ORDER OF COURT
I respectfully dissent from the denial of rehearing en banc. In doing so, I do not write on a clean slate. Instead, I acknowledge my indebtedness to and draw heavily upon the work of colleagues in other circuits who have either dissented from the denial of en banc review in similar cases or have written separate opinions to distance themselves from panel opinions dealing with the issues addressed by the panel in this case. I refer specifically to a dissent from the denial of rehearing en bane by Judge Reinhardt and joined by Judges Pregerson, Gould, Paez, and Berzon, see Crater v. Galaza,
The panel addressed two issues related to the scope of federal court review of a habeas petition. Both issues involve changes instituted by Congress in the An-titerrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”). See section 104 of AEDPA, Pub.L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214 (codified in relevant part at 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1)). First, when determining whether an individual is being held “in violation of the Constitution or laws ... of
I.
Although- Congress has the power, pursuant to the Constitution, to limit the jurisdiction of the lower federal courts, its authority is not plenary. Even as Congress may confer or restrict the federal courts’ jurisdiction — its “quantitative powers” — it may not instruct the court how to decide certain cases or how to carry out the qualitative aspects of its work. See Crater,
The judge’s reasoning process is critical to the exercise of judicial power. See Irons,
Federal courts also have the fundamental duty to maintain the supremacy of federal law and the Constitution by “saying what the law is.” See Cooper v. Aaron,
A.
By limiting the sources of law a federal court may rely upon in granting habeas relief to “clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court,” § 2254(d)(1) impinges upon a federal court’s “judicial power” by “strik[ing] at the center of the judge’s process of reasoning.” Irons,
[AEDPA] shuts the judge off from the judge’s normal sources of law and curbs that use of analogy which is the way the mind of a judge works. In our system of law where precedent prevails and is developed, AEDPA denies the judge the use of circuit precedent, denies development of Supreme Court and circuit precedent, denies the deference due the penumbra and emanations of precedent, and even denies the courts the power to follow the law as now determined by the Supreme Court-the precedent to be applied must have been in existence at the earlier moment when a state decision occurred. A more blinkered concept of law cannot be imagined — law, particularly constitutional law — is treated as what once was the law. The development of doctrine is despised. That despisal is a direct legislative interference in the independence of the judiciary.
Irons,
In response to these concerns, the panel says that § 2254(d)(1) does not restrict completely a judge’s ability to consider decisions from the lower federal courts when undertaking its habeas inquiry. Specifically, the panel notes that “section 2254(d)(1) does not in any way limit the judge’s ability to draw from any legal source in determining whether the state court’s decision rests on constitutional error or is an unreasonable application of Supreme Court precedent. It only limits the grounds on which habeas relief may be granted.” That is a large limitation. By congressional directive, the only precedent that ultimately matters in the constitutional inquiry by district courts is the clearly established jurisprudence of the Supreme Court. Congress has imposed on the process of adjudication a limited inquiry which requires federal courts “to ignore the clear
The Supreme .Court’s appellate review is discretionary; its purpose is to clarify the law and to resolve conflicts among the circuit courts. Therefore, the Supreme Court is unlikely to grant review to establish a constitutional principle that is already firmly ingrained, or upon which the lower courts agree. The perverse result is that some of the most universal constitutional principles might never become “clearly established law, as determined by the Supreme Court,” and thus their violations may never warrant habeas relief under § 2254(d)(1).
Id.
Given the limited nature of Supreme Court review, there are constitutional principles that have been elaborated by the lower federal courts but they have not yet been adopted by clearly established Supreme Court precedent. With the con-gressionally dictated reliance on Supreme Court precedent, that large body of constitutional law developed by the lower federal courts becomes largely irrelevant. The congressional intrusion on the process of constitutional adjudication in the federal courts could not be more stark.
B.
By requiring the federal courts to sanction state court rulings that, according to the federal courts’ independent judgment, violate the Constitution, but do so in an “objectively reasonable” manner, § 2254(d)(1) also inhibits the courts’ “judicial power” to “say what the law is.” Crater,
In offering these analogies, the panel ignores the unique nature of the writ of habeas corpus. The writ involves a right and remedy that are inextricably linked; a prisoner files a writ when the government has incarcerated him in violation of his constitutional rights. See Crater,
II.
Together, the two issues addressed in the panel opinion go to the heart of our constitutional system of government. For that reason alone, en banc review was justified. See Fed. R.App. P. 35(a)(2) (“[T]he proceeding involves a question of exceptional importance.”). Moreover, because the panel’s constitutional determinations were erroneous, en banc review was required. As Judge Noonan has eloquently stated:
Legislatures exist to make laws. Courts exist to decide cases. The separation of these functions is part of our democratic system of government. To allow the legislature to decide a case is to deny the separation. To allow the legislature to tell a court how a case should be decided is worse. It allows the legislature to mask itself under judicial robes. It puts forward as the judgment of a court what in actuality is the judgment of the legislature. Impermissibly it mixes the two branches. It does so to the great detriment of the judicial branch which is made to act as if it were performing its judicial task while it has had its ability to perform this task removed.
Irons,
