Monthly Archives: August 2011

The Philosopher Knows?

The best argument I have seen for there being a method in what seems to me to be the madness of President Obama’s passivity in the face of his opponents’ political insanity is The Shadow by Robert Paul Wolff, a noted philosopher, long-time (white) professor of Afro-American Studies, and recent and enthusiastic convert to blogging.

Wolff argues eloquently that the Obama strategy is to entice his opponents into ever-greater extremism (as if that took effort?) until they reach the point that they turn off their followers. It is possible that this is a correct reading of the Obama playbook or of his instincts. And while it is possible that this is a good strategy for a community organizer, I still believe it is a crummy way to govern because of all the pain it allows while one waits for the tectonic plates to decide if they want to shift.

I wish I could buy Wolff’s argument, I’d be more cheerful. I don’t, because I think it understates the ability of the Presidency to change the political landscape, both by use of presidential power, and by moving the frame of what is considered first possible than normal. And it creates a false dichotomy in which the only alternative to passivity is anger; in fact the alternative to passivity is boldness.

Obama claims to admire Ronald Reagan. Reagan did not seek bipartisanship as an end in itself, although it’s clear that part of his strategy was geared to northern lunchpail Democrats, and Southern religious mostly-whites. Reagan made a point of looking bold and in doing things that would never command a consensus — like breaking the Air Traffic Control union. Reagan, though, had the advantage of a less disciplined opposition party than the one Obama faces, and this too is a part of Wolff’s argument as to why the Obama patience is a good strategy. It’s not a long essay and it’s worth a read.

As we used to say, and as Wolff seems to be saying, you don’t fight fire with fire — you fight it with water.

Update: I wonder if Wolff was reacting to Ta-Nehisi Coates’s remark (about Rick Perry’s first gaffe as a Presidential candidate) that,

It’s almost as if Obama has this mutant power to compel these guys into charging, full steam, into a wall of spikes.

Posted in Politics: US | 3 Comments

Floirida Supreme Court Holds that Governor’s Regulatory Freeze Violates Florida Separation of Powers and State APA

The Florida Supreme Court has decided Whiley v. Scott. That’s Gov. Rick Scott, and he lost, so the regulatory freeze, one of his first acts as Governor — taken less than an hour after taking office — is toast.

In exercising our discretion to resolve this matter, we grant relief and specifically hold that the Governor impermissibly suspended agency rulemaking to the extent that Executive Orders 11-01 and 11-72 include a requirement that the Office of Fiscal Accountability and Regulatory Reform (OFARR) must first permit an agency to engage in the rulemaking which has been delegated by the Florida Legislature. 1 Absent an amendment to the Administrative Procedure Act itself or other delegation of such authority to the Governor‘s Office by the Florida Legislature, the Governor has overstepped his constitutional authority and violated the separation of powers.

and

To the extent that Executive Order 11-01—and superseding Executive Order 11-72 (issued subsequent to the date Whiley filed her petition)—suspend the rulemaking process established by the Florida Legislature under Chapter 120, the Florida Administrative Procedure Act (APA), we conclude that the Governor exceeded his constitutional authority.

The majority opinion (a per curiam for five of the Justices) has some scathing footnotes about the dissent by Justice Polston.

The Court decided the case on a state writ of quo warrento presented to it as an original matter. (You don’t see that every day.) I think it’s safe to say that if this had been a Presidential action under federal law, the Supreme Court would not have taken original jurisdiction, and the lower courts would most likely have rejected this particular challenge for lack of standing even if the action were in fact heinously illegal. But Florida law is notoriously different, both in its separation of powers and even more so in its administrative law. Indeed Florida’s APA is one of the most different in the nation from the federal system, so much so that although I know my way around the federal APA pretty well, I don’t claim any expertise about state administrative matters. This case well illustrates some of those differences in action.

There is an element of judicial statecraft (some might say activism) here, in that the Court essentially admits that its decision to decide the case — at least as an original filing direct to the Supreme Court — was discretionary. The reasons it gives for choosing to act are these:

As a general rule, unless there is a compelling reason for invoking the original jurisdiction of a higher court, a quo warranto proceeding should be commenced in circuit court. See Vance v. Wellman, 222 So. 2d 449, 449 (Fla. 2d DCA 1969). This Court may choose to consider extraordinary writ petitions “where the functions of government would be adversely affected absent an immediate determination by this Court.” Chiles, 714 So. 2d at 457; see, e.g., Allen v. Butterworth, 756 So. 2d 52, 55 (Fla. 2000) (entertaining jurisdiction on a petition for writ of mandamus where failure to resolve the issue would result in a large number of postconviction death case proceedings being in “limbo,” and where the responsibilities of a large number of state-employed attorneys would be affected); Moreau v. Lewis, 648 So. 2d 124, 125-26 n.4 (Fla. 1995) (entertaining jurisdiction on a mandamus petition which sought to invalidate a portion of a General Appropriations Act that required Medicaid recipients to make a $1 copayment for pharmacy services, finding that “an immediate determination is necessary to protect governmental functions,” and noting that there was no relevant factual dispute which would require “extensive fact-finding”). Moreover, in Harvard v. Singletary, 733 So. 2d 1020, 1021-22 (Fla. 1999), this Court explained that it would “decline jurisdiction and transfer or dismiss writ petitions which . . . raise substantial issues of fact or present individualized issues that do not require immediate resolution by this Court, or are not the type of case in which an opinion from this Court would provide important guiding principles for the other courts of this State.” (Emphasis in original).

