Virtual Book Club: Tribe on the Invisible Constitution
As announced earlier this semester, several faculty members have been reading Laurence Tribe’s The Invisible Constitution. I hope that we will be having a series of posts and comments on the book. I have just finished reading it. A few very general reactions will be offered here.
Tribe’s interest is in a set of principles that have come to be accepted as constitutional in nature, but that appear nowhere in the Constitution’s written text. He lists as examples:
- Courts must not automatically defer to what elected officials decide the Constitution means.
- Government may not torture people to force information out of them.
- In each person’s intimate private life, there are limits to what government may control.
- Congress may not commandeer the states as though they were agencies or departments of the federal government.
- No state may secede from the Union. (28)
In developing his thesis that the Constitution contains such invisible “dark matter,” Tribe implicitly situates himself in opposition to the formalist school of constitutional interpretation, which emphasizes the written text of the Constitution and historical documents from the framing era that shed light on the meaning of the text. Tribe instead understands the content of the Constitution to evolve over time, even without formal amendment of the text.