Pubdate: Sun, 13 Feb 2005 Source: Argus, The (CA) Copyright: 2005, ANG Newspapers Contact: http://www.theargusonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1642 Author: Washington Post Editorial NO VIABLE DEFENSE IT Does Not Often Happen That the U.S. solicitor general refuses to defend an act of Congress. Nor should it. But every now and then Congress passes a law so flagrantly in disregard of constitutional norms that a defense is impossible. Rep. Ernest J. Istook Jr.'s attack last year on free speech in the Metro system is a good example. The acting solicitor general, Paul Clement, made the right call in informing Congress recently that he "does not have a viable argument" in defense of the law and would not appeal a lower-court decision striking it down. Congress, like everybody else, is entitled to a legal defense, and solicitors general of both parties are therefore necessarily obliged to defend laws they might not personally support. One mark of a good solicitor general, in fact, is the willingness to go to bat for laws he might not uphold were he the judge hearing the case. We would have expected -- had Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., won the presidential election - -- that his solicitor general would defend the ban on "partial birth" abortion, though we think it should be struck down. If even a remotely plausible argument can be advanced on behalf of the legislature's decision, the institutional obligation of the office is clear. But sometimes Congress just runs amok. This law came about because Istook, R-Okla., was outraged by ads in Metro facilities promoting decriminalization of marijuana -- particularly an ad that declared, "Enjoy better sex! Legalize and Tax Marijuana." Istook stuck into an appropriations bill a provision that cuts off federal transportation funding to any transit system "involved directly or indirectly in any activity that promotes the legalization or medical use of any" illegal drug. As a result, while other advocacy groups can be heard in Metro's public spaces, the ads of those advocating liberalization of drug policy have been rejected. This is classic viewpoint discrimination, and the courts have been crystal clear that, except under the most unusual circumstances, it is flatly impermissible under the First Amendment. It was, consequently, no surprise that U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman batted the law down last June. It would have been the easy political course for a conservative administration to fight to the end on a culture-war issue such as drug legalization. Clement is correct not to waste the courts' time defending unconstitutional legislative temper tantrums. - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFLorida)