In the 1830s, the French aristocrat Alexis de Tocqueville warned that "insufferable despotism" would prevail if America ever acquired a national administrative state. Today's Tea Partiers evidently believe that, after a great wrong turn in the early twentieth century, Tocqueville's nightmare has come true. In those years, it seems, a group of radicals, seduced by alien ideologies, created vast bureaucracies that continue to trample on individual freedom. In Tocqueville's Nightmare, Daniel R. Ernst destroys this ahistorical and simplistic narrative. He shows that, in fact, the nation's best corporate lawyers were among the creators of "commission government" that supporters were more interested in purging government of corruption than creating a socialist utopia, and that the principles of individual rights, limited government, and due process were built into the administrative state. Far from following "un-American" models, American state-builders rejected the leading European scheme for constraining government, the Rechtsstaat (a state of rules). Instead, they looked to an Anglo-American tradition that equated the rule of law with the rule of courts and counted on judges to review the bases for administrators' decisions. Soon, however, even judges realized that strict judicial review shifted to courts decisions best left to experts. The most masterful judges, including Charles Evans Hughes, Chief Justice of the United States from 1930 to 1941, ultimately decided that a "day in court" was unnecessary if individuals had already had a "day in commission" where the fundamentals of due process and fair play prevailed. This procedural notion of the rule of law not only solved the judges' puzzle of reconciling bureaucracy and freedom. It also assured lawyers that their expertise in the ways of the courts would remain valuable, and professional politicians that presidents would not use administratively distributed largess as an independent source of political power. Tocqueville's nightmare has not come to pass. Instead, the American administrative state is a restrained and elegant solution to a thorny problem, and it remains in place to this day.
Okayama demonstrates that the American institutional combination of common law and the presidential system favored policy implementation through formal procedures by autonomous agencies and that it induced the creation and development of ...
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Lucien Jaume has specifically noted this point in his intellectual biography of Tocqueville, insisting that “we will ... Daniel Ernst's book, Tocqueville's Nightmare, suggests like so many others that Tocqueville's observations in ...
The letter is quoted in Ernst, Tocqueville's Nightmare, 58. 55. See George K. Ray and Harvey Wienke, “Hot Oil on the Unchartered Seas of Delegated Powers,” 29 Ill. L. Rev. 1035 (1935), and several letters exchanged among staff members ...
His celebrated Democracy in America, the most quoted work on America ever written, presented the new Americans with a degree of understanding no one had accomplished before or has since.
This book examines the history of administrative power in America and argues that modern administrative law has failed to protect the principles of American constitutionalism as effectively as earlier approaches to regulation and ...
For example F. R. Donahue dictated several letters in October 1945 about “labor disputes which have occurred in the shook mills in the States of California, Oregon, and Washington.” Donahue also dictated letters in July 1945 about a ...
Justice: Terrorism Cases, Enemy Combatants, and Political Justicein U.S. Courts,” Politics &Society 33 (2005): 637–69;Anne Gearan, “Bush's War onTerror Runs Afoul of theRuleof Law: Despite Popular Support, ItHasSuffered Mostly Defeat in ...
On the difficulties of this period, see PHILLIPS, supra note 39, at 33—45. 54. A few state banks were used in the East as well. See Banks in Which the Receipts from the Public Lands Are Deposited (Feb. 14, 1822), reprinted in 3 AMERICAN ...
Arendt and Tocqueville This was Arendt's conclusion , too , as the immediate danger of McCarthyism receded . ... Most striking are the similarities between Tocqueville's nightmare vision of the tutelary power that is “ society itself ...