Is the Constitution a “living” document? 59
Is the Constitution a “Living” Document?
Polls suggest that many Americans are unfamiliar with the Constitution’s basic
provisions. Indeed, a national poll found that only 26 percent could name all three
branches of the U.S. government, while 31 percent could not identify even one;
12 percent believed there was a constitutional right to own a pet, and 34 percent
thought there was a right to own a home.^23 Even more disconcerting, another poll showed
that 52 percent could name at least two members of Bart Simpson’s family, while only
28 percent could list more than one of their five First Amendment rights.^24 In the face of
such public ignorance, can the Constitution provide the blueprint for modern democratic
governance? If so, how has it remained relevant after more than 200 years? The answer to
the first question, in our opinion, is clearly yes. Although the United States falls short on
many measures of an ideal democracy, the Constitution remains relevant in part because
it embodies many of the central values of American citizens: liberty and freedom,
majority rule and minority rights, equal protection for all citizens under the laws, and a
division of power across and within levels of government. The Constitution presents a list
of substantive values, largely within the Bill of Rights, aimed at legally protecting certain
individual rights that we still consider basic and necessary. The Constitution also sets out
the institutional framework within which the government operates.
But these observations beg the question of why the Constitution remains relevant
today. Why does this framework of government still work? How can the framers’ values
still be meaningful to us? There are at least three components of the Constitution
that allow it to continue as a “living” document: the ambiguity in central passages
that permits flexible interpretation, the amending process, and the document’s own
designation of multiple interpreters of the Constitution. These factors have allowed the
Constitution to evolve with the changing values and norms of the nation (see the Take a
Stand feature).
Ambiguity
The Constitution’s inherent ambiguity is a characteristic that has kept the document
relevant to this day. Key passages were written in very general language, which has
allowed the Constitution to evolve along with changing norms, values, and political
contexts. This ambiguity was a political necessity: not only were the framers aware
that the document would need to survive for generations, but in many instances
the language that they chose was simply the only wording that all the framers could
agree on.
Three of the most important parts of the Constitution are also among its most
ambiguous: the necessary and proper (or elastic) clause, the executive powers clause,
and the commerce clause. As discussed earlier, the necessary and proper clause gives
Congress the power to enact laws that are related to its enumerated powers, or those
that are explicitly granted. But what does “necessary and proper” mean? For the most
part, Congress gets to answer that question.
The executive powers clause is even more vague: Article II begins with the words
“The executive Power shall be vested in a President of the United States of America.”
This sentence has served to justify a broad range of presidential actions because it does
not define any boundaries for the “executive powers” it grants. The vague wording
was necessary because the Constitutional Convention delegates could not agree on
EXPLORE HOW THE
MEANING OF THE
CONSTITUTION HAS
E VO LV E D
The people made the
Constitution, and the people
can unmake it. It is the creature
of their will, and lives only by
their will.
—Justice John Marshall
executive powers clause
The part of Article II, Section 1, of
the Constitution that states: “The
executive Power shall be vested in
a President of the United States of
America.” This broad statement has
been used to justify many assertions
of presidential power.
commerce clause
The part of Article I, Section 8, of the
Constitution that gives Congress
“the power to regulate Commerce...
among the several States.” The
Supreme Court’s interpretation
of this clause has varied, but today
it serves as the basis for much of
Congress’s legislation.
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