The topic of
discussion for this Constitution Monday is the same subject that has inundated
the news feeds. Does President Trump have the authority to issue a ban to
people coming from nations that are havens for ISIS and other terrorists? Is
the President of the United States responsible to keep Americans safe from
enemies foreign and domestic?
Judge James L. Robart, a Seattle
federal district court judge, issued a temporary restraining order against the
ban. Trump asked his Department of Justice to request an emergency stay on the
restraining order, but the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals denied the
request.
Geoffrey P. Hunt at American Thinker reminds his readers that it was the 9th Circuit that affirmed a
lower court ruling in 2011 in Arizona v.
United States. Arizona made some statutes that were intended to decrease or
stop illegal immigration into the state. The Obama DOJ sued Arizona “for
usurping the federal supremacy in immigration.” Arizona lost. The Supremacy
Clause states:
This Constitution, and the Laws of the
United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made,
or which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall be the
supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby,
any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary
notwithstanding. (Article VI)
The Heritage Guide to the
Constitution explains
why the Founders chose to write the Constitution as they did and why the
Constitution is “the supreme Law of the Land.”
Any federal system needs a strategy for
dealing with potential conflicts between the national and local governments.
There are at least three strategies available. First, each government could be
given exclusive jurisdiction over its respective sphere, which would, at least
in theory, avoid altogether the possibility of direct conflict. Second, the
governments could have concurrent jurisdiction, but one government could be
given power to veto actions of the other, either in the event of actual
conflict or in general classes of cases. Third, both governments could be
allowed to act without mutual interference, but one government’s acts could be
given primacy over the other’s acts in the event of actual conflict.
The Supremacy Clause embodies the third
strategy. It is a conflict-of-laws rule specifying that certain national acts
take priority over any state acts that conflict with national law. In this
respect, the Supremacy Clause follows the lead of Article XIII of the Articles
of Confederation, which provided that “[e]very state shall abide by the determinations
of the united states in congress assembled on all questions which by this
confederation are submitted to them.”
Federal statutes and other federal laws
are, of course, “supreme” only if made in pursuance of the Constitution, and
Chief Justice John Marshall used this language in Marbury v. Madison (1803) to support his argument that the
Constitution contemplates judicial review. Thus, the Supremacy Clause does not
grant power to any federal actor, such as Congress. It deals with resolving a
conflict between the federal and state governments once federal power has been
validly exercised. It is a straightforward interpretative rule that is
addressed to all legal interpreters,
including Members of Congress, federal executive officials, federal judges,
state-court judges, or other state officials. It does not preclude other
strategies for dealing with potential national and state conflict, nor does it
allocate power between the national and state governments. Other parts of the
Constitution do that… The Convention repeatedly rejected all such proposals for
a federal veto power over state laws. The objective of the Framers throughout
was to devise strategies that would reduce occasions for national and state
conflict.
Hunt’s article states that the
U.S. Supreme Court in the Arizona case in June 2012 reinforced the “supremacy
of the federal government – both Congress and the president – over the states
in immigration and national security. I believe the Trump ban is
constitutional, but I do not know what ruling will come down from the various
liberal judges. Even going to the Supreme Court is not something to bet on
because the Court would probably split 4-4 and leave the 9th Circuit
Court ruling in place.
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