Ethan Miller/Getty Images opinion Elizabeth Warren’s Threat to the Constitution

Rich Lowry is editor of National Review and a contributing editor with Politico Magazine.

There’s a brewing constitutional crisis, and it is the Elizabeth Warren surge in the Democratic primaries.

Should the Massachusetts senator become president of the United States, she will undertake a historic bout of federal activism unmoored from any serious consideration of constitutional constraints.


This would far exceed the current “constitutional crisis” over the Ukraine controversy. Impeachment involves the House of Representatives exercising a responsibility clearly bestowed on it with broad latitude by the U.S. Constitution, to punish an act by President Donald Trump that was foolish and improper, but also squarely within his constitutional powers.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi likes to say Trump violated the Constitution on his call with the Ukrainian president pushing for a Biden-related investigation, but there’s no serious argument for this. The conduct of foreign policy — and the inevitable cajoling of and horse-trading with foreign leaders — is a core presidential duty.

The problem was mingling personal political priorities with actions in his official capacity, a symptom of one of the worst aspects of Trump’s presidency, namely his inability or willingness to distinguish between himself and his office. Trump doesn’t think institutionally or constitutionally, making it a historic irony that he’s appointed a phalanx of judges who will attempt to faithfully interpret the Constitution and protect the institutional prerogatives of the different branches for decades to come.

In contrast to Trump’s carelessness and highly personalized view of the presidency, Warren offers a carefully thought-out agenda of open contempt for legal and constitutional boundaries. It’s not that she, a former Harvard Law professor, doesn’t know that they exist; it’s that she doesn’t care.

Her broad approach is if she doesn’t like something about America, she’ll act as president to ban it or curtail it, whether she has the legal or constitutional authority or not. This isn’t a trait personal to her. Instead, it is inherent to progressive government, which from its beginnings in the early 20th century strained against constitutional limits it considered antiquated and unnecessary.

The philosophical and political line from Woodrow Wilson — the foundational progressive political leader and thinker who scorned what he considered the inefficiency of our traditional constitutional system — to Warren is direct and unbroken.

One of Warren’s signature domestic proposals is her wealth tax of 2 percent annually on household net worth of $50 million to $1 billion and 3 percent on net worth above $1 billion. Without dwelling on the complex legal arguments, the Warren plan is constitutionally dubious, at best, and would instantly end up in the Supreme Court if it ever passed.

Someone scrupulously committed to the Constitution would want to steer clear on this basis alone, but “constitutionally or legal suspect” is the unifying thread of much of the Warren agenda.

As conservative writer David French points out, her proposed executive order prohibiting fracking obviously runs afoul of a 2005 federal law protecting it from federal regulation. She is promising to do something illegal, pure and simple.

And on it goes. She says she would act unilaterally to expand background checks for gun purchases, circumventing Congress. She wants to tax lobbying, an activity protected under the First Amendment, in yet another constitutionally fraught initiative. She wants to break up Big Tech, although it’s not clear under what authority.

Tellingly, almost no one on her side says, “I appreciate what you’re getting at Liz, but you can’t do that.”

To their credit, a couple of CNN panelists pressed her in July on the constitutional basis of her wealth tax, and she just waved them off. Her answer came down to the assertion that if a majority supports the tax, it should pass muster. Needless to say, the op-ed pages and airwaves weren’t thick with denunciations of her casual dismissal of the Constitution.

This gets to a marked, and annoying, hypocrisy in the reaction to Trump’s Ukraine call. The same people who are most convinced that it is somehow unconstitutional or illegal, didn’t raise a peep when President Barack Obama rewrote immigration law on his own after repeatedly, and correctly, saying he didn’t have the power to do it.

To be sure, the reliable, consistent constituency for strictly bounded executive action is vanishingly small. It amounts to about a dozen senators, those Republicans brave enough to oppose Trump’s emergency declaration to repurpose military funding for the border wall, the most problematic of his executive actions and a move that at least violates the spirit of our system.

All you need to know about how seriously most of the left takes the Constitution is that at the same time it’s freaking out Trump, it’s boosting the prospects of Elizabeth Warren, who is promising to ignore it as a matter of policy.

