David Howarth

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Given that few, if any, cases coming before the court in the late twentieth to early twenty-first century are cut-and-dried under the language of the Constitution, there is an argument to be made against this kind of second-guessing, period. One problem with it is that it makes the court appear political and not neutrally tethered to the law and the facts.
How to Read the Constitution—and Why (Legal Expert Series)
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