Gordon S. Wood Quote

Allowing unelected judges to declare laws enacted by popularly elected legislatures unconstitutional and invalid seemed flagrantly inconsistent with free popular government. Such judicial usurpation, said Richard Dobbs Spaight, delegate to the Constitutional Convention from North Carolina, was absurd and operated as an absolute negative on the proceedings of the Legislature, which no judiciary ought ever to possess. Instead of being governed by their representatives in the assembly, the people would be subject to the will of a few individuals in the court, who united in their own persons the legislative and judiciary powers, making the courts more despotic than the Roman decemvirate or of any monarchy in Europe.

Gordon S. Wood

Allowing unelected judges to declare laws enacted by popularly elected legislatures unconstitutional and invalid seemed flagrantly inconsistent with free popular government. Such judicial usurpation, said Richard Dobbs Spaight, delegate to the Constitutional Convention from North Carolina, was absurd and operated as an absolute negative on the proceedings of the Legislature, which no judiciary ought ever to possess. Instead of being governed by their representatives in the assembly, the people would be subject to the will of a few individuals in the court, who united in their own persons the legislative and judiciary powers, making the courts more despotic than the Roman decemvirate or of any monarchy in Europe.

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About Gordon S. Wood

Gordon Stewart Wood (born November 27, 1933) is an American historian and professor at Brown University. He is a recipient of the 1993 Pulitzer Prize for History for The Radicalism of the American Revolution (1992). His book The Creation of the American Republic, 1776–1787 (1969) won the 1970 Bancroft Prize. In 2010, he was awarded the National Humanities Medal by President Barack Obama.