The Case for a Constitutional Visionary

The conventional wisdom is that President Obama’s nominee to replace retiring Justice John Paul Stevens won’t change the Supreme Court much, since Justice Stevens is part of the Court’s progressive wing and President Obama’s choice is likely to be of a similar stripe.  That thinking is dead wrong.  The next nominee could profoundly change the Court’s jurisprudence in ways that defy conservative-liberal labels and have a lasting impact.

The next nominee must, of course, be well qualified and committed to the Constitutional values of liberty, fairness, and equal justice for all.  She or he must be someone who approaches each case with an open mind and an unbiased eye.  But within those bedrock parameters, there is room for watershed change.  President Obama has the opportunity to nominate a constitutional visionary—a justice who charts new pathways, crafted for America in the 21st century.

A constitutional visionary is someone who sees the ways in which our society is evolving and articulates a jurisprudence—sometimes over the course of years or decades—that applies the Constitution’s text and principles to engage that new reality.  The term is ideologically neutral, with past examples coming from both parties’ nominees.

Consider, for example, Justice Hugo Black, a former Alabama Senator (and, remarkably, a former Ku Klux Klan member) appointed by President Roosevelt in 1937.  Serving on the Court through the Great Depression, World War II, and the Civil Rights Movement, Black saw that many of the threats to liberty and freedom that so troubled the Framers of the Constitution—suppression of free speech, government violence and oppression, taxation without representation, denial of due process and equal justice—were playing out most fiercely within states and localities.

Justice Black saw, too, that the Civil War Amendments to the Constitution, and particularly the 14th, were intended by their authors to transform the relationship between state and federal governments, forging a more cohesive and more equal nation, with the same basic rights and responsibilities for all.  Applying that history to the contemporary context, Black articulated the “incorporation doctrine,” under which almost all of the Bill of Rights restrain not only the Federal government—as was largely the case when Black first joined the Court—but also state and local governments, via the 14th Amendment.

Though Black was not significantly more liberal or conservative than his colleagues on the Vinson and Warren Courts, his constitutional vision transformed how the Constitution is lived by everyday Americans, in ways that transcend ideology.  The incorporation doctrine is accepted in all but the most extremist legal and political circles.  It protects the free speech rights of Americans—be they left, right, or center—against censorship by cities, towns, counties and states, for example.  And it is used by conservatives to assert property and gun rights, as well as by progressives to assert privacy rights and the rights of people accused of crimes.

Other constitutional visionaries have influenced the court and nation more subtly, yet in important and lasting ways.  Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, for example, a former state legislator and judge, advanced a theory of “new federalism” popular with conservatives that has hindered the federal government’s efforts to enforce civil rights and other laws against state and local governments—reigniting a trend that cuts against Justice Black’s jurisprudence.

Justice Harry Blackmun, for whom I worked as a law clerk, articulated a privacy jurisprudence that (however haggard) continues to protect most women’s intimate reproductive choices, and was vindicated in the Court’s Lawrence decision protecting the privacy of consensual sexual relations.  Lawrence overturned Bowers v. Hardwick, in which Justice Blackmun wrote one of his most eloquent dissents.

As a former constitutional law professor and President of the Harvard Law Review, Mr. Obama is as qualified as any President in our history to select and nominate a constitutional visionary for the coming era.  Yet the rancorous policies of today’s Senate, looming mid-term elections, and an ambitious legislative agenda will militate toward a politically “safe” choice, with incrementalist and largely unarticulated views.

That would be a mistake—first, Republican leaders have already made clear that they will attack, and may filibuster, whoever the President nominates.  More importantly, though, the challenges of today and tomorrow—preserving privacy in the age of Facebook, YouTube, and ubiquitous outdoor surveillance cameras; protecting equality in an era of genetic coding and engineering; ensuring freedom and security at a time of growing corporate power and transborder terrorism—demand fresh ideas and perspectives.

Even a transformative nominee won’t change the nine-member Supreme Court’s jurisprudence overnight, and it shouldn’t.  But the vetting of a broad range of ideas and approaches, each committed to fairness, equal justice, and our Constitution, is what our Court and the country need.

April 14: The Next Landmark Day For Immigrant Equality

Wednesday April 14 will be a landmark day for ensuring the equality of all voices in the American public sphere.  It is the day that Ugly Betty, the popular ABC series chronicling a young Mexican-American woman’s adventures of beating the odds in the Big Apple, will come to an end after four seasons. That same evening, The Opportunity Agenda will convene artists, advocates, and media makers in New York City for conversation and collaboration on the power of arts, culture, and media activities in promoting the dignity and human rights of immigrants in the United States.  What do these two events have to do with each other and the broader fight for equality in America? Everything.

