Madison's Music

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Madison's Music Page 28

by Burt Neuborne


  85. Schenck v. United States, 249 U.S. 47 (1919).

  86. Frohwerk v. United States, 249 U.S. 204 (1919).

  87. Abrams v. United States, 250 U.S. 616 (1919).

  88. Recall that that’s what President Lincoln did to Clement Vallandingham, only Vallandingham was deported to the Confederate States of America.

  89. Minersville School District v. Gobitis, 310 U.S. 586 (1940).

  90. West Virginia Board of Education v. Barnette, 319 U.S. 624 (1943).

  91. Justice Jackson was the last Supreme Court justice who practiced law and served as a federal judge without having graduated from law school. He read for the bar and attended Albany Law School for a year.

  92. 323 U.S. 214 (1944).

  93. Dennis v. United States, 341 U.S. 494 ((1951).

  94. United States v. O’Brien, 391 U.S. 367 (1968).

  95. Although Justice Douglas apparently accepted the Court’s free-speech analysis, he dissented on the grounds that the draft itself raised constitutional problems under the Thirteenth Amendment.

  96. Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1 (1976).

  97. Arizona Free Enterprise Clubs’ Freedom PAC v. Bennett, 131 S.Ct. 2806 (2011).

  98. Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project, 561 U.S. (2010).

  99. Ex parte Endo, 323 U.S. 283 (1944).

  10. Madison, the Reluctant Poet

  1. The material in this chapter is drawn from Bernard Schwartz, The Roots of the Bill of Rights, vol. 5 (New York: Chelsea House, 1980). I will spare you day-to-day footnoting. As James Thurber (and Casey Stengel) says, “You could look it up.”

