Context
Since the founding of the Republic, American laws have generally taken into account cost-benefit for affected people and interests when a law has significant impacts. Balancing of interests has been ubiquitous in constitutional law since the early 20th century. Even when absolutists claim the Constitution is silent about balancing, e.g., clauses asserting a right "shall not be infringed" or congress "shall make no law", their decisions are usually crafted in ways that actually do some balancing, even when that is denied.
Although absolutism and hostility toward balancing of interests is a minority legal view, it is arguably dogma among MAGA legal practitioners, generally including all six Republicans on the US Supreme Court bench. That makes absolutism a powerful influence on modern law despite it being a minority position. The majority view is that constitutional rights and laws must be interpreted in a manner that is sensitive to their purpose and to the necessities of society and the law.
Some legal scholars have called out the hypocrisy of selective anti-balancing originalism in the law. That brand of originalism almost always results in partisan outcomes, not principled outcomes. It uses the law as means to partisan ends. One scholar asserted that originalism is a form of a living constitution that is simply not honest about its values, aims, and commitments. In the hands of MAGA US Supreme Court judges, originalism functions as an after-the-fact rationalization, and an anti-democracy weapon, for partisan decisions made on partisan grounds.
In short, anti-balancing legal scholars and judges are, or at least look like they are, asserting anti-balancing absolutism as a smoke screen for MAGA authoritarianism. The current US Supreme Court is increasingly extending absolutist levels of protection to current favored rights, e.g., speech, religious exercise, bearing arms, and holding property, while zeroing out protection for currently" disfavored rights, e.g., abortion, voting rights and consumer rights and protections.
The Founders' Approach
The Founders explicitly embraced balancing. James Madison cautioned against "absolute restrictions in cases that are doubtful, or where emergencies may overrule them". He understood that rigid rules will not be well-respected when they significantly oppose the public interest. Jefferson similarly acknowledged that declarations protecting free press will not take away the liability of the printers for false facts printed" and that protecting religious freedom "does not give impunity to criminal acts, dictated by religious error. The historical record makes clear that the Founders assumed rights had limits.
MAGA Hypocrisy
Today's conservative Supreme Court majority claims to reject interest balancing in favor of "text, history, and tradition." However, historian Eric Foner has observed that originalism is intellectually indefensible because there is no important document in the world that has only one original meaning or one original intention.
The hypocrisy is glaring. The same justices who eliminated interest balancing for gun safety laws (the 2022 Bruen decision) employ balancing when it favors preferred outcomes. Preferred outcomes include expanding executive power (under the authoritarian unitary executive theory), religious exemptions (allowing discrimination against target groups), and weakening protections for voting rights. Legal scholars document that when convenient, conservative originalists announce decisions and doctrines that have no basis in the Constitution's original meaning.
The Authoritarian Threat
The net effect of MAGA's selective anti-balancing dogma is authoritarian. Recent scholarship argues that the widespread adoption of originalism has diminished the ability of the United States to stare down anti-democratic threats because it has eroded two key bulwarks against authoritarianism, namely individual rights and an independent judiciary.
Since January 2025, the Supreme Court has sided with the Trump administration in 20 of 23 shadow-docket rulings. Lower-court judges who ruled against the administration have been consistently overturned by a Supreme Court majority that claims fidelity to constitutional text while functionally expanding executive power beyond anything the Founders contemplated. There's little to no balancing in that.
Public Ignorance
Most Americans remain unaware that abstract-sounding debates over "originalism" versus "balancing" determine whether their rights have practical meaning. When courts refuse to balance, they either make rights absolute by blocking all regulation, or they defer to government or special interest power. Neither outcome reflects the Founders' nuanced understanding that liberty requires both protection and prudent limits. Both are anti-democracy
The stakes are democracy itself. Empowered originalism creates a legal environment where authoritarianism is viable and democracy weakened. When a an anti-democratic constitutional dogma becomes a weapon wielded for partisan ends, the rule of law and democracy have eroded. Understanding this battle is an important first step toward defending democracy and self-governance.
