Political question
In United States constitutional law, the political question doctrine holds that a constitutional dispute requiring knowledge of a non-legal character, techniques not suitable for a court, or matters explicitly assigned by the Constitution to Legislative or Executive branches lies within the political realm, rather than the judiciary. Judges customarily refuse to address such matters as a matter of justiciability, questioning whether their courts are an appropriate forum for the case. Legal questions are deemed justiciable, while political questions are nonjusticiable. One scholar explained:
A ruling of nonjusticiability prevents a case's core issue from being resolved in a court of law. When the issue involves duties not addressed by the Constitution, courts leave it to the democratic process, rather than resolving political disputes themselves.
Origin
The doctrine can be traced to the landmark Supreme Court ruling in Marbury v. Madison. In that case, Chief Justice John Marshall distinguished between the US Secretary of State's legal work and purely discretionary political tasks, only the former of which involves legally identifiable standards that can be reviewed by a court of law. Marshall argued that courts should generally not hear cases that involve political questions without implicating individual rights, though later decisions allowed the doctrine's application in cases that do implicate individual rights.Former Associate Justice Stephen Breyer further traces this doctrine to the Roman statesman Cicero's observation that "when the cannons roar, the laws fall silent," such that politicians are granted leeway to violate the written law amid political emergencies like internal rebellion and external warfare. In Breyer's view, rather than making such political acts non-reviewable, the Constitution of the United States delegates that authority to Congress by empowering it to impeach presidents for violating their oath of office.
Doctrine
Unlike the rules of standing, ripeness, and mootness, when the political question doctrine applies, a particular question is beyond judicial competence no matter who raises it, how immediate the interests it affects, or how burning the controversy. The doctrine is grounded in the separation of powers, as well as the federal judiciary's desire to avoid inserting itself into conflicts between branches of the federal government. It is justified as leaving political questions to the political process, in which voters can indirectly approve or reject the challenged action through voting.The leading Supreme Court case on the political question doctrine is Baker v. Carr. In that case, the Supreme Court held that an unequal apportionment of a state legislature may have denied equal protection and presented a justiciable issue. In Baker, the Court outlined six characteristics "rominent on the surface of any case held to involve a political question":
- "a textually demonstrable constitutional commitment of the issue to a coordinate political department; or
- a lack of judicially discoverable and manageable standards for resolving it; or
- the impossibility of deciding without an initial policy determination of a kind clearly for nonjudicial discretion; or
- the impossibility of a court's undertaking independent resolution without expressing a lack of respect for coordinate branches of government; or
- an unusual need for unquestioning adherence to a political decision already made; or
- the potentiality of embarrassment from multifarious pronouncements by various departments on one question."
Other applications
While the scope of the political question doctrine is still unsettled, its application has been mostly settled in a few decided areas. These areas are:Guarantee Clause
The Guarantee Clause of the US Constitution requires the federal government to "guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government." The Supreme Court has ruled that this clause does not imply any set of "judicially manageable standards which a court could utilize independently in order to identify a State's lawful government." On this ground, the Court refused to identify the legitimate government of Rhode Island during the Dorr Rebellion in Luther v. Borden. Since then, the Court has consistently refused to resort to the Guarantee Clause as a constitutional source for invalidating state action, such as whether it is lawful for states to adopt laws through referendums.Impeachment
Article I, Section 2 of the Constitution states that the House "shall have the sole power of Impeachment," and Article I, Section 3 provides that the "Senate shall have the sole Power to try all Impeachments." Since the Constitution placed the sole power of impeachment in two political bodies, it is qualified as a political question. As a result, neither the decision of the House to impeach, nor of the Senate to remove a President or any other official, can be appealed to any court.Foreign policy, national security and war
A court will not usually decide if a treaty has been terminated because "governmental action must be regarded as of controlling importance." However, courts sometimes do rule on the issue. One example of this is native American tribes who have been officially terminated do not lose their treaty concessions without explicit text from Congress that the treaty is also abrogated.In the case of bin Ali Jaber v. United States, the plaintiffs filed a lawsuit under the Torture Victim Protection Act of 1991 after a 2012 US drone strike killed five civilians. The District of Columbia Court of Appeals dismissed the plaintiffs' claims on the basis that the "plaintiffs challenged the type of executive decision found nonjusticiable in El-Shifa Pharmaceutical Industries Co. v. United States." In El-Shifa, the court distinguished "between claims questioning the wisdom of military action, 'a policy choice... constitutionally committed' to the political branches, and 'legal issues such as whether the government had legal authority to act.'" Thus, the court held that the plaintiffs' argument required the court to make a policy decision.
Gerrymandering
In cases like Davis v. Bandemer, Vieth v. Jubelirer, and Gill v. Whitford, the Supreme Court had repeatedly treated partisan gerrymandering as judiciable, but it remained unable to agree on a majority standard for deciding such cases. In Rucho v. Common Cause, the Supreme Court ultimately reversed itself, deciding that partisan gerrymandering was a purely political question.Private military contractors
In the case of Ghane v. Mid-South, the Mississippi Supreme Court held that a wrongful death action against a private military company by the family of a deceased United States Navy SEAL could proceed under Mississippi law since the plaintiff's claims did not present a non-justiciable political question under Baker v. Carr.Court cases
US Supreme Court cases discussing the political question doctrine:- Marbury v. Madison, – Origin of the phrase.Luther v. Borden, – Guarantee of a republican form of government is a political question.Coleman v. Miller, – Mode of amending federal Constitution is a political question.Colegrove v. Green, – Apportionment of congressional districts is a political question.Baker v. Carr, – Apportionment – whether of state or federal legislatures – is not a political question.Powell v. McCormack, – Congress' exclusion of members who have met the qualifications to serve is not a political question.Goldwater v. Carter, – Presidential authority to terminate treaties is a political question.INS v. Chadha, – Constitutionality of one house legislative veto is not a political question.Nixon v. United States, – Senate authority over impeachment is a political question.Rucho v. Common Cause, – Partisan gerrymandering is a political question.
International use
France
A type of act by the French government, the acte de gouvernement, avoids judicial review as it is too politically sensitive. While the scope of the concept has been reduced over time, there are still acts that the courts do not have jurisdiction over, such as matters that are deemed to be unseverable from France's diplomatic acts, like the President's decision to conduct tests of nuclear weapons or end foreign aid. Other acts include the President's decision to dissolve Parliament, award honors, or grant amnesty. Such actes de gouvernement need to be politically-based and also concern domains in which the courts are not competent to judge.Japan
The postwar constitution gave the Supreme Court of Japan the power of judicial review. The court developed its own political question doctrine, in part to avoid interpreting Article 9 of the post-war pacifist constitution, which renounces war and the threat or use of force. Issues arising under Article 9 have included include the legitimacy of Japan's Self-Defense Force, the Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security between the United States and Japan, and the stationing of American forces in Japan.The Sunagawa case is considered the leading precedent on the political question doctrine in Japan. In 1957, demonstrators entered a then-American military base in the Tokyo suburb of Sunagawa, violating a special Japanese criminal law based on the US-Japan Security Treaty. A Tokyo District Court found that the US military's presence in Japan were unconstitutional under Article 9 of the Constitution and acquitted the defendants. The Japanese Supreme Court overturned the district court in a fast-track appeal, implicitly developing the political question doctrine in the ruling. The Court found it inappropriate for the judiciary to judge the constitutionality of highly political matters like the US-Japan Security Treaty, unless they expressly violate the Constitution. On the Security Treaty, the Court saw "an extremely high degree of political consideration," and "there is a certain element of incompatibility in the process of judicial determination of its constitutionality by a court of law which has as its mission the exercise of the purely judicial function." It therefore found that the question should be resolved by the Cabinet, Diet, and people through elections. The presence of American forces was held to not violate Article 9 because they were not under Japanese command. The political question doctrine has remained a barrier for challenges under Article 9. Under the "clear mistake" rule developed by the Court, it defers to the political branches on Article 9 issues so long as the act is "not obviously unconstitutional and void."
Other notable cases on the political question doctrine in Japan include the Tomabechi case, which concerned whether the dissolution of the Diet was valid. In the Tomabechi case, the Court also decided against judicial review by implicitly invoking the political question doctrine, citing the separation of powers as justification. In addition, the Court announced that in political question cases not related to Article 9, the clear mistake rule does not apply and judicial review is categorically prohibited.