We find that the present case raises a serious constitutional question relating to the authority of the Governor and the Legislature respectively in rulemaking proceedings. The issue of whether the Governor has the power to suspend agency rulemaking directly and substantially affects the fundamental functions of state government. We also note that a decision from this Court on such an issue would provide important guiding principles to other state courts, and that there do not appear to be any substantial disputes of material fact. Accordingly, we exercise our discretionary jurisdiction and entertain the petition for writ of quo warranto.

Discretion to take cases exists to be used — at least sometimes. I think what I quoted above is a reasonable justification of why the Court exercised its discretion, particularly when one considers that this case raised a claim of an on-going violation, not just a past one. I suspect nonetheless that this explanation will not persuade everyone. Indeed, no doubt someone somewhere will scream this is a political outcome — and it is definitely an embarrassing loss for the Governor — but I think the 5-2 result, including two of the four Justices appointed by Charlie Crist and one Justice appointed with the approval of then-Governor elect Jeb Bush, ought to dampen that a bit. Not that it will stop those who say Crist wasn’t actually a Republican Governor …

It’s also important to note that the Court’s opinion leaves open a straight-forward work-around to its decision: pass a new statute explicitly giving the Governor the authority he tried to exercise. Even thought I suspect this Republican-dominated legislature is not feeling that kindly to its fellow Republican, it might do so.

Posted in Florida, Law: Constitutional Law | Comments Off on Floirida Supreme Court Holds that Governor’s Regulatory Freeze Violates Florida Separation of Powers and State APA

Research Assistant Wanted (2011-12)

I would like to hire a 2L or 3L to be my research assistant for the coming school year. You should expect to work 10-15 hours/week.

The work primarily involves assisting me with legal research relating to papers I am writing on privacy and on Internet regulation.

I need someone who can write clearly and is well-organized. If you happen to have some web or programming skills (some or all of WordPress, HTML, MySQL, Perl, Debian), that would be a plus but it is not in any way a requirement.

The pay of $13 / hr is set by the university, and is not as high as you deserve, but the work is sometimes interesting.

If this sounds attractive, please e-mail me the following with the subject line RESEARCH ASSISTANT 2011 (in all caps), followed by your name:

  1. A note telling me
    • How many hours you’d ideally like to work per week
    • When you are free to start.
    • Your phone number and email address.
  2. A copy of your resume (c.v.).
  3. A transcript of your grades (need not be an official copy).
  4. If you have one handy, also attach a short NON-legal writing sample. If you have none, I’ll accept a legal writing sample (whatever you do, though, please don’t send your L-Comm/LRW memo).
Posted in U.Miami | 1 Comment

Terrible Fact

More U.S. soldiers and veterans have died from suicide than from combat wounds over the past two years. (Source)

Posted in National Security | 3 Comments

Jotwell Could Use Your Help

The ABA Journal has just sent out requests for nominations of law-related blogs that it should consider for its Blawg 100 list. Although Jotwell (aka The Journal of Things We Like Lots) is not exactly a blog — it’s at least as much an online law journal — I’d love to have it included in the ABA list because I’d very much want to get the word out about Jotwell to the legal profession. We have a gratifyingly broad readership among law professors, but have not made great inroads among practicing lawyers.

Unfortunately for me, the rules of game are that you can’t nominate a blog you write yourself — so I think even though I edit Jotwell rather than write it, that lets me out. But perhaps there is someone reading here who also reads Jotwell and could take the time to write up to 500 great characters and submit them via Blawg 100 Amici form? (Please feel free to post a copy here too, if you wish.) Nominations are due by Sept. 9:

Use the Blawg 100 Amici form to tell us about a blawg——not your own——that you read regularly that you think other lawyers should know about. If there is more than one blawg you want to support, please send us additional amici through the form. We may include some of the best comments in our Blawg 100 coverage. But keep your remarks pithy——you have a 500-character limit.

Editors make the final decisions about what’s included in the Blawg 100; this isn’t a scenario in which the blawgs that receive the most amici are the ones that make the list. A blawg with no amici support at all can still make our list. See the amici form page for additional information about amici and Blawg 100 criteria.

Friend-of-the-blawg briefs are due no later than Friday, Sept. 9.

Thank you.

Posted in Jotwell | Comments Off on Jotwell Could Use Your Help

Anarchy in the UK

As it happens, I’m in the UK only a few miles from where this was posted on the door of a Manchester Subway:


(For an ironic corrective, see this compendium.)

The more pervasive rioting has been in London, including a major tear-up of the main street in Hackney, Mare Street, which was about a mile from Homerton, which where I lived when I first moved to London.

The Internet suggests there are signs of returning normalcy. Commentators on the #Manchester hashtag, for example, say much of the damage, including broken glass, has already been replaced.

Posted in UK | Comments Off on Anarchy in the UK