Giving equal respect to the stories and voices of all who live here is an essential democratic value and critical to expanding opportunity in America. Since 2006, Ugly Betty (starring actress America Ferrera) has confronted such hot-button subjects as body image, gay teenagers, and, notably, illegal immigration without becoming expressly political or polarizing. When the first season revealed that Betty’s father, Ignacio Suarez (Tony Plana), was undocumented and could be deported, the show received both cheers and jeers for touching such a sensitive issue at the height of the immigration debate during the Bush administration.
Yet, the story was handled masterfully with both drama and comedy, showcasing the talent of the show’s on- and off-screen teams (the show is executive produced by Salma Hayek and Silvio Horta). At its best, Ugly Betty demonstrated the true power of arts and media to impact hearts and minds, along with provoking dialogue around important issues. Its absence will certainly be felt in the lack of leading roles for people of color on television (the series also co-starred Vanessa Williams), but this void also presents an opportunity for artists and advocates concerned with immigrant rights to continue the momentum with meaningful and collaborative work.

It is essential that shows like Ugly Betty reach the mainstream, but there is also urgent work to be done on the ground to create lasting change for the integration and fair treatment of America’s immigrant communities. The Opportunity Agenda presents Immigration: Arts, Culture & Media 2010 – A Timely Conversation with Artists and Advocates this Wednesday as a major step in this direction. We believe that while advocates can provide powerful arguments and compelling data, it is artists and media makers who create a window into the possible.

By creating spaces for collaboration, developing a shared vision, and coordinating strategies to achieve it, we aim to strengthen the work of advocates and empower those in the creative professions to make a significant impact on the issues that matter to them. What visionary ideas will get seeded when award-winning writers and visual artists connect with organization leaders and those who have access to key policy makers? We will find out at this Wednesday’s event!

As we have received a tremendous response to the event, our guest list is currently full. We do, however, expect some spaces to be made available, so please consider joining our waitlist. RSVP details for the event can be found at creativechange.eventbrite.com. See here for information about our special guest attendees.

Connect with The Opportunity Agenda on Twitter and Facebook! Follow updates about the event and the broader Immigration: Arts + Culture initiative by using the Twitter hashtag #ImmArts. If you are in the Los Angeles area, check out information about our Immigrants in America: A Hollywood Perspective event on May 3 here!

(Photo Credit: ABC)

Thursday Immigration Blog Roundup

This week’s Immigration Blog Roundup covers new developments in policy, research, media, and more…

Senate Bill 1070 which would make it a state crime in Arizona to be in the country illegally has already passed in the Senate and two committees in the House is expected to be heard by the full House next week. 

A recent poll by USC College/Los Angeles Times reveals a shift in the mindset of Californians showing strong support for a guest worker program and creating a path toward legalization.  The poll also shows that they are much more conflicted on the question of services for illegal immigrants than in the past.

The Washington Post recently reported that ICE has implemented quotas and set goals to remove 400,000 illegal immigrants this year and have shifted their focus from deporting undocumented immigrants that have criminal backgrounds to bolstering efforts to catch undocumented immigrants whose only violation was lying on immigration/visa documents.

Watch "Immigration: More Rogue than Right?" from America’s Voice

Read about "Living on the Border" a documentary by Karl W. Hoffman.

Civil liberties groups are applauding the Transportation Security Administration’s decision to rescind a policy that called for enhanced security screening for passengers who held passports or were traveling from 14 predominantly Muslim countries. 

New research from the Immigration Policy Center examines the economic impact of immigrants, Latinos, and Asians in New Mexico and found that Immigrants made up 9.3% of New Mexicans in 2007 and if all unauthorized immigrants were removed from New Mexico, the state would lose $1.8 billion in economic activity, $809.1 million in gross state product, and approximately 12,239 jobs.

Finally, The Opportunity Agenda invites you to Immigration: Arts, Culture & Media 2010 on April 14th.

Immigration: Arts, Culture & Media 2010

A true shift in consciousness can only come when people begin to see the world not as it is, but as it should be. While advocates can provide powerful arguments and compelling data, it is artists and media makers who create a window into the possible.

To truly move hearts and minds, artists, advocates, and media makers must collaborate deeply, developing a shared vision and a coordinated set of strategies for achieving it.

It was with this in mind that The Opportunity Agenda launched our Arts + Culture Initiative. The hope is to create a space for collaboration, strengthening the work of advocates and allowing artists and media makers to make an impact on the issues that matter to them. Designed to move the social justice movement towards greater innovation, the Initiative serves as a catalyst for inspiration and action, incubating new ideas, relationships, and opportunities to move beyond traditional modes of organizing and activating constituencies.

