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  • Hi. I'm Craig, and this is Crash Course Government and Politics, and today we're going to talk

  • about the most important case the Supreme Court ever decided ever. No, Stan, not Youngstown

  • Sheet and Tube Company vs. Sawyer. Although, that is one of my favorites. Loves me some

  • sheet and tube. And no, it's not Ex parte Quirin. Although I do love me some inept Nazi

  • spies and submarines. And no, it is not Miller v. California. Get your mind out of the gutter

  • Stan. We could play this game all day, but this episode is about judicial review: the

  • most important power of the Supreme Court and where it came from. Don't look so disappointed.

  • This is cool!

  • [Theme Music]

  • When you think of the Supreme Court, the first thing you think about, other than those comfy

  • robes, is the power to declare laws unconstitutional. The term for this awesome power, the main

  • check that the court has on both the legislative and executive branches, is judicial review.

  • Technically, judicial review is the power of the judiciary to examine and invalidate

  • actions undertaken by the legislative and executive branches of both the federal and state governments.

  • It's not the power to review lower court decisions. That's appellate jurisdiction. Most people

  • think of judicial review as declaring laws unconstitutional, and that definition is okay.

  • The legal purist will quibble with you since judicial review applies to more than just laws.

  • Appellate courts, both state and federal, engage in some form of judicial review, but

  • we're concerned here with the federal courts especially the U.S. Supreme Court. The Court

  • has the power to review the following: One, Congressional laws a.k.a. statutes! Statutes.

  • Since judicial review is a form of appellate activity, it involves upholding or affirming

  • the validity of laws, or denying it, invalidating the law in question. You might think that

  • the Supreme Court does this a lot, but it doesn't and historically it almost never happened

  • before the twentieth century. If the court were always striking down congressional statutes,

  • it would be hard for people to know which laws to follow, and you'll remember that one

  • of the main things that courts do is create expectations and predictability. For instance,

  • you could predict that I would eventually be punching this eagle!

  • Another reason why they don't invalidate laws often is that if the Court frequently overruled

  • Congress, the Court would seem too political and people would stop trusting its judgment.

  • If the Court has any power at all, it largely stems from its prestige and reputation for

  • being impartial and above politics. No one has any problems with the Supreme Court decisions, at all.

  • Two, the Court can also overturn state actions which include the laws passed by state legislatures

  • and the activities of state executive bureaus, usually the police.

  • The power to review and overturn states comes from the Supremacy Clause in the Constitution.

  • Most of the time that the Supreme Court extends civil rights, it comes out of a state action.

  • A good example is Brown vs. Board of Education where the Court struck down the idea of separate

  • accommodations being equal in the context of state public schools.

  • Three, the Court can review the actions of federal bureaucratic agencies. Although, we

  • usually defer to the bureaucrat's expertise if the action is consistent with the intent

  • of the legislature which the Court usually finds it is. The Court almost never strikes

  • down Congressional delegation of power to the executive. Although, you might think that it should.

  • The fourth area where the Court exercises judicial review is over Presidential actions.

  • The Court tends to defer to the President, especially in the area of national security.

  • The classic example of the Court overturning executive action happened in U.S. vs. Nixon

  • where the Justices denied the President's claim of executive privilege and forced him

  • to turn over his recordings relating to the Watergate scandal. More recently, the Court placed

  • limits on the President's authority to deny habeas corpus to suspected terrorists in Rasul vs. Bush.

  • So, the Supremacy Clause gives the Court the authority to rule on state laws, but where

  • exactly in the Constitution does the power of judicial review come from? Trick question!

  • It's not there, go look ahead, look. I'll wait. See, not there. Wow, you went through

  • that whole thing really quickly. Fast reader.

  • The crazy thing is that the power of judicial review comes from the Court itself.

  • How? Let's go to the Thought Bubble.

  • The Supreme Court granted itself the power of judicial review in the case of Marbury

  • vs. Madison. You really should read the decision because it's a brilliant piece of politics.

  • The upshot of the case was that Chief Justice John Marshall ruled that the Court had the

  • power to review, uphold, and strike down executive actions pursuant to the Judiciary Act of 1789,

  • and in doing this, to strike down part of that federal law. How he got there was pretty cool.

  • So, Marbury was an official that President John Adams, at the very end of his term, appointed

  • to the position of Justice of the Peace. When Marbury went to get his official commission

  • certifying that he could start his job, James Madison, who was Secretary of State, refused

  • to give it to him. So, Marbury did what any self-respecting petitioner would do, he went

  • to the Supreme Court for a writ of mandamus that would force Madison to give Marbury his job.

