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This Committee thus must assess
Justice O’Connor’s prospective replacement in terms of his
likely impact on constitutional law. Unlike many nominees in
American history, Judge Alito has a long written record which
provides clear indication of his views and what he is likely to
do if confirmed to the United States Supreme Court. The contrast
between Samuel Alito and Sandra Day O’Connor is stark. I want to
focus on one area: separation of powers and specifically checks
and balances on executive power. No area of constitutional law
is likely to be more important in the years ahead than
constitutional challenges to claims of broad executive
authority. In recent years, the Bush administration has claimed
unprecedented executive power, including the authority to detain
American citizens apprehended in the United States as enemy
combatants; the power to engage in warrantless eavesdropping of
conversations and electronic communications by American citizens
with those in foreign countries; the ability to detain enemy
combatants indefinitely in Guantanamo, Cuba, without due
process; and the power to authorize torture of individuals.
My goal today is not to discuss
the legality or desirability of any of these executive actions.
Rather, my point is that these and other issues of executive
power are enormously important and are sure to come before the
Supreme Court in the near future. As President Bush has
explained, the war on terrorism is likely to last beyond all of
our lives and thus surely will pose many other issues concerning
executive power in the years and decades ahead. Thus, a crucial
issue before this Committee must be whether Samuel Alito is
likely to examine the claims of executive power critically or
whether he is likely to be a virtual rubber-stamp approving
executive actions. What is striking about Judge Alito’s record
is that every available indication of his views – from his memos
as a Justice Department lawyer, his speeches, and his judicial
opinions – points in one direction: Judge Alito is likely to be
extremely deferential to claims of executive power and very
unlikely to enforce needed checks and balances. I have carefully
reviewed Judge Alito’s record and I could find no indication
where he wrote a memo, gave a speech, or authored a judicial
opinion favoring limits on executive power. My conclusion is
that at this point in time, it is far too dangerous to approve
someone for the Supreme Court with such a consistent record of
strong deference to executive claims of authority.
The Importance of
Limiting Executive Power
At the risk of saying the
obvious, checking executive power was a central goal of the
American Constitution. For the framers of the Constitution,
executive power was the power most to be feared. Indeed, in
their view, reposing virtually all power in a single individual,
such as King George III, threatened all liberty. Having endured
the tyranny of the King of England, the framers viewed the
principle of separation of powers as the central guarantee of a
just government. Madison wrote the strict separation of powers
was essential to preserve democracy in a republic because: “[n]o
political truth is certainly of greater intrinsic value or is
stamped with the authority of more enlightened patrons of
liberty than that . . . [t]he accumulation of all powers
legislative, executive and judiciary in the same hands, whether
of one, a few or many, and whether hereditary, self appointed,
or elective, may justly be pronounced the very definition of
tyranny.” Madison further warned, “[t]he great security against
a gradual concentration of the several powers in the same
department consists in giving to those who administer each
department the necessary constitutional means and personal
motives to resist encroachments of the others. The provision for
defense must in this, as in all other cases, be made
commensurate to the danger of attack.” In the past, the Supreme
Court has served an essential role in the system of separation
of powers by checking executive power and rejecting presidential
actions that usurp the powers of other branches of government or
prevent them from carrying out their constitutional duties. In
cases like Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer, which rejected
President Truman’s effort to seize the steel mills during the
Korean War, and United States v. Nixon, which rejected President
Nixon’s effort to invoke executive privilege to keep the
Watergate tapes from being used as evidence in court, the Court
imposed essential checks on executive power. A crucial question
must be whether Judge Alito will continue this tradition of
judicially imposed limits on presidential authority or whether
he will be a virtually sure vote for the executive on the
important issues likely to come before the Court concerning
separation of powers.
Samuel Alito’s
Record on Executive Power
Judge Alito’s writings, speeches,
and opinions indicate that his confirmation to the Supreme Court
would shift the Court’s balance towards potentially dangerous
deference to executive power. In this, like every area, the
contrast to Justice O’Connor is crucial in assessing the impact
of confirming Judge Alito. Justice O’Connor, for example, in
rejecting the Bush administration’s position that it could
detain enemy combatants without due process declared that even
“a state of war is not a blank check for the President when it
comes to the rights of the Nation’s citizens.” Similarly,
Justice O’Connor voted with the majority in holding that federal
courts had jurisdiction to hear the habeas corpus petitions
brought by detainees held in Guantanamo, Cuba. But there is
nothing in Judge Alito’s record to suggest recognition of the
need for limits on executive power. Prior to becoming a judge,
Alito worked exclusively in the executive branch of government,
in the United States Department of Justice: as an Assistant
United States Attorney, as Assistant Solicitor General, as
Deputy Assistant Attorney General in the Office of Legal
Counsel, and as a United States Attorney. In these capacities,
he repeatedly expressed the need for expansive, unchecked
executive power.
