As the United States edges up to the 250th anniversary of
the Declaration of Independence in 2026, one of the core principles the
founders sought to advance – that the government must act with accountability
and in accordance with the rule of law – is
being strongly tested.
In their deliberations leading up to the declaration, the
founders would not just raise deep concerns that the government of King George
III was violating the Colonists’ rights, which
they described in the declaration. They would also enshrine these
principles in the U.S. Constitution over a decade later through the concept of
“due process.”
What did the framers likely mean when they did so? That’s
no longer simply an academic question for legal
scholars like me. The meaning and application of due process has become a
crucial issue in the U.S., most often with respect to the Trump
administration’s migrant
deportation efforts.
Over the past several months, the U.S. Supreme Court has
made several rulings in deportation-related
cases with respect to what’s called the due
process clause of the Constitution.
In April 2025, in the case Trump v.
J.G.G., the court seemed to state quite clearly that deportations could not
take place without due process. More recently, however, in D.H.S. v.
D.V.D., the Supreme Court prevented a lower court from providing due
process protections to a group of men the administration wanted to
deport to South Sudan, where they are at risk of facing torture
and even death.
These seemingly contradictory rulings not only make it
unclear when due process applies but probably leave many asking what the term
“due process of law” even means and how it works.
Over the past several months, the U.S. Supreme Court has
made several rulings about due process in deportation-related cases. (Mike
Kline, Moment/Getty Images)
The origins of due process
The American concept of due process can be traced
from medieval
England to its modern formulation by the U.S. Supreme Court. Doing so
allows the meaning of due process to come into focus. It also calls into
question the court’s most recent ruling on this issue.
The concepts of due process and the rule of law largely
emerged in the 13th century in the Magna Carta, a formal, written
agreement between King John of England and the rebel aristocracy that
effectively established legal constraints on government.
One key passage from the Magna Carta provided that “No
Freeman shall be taken, or any otherwise imprisoned, or be disseised of his
Freehold, or Liberties, or free Customs, or be outlawed, or exiled, or
destroyed; nor we will not pass upon him, nor condemn him, but by lawful
Judgment of his Peers, or by the Law of the Land.”
This accord established formal constraints on a
previously unrestrained regent, setting English law on the course that would
prioritize rule of law over the whims of the monarch.
Over a century later, Parliament
would pass the English statute of 1354 that said “That no Man of what
Estate or Condition that he be, shall he put out of Land or Tenement, nor taken
nor imprisoned, nor disinherited, nor put to death, without being brought in
Answer by due Process of the Law.”
These principlesd evolve over time in British law and
then informed the emerging revolutionary spirit in the American Colonies.
Released in January 1776, Thomas
Paine’s pamphlet Common Sense would help galvanize and steel many
Colonists for the revolutionary conflict to come. The work shifted the focus of
Colonists’ anger from trying to force the king to treat them better to more
radical change: independence and a country governed by the rule of law.
Thomas Paine wrote in this influential 1776 political
pamphlet, ‘For as in absolute governments the King is law, so in free countries
the law ought to be King; and there ought to be no other.’ Library of Congress Rare Book and
Special Collections Division
What the Colonists wanted, Paine wrote,
was not a monarch: “So far as we approve of monarchy, that in America THE
LAW IS KING. For as in absolute governments the King is law, so in free
countries the law ought to be King; and there ought to be no other.”
Defining due process
After independence, many of the original 13 states
adopted their own constitutions
that would enshrine principles akin to due process to protect their
constituents from government overreach, such as that government was to be
bound, as it was in Virginia’s
Declaration of Rights in 1776, by “the law of the land.”
But it was not until the nation adopted the
Bill of Rights – the first 10 amendments to the Constitution – in 1791
that the federal government could not act in a way that deprived the populace
of life, liberty or property without due process of law. After the Civil
War, the 14th Amendment would apply these same protections to all
government action, state and federal.
The contemporary and most comprehensive formulation of
what due process requires can be found in the Supreme Court’s ruling in the
1970 case Goldberg v.
Kelly, brought by welfare recipients challenging their loss of such
benefits without a hearing.
In that case, the court determined that when
governments attempt to deprive someone of their life, liberty or property,
the target of those attempts must receive fair notice of the charges or claims
against them that would justify that loss; be given an opportunity to defend
against those claims; and possess the right to have such defenses considered by
an impartial adjudicator.
The
Supreme Court in 1976 would accept that due process protections in
different settings will vary based on a number of variables. Those include what
is at stake in the case, the likelihood that government might make a mistake in
a particular setting, and the benefits and burdens of providing certain forms
of process in a given situation.
When someone’s life is literally on the line, for
example, more exacting procedures are required. At the same time, regardless of
how important the interest that is subject to due process – whether it is one’s
life, one’s home, one’s liberty, or something else – the components of fair
notice, an opportunity to be heard, and to have one’s case decided by an
impartial adjudicator must be meaningful.
As the court said in Mullane vs. Central
Hanover Bank & Trust Co. in 1950: “Process which is a mere gesture
is not due process.”
Ray Brescia,
Associate Dean for Research and Intellectual Life, Albany Law School for The
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