The Stranger’s Dan Savage wrote up a New York Times op-ed today on an idea that’s been slowly making the rounds recently: a constitutional amendment on the right to privacy.
Well, if the right to privacy is so difficult for some people to locate in the Constitution, why don’t we just stick it in there? Wouldn’t that make it easier to find?
If the Republicans can propose a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage, why can’t the Democrats propose a right to privacy amendment? Making this implicit right explicit would forever end the debate about whether there is a right to privacy. And the debate over the bill would force Republicans who opposed it to explain why they don’t think Americans deserve a right to privacy — which would alienate not only moderates, but also those libertarian, small-government conservatives who survive only in isolated pockets on the Eastern Seaboard and the American West.
Of course, passing a right to privacy amendment wouldn’t end the debate over abortion — that argument would shift to the question of whether abortion fell under the amendment. But given the precedent of Roe, abortion rights would be on firmer ground than they are now.
So, come on, Democrats, go on the offensive — start working on a bill.
Politically, it’s an approach that has a clear upside. Just as Republicans use schemes like the flag-burning amendment to score cheap nationalistic points, putting Dems on the spot who don’t want to appear unpatriotic, a privacy amendment could become just as problematic for the GOP. I haven’t seen any recent polling, but I suspect most Americans strongly support privacy rights and would back an amendment to guarantee those rights.
There are, however, a couple of concerns.
First is the practical application. As Savage mentioned, instead of arguing whether a right to privacy that guarantees abortion rights exist, we’d argue whether abortion rights fall under the right to privacy. For that matter, legal controversies over issues like sex and abortion would probably be covered, but what about death-with-dignity questions? Or maybe recreational drug use? It’d be difficult, if not impossible, to word an amendment in such a way as to avoid ambiguities. That’s a problem.
Second, the fundamental flaw in a liberal arguing that an amendment is necessary is that implicitly argues that a right to privacy doesn’t already exist in the Constitution, which is the conservative argument. My friend Michael Stickings at The Reaction covered this well a few days ago.
It’s an interesting idea, and Democrats might do well to go ahead with it (would Republicans or conservatives more specifically come out against privacy?), but…I tend to think that the Constitution already includes the right to privacy — it’s just not mentioned by name. […]
An amendment could help, no doubt, but we who hold that the Constitution already includes the right to privacy must be more vocal in our defense of that right and in our opposition to those who would take that right away from the American people.
Exactly. The left has been arguing — indeed, demanding — for 30 years that the Constitution already offers Americans a right to privacy. It doesn’t make a lot of sense for those same people to turn around and argue that the Constitution doesn’t offer that protection so we need to ratify an amendment.
It seems the wisest course, in addition to taking Stickings’ advice and standing up for this right more forcefully more often, is to wait for Bush’s nominees to start taking these rights away. After the Roberts/Scalia/Thomas/Alito gang start “tweaking” the last couple of generations of jurisprudence, a right to privacy amendment may become necessary.
What do you think?