On
December 11, 2009, a federal judge ruled that Congress had unconstitutionally
cut off all federal funds to ACORN. The judge issued an injunction
stopping federal authorities from continuing to cut off past, present
and future federal funds to the community organization.
ACORN (Association
of Community Organizations for Reform Now) and its allies in 75 cities
will again have access to millions of federal dollars to counsel people
facing foreclosure, seeking IRS tax refunds, and looking for affordable
low cost housing. ACORN, which has received about $54 million
in government grants
since 1994, will be able to apply for new federal programs just like any
other organization.
The court ruled
that Congress violated the U.S. Constitution �by singling out ACORN and
its affiliates for severe sweeping restrictions� and that such action
constitutes illegal punishment or a �bill of attainder.�
What is a bill
of attainder? Even most lawyers have no idea. Bills of� attainder
are acts of congress which unilaterally punish an individual or organization.
Essentially Congress acts as prosecutor, judge, jury and executioner.
The U.S. Constitution
has prohibited bills of attainder since 1787. U.S. founders objected
to bills of attainder because in England Parliament passed many such bills
against political enemies, used them to throw people in prison and even
execute them without trial.
Congress punished
ACORN without even trying to figure out if any laws had been broken or
allowing the 500,000 member organization to defend itself.
What about protecting
the taxpayers against fraud? As the court pointed out, there are
many legal ways for the government to investigate and terminate federal
contractors which have been proven to engage in fraud or illegal activity.
But Congress did
not want to wait for trials or proof or to allow ACORN due process.
Conservatives developed
a voting majority and imposed punishment without a hearing or anything.
ACORN has been
a target of right-wing politicians for years. Conservatives hate
ACORN primarily because it registered over two million people to vote
since 2003 and because it has an overwhelming African American, working
class, democratic-voting, membership.
Fox News is obsessed
with ACORN. Google Fox News and ACORN and you will see over two
million hits. Google Glenn Beck and ACORN and you get over a million
hits, six hundred thousand for Rush, and three hundred thousand for Michelle
Malkin.
Right wing members
of Congress accused ACORN of being a �shell game� using millions of taxpayer
dollars �to advertise for a political candidate� and which �helped President
Obama get elected.�
After a highly
dubious right-wing sting operation in September, the conservative media
machine overran Congress members, including, sadly, many democrats, and
passed the bill of attainder cutting off all federal funds to ACORN and
any affiliates, subsidiaries and allies.
Most Congress reps
knew full well this was an illegal bill of attainder as it was pointed
out in the debates and even by the Congressional Research Office, but
voted to let it go through anyway. Representatives Nadler and
Grayson and Senator
Leahy, among others, repeatedly pointed out that this was unconstitutional.
Democrats who voted for the bill of attainder included many who
had sought and received help from ACORN members in the past. They have
some explaining to do.
Progressives who
remained silent while the nation�s largest low income African American
community organization was under attack also should re-think their lack
of support. Did anyone think that if the right-wingers
took down Van Jones
and ACORN they would stop there?
What is ahead?
Surely the conservative opponents of ACORN will continue to bloviate
and continue to try to put ACORN out of business. There will likely
be fights galore. But with this ruling the fights will be a little
fairer.
ACORN won this
case. The U.S. Supreme Court has called the prohibition of congressional
bills of attainder a �bulwark against tyranny.� Here the bulwark
against tyranny worked to stop the right-wing smear machine.
But
the rule of law won too. And all of us and Congress have again been
taught a valuable
lesson � there are no shortcuts when it comes to following
the Constitution.
BlackCommentator.com Columnist Bill Quigley is a human
rights lawyer and law professor at Loyola University, New Orleans. He
has been an active public interest lawyer since 1977 and has served as
counsel with a wide range of public interest organizations on issues including
Katrina social justice issues, public housing, voting rights, death penalty,
living wage, civil liberties, educational reform, constitutional rights
and civil disobedience. He has litigated numerous cases with the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund,
Inc., the Advancement Project, and with the ACLU of Louisiana, for which
he served as General Counsel for over 15 years. Bill
is also legal director of the Center for Constitutional Rights and one
of the team who represented ACORN in their successful federal constitutional
challenge. You can read the opinion at www.crrjustice.org.
Click
here to contact Mr.
Quigley. |