Our next event is entitled Immigration: Arts, Culture & Media 2010; A Timely Conversation with Artists and Advocates. Taking place Wednesday, April 14, the forum will explore the power of arts, culture, and media activities in promoting the dignity and human rights of immigrants in the United States.

The event will feature conversations with:

  • Chung-Wha Hong, Executive Director of the New York Immigration Coalition;
  • David Henry Hwang, Playwright of M. Butterfly and Yellow Face;
  • Alan Jenkins, Executive Director of The Opportunity Agenda;
  • Mira Nair, Director of The Namesake and Monsoon Wedding;
  • Martín Perna, Founder of Antibalas and Ocote Should Sounds;
  • Favianna Rodriguez, Printmaker and New Media Artist;
  • Frank Sharry, Executive Director of America’s Voice;
  • and the art of Kip Fulbeck.

The discussion will be moderated by Maria Hinojosa, Emmy Award-winning PBS anchor and the host of NPR’s Latino USA. A reception will follow, featuring DJ Martín Perna.

The forum comes on the heels of a historic March 21 rally in Washington, D.C. by pro-immigrant activists, and with comprehensive immigration reform currently on the national legislative agenda. The event will feature a conversation between artists and activists about the role of artists in society, particularly the ways in which creative work can serve to open up hearts and minds and break down prejudice. Panelists will be asked to reflect on how their personal immigration stories influence their own work, as advocates and as artists, and how immigration stories are being reflected in the arts in general. They also will share their views on the current state of the immigration policy debate.

The event is currently full but we do have a waitlist and expect room to open up. For more, visit creativechange.eventbrite.com.

Even if you are not able to attend this event, you can participate on Twitter. Use and watch the hashtag #ImmArts.

An Upswing Is Good – Can It Be Better?

After a recent breakup, a friend of mine had an awkward conversation with her new ex. It began with this difficult question – “I know you’ve got a new man, but is he a good man?”

Some things are just hard to answer.  So when I read in the New York Times last Friday that the job market was brightening, I knew better than to question the statement.  Out loud, at least.

In my head, I can hear the rewording – “I know you’ve got a new job, but is it a good job?”  And actually, I think this difficult question has to be asked, and answered.  The American economy has made some strides in recent months, presumably in response to the stimulus. However, there is still work to done.  Although the country added 162,000 net jobs in March 2010, almost one-third of these jobs include temporary Census jobs.  Furthermore, of the people who remain unemployed, the number of those considered to be long-term unemployed – meaning that they have been seeking work for 27 weeks or more – has risen to 44.1%.
This news doesn’t sound optimistic – clearly, everyone who wants to work should be able to find meaningful employment and that is not currently the case. However, there is reason for optimism in the latest economic news.  First, the unprecedented public spending of the stimulus is beginning to have some effect.  In the heady world of high-stakes economics, perception is (if not everything) a great deal.  The more economic indicators rise, the more investors will support economic markets, thereby raising additional economic indicators…

The second reason for optimism in the latest jobs picture is that it is engaging debate on what constitutes good jobs and stimulating a call for continued jobs creation.  Both are necessary if the American economy is going to move ahead on a better, more stable base.  We must focus on purposeful jobs creation, and the jobs created must be good jobs.  The country must focus on moving forward on a more equitable footing.  For example, African Americans and Latinas/Latinos still experience a poverty rate that is almost triple that of whites.  The wage gap for African American women and Latinas has increased.  Job creation efforts must address these inequities to avoid a repeat of our past.

Newly created jobs should pay a living wage.  Job creation legislation should include worker retraining and skill-building to ensure that America’s workers are prepared for a 21st Century global economy.  New publicly funded projects – especially those related to economic recovery – should be analyzed through the lens of an Opportunity Impact Statement to ensure that our money is not spent in ways that are not in accordance with our values.

Read more at The Opportunity Agenda website.

Rights at Home

Mossville, Louisiana is an historic African American community in the southwest part of the state. Like too many similar communities around the country, it is surrounded by 14 industrial facilities that release millions of pounds of toxic chemicals annually. Mossville residents point to studies by governmental and private sources linking the pollution from these facilities to their exposure to dioxins, noxious odors, and unhealthy air and water quality throughout the community. And they have documented how the burdens of toxic pollution and environmental hazards are disproportionately visited upon Louisiana communities that share their racial complexion.

A safe and healthy environment and freedom from discrimination are basic human rights that everyone should enjoy and that all governments should protect. Yet Mossville residents’ efforts to seek relief from their government–both state and federal–have yielded only excuses and inaction.

