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Contributor
Ray
Haynes
Mr.
Haynes is an Assembly member representing Riverside and
Temecula.
He serves on the Appropriations and Budget Committees. [go to
Assembly Member Haynes
website at California Assembly][go to Haynes index]
Judges
Gone Wild
The deteriorating liberal judiciary…
[Ray
Haynes] 3/22/05
They
learn it in school. And it is obscene. How they get away with it,
I don’t
know, but you see this obnoxious and obscene behavior everywhere.
It is what you see
on the news everyday of our courts out of control—of
our judges gone wild. Wild in the sense that they believe they
are not restricted or controlled by the constitutions
of our federal or state government, the laws enacted by those
governments, or the traditions of the judiciary developed pursuant
to the constitutions and the principles of this country. These
judges gone wild need to read Montesquieu, and his principle
of separation of powers.
It was unusual at the time of our founding for the judicial
and legislative powers to be separated. Montesquieu thought combining
these powers was dangerous. If a judge writes the law, and then
applies it, the judge loses the objectivity that is necessary
to fairly and impartially apply the law. If, on the other hand,
the judge is free to ignore the law, and apply his or her own
whim, the law becomes arbitrary; the society is governed by the
rule of man, not the rule of law.
In California, the rule of law is in danger. A judge in San
Francisco ruled that the California Constitution, enacted in
1870, prohibits discrimination in our marriage laws against homosexuals.
Put aside the fact that the laws of marriage are equally applied.
Every man, regardless of sexual orientation, can marry a woman,
and every woman, regardless of sexual orientation, can marry
a man. The more important issue is that no rational person can
maintain that the people of this state, at the time the Constitution
was enacted, intended any part of that constitution to require
that the state recognize same sex marriage. The judge in this
case just ignored that common sense proposition, and rewrote
the Constitution. The judge ruled that our Constitution required
the state to recognize marriage between two men or two women.
The ruling is nonsensical, but understandable because this
judge has to face the voters of San Francisco in his next election.
Increasingly, judges are all too willing to abandon their oaths
of office to mimic popular culture. Our Supreme Court recently
ruled that certain international laws and treaties (that did
not exist when our Constitution was drafted) ought to define
the meaning of our constitutional principles. Now, a judge in
California simply ignored history and precedent, and rewrote
the California Constitution, ignoring the will of over 62% of
the California electorate. This is the picture of a judge gone
wild.
These judges are
taught to do this in law school. They are taught that the Constitution
is a “living” thing,
a thing who’s meaning changes with the times. While it
is true that the principles of the Constitution are timeless,
their meanings do not change. Changing the Constitution requires
an amendment, enacted by the Legislature and put before the people
to gain their assent. A judge that changes constitutional principles
without an amendment is acting like a lawmaker, and that is outside
his or her power or expertise.
Elected representatives are designated as the lawmakers because
they are in the best position to balance the needs of their constituents.
They are in the best position because they are held accountable
for their decisions on laws through the electoral process. Lawmakers
set the rules under which disputes are resolved, judges resolve
the disputes. When judges cross the line, and start to write
the rules, they undermine the system. Those who wrote the Constitution
understood how to strike the balance. The judge in San Francisco
obviously did not.
Judges gone wild
is not a pretty sight. It is destroying the people’s
faith in our judicial system.CRO
Mr.
Haynes is a California Assembleyman representing Riverside
and Temecula and frequent contributor to CaliforniaRepublic.org.
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