in The Death Penalty Case described the decision’s reliance on the right to human dignity
as a utilization of the “invisible constitution” – [which is] beyond the [control of both the]
Constitution, which is often amended . . . [, and] future Constitutions”); Vicki C. Jackson,
299, 313–14 (“[statutes prohibiting] the use of government monies or resources for the purpose
of supporting a particular candidate for election or reelection . . . may be thought of as a kind
of “invisible constitution,’ reflecting, and supporting, constitutional values though not in their
See Tribe, Supra note 1.
Lawrence B. Solum
62
Lawrence B. Solum
Grey’s question has been echoed by Michael Moore,
4
Antonin Scalia,
5
Akhil
Amar,
6
and others.
7
One of the motivations for Grey’s essay was the early stir-
rings of originalism. Descendants of the interpretivism and textualism that
Grey interrogated now occupy center stage in contemporary debates about
constitutional theory. But since Grey wrote, originalism and textualism have
evolved. This chapter addresses the idea of an unwritten or invisible constitu-
tion from the perspective of contemporary originalist theory. Is the notion of
an unwritten or invisible constitution consistent with the originalist claim that
constitutional practice should be constrained by the original public meaning
of the constitutional text?
“Originalism” is a family of contemporary theories of constitutional inter-
pretation and construction that share two core ideas. First, the communicative
content of the constitutional text is fixed at the time each provision is framed
and ratified – the “Fixation Thesis.”
8
Second, constitutional practice should
be constrained by that communicative content of the text, which we can call
the “original public meaning” – the “Constraint Principle.”
9
Other matters
(such as original intent versus original public meaning) are debated by con-
temporary originalists.
We can begin with a three-step argument that highlights the problematic
relationship between originalism and an invisible or unwritten constitution:
(1) the predominant form of contemporary originalism is public meaning orig-
inalism, a form of textualism. (2) An unwritten or invisible constitution is not a
text. (3) Therefore, public meaning originalists should reject the notion of an
unwritten or invisible constitution.
This simple syllogism
10
is misleading, in part because the phrases “invisi-
ble constitution” and “unwritten constitution” provide an unfortunate frame
4
Michael S. Moore, “Do We Have an Unwritten Constitution?” (1989) 63
Southern California
Law Review 107.
5
Antonin Scalia, “Is There an Unwritten Constitution?” (1989) 12
Harvard Journal of Law and
Public Policy 1.
6
Akhil Reed Amar,
America’s Unwritten Constitution (New York, NY: Basic Books, 2012).
7
The literature on unwritten constitutions, unenumerated constitutional rights, the Ninth
Amendment, and related topics is vast. The work that influenced the writing of this chapter
includes: Jed Rubenfeld, “The New Unwritten Constitution” (2001) 51 Duke Law Journal 289;
Suzanna Sherry, “The Founders’ Unwritten Constitution” (1987) 54 University of Chicago
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