Medellin and Originalism

D. A. J. Telman
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

In Medellin v. Texas, the Supreme Court permitted Texas to proceed with the execution of a Mexican national who had not been given timely notice of his right of consular notification and consultation in violation of the United States' obligations under the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations. It did so despite its finding that the United States had an obligation under treaty law to comply with an order of the International Court of Justice that Medellin's case be granted review and reconsideration. The international obligation, the Court found, was not domestically enforceable because the treaties at issue were not self-executing. The five Justices who signed the Chief Justice's Majority opinion, including the Court's self-proclaimed originalists, thus joined an opinion that construed the Constitution's Supremacy Clause without any serious consideration of its language or the history of its drafting, ignoring evidence of the Supremacy Clause's original meaning cited by the dissenting Justices. This Article explores the meaning of originalism in the context of the Court's Medellin decision and contends that the Majority's opinion, while perhaps defensible on other grounds, cannot be reconciled with any identifiable version of originalism. Rather it is best understood as a decision reflecting the conservative Majority's political commitment to favor principles of U.S. sovereignty and federalism over compliance with international obligations, even when the consequences of such a commitment is to enable state governments to undermine the foreign policy decisions of the political branches of the federal government. Ultimately, however, the Article concludes that Medellin's case never should have come before the Court. The President has a duty to take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed. The Court determined that the Bush administration did not satisfy this duty by issuing an Executive Memorandum directing states to comply with the judgment of the International Court of Justice. That being the case, the President now must comply with his Take Care Clause duties by working with Congress to make certain that federal law compels compliance with the International Court of Justice's judgment. Indeed, this Article contends that the Medellin case is emblematic of the U.S. executive branch's broader failure to ensure that all treaties requiring domestic implementation are in fact implemented so as to avoid placing the United States in violation of its international obligations.
麦德林和原旨主义
在麦德林诉德克萨斯州案中,最高法院允许德克萨斯州继续执行一名墨西哥国民的死刑,因为他没有及时得到领事通知和协商权的通知,这违反了美国根据《维也纳领事关系公约》所承担的义务。它这样做了,尽管它认为,根据条约法,美国有义务遵守国际法院的命令,允许对麦德林的案件进行审查和重新考虑。法院认为,国际义务不能在国内强制执行,因为有关条约不是自动执行的。签署首席大法官多数意见的五名大法官,包括法院自称的原旨主义者,因此加入了在解释宪法最高条款时没有认真考虑其语言或起草历史的意见,忽视了持不同意见的大法官引用的最高条款原意的证据的意见。本文在最高法院麦德林案判决的背景下探讨了原旨主义的含义,并认为多数派的意见虽然可能在其他理由上站得住,但不能与任何可识别的原旨主义版本调和。相反,它最好被理解为反映了保守派多数派的政治承诺,即支持美国主权和联邦制原则,而不是遵守国际义务,即使这种承诺的后果是使州政府能够破坏联邦政府政治部门的外交政策决定。然而,该条最终得出的结论是,麦德林案本不应提交法院审理。总统有责任确保法律得到忠实执行。法院裁定布什政府没有履行这一义务,因为布什政府发布了一份行政备忘录,指示各国遵守国际法院的判决。在这种情况下,总统现在必须履行“小心条款”的职责,与国会合作,确保联邦法律强制遵守国际法院的判决。事实上,本文认为麦德林案象征着美国行政部门更广泛的失败,即未能确保所有需要国内执行的条约都得到实际执行,以避免使美国违反其国际义务。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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