The Consequences of Constitution Worship
The Electoral College, of course, is one of the bargains the framers made in order to reassure the slave states that they could keep their own “peculiar institution.” Abolishing the Electoral College has become a popular refrain among liberals — something that the legal scholar Aziz Rana counts as one of the procedural specifics that consume discussions about constitutional reform. In his bold new book, “The Constitutional Bind,” Rana argues against this tendency to “take our problematic system as a given, and then struggle to patch especially egregious leaks.” Instead of focusing on patchwork measures, he encourages us to think more expansively.
The bind he describes is familiar, if untenable: Americans who are justifiably disenchanted with the Constitution still cling to it in times of duress. “These defenses implicitly suggest that Americans can only effectively protect their bedrock liberties from demagogues by redoubling their commitment to the text.”
“Constitution worship” is so habitual that it’s tempting to assume the veneration was baked into our politics from the very beginning. But Rana situates it historically, showing how it flourished in the 20th century, alongside the country’s global ambitions. Even as the United States pursued imperial projects in places like the Philippines and tolerated racial terror in the Jim Crow South, the Constitution was offered as proof that the country was profoundly committed to liberty and equality — that “its interests are coterminous with the world’s interests.”
Originalism has gathered strength by tapping into this reverence — deploying the authority of the framers in order to pass off originalist interpretation as the epitome of restraint and objectivity. Rana notes that originalism has allowed conservatives to undermine progressive policies while using the soothing language of constitutionalism.
According to this line of argument, the damages of Constitution worship extend to the structure of the political system itself. National politics gets increasingly funneled through the judiciary, with control of the courts — especially the Supreme Court — becoming a way to consolidate power regardless of what the majority of people want. This disempowerment of majorities, combined with political gridlock and institutional paralysis outside the judiciary, fuels popular disaffection. The document that’s supposed to be a bulwark against authoritarianism can end up fostering the widespread cynicism that helps authoritarianism grow.
Rana says that the urge to seek salvation in the Constitution has stunted not only our political behavior but also our understanding of what’s possible. Americans tend to overlook the possibilities of mass democratic politics precisely for this reason — we succumb to the conventional wisdom of Constitution worship, thinking that political progress is a matter of adhering ever more perfectly to the “essence” of the document, when the building of majorities is invariably a more complicated process.
But such complications are often why we have held fast to the Constitution; for a long time, it offered a shared language when we couldn’t agree on much else. The historian Linda Colley, who has written critically about the connection between constitutions across the world and imperial expansion, nevertheless concludes that such “frail, paper creations of fallible human beings” can inscribe expectations that governments are at least supposed to live up to — providing something of value, even when violated.
“In a deeply uncertain, shifting, unequal and violent world,” Colley writes in “The Gun, the Ship, and the Pen,” such documents “may be the best we can hope for.” Americans aren’t alone in treating a constitution as a source of inspiration and protection. Colley cites Olga Misik, a young pro-democracy activist in Moscow, who in 2019 stood in the street, surrounded by “formidable men in body armor,” and read aloud passages from the Russian Constitution. The police officers “recognized the text from where she was reading — and they did not move in and attack.”
Colley published her book in early 2021. Later that year, Misik was sentenced to two years of home confinement. Her example is a stark illustration of the undeniable power of a constitution — alongside the undeniable power of undemocratic forces determined to have the last word.
Jennifer Szalai is the nonfiction book critic for The Times. More about Jennifer Szalai