For example, as an Assistant
Solicitor General, Alito addressed the question whether
high-ranking executive officials should have absolute immunity
from lawsuits claiming that they authorized the illegal,
warrantless wiretapping of American citizens thought to present
domestic threats to national security. In 1972, the United
States Supreme Court unanimously ruled that the President could
not authorize such warrantless electronic surveillance. After
this decision, individuals who were subjected to illegal
wiretapping sued the Attorney General and other executive branch
officials. Alito, who was working in the Justice Department at
the time, wrote a memo saying that he believed that those
responsible were protected by absolute immunity. He declared: “I
do not question that the Attorney General should have this
[absolute] immunity.” The United States Supreme Court rejected
this position and declared in words that seem quite important
today: “The danger that high federal officials will disregard
constitutional rights in their zeal to protect national security
is sufficiently real to counsel against affording such
individuals an absolute immunity.” Judge Alito’s views about
executive power are reflected in other writings when he was at
the Justice Department. For instance, he wrote a memorandum
urging that the President issue statements when signing bills so
that presidential views, and not legislative history, be used in
interpreting statutes. Alito’s clearly stated objective was to
shift power from the legislature, whose legislative history
often guides statutory interpretation, to the executive branch.
He said that his goal was to give the Executive “the last word”
on issues of statutory interpretation and to “increase the power
of the Executive to shape the law.” Since becoming a judge,
Alito has given a number of speeches in which he has advocated
expansive executive powers. For example, in a 1989 speech, Judge
Alito sharply criticized the Supreme Court’s decision in
Morrison v. Olson, upholding the constitutionality of the
federal law providing for an independent counsel. The Supreme
Court, in a 7-1 decision, recognized the need for Congress to
create an independent counsel to investigate wrong-doing by the
President and high level executive officials. Judge Alito, in
his speech, strongly disagreed and characterized Justice
Scalia’s lone dissent as “brilliant.” In other words, Judge
Alito rejected the need for checks and balances and sided with
Justice Scalia’s dissent which favored broad executive power. In
a speech to the Federalist Society, in 2001, Judge Alito
expressed his view that “the theory of the unitary executive . .
. best captures the meaning of the Constitution’s text and
structure.” He explained that under this theory, “all federal
executive power is vested in the President” and “a vigorous
executive is needed.” This theory would significantly increase
presidential power and greatly limit the ability of Congress to
impose checks on it. As its advocates explain, “[t]he practical
consequence of this theory is dramatic: it renders
unconstitutional independent agencies and counsels to the extent
that they exercise discretionary executive power.” This theory
requires all executive tasks to be under presidential control
and rejects most limits on presidential power. The fact that
Judge Alito champions the unitary executive theory is strong
indication that as a Justice he would be a consistent vote for
executive power.
On the Third Circuit, Judge Alito
has not had the occasion to deal directly with issues of
presidential power. But repeatedly Judge Alito has had to deal
with cases involving the conflict between executive, law
enforcement power and individual rights. Judge Alito
consistently has ruled against individuals and in favor of
government powers. For example, in Doe v. Groody, Judge Alito
dissented from a decision that allowed a woman and her 10 year
old daughter to receive money damages after they were strip
searched by police who were executing a search warrant unrelated
to these two individuals. Judge Alito sided with the police and
would have precluded any recovery for the injured individuals.
On some occasions, Judge Alito has dissented from en banc
decisions on his Court protecting individual freedoms from
government power. For example, Judge Alito dissented from a 9-2
decision of his court holding that notice must be sent by mail
to the place where a person is being held and from a 10-1
decision that notice must be reasonably calculated to actually
reach the person whose property is being seized.
Conclusion
Simply put, there is nothing in
Judge Alito’s memos, speeches, or opinions that offer hope that
he will be a vote to uphold checks and balances. Instead,
everything points to his being a strong voice and vote for
expansive executive power. At this point in American history,
replacing Justice O’Connor with Judge Alito likely will mean a
significant shift on the Supreme Court in favor of executive
authority and against checks and balances. For this reason, and
so many others where Judge Alito is likely to bring about a
dramatic change in the law, he is the wrong nominee at the wrong
time to go on the Supreme Court.
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