Orin has a post up at Volokh Conspiracy posing a thought experiment (or something) to originalists. Essentially, it's been good constitutional law for a long time that the sixth amendment right to counsel means that the state must provide an attorney for a criminal defendant (in a sufficiently serious case). Under stare decisis principles, this shouldn't be changed. But if you're an originalist, meaning that you believe either the original public meaning or the original intended/expected application should govern constitutional interpretation, should you favor overruling all those cases? At the time the U.S. Constitution was drafted, in England the right to counsel meant that you could get the assistance of counsel if you could afford a lawyer, which was itself a break from the older tradition in which defendants didn't get lawyers, period. Or so the theory goes. So, arguendo, the originalist reading of the sixth amendment is that it guarantees you the right to be represented by an attorney if you can afford to hire an attorney. You're an originalist. What do you do?
This is supposed to get at what the proper role of stare decisis (adherence to legal precedents) is to an originalist. I get that. But unless I'm just missing something, this seems like a lousy example. Even if we agree that the original meaning of the sixth amendment right to assistance of counsel means the government doesn't have to pay for lawyers for indigent defendants, the fifth and fourteenth amendments guarantee "due process of law." As far as I know, even among wacko conservatives (ahem, Justice Thomas), it is undisputed that this guarantees procedural due process, i.e., a procedurally fair trial. And I feel fairly confident in saying that there's absolutely no way that, under our current legal system, a felony defendant can get a procedurally fair trial if he doesn't have an attorney. Thus, the due process clauses of other amendments have to independently guarantee the right to an appointed attorney. Which means that that the originalist who doesn't believe in stare decisis only gets to say "well, you should hold that it's guaranteed by the fifth and fourteenth amendments instead of the sixth." Or really, the originalist justice will at most say "it's guaranteed by the fifth and fourteenth amendments, and we therefore do not reach the question of whether it's guaranteed by the sixth."
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