Arlos wrote:Judicial review of the constitutionality of laws is a tradition of over 200 years now, if I have my dates right. It's not going to change. Get over it. Look at the quotes I posted about the "Tyranny of the Majority" that the Founding Fathers were worried about. Judicial review provides some protection against this. It's a good thing.
-Arlos
You are absolutely correct concerning the intent of the founding fathers Arlos, not only do the quotes support the idea, but the very design of our government protects against the majority trampling the civil rights of people.
Judicial review on the federal level is not just tradition, it is the function of the judicial branch of government set forth in the constitution. My question is this, are state judges who deem laws voted in on the state level unconstitional referring to federal or state constitution? While the US constitution is the law of the land, it was my understanding that determination of constitutionality (meaning federal) of laws created at the state level was still the domain of federal courts. I may be incorrect in this understanding.
While there is due process and cases are escalated sometimes from the state courts to federal courts, it appears that no one pushes the case for the voters. Meaning that one judges interpretation of the constitutionality of a law is the final line (Seriously, the highest court in the land doesn't even allow decisions by a single individual) I'm sorry but I find it disturbing in any case, regardless of which side of the issue I'm on that a single state judge can basically nullify the will of the voters, with no process or challenge after that.