The “supreme law of the land” includes “this Constitution,” and federal officers are “bound, by oath or affirmation, to support this Constitution.” In recent years, some people have argued that these words require oath-takers to be originalists and to follow the Constitution’s “original public meaning,” properly understood. An understanding of this argument requires an exploration of the diverse forms and conceptions of originalism, which raise puzzles of their own. Whether or not we embrace some form of originalism, the broader point is this: the claim that the term “this Constitution” mandates a contested theory of interpretation, including a contested form of originalism, belongs in the same category with many other efforts to resolve controversial questions in law by reference to the supposed dictate of some external authority. Whether maddening or liberating, there is nothing that communication just is, nor is there any such dictate. The choice is ours.
CITATION STYLE
Sunstein, C. R. (2023). “THIS.” Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy, 46(2), 395–418. https://doi.org/10.3366/anph.2019.0004
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