Last week, however, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights–a part of the Organization of American States–agreed to hear their case. The Commission will consider whether the United States government, which is a member of the OAS, has violated residents’ human rights to racial equality. The case marks the first time that the Commission will consider a U.S. environmental justice case.

It’s a shame that it takes an international body to hold our government accountable for protecting the rights of its own people. But that’s one of the reasons why America must be part of an international human rights system as well as our domestic systems of civil and constitutional rights. Human rights treaties provide tools to help ensure that the basic rights of all people are upheld.

Monique Harden, Co-Director of Advocates for Environmental Human Rights, which represents the Mossville residents, explained why the case is so important: “The good news is that a judicial review by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights can open the door to ending the pattern of environmental racism by introducing a human rights framework for environmental protection.” Hopefully, this case will help to bring human rights home to a place that desperately needs them.

Read more at The Opportunity Agenda website.

Women Hold Up Half the Sky

In light of International Women’s Day and the 54th United Nations Commission on the Status of Women, on Tuesday, March 9th, the Urban Agenda’s Human Rights Project, The National Council on Research for Women and the Center for Women’s Global Leadership joined together with The Opportunity Agenda to hold a side event at the UN Commission on the Status of Women.

Women from around the world coalesced in New York to take the front seat in the social justice debate. Regardless of dialect, religion or ethnic origin, there was one theme uniting them all in the room: women, and more specifically, women of color, are hurting in the shadows of the recession.

Historically, women, people of color and the poor have been faced with disproportionate inequalities in society. The crisis has only exacerbated these existing disparities. In 2008, the percentage of poor women increased to 30% in the United States, and in the subprime crisis, it was women who were the most affected. Moreover the gender income gap is astonishing for the 21st century. At the end of 2000, women were making 77% of what men make, black women were making 67%, Latina women 57%, and Asian women 93%. The inequality is too wide to ignore. What it comes down to is that women and people of color have been in crisis for much longer than just the current crisis.

As we look towards establishing lasting goals and policies, we need to consider a long-term plan that will create a sustainable economy for the future. Asset creation and wealth building generate a solid, enduring economic foundation for individuals. The median wealth (long-term assets) of a non-white, never-married woman is $0. We all deserve a fair chance to achieve our full potential, and that starts with including and considering everyone in policymaking so that a dismal statistic like this is a thing of the past. We need good jobs to spur wealth building so that people have savings and retirements plans. Good jobs mean living wages along with benefits and safety nets in case of emergency. Women in particular are relied on for care giving to both children and the elderly, which directly impacts their time in the workforce and therefore their asset creation. They should not be penalized, nor ignored but supported throughout their lifetime.

Annual events and days of commemoration give us the opportunity to reflect and consider the status quo. As a young, yet powerful country in the world, we must take these reflections and understanding of the situation to constantly strive towards improvement and equality, because we are not even close to there yet. The work is not done until each and every one of us has equal rights and equal opportunity regardless of race, gender, age or class.

Read more at The Opportunity Agenda website.

Thursday Immigration Blog Roundup

This week’s Immigration Blog Roundup will cover state and federal updates, new research, and more…

A bill authored by Republican Sen. Kathy Campbell proposes providing prenatal care for all pregnant, low-income women regardless of immigrant statutes under the Children’s Health Insurance Program in Nebraska.  Until a few months ago, the state offered prenatal care to all pregnant women through its Medicaid program, that is, until the federal government notified the Nebraska Dept. of Health and Human Services that federal Medicaid policy does not cover the "unborn child."  The bill is being backed by a diversity of organizations including pro-life and immigrant advocates.

Minorities make up almost half of the children born in the U.S. and are expected to become the U.S. majority in the next 40-50 years. Read more here.

The Wall Street Journal reports on a plan by lawmakers to implement a national biometric identification card that all American workers would be required to obtain.  The plan, backed by Senators Schumer and Graham who are spearheading comprehensive immigration reform for 2010, attempts to offer an alternative to the much flawed E-verify system to discourage an influx of undocumented immigrants once CIR passes.

The Arizona House of Representatives is expected to vote this week on Senate Bill 1070 and House Bill 2632 which would require police to make a "reasonable attempt" to determine the immigration status of anyone they come into contact with during an investigation, give them the authority to arrest someone if they have probable cause to believe that they are undocumented, and criminalizes transporting, harboring, or shielding anyone if the person knows or disregards the fact that they are undocumented.  Go to the Border Action Network website to read more.

