The Supreme Court and Judicial Review

Early this year our class discussed the constitution and how it should be interpreted. Should legislation and the government be required to follow the strict meaning of the constitution or should it follow the general idea’s the constitution was designed to protect. The constitution does not go into great detail on the specific jobs of the Supreme Court. It states that terms are lifelong and the specific cases they must deal with, however their role in upholding the constitution is never explicitly stated. Whether the Founding Fathers intended for Judicial Review, distinguishing state and federal laws to follow the constitution, to be practiced by the Supreme Court is unclear and often debated.

One common example of the debate between when to follow the constitution verbatim and when to allow for interpretation is in the argument for firearm regulations. Is it denying the public their rights to bear arms, given by the second amendment by regulating guns, or was there a different purpose intended due to the cultural difference between now and when the constitution was written. Often times the Supreme Court has been forced to make this distinction. Cases include Roe v Wade, which handled abortion, and Brown v The Board of Education, which tried to end the separate but equal ruling previously made by the court. A recent case on the table for the court is that known as, Masterpiece Cake Shop v Colorado Civil Rights Commission.

This recent trial involves a gay couple who requested a cake for their wedding from the baker, Jack Phillips, who denied due to his religious beliefs. The Christian group, Alliance Defending Freedom, that is representing Mr. Phillips has insisted that “The government can no more force Phillips to speak those messages with his lips than to express them through his art” (New York Times). They are implying that by creating a cake for the wedding, Phillips would be supporting the marriage itself and that is something he cannot be required to do under the first amendment. Gay rights groups argue however that by turning away the couple, Phillips has violated the public accommodations law in Colorado that requires equal service no matter someone’s, “disability, race, creed, color, sex, sexual orientation, marital status, national origin, or ancestry” (Washington Post). There is also an argument that refusing to make the cake was undermining the couple’s right to marriage given by the Supreme Court decision made in 2015 to make same sex marriage legal.

Either way the Supreme Court must decide which side has better standing as it relates to what upholds the constitution and its values. Whether this be the first amendment or other legislation that has been passed as society progresses and culture changes with an interpreted meaning of the constitution. It is expected they will come to a ruling in early 2018. Does the Supreme Court have the right to make such decisions and if so, how far should they be allowed to interpret the written words of the constitution when it comes to new legislative decisions?

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/courts_law/supreme-court-asked-if-bakers-case-protects-religious-rights-or-illegal-discrimination/2017/12/04/1a56624e-d6d8-11e7-95bf-df7c19270879_story.html?utm_term=.e67f780f6e9a

New York Times

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