Constitutional Self-Government
by Christopher L. Eisgruber
Most of us regard the Constitution as the foundation
of American democracy. How, then, are we to understand the restrictions that it
imposes on legislatures and voters? Why, for example, does the Constitution
allow unelected judges to exercise so much power? And why is this centuries-old
document so difficult to amend? In short, how can we call ourselves a democracy
when we are bound by an entrenched, and sometimes counter-majoritarian,
constitution?
In Constitutional Self-Government, Christopher
Eisgruber focuses directly on the Constitution's seemingly undemocratic
features. Whereas other scholars have tried to reconcile these features with
majority rule, or simply acknowledged them as necessary limits on democracy,
Eisgruber argues that constitutionalism is best regarded not as a constraint
upon self-government, but as a crucial ingredient in a complex,
non-majoritarian form of democracy. In an original and provocative argument, he
contends that legislatures and elections provide only an incomplete
representation of the people, and he claims that the Supreme Court should be
regarded as another of the institutions able to speak for Americans about
justice. At a pivotal moment of worldwide interest in judicial review and
renewed national controversy over the Supreme Court's role in politics,
Constitutional Self-Government ingeniously locates the Constitution's value in
its capacity to sustain an array of institutions that render self-government
meaningful for a large and diverse people.