Why sending the Texas National Guard to Chicago is unconstitutional, from Richard Primus on Politico.
The Supreme Court’s recognition of that principle is at
least as old as its 1819 decision in the landmark case of McCulloch v.
Maryland. The question in McCulloch was whether Maryland could tax a
branch of the Bank of the United States, located within Maryland. The Bank was
a controversial institution — opponents like Thomas Jefferson argued it gave
the federal government too much power — and Maryland didn’t like it much. So
the Maryland legislature cleverly wrote a statute imposing a prohibitively high
tax on all banks doing business in the state without charters of incorporation
granted by Maryland’s own legislature. At the time, there was precisely one such
bank: the Bank of the United States, which was chartered not by Maryland but by
Congress. And in one of the most influential judicial opinions in American
history, Chief Justice John Marshall held the tax unconstitutional.
As Marshall explained, a fundamental problem with Maryland’s
tax was the misalignment between the people who imposed it and the people who
had to pay it. When the Maryland legislature taxes Marylanders, it will keep
the tax burden reasonable, because Maryland taxpayers can vote their legislators
out otherwise. That’s why states can be trusted with the power to tax their
own. But the people of State A would never authorize the legislature of State B
to tax them, because they’d have no mechanism for holding State B’s lawmakers
accountable for abuses of the power. (Taxation without representation, as
someone once said, is tyranny.) And for a single state to tax the Bank of the
United States would, in effect, be for that state to tax the people of all the
other states, because the costs incurred by the Bank of the United States would
be borne by the entire American public. By the same token, Marshall noted that
Maryland could collect a tax from the Bank of the United States if it
were a tax imposed uniformly on all banks, or all businesses, in the state of
Maryland: The votes of other taxpayers, exercised to protect themselves from
excessive taxation, would have the effect of protecting the Bank of the United
States, too. What Maryland couldn’t do was impose a cost specially or
disproportionately on people who could not hold Maryland’s lawmakers to
account.
Using military personnel for domestic law enforcement is
dangerous and fraught, and any political leader who does it should be held
strictly accountable for the consequences. Given the absence of any real need
for militarized law enforcement in Chicago, it would be a grave abuse of power
for the president to send any troops there on a law-enforcement pretext — as it
was when he mobilized the National Guard for law enforcement in Washington, D.C.
But for more than one reason, that mobilization in D.C. is easier to defend
constitutionally than sending the Texas National Guard to Chicago would be.
Justifiably or not, constitutional law treats all of D.C. as an exception to
the McCulloch principle: The people of D.C. are, as a general matter,
subject to a lawmaking authority — Congress — that they play no part in
electing. (That’s why some D.C. license plates bear the protest slogan,
“Taxation Without Representation.”) But regardless of whether that exception is
justified in D.C., it has absolutely no application in Illinois. Like
Nebraskans and Pennsylvanians and Kansans, Illinoisians are constitutionally
entitled to be constituents of whatever body governs them.
Any military force is likely to behave with less restraint
toward a population to which its leaders are not responsible than toward a
population to which its leaders must answer democratically. If the Texas
National Guard behaves poorly in Chicago, the locals have no electoral
mechanism for holding Texas authorities to account. The governor of Texas never
appears on any ballot in Illinois. He has nothing to fear, politically, from
the people his National Guard will police. Surely a militarization at the hands
of a non-responsible power is no less tyrannical, and no more constitutional,
than a tax imposed by one.
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