Wednesday, March 22, 2006

New York Times Editorial - Bush and the courts

Bush and the courts
Agence France-Presse, Copyright by The New York Times

TUESDAY, MARCH 21, 2006


Since the Republican majority has decided to allow President George W. Bush to usurp Congress's role in matters of national security, the battle to save the constitutional balance of powers moves to the judiciary. A critical test of judicial independence will come this month, when the Supreme Court hears arguments in a case that has become a focus of Bush's imperial vision of the presidency.

Salim Ahmed Hamdan, a Yemeni national accused of having been a bodyguard and driver for Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan, has been detained since 2002 in Guantánamo Bay. He filed suit to challenge the legitimacy of the military commission that upheld his designation as an "unlawful enemy combatant" - a term Bush invented after Sept. 11 to deny the protections of the Geneva Conventions, international statutes or U.S. law to certain prisoners.

Hamdan argued, rightly, that the commissions are not legitimate because prisoners are routinely barred from seeing evidence, much less confronting their accusers or having access to real legal representation. But his case has become a much larger battle over the principle of habeas corpus, which is embedded in the Constitution and says that a prisoner cannot be denied the right to challenge his detention. Bush's decision after Sept. 11 that he had the power to put prisoners beyond the reach of the law was the first attempt to suspend habeas corpus on American territory since the Civil War.

The Supreme Court two years ago emphatically rejected the president's claim that its jurisdiction did not extend to Guantánamo. Seeking to reverse that ruling, the White House in December helped push through a special amendment as part of the deal that also saw Bush sign a watered-down ban on torture of military detainees.

The amendment, sponsored by Senators Lindsey Graham, a Republican, and Carl Levin, a Democrat, left "enemy combatants" held without a trial in a seemingly inescapable legal black hole. As soon as Bush signed this law, he declared that the administration was going to apply it to all pending cases, about 160 or so, and the solicitor general told the Supreme Court it no longer had a right to hear Hamdan v. Rumsfeld.

This is court-stripping - the attempt by another branch of government to prevent the court from deciding a particular issue. The White House tried to justify this outrageous tampering with the judiciary by arguing that the new legislation took away the power of the courts to hear not just future cases but also cases already accepted for review. The Supreme Court responded by adding the jurisdictional objection to the list of issues it will consider when the case is heard March 28.

At a minimum, we hope the court will rule that Congress and the president may not deny the justices the power to review pending cases. But it should also reject the defective military commissions, as well as the idea of denying access to the courts for future valid claims brought by Guantánamo detainees.

If Congress wants to take the extreme step of suspending the Supreme Court's jurisdiction over habeas corpus, especially pending appeals, it must say so in unmistakable terms, which it has not done.

The U.S. Constitution requires an "invasion" or a "rebellion" as a prerequisite for suspension of habeas corpus. It's hardly likely that the founding fathers intended to give Congress the right to eliminate judicial review during an ongoing international struggle against terrorism that may well go on for generations.

The retired Justice Sandra Day O'Connor observed in a recent speech that the framers created three branches of government because they knew that preserving liberty requires that no single branch or person can amass unchecked power. According to Nina Totenberg of National Public Radio, who heard the speech, O'Connor cited Republican court-stripping efforts as an example of dangerous overreaching. "It takes a lot of degeneration before a country falls into dictatorship," O'Connor said, "but we should avoid these ends by avoiding these beginnings."

Bush seems to forget that and Congress clearly will not remind him. The United States cannot afford for the Supreme Court to forget as well.

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