  INDEX

  Abrams, Jacob, 191

  Abrams v. United States, 111

  accusation, Fifth Amendment and, 25

  ACLU, 50, 63, 74, 139, 169

  Flynn in, 192–93

  Adams, Abigail, 156

  Adams, John. See also Marbury v. Madison

  Article III and, 207

  censorship by, 6, 175, 185

  press and, 6

  Adams, John Quincy, 90

  affirmative action, 183

  Affordable Care Act, 135–36

  Roberts, J., on, 172

  African Americans. See civil rights demonstrations; racial minorities; slavery

  Alien and Sedition Acts, 31

  Jefferson and, 195

  Marshall, James, and, 185–86

  Alito, Samuel, 136–37

  religion and, 145

  Amar, Akhil, 225–26

  Amazon, 9, 126

  American Communist Party, 112, 192–93, 233n24

  Flynn in, 193

  Supreme Court and, 7, 111

  American Political Science Association, 82–83, 232n7

  Ames, Fisher, 219, 220

  Anti-Federalists, 200, 201

  anti-Semitism, 8

  antislavery

  censorship of, 31, 226n2

  First Amendment and, 31

  newspapers, 6

  antitrust laws, 8

  appellate courts, 157, 238n12

  appellate jurisdiction, of Supreme Court, 161, 167, 169–71

  Arab Spring, 32

  Areopagitica (Milton), 125

  aristocratic speakers

  First Amendment and, 99–100, 105, 116–18

  Free Speech Clause and, 143

  taming, 116–18

  Arizona Free Enterprise Club v. Bennett, 228n7

  arrest, Fourth Amendment and, 25, 26

  Article I

  Committee of Eleven and, 213–14

  Congress and, 199

  First Amendment and, 204–5

  House of Representatives and, 204

  religion and, 209–10

  Article III

  Adams, John, and, 207

  circuit judges and, 156–57, 162, 169–72

  Committee of Eleven and, 214–15

  Supreme Court and, 205–6

  Article IV, 199, 241n44

  Article VI, 199

  federalism and, 205–6

  Articles of Confederation, 198, 202, 207

  aspirations

  First Amendment and, 10–12, 109–16

  Free Speech Clause and, 109–16

  assembly. See Free Assembly Clause

  association. See freedom of association

  autonomous choice, First Amendment and, 8

  autonomy, privacy and, 78

  Bache, Benjamin Franklin, 6

  bad tendency doctrine, 234n25

  First Amendment and, 111

  Baer, Elizabeth, 189–90

  bail, Eighth Amendment and, 27

  Baker v. Carr, 40–42

  “one person, one vote” principle and, 177

  Baldwin, Abraham, 207

  Baldwin, Roger, 192–93

  banks, Commerce Clause and, 177

  Barkett, Rosemary, 50

  Bayard, James, 154

  Benson, Egbert, 207

  on Committee of Style, 221

  Bethel School District v. Fraser, 235n38

  Bill of Rights. See also specific amendments

  Committee of Eleven and, 206–17

  conscience and, 144

  criticism of, 185

  democracy and, 2, 43

  Founders and, 1

  freedom in, 2

  House of Representatives and, 217–22

  judicial review and, 149–50

  Marbury v. Madison and, 173

  opposition to, 31–32

  order of amendments in, 14–15, 228

  ratification of, 19

  reluctance to write, 197–223

  Senate and, 222–23

  states and, 30, 31, 223

  Black, Charles, 225

  Black, Hugo, 191, 192

  blanket primary, 21, 228n7

  Supreme Court and, 58

  Bork, Robert, 33

  Boudinot, Elias, 207

  Boyd v. United States, 229n24

  brainwashing, in public schools, 9

  Brandeis, Louis, 11, 191

  Abrams v. United States and, 111

  First Amendment and, 8–9, 99

  Whitney v. California and, 111

  Brennan, William, Jr., 6

  on campaign finance, 65–66

  democracy and, 40–42

  draft card burning and, 194

  equality and, 230–31n17

  living constitution of, 29, 177

  “one person, one vote” principle and, 44, 74, 177

  Breyer, Steven, 11

  Bush v. Gore and, 73

  egalitarian democracy and, 29

  on McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission, 74

  purposivism and, 178

  Brooklyn, racial minorities in, 50–51