  • This is what he was supposed to do according to the Judiciary Act of 1789.

  • What Marshall did was brilliant! He ruled that yes, Marbury had a right to the commission

  • but that the Supreme Court could not grant his writ because the law directing them to

  • do so was unconstitutional. This is brilliant for two reasons. First, by the time the time

  • the case came before the Court, Thomas Jefferson was President. Those of you who remember Crash

  • Course U.S. History will recall that that less handsome man told you that Jefferson

  • was a Democratic Republican while Adams, Marbury, and even Marshall were all Federalists.

  • By ruling against his own party, Marshall made a decision that was favorable to Jefferson

  • and thus, likely to be supported.

  • The second move was even cooler. Marshall's ruling took the power of writs of mandamus

  • away from the Court, making it look weaker, while at the same time giving the Court the

  • power to declare the law that had granted it the mandamus power in the first place unconstitutional.

  • So by weakening the Court in this instance, like Daredevil going blind as a kid, Marshall

  • made it much stronger for the future, like Daredevil getting stronger in the future.

  • Thanks, Thought Bubble!

  • So that's where judicial review comes from, but that still leaves many questions. A big

  • question is, why has this ruling stuck around and hasn't been overturned by other laws or

  • later court decisions? Another question is, is judicial review a violation of separation of powers?

  • Some say that it's judges making laws and thus an anti-democratic usurpation of the legislature's power.

  • Let's talk about this rulings longevity first. Remember when I said last time that the Supreme

  • Court rulings are binding in lower courts? You don't remember do ya? You were sleepin'. Wake up!

  • Well, in general, Supreme Court precedents are binding on future Supreme Courts too because

  • of the principle of stare decisis, which is Latin for "let the decision stand." This doesn't

  • mean that future Supreme Court's can never overturn the decisions of prior Courts, it's

  • just that they try very hard to not do it.

  • This idea of precedent is one way that judges can be said to make laws. Appellate decisions

  • are like common law in that they are binding on future courts and constrain their decisions

  • and because they don't have to be grounded in a specific statute.

  • Other courts have to follow the higher court's interpretation of the law, and this interpretation

  • has the effect of redefining the law without actually rewriting the statute.

  • On the other hand, appellate decisions are technically not common law in that they are

  • only binding on courts, not executive agencies or legislatures. They are, however, signals

  • to courts and legislatures about how courts will rule in the future. Maybe an example

  • will help. If you watch cop shows, or you get arrested a lot, you probably know something

  • about Miranda vs. Arizona which gave us the Miranda Warning. You have the right to remain

  • silent and all that stuff. Hopefully, you've never heard that in person, though. But hey,

  • we're not here to judge. That's what the courts are for! Bahahahaha. Okay.

  • In that case, the Supreme Court threw out Miranda's conviction because he hadn't been

  • told he had the right to remain silent. Without knowing that he didn't have to talk, he made

  • a confession that got him convicted. The court didn't rewrite Arizona's law but it sent a

  • signal to Arizona's law enforcement agencies, and those in all the other states, that in

  • the future courts would throw out the convictions of defendants who hadn't been informed of

  • their rights. As a result, police procedures changed in every state, and now the police

  • are supposed to read the Miranda Rights to anyone they arrest.

  • So those are the very basics of judicial review. We've probably raised as many questions as

  • we've answered, but that's why we're making a bunch of these videos! So we can teach it all! All of it!

  • Anyway, the big concern for many is that cases like Marbury vs. Madison, which give courts

  • the power to strike down pieces of legislation, overturn the judgment of the elected representatives

  • that made the laws and violate the idea of separation of powers.

  • Well, that is a thorny issue, but it's one that we don't have time to de-thorn today.

  • For now, understand that judicial review is how the courts work in practice and not necessarily

  • a defined power granted by the Constitution. Just remember, the executive and legislative

  • branches also operate with a lot of implied powers that aren't explicitly granted to them

  • in the Constitution. That's because the governance of the United States has evolved and changed

  • over time to hopefully, suit the needs of the country as they change over time.

  • Thanks for watching.

  • Crash Course Government and Politics is produced in association with PBS Digital Studios. Support

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  • technology and media to advance social equity. Learn more about their mission and initiatives

  • at voqal.org. Crash Course is made with the help of these nice people who have the right to remain silent.

  • Thanks for watching. You have the right to stop watching.

Hi. I'm Craig, and this is Crash Course Government and Politics, and today we're going to talk

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司法審査。クラッシュコース 政府と政治 #21 (Judicial Review: Crash Course Government and Politics #21)

  • 93 11
    羅紹桀 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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