After reporting in November that the number of deportations increased 47 percent under the Obama administration, the Department of Homeland Security is now saying that it was a mistake and the actual increase was only 5 percent.  The 387,790 undocumented immigrants removed by ICE last year however is still a record.

The Immigration Policy Center has released its research on the economic and political impact of immigrants in Washington State.

Join the Reform Immigration for America Campaign in the March for America on March 21st in Washington, DC! Get more information here.

Framing and Reality TV

In her blog today, Arianna Huffington asks if CBS’s new reality offering, Undercover Boss, is the most subversive show on television. It’s a provocative question, as most of us would like to think that a reality show existed that could turn the genre on its head.  Maybe spotlight some of the reality that real Americans face, rather than spotlighting primarily those obsessed with fame. In the show, CEOs infiltrate the lower ranks of their organizations, often service industries, to see how business is going on the ground. Huffington proposes that in revealing the reality and conditions of low-wage work and workers, the show allows audiences a somewhat unprecedented look at what it really takes to get by in this country, while also illuminating the stark divide between the haves and have nots.

She’s right that there’s an opportunity here to better understand what low wage work looks like, and how unequal our society really is. However, the show does not succeed in subverting the most dominant narrative about income disparities, and that failure lies in its frame.

A typical episode depicts a CEO interacting with a variety of low level workers, most of whom have compelling human interest stories that touch his (the episodes I’ve seen have only included male CEOs) heart and motivate him to make small changes that will improve their lives. In one episode an owner meets a fast food worker who has had a heart attack and worries for her health. By the end of the episode, he’s started a healthy living program to encourage employees to start healthier habits. The same owner admonishes others in his company for not realizing how the management practices they are encouraging actually interfere with day-to-day restaurant operations.

Who is the hero here? The good-hearted, but somewhat out-of-touch CEO. The villain? Well, this show does differ from other CBS reality fare in shying away from outright villains (hello Survivor), but if anything, the villains are the middle management that muck up the good intentions of their leader by imposing unnecessary bureaucracy and red tape onto the lower levels. This is a classic charity frame – the powerful help the powerless out of the goodness of their hearts. It’s not revolutionary, definitely not subversive.

What is missing from the solutions posed here is a piece that CBS, or any other network, is unlikely to include: systemic changes that guarantee a living wage, health care and safe working conditions.

So, once in a while a show will give us some interesting food for thought, and maybe Undercover Boss provides some of that. But until we change pop culture’s dominant frames, the solutions that will really change people’s lives will continue to languish outside of both TV and real-world reality.

Read more at The Opportunity Agenda website.

International Women’s Day is a Day for Action

President Obama and the First Lady recognized International Women’s Day earlier this week with a moving and sometimes funny ceremony in the East Room. The President said that “the story of America’s women, like the story of America itself, has had its peaks and valleys. But as one of our great American educators once said, if you drew a line through all the valleys and all the peaks, that line would be drawn with an upward curve. That upward curve—what we call progress—didn’t happen by accident.
Three actions that the President can take right now would add another peak to the story of America’s women, and to the story of our nation. First, and most simply, he should direct the Secretary of Labor to collect, analyze, and report to Congress and the public gender and wage information for jobs receiving federal financial assistance or tax credits—including through the economic stimulus package and pending jobs bill. That information is crucial for ensuring that federal investments improve rather than worsen the yawning gap in American women’s wages—77¢ for every dollar earned by men. Collecting and reporting this information, then using the data to enforce our equal opportunity laws, is something the Administration can do on its own. Today.

Second, the President should call on Congress to ratify the International Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women. Ratifying the convention—which President Carter Signed in 1980—would recognize equal opportunity regardless of gender as a human right that our nation respects at home and abroad. It would serve as a resource for ensuring equal access to education and economic opportunities, as well as freedom from violence and abuse. And it would strengthen our nation’s leadership in promoting the human rights of women around the world. The Obama administration has said in the past that it considers ratification of this convention to be an "important priority." It’s time to make that priority a reality.

Finally, the Administration should take action to transform the ineffective and politically divisive U.S. Commission on Civil Rights into a revitalized U.S. Commission on Civil and Human Rights. A reformulated Commission should be comprised of members nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate. And it should have an updated mission for the 21st century, including addressing contemporary barriers to opportunity facing women and girls. Transforming the Commission will require action by Congress. But the President should provide visible leadership on the issue, including proposing a structure and mission statement for the reformed body, and reporting on the human rights issues that it should prioritize.

International Women’s Day is a time to reflect on the obstacles that women have overcome in the U.S and around the world. It’s also a time to acknowledge the hurdles that still exist, and for leadership in knocking them down.

Read more at The Opportunity Agenda website.