  Brown v. Board of Education, 179, 183

  Buckley v. Valeo, 63–68, 82, 228n6, 232n46, 234n33

  pure speech and, 177

  Burger Court, 45

  Burke, Aedanus, 207

  Burke, Edmund, 219

  Burnside, Ambrose, 187

  Burr, Aaron, 158. See also Marbury v. Madison

  Burwell v. Hobby Lobby, 136–37

  Bush, George W., 171

  Bush v. Gore, 41, 229n16

  democracy and, 69–75

  Equal Protection Clause and, 69

  Republican Party and, 73

  “safe-harbor” provision in, 189

  California, blanket primary in, 58, 228n7

  campaign finance, 20–21

  Buckley v. Valeo and, 63–68, 82

  Citizens United v. FEC and, 69, 70–71

  corporations and, 69, 70–71, 73, 79–82

  corruption and, 67

  for democracy, 148–49

  disclosure loopholes for, 79, 232n46

  First Amendment and, 66, 67, 79–82

  Free Press Clause and, 71–72, 80

  Free Speech Clause and, 64–66

  in New York City, 92

  pure speech and, 64–65

  Supreme Court and, 20–21, 39, 61–69, 79–82

  tax cre
dit for, 92

  Carter, Jimmy, 112

  caucuses, in House of Representatives, 91

  censorship

  by Adams, John, 6, 175, 185

  of antislavery, 31, 226n2

  in democracy, 9

  First Amendment and, 185

  by government, 9, 122, 125, 233n18

  by religion, 99

  chaplains

  in Congress, 143

  in military, 142–43

  Chase, Samuel, 162

  checks and balances, for military, 23

  child-labor laws, 181

  Christian prayer, 143–44

  Christian Scientists, 135

  Church of Christ the Savior, 139–41

  circuit judges, Article III and, 156–57, 162, 169–72

  circuit riding, by Supreme Court, 154, 157, 162, 238n8, 238n12

  Citizens United v. FEC, 69, 194

  Kennedy on, 70–71, 74

  citizenship

  of president, 174

  of voters, 47

  city-states, democracy in, 35

  civil law, 27. See also specific cases

  civil rights demonstrations

  Supreme Court and, 111

  Warren Court and, 118

  Civil War

  Lincoln, A., and, 6, 186–87, 195

  natural law and, 32

  opposition to, 6

  Petition Clause and, 89–90

  slavery and, 176

  Clinton, Bill, 112

  CO. See conscientious objectors

  Cold War, 92–193

  Comcast, 126

  Commerce Clause, 77

  Committee of Eleven

  Article I and, 213–14

  Article III and, 214–15

  Bill of Rights and, 206–17

  federalism and, 221

  Fifth Amendment and, 212–13

  First Amendment and, 210–12

  Fourth Amendment and, 213

  Free Speech Clause and, 210

  Grand Jury Clause and, 215

  House of Representatives and, 217–22

  jury trial and, 215

  religion and, 209–10

  separation of powers and, 215–16, 219

  Third Amendment and, 212

  Committee of Five, 207

  Committee on Style, 221

  communicative conduct

  draft card burning as, 64–65, 123, 193–94

  regulation of, 122–23

  Supreme Court and, 122–23

  Communism. See also American Communist Party

  natural law and, 32

  after World War II, 7

  compelling interest

  First Amendment and, 112

  Free Speech Clause and, 121

  Supreme Court and, 121

  compulsory voting, 93–94

  conduits, First Amendment and, 103–4, 125–26

  Confederation Congress, 200

  Congress. See also House of Representatives; Senate

  Article I and, 199

  campaign finance and, 20–21, 62–63

  chaplains in, 143

  compensation for, 204, 209

  Constitution and, 150–51, 202

  District of Columbia and, 168

  in First Amendment, 5

  as lame duck, 44, 157

  pay raises for, 44

  Petition Clause and, 90–91

  Supreme Court and, 161, 168, 170, 171

  Twentieth Amendment and, 44

  Twenty-Seventh Amendment and, 44

  Voting Rights Act and, 21

  conscience. See also religious conscience; secular conscience

  Bill of Rights and, 144

  First Amendment and, 18–19, 133

  Founders and, 30

  Free Exercise Clause and, 146

  Harlan and, 30

  conscientious objectors (CO)

  House of Representatives and, 220–21

  Vietnam War and, 133–34, 137–38

  Conservative Party, 63

  Constitution. See also Bill of Rights; specific amendments; specific articles

  ambiguity in, 178–79, 184

  Congress and, 150–51, 202

  democracy in, 75

  dictionary meaning of words in, 174–75

  federalism in, 75

  Federalists and, 200–201

  Free Press Clause and, 71

  Fugitive Slave Clause of, 181

  Hamilton and, 198

  judicial review and, 149, 179–80

  lapses in, 42–43

  literalists and, 173–75

  Marbury v. Madison and, 167

  military and, 229n19

  “one person, one vote” principle and, 177

  originalism and, 175, 176–77

  purposivism and, 177–78

  ratification of, 199–202

  separation of powers in, 75

  slavery and, 175–76

  textualists and, 173–75

  Constitutional Convention, 176, 199, 202

  Continental Association, 207

  Continental Congress, 202, 207

  convicted felons

  in Florida, 49–50

  voting by, 36, 45–46, 49–50

  corporations

  campaign finance and, 21, 69, 70–71, 73, 79–82

  Due Process Clause and, 71

  Equal Protection Clause and, 71

  Free Press Clause and, 71–72

  judicial review and, 181

  Kennedy on, 73

  as legal “persons,” 71

  speech and, 9–10

  Supreme Court and, 72

  corruption, campaign finance and, 67

  counsel. See right to counsel

  Cranch, William, 156

  Crawford v. Marion County, 69, 73–74, 229n12

  criminal law

  Amendments for, 25

  jury trial for, 27

  “cruel and unusual punishment,” in Eighth Amendment, 25, 27, 175

  Cushing, William, 162

  custodial interrogation, Fifth Amendment and, 25, 26, 28

  Daley, Richard, 57

  Darwinism

  First Amendment and, 7

  Holmes and, 182

  data-gathering programs, search and seizure and, 28

  death penalty, 27

  Debs, Eugene, 6–7, 111, 189, 195

  deck-chair theory, of First Amendment, 194–96

  Declaration of Independence, 202, 207

  democracy

  Bill of Rights and, 2, 43

  Brennan and, 40–42

  Bush v. Gore and, 69–75

  campaign finance for, 148–49

  censorship in, 9

  in Constitution, 75

  as dysfunctional, 69–75

  egalitarian, 29

  in England, 35

  equality and, 40–42

  First Amendment and, 2, 11, 17–96

  Free Exercise Clause and, 135

  Free Speech Clause and, 20

  freedom and, 2

  freedom of association and, 87

  judges and, 2

  natural law and, 32

  single-tier, 91–96

  Supreme Court and, 22, 40–42

  three-tiers of, 35–40

  Democratic Party

  gerrymandering by, 53–54

  primary elections and, 56–61

  Supreme Court and, 10, 109–10, 114–15, 182

  voters for, 21

  Dennis v. United States, 233n24

  deregulation

  First Amendment and, 10–12, 109–16

  Free Speech Clause and, 109–16

  District of Columbia

  Congress and, 168

  Marbury v. Madison and, 168–69

  Twenty-Third Amendment and, 43

  voting in, 43

  District of Columbia Organic Act, 156

  double-jeopardy, 204, 211, 212

  Douglas, William O., 191, 192

  draft card burning and, 194

  Ninth Amendment and,
32

  draft card burning

  as communicative conduct, 64–65, 123, 193–94

  Supreme Court and, 64–65, 111

  Dred Scott v. Sandford, 90, 175, 181, 186

  originalism and, 176

  Duane, William, 185

  Due Process Clause

  corporations and, 71

  of Fifth Amendment, 15, 27, 175

  of Fourteenth Amendment, 31, 71, 77–78, 205

  gender equity and, 78

  Dworkin, Ronald, 179

  egalitarian democracy, Breyer and, 29

  1812 Overture (Tchaikovsky), 139

  Eighteenth Amendment, 44

  eighteen-year-olds voting, Twenty-Sixth Amendment and, 36

  Eighth Amendment, 227n2

  “cruel and unusual punishment” in, 25, 27, 175

  Eisenhower, Dwight, 183

  Electoral College. See also Marbury v. Madison

  Georgia and, 237–38n9

  Hayes and, 189

  electoral districts. See also gerrymandering

  for incumbents, 22

  in Louisiana, 78

  in North Carolina, 51, 84

  “one person, one vote” principle and, 53–54

  for racial minorities, 21

  Supreme Court and, 22, 36

  voting turnout and, 47

  Eleventh Amendment, 44

  Ellery, Christopher, 158, 239n14

  Ellsworth, Oliver, 155, 238n10

  Emancipation Proclamation, 186

  England

  democracy in, 35

  “equity of the statute” in, 30

  free speech in, 105

  inclusio unis est exclusio alterium in, 29–30

  judicial review in, 180–81, 240n34

  Petition Clause and, 90

  religious wars in, 24

  universal suffrage in, 35

  Enlightenment, 207

  Equal Protection Clause

  Bush v. Gore and, 69

  corporations and, 71

  Florida and, 49–50

  of Fourteenth Amendment, 41, 47–50, 54, 69, 71, 78, 230n4

  gerrymandering and, 54

  equality

  Article IV and, 199

  Brennan and, 230–31n17

  democracy and, 40–42

  Fourteenth Amendment and, 44

  gerrymandering and, 84

  Jefferson and, 153

  equality test. See “one person, one vote” principle

  “equity of the statute,” 30, 229–30n25

  Escher, M.C., 75

  Establishment Clause

  of First Amendment, 18, 76, 98, 132, 141, 142, 144–47

  Free Speech Clause and, 143–44

  Supreme Court and, 142, 144–47

  evidence wrongfully obtained, Fourth Amendment and, 26

  Exceptions and Regulations Clause, in Marbury v. Madison, 170, 188

  exclusionary rule, Fourth Amendment and, 26, 123

  fair political representation

  Constitution and, 43

  First Amendment and, 14, 52

 

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