Nipawin - December 15, 2000 - By: Mario deSantis
   

unconstitutional

We have been following the five week legal battle for the US presidency between
George W. Bush and Al Gore. Gov. Bush has been declared president-elect by default(1),
mostly because of the US Supreme Court's statement that "Because it is evident that any
recount seeking to meet the Dec. 12 date will be unconstitutional ... we reverse the
judgment of the Supreme Court of Florida ordering the recount to proceed(2)." And
December 12 is the statutory (written law) deadline for states to select their delegates to the
Electoral College, and December 18 is the date when the Electoral College chooses the next
president.

 

 

textual
or
literal

As a consequence, we can say that the US Supreme Court provided a textual interpretation
of the law, rather than a contextual interpretation of the law. The textual interpretation of the
law is very narrow and is limited to the textual or literal interpretation of the law; the
contextual interpretation of the law refers instead to the intent of the legislators when they
wrote the law to be effective(3).

 

 

recount

So, in practice, George Bush has been declared president-elect, because today he has more
certified votes in Florida than Al Gore's and the Supreme Court has stated that there is no
time for a recount of the votes (textual interpretation of the law). If the recount would have
been allowed, the statutory dates of December 12 and December 18 would have been
ignored, and due importance would have been given to the democratic principle that every
vote counts (contextual interpretation of the law).

 

 

define
the
truth

We must remember, that one ongoing theme of our articles on Ensign has been dealing with
how we define the truth, and we have been saying all along that the truth is not something
which is absolute, but we individually construct our own truths through our own living
experiences. And we find our truths within our relationships and our pattern of behaviour,
and we use our own language to relate to each other. But we must know that the language
we use is our own construct, it is our own invention. As a consequence, it is impossible to
express ourselves in a so called objective way, that is different people can write the same
sentence and have different intentions, and different people can write different sentences
and have the same intention.

 

 

'liberal'
justices

Since we use our language differently, we must say that there is no such a thing as an
objective law, the law is always subject to interpretation. And in one way, I can generalize
and say that 'conservative' justices apply the law within a textual and narrow framework,
while 'liberal' justices apply the law within a larger and purposeful societal context.

 

 

libertine

Remember when Ethics Counsellor Howard Wilson stated that there was no law to be
applied when Prime Minister Jean Chrétien individually intervened for the granting of
the BDC's $615,000 loan to his friend Yvon Duhaime(4)? Well, in this case Mr. Wilson
did not apply the 'liberal' interpretation of the law, and he did not apply the 'conservative'
interpretation of the law either, what Mr. Wilson did was to apply the libertine
interpretation of the law. Yes, the libertine interpretation of the law should not exist in
a democratic society, but we have it in Canada, it is the interpretation of the law for the few
and privileged.
   
-------------References/endnotes:
   
  List of relevant political and economics articles http://www.ftlcomm.com/ensign
   

1.

Bush Elected by Supreme Court, FTLComm - Tisdale - December 13, 2000
   

2.
-

Supreme Court hands major win to Bush; Gore urged to concede, Jan Cienski, with files from Alexander Rose, December 13, 2000, National Post
   

3.
-

What Is Law? A Search for Legal Meaning and Good Judging Under a Textualist Lens, Roger Colinvaux
   

4.
-

Prime Minister Jean Chrétien's involvement with the BDC's $615,000 loan, Part 4. Doling of governmental money, by Mario deSantis, December 9, 2000