“150 YEARS OF THE 14TH AMENDMENT”
I’m sending
out my weekly blog a couple of days early because today is the 150th
anniversary of the adoption of the 14th amendment to the Constitution. It was ratified on July 9, 1868, and on July
29, Secretary of State William Seward declared that it was officially ratified
and now part of the Constitution.
This
amendment is one of the most litigated of the parts of the Constitution because
it did four important things. First, it
established the right of citizens to due process in relationship to the
government. Second, it provided equal
protection to all citizens. Third, it
established the idea of “birthright” of citizenship – if you are born “here” in
USA or our territories, you are automatically an American citizen. Fourth, it indicated for the first time that
state and local governments were subject to these three steps.
This 14th
Amendment has had a difficult time in American history. Even
while it was being ratified, white Southerners were working to undercut it, and
indeed we did undercut it through a reign of terror and legislative
manipulation. It would take almost 100
years before it would gain even a minimal force of law through the Civil Rights
Acts and the Voting Rights Acts of 1964-65.
In a terrible but not surprising
decision in 2013, the US Supreme Court gutted the Voting Rights Act by taking
out its “special” enforcement status for those states whose history indicated
an unwillingness to adhere to the 14th Amendment. It should be no surprise that decision
(Shelby v. U.S.) came out of the state of Alabama, a state as Martin Luther
King, Jr., said in his 1963 speech: “with its governor having his lips dripping
with the words of interposition and nullification.”
This
struggle over the 14th Amendment is so great because, in many ways,
it is the crux on which American history and indeed the idea of constitutional
government hinges – it always seems to be hanging in the balance. Do we believe in the idea of equality or
not? Our history says “no,” for the most
part, but the 14th Amendment is among our better angels, urging us
to say “yes.” Many of our leaders have
understood the importance and the meaning of this Amendment. Thurgood Marshall was one who understood it,
and he put it this way in his Bicentenial speech in 1987: “While the Union survived the Civil War, the
Constitution did not. In its place arose
a new, more promising basis for justice and equality, the 14th
Amendment….guaranteeing equal protection of the laws.”
Marshall
correctly understood that the intent of the Constitution in its beginning was
to keep power in the hands of white men of property, and so there was no
mention of the full humanity of women or of people of African descent or Native
Americans. Yet, the idea of equality was
so powerful and so electric, that the white men of property could not confine
it to themselves. Women heard their
names called. African-Americans heard
their names called. Native Americans
heard their names called. Latinx
Americans heard their names called.
Asian-Americans heard their names called. Poor people heard their names called. LGBTQ people heard their names called. The power of the 14th Amendment is
to speak to all of us: the power of the
idea of equality is calling to us all.
That is one of the great things that we should remember as we celebrate
this powerful amendment to the Constitution.
It is not just progressives who have
understood the meaning of this 14th Amendment. Regressives have understood it too. That’s why the fight over the 14th
Amendment continues. Those who speak of
being “originalists” over the authority of the Constitution are seeking to take
us back to the days of the origins of the Constitution, when white men of
property were seen as those entitled to power.
There is a lot of talk these days about the changing demographics in
America, with young people and people of color becoming the majority in the USA
sooner than many of us realize. Some
progressives have hopes in this demographic change, and I have hopes too. Yet, we should realize that old white men
(and women, it seems, since the majority of them voted for Trump) will not
yield this power easily, if we yield it at all.
Limits on voting rights, purging voter rolls, overt gerrymandering – all
designed to take us back to the original Constitution. And, now the Supreme Court seems to taking a
hard turn towards this regressive status, so perhaps a Dred Scott decision or a
Plessy decision awaits us in the near future.
So, let us
give thanks for those who worked so hard for this amendment and others to
follow. Take time this week to read the
14th Amendment – our very lives as a nation may depend on our
ability to believe and to live it. Then,
while you still can, make sure that you are registered to vote and that all
your friends, neighbors and colleagues are registered to vote – these November
elections will tell us if we are moving with the 14th Amendment or
against it.