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Can Constitutionalism be Leftist?
Louis Michael Seidman, Georgetown University Law Center

Download the Paper (PDF format) - July 10, 2007 Tell a colleague about it.
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ABSTRACT:
In this essay, written for a symposium on the work of Mark Tushnet, I examine Tushnet’s effort to defend popular constitutionalism in his powerful and subtle book entitled ATaking the Constitution Away from the Courts,” I ask whether the book succeeds in reconciling constitutionalism with leftism. If there is anyone who could accomplish this task, it is Tushnet. He is without question our most thoughtful constitutional leftist. And yet, the book, at least taken at face value, fails to achieve its goal. To the extent that the book argues for constitutionalism, it abandons leftism, and to the extent it is leftist, it abandons constitutionalism. Tushnet=s proposal can be both leftist and constitutional only by reconceiving what constitutionalism amounts to in ways I suggest at the conclusion of the essay. The failure to reconcile leftism with constitutionalism as it is more commonly understood teaches us something important: If Tushnet cannot produce this synthesis, then no one can.

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Louis Michael Seidman, "Can Constitutionalism be Leftist?" (July 10, 2007). Georgetown Law. Georgetown Law Faculty Working Papers. Paper 32.
http://lsr.nellco.org/georgetown/fwps/papers/32




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