For decades, the [tag]Pledge of Allegiance [/tag]was purely secular. It used to end, “one nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.” In 1954, Congress changed the language and inserted “[tag]under God[/tag]” as part of the response to the Cold War. (If the enemies were godless communists, we did the opposite. Now that our enemies are deeply religious, should we go back to embracing secularism?)
A controversial lawsuit was filed a few years ago challenging the constitutionality of [tag]Congress[/tag] making the Pledge more religious, and ever since, Republicans in Congress and the religious right have been anxious to exploit the issue for political gain. It’s culminated in a little something called the “[tag]Pledge Protection Act[/tag].”
At a Capitol Hill news conference, Rep. Todd [tag]Akin[/tag], R-Mo., and Sens. John [tag]Kyl[/tag], R-Ariz., and Sam [tag]Brownback[/tag], R-Kan., said the country needs the Pledge Protection Act to safeguard our freedom.
“We’re very concerned that the Supreme Court might possibly say that the words, ‘one nation under God’ would be unconstitutional,” Akin told CitizenLink. “I think that would be a tragedy and a travesty if it happens.”
The bill would keep the federal courts from taking cases challenging with the Pledge. “If somebody complains to a federal judge that it’s unconstitutional for school children to say the Pledge of Allegiance,” Akin said, “then that federal judge would have to say, ‘I’m sorry, I don’t have jurisdiction to hear this case.’ “
That’s actually a pretty accurate description of the legislation. Right now, if someone wanted to file a federal lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the 1954 law that added “under God” to the [tag]Pledge[/tag], a person could do that. He or she would probably lose, and there’s a real question over who has the standing needed to file such a challenge, but a federal suit could be filed.
Under Akin’s bill, a federal court couldn’t hear the case, even if it wanted to. This practice, sometimes called “[tag]court stripping[/tag]” or “[tag]jurisdiction stripping[/tag],” is one of the far-right’s nuttier approaches to the law.
For about two centuries, the federal courts have had the authority to strike down unconstitutional laws passed by Congress. It’s part of the system of checks and balances inherent in the federal government. According to these conservative lawmakers and their religious right allies, Congress can reshuffle the deck a little and tell courts that they can no longer hear specific types of cases anymore. It’s like the congressional version of “legislating from the bench” — these guys want to adjudicate from the legislature.
The idea has been floating around for years, but cooler heads always prevailed before lawmakers do any real damage. On multiple occasions in the 1980s, Sen. Jesse Helms (R-N.C.) tried repeatedly to remove the ability of the federal courts to hear school prayer cases. In the 1990s, Rep. Bob Aderholt (R-Ala.) kept introducing legislation to remove the federal courts’ jurisdiction on cases challenging government-sponsored Ten Commandments displays. Far-right groups would get a couple fundraising letters out of it, but these efforts always fizzled.
But Congress is a quite a bit nuttier than it was 10 years ago, and they have a Republican president who’ll sign anything.
Put aside the question of whether Congress was right to add religious language to the Pledge 50 years ago, because that’s actually secondary. The principle is far more important: can Congress take away the courts’ ability to hear a case simply because lawmakers may not like the way the courts may eventually rule?
And if Congress can, what’s to stop lawmakers from simply attaching a measure to every single piece of legislation they pass that says, “Oh, and by the way, the courts aren’t allowed to consider the constitutionality of this legislation”?
This bizarre stunt is still a long way from reaching Bush’s desk, but the bill is scheduled to be approved by the House Judiciary Committee next week and should get a vote on the House floor before the July 4th recess.