIDAY AT 3 P.M. EASTERN: ‘Five O’Clock Somewhere’ With Kruiser, VodkaPundit, Ashley McCully
RFK Jr. Is Poised To Tilt The Presidential Race — But It’s Still Not Clear To Whom
Around 300 arrested as riot police break up US university protests
‘Hold the line’: Inside the pro-Palestinian protest’s last stand at UCLA

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *