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I.
Division of Powers.
B. Federalism, i.e., the federal system, decentralizes political power and our politics, dividing it between the national government and the various state governments. It creates more access points to government. See linkage institutions. Additionally, federalism strengthens the judicial branch, since it is often called up to resolve conflicts.
2. Implied: Implied powers were first established in the United States Supreme Court case of McCulloch v.Maryland (1819). In McCulloch, the Supreme Court held that because of the "necessary and proper" clause in Article 1, Section 8 of the Constitution, the national government had additional powers that were implied in that clause.Implied powers are those powers of the national government that flow from its enumerated powers and the "elastic clause" of the Constitution. Implied powers are best exemplified by congressional authority to pass environmental protection laws. 3.Inherent: Inherent powers are those powers that belong to the national government simply because it is the national government, e.g., declare war, foreign affairs, acquire new territory. ONLY the national government is allowed to regulate commerce with foreign nations, i.e. foreign trade. Example NAFTA restrictions. 4. Prohibited: Expressly bar government from specific actions, e.g. state governments cannot coin money, no ex post facto laws or grant titles of nobility. 5. Concurrent: Concurrent powers are those which are exercised independently by both the national and state governments. Those powers shared by both levels of governments, i.e., state and national. Examples: power to tax, power to borrow, and power to regulate commerce within their own borders. Both the federal and state government collaborate with each other within many geographic and policy spheres. 6. Reserved:
Reserved powers are powers retained by the states. 10th Amendment: "The
power not delegated to the United States by the Constitution., not prohibited
to it by the States, are reserved to the States or to the people." State
powers then are called reserved powers. In our federal system, the
powers of the state governments are ultimately granted by the United States
Constitution. The most significant reserved power given to states is the
power to determine the qualifications for voting. Courts have interpreted
reserve powers as falling into three categories:
b. Police powers; criminal laws. For example, as a result of our federal form of government, the death penalty in the United States varies substantially state by state. c. Right to regulate commerce within a state, i.e., intrastate commerce.
2. Vertical
Federalism describes the obligations between the states and the national
government, as established by the Constitution.
b.
states is obligated to consider proposed constitutional amendments and
provide the machinery for conducting elections for national officers,
i.e., president, vice president and members of Congress.
2.
Article IV of the U.S. CONST., describes the basic relationships between
states, in Section 1, "Full Faith and Credit," and Section 2, "Privileges
and Immunities." The "Full Faith and Credit" clause is an example of horizontal
federalism.
b. Section 2 (Privileges and Immunities): Concept that citizens are granted the same rights and duties, no matter what state they reside in. Section 2 also contains provision regarding extradition. c. Horizontal
federalism is a concept founded on the "full faith and credit" clause of
the U.S. Constitution. It describes the relationship between states, as
opposed to the relationship between a state and the national government.
An example of horizontal federalism is the act of one state recognizing
a divorce decree of another state.
D. As a practical matter, the Framers has no choice but to adopt a federal system because the citizens' loyalty to established state governments at that time were stronger than it was to the newly created United States. The population of the colonies was too dispersed in order to effectively have a unitary system of government (see below), complicated by a primitive transportation and communications system. Moreover, a confederation system had failed, as evidenced by the weak Articles of Confederation.
B. Supremacy Clause (national supremacy) is that constitutional requirement that federal law prevails over state law. Simply put, the actions of the national (central) government take precedence if the national government is acting within the scope of constitutional authority.
2. United States Laws and Treaties 3. United States Supreme Court Decisions 4. United States Administrative Regulations Followed by state hierarchical authority: 5.
State constitution
B. Twenty states (mostly Western ones) increased their speeds to seventy miles per hour or more. Montana imposed no day speed, and Nevada had no speed limits at all. C.
Why were fifty-five-mile-per-hour speed limits imposed?
2. Insurance industry studies say fewer highway deaths at lower speeds. 3.
The same, or similar laws removed helmet rules and zero alcohol tolerance
rules.
2. To get federal funds, states were forced to keep lower speeds limits, until Congress changed the law in 1995. 3. President Clinton and Congress responded to states' complaints (and example of the federal system and election politics in action).
b. Policy is made by the central governments and is administered through units at the regional level (no local governmental partners). c.
A unitary system differs from a federal system in that the federal, or
national government, can change the boundaries of states, or abolish them.
2. Police in Los Angeles were slow to respond, so the governor sent in the California state militia (national guard). 3.
The president took the state militia under federal control, and also sent
federal marshals to put down the disturbance.
2. There are a number of local units, not remote bureaucracies, which deal directly with local problems. (Local governments may better understand local problems.) 3. There are multiple access points for citizens to participate in democracy. 4. There is less chance that individual rights will be abused by a large, aloof bureaucracy where power is concentrated in a few hands. 5. Multiple layers of government provide more avenues for innovation, experimentation, and problem solving. Many of the FDR New Deal programs copied the states. 6.
It suits a large country with a very diverse population like the United
States.
2. Under a federal system, special interests and certain localities can frustrate the realization of national goals. (Examples: poor wages and working conditions for coal miners in West Virginia; automobile and oil industries in some areas) 3. Local communities may lack the expertise to solve problems, and may provide favoritism to some at others' expense. 4. Law enforcement and justice maybe unevenly applied among the states (death penalty laws). 5. Local autonomy may get in the way of national unity.
B. 1995 Census Bureau government count found 86,743, including all federal, state and local entities. C. Morton Grodzins says the federal analogy is not of a three-layered (federal, state, and local) cake, but a marble cake with all parts interlaced. Marble cake federalism refers to the three-layered system of government, i.e., national, state, and local governments. D.
Cooperation and tension among federal, state, and local governments and
the New York bailout.
2. State didn't want to bail it out, but later took over all its books. 3.
President Ford planned to let it default, but later relented.
2. JFK used federal troops at Ole Miss and the National Guard at University of Alabama to protect entering black students. (Alabama Governor Wallace opposed him.) 3. LBJ sent in paratroopers to quell race riots in Detroit in 1967. 4.
President Bush sent troops and federal agents to Los Angeles when rioting
erupted following the Rodney King verdict.
2. Conservative GOP and Southern Democrats see the federal government as a danger to individual liberties, and as an "octopus" whose tentacles strangle local initiative. An example is gun control.
B.
New Deal social programs changed the equation.
2.
Cooperative federalism evolved.Cooperative federalism
is described as various levels of government which are seen as related
parts of a single governmental system, characterized more by cooperation
and shared functions than by conflict and competition. In cooperative federalism,
responsibilities are mingled and distinctions are blurred between the levels
of government. Federal government enhances its power and governance
becomes "we are all in this together, so we should cooperate." All governments
are seen as being a part of a bigger system. Since ratification of the
Constitution, American federalism has gradually changed from dual federalism
to cooperative federalism. In cooperative federalism, in order to qualify
for federal grant money, cities and states must follow strict federal guidelines
for adopting and enforcing federal laws.
D.
A new model of federalism — regulatory federalism — evolved with the advent
(since the mid-1960s) of extensive federal regulations mandating functions
for states and localities to perform. Regulatory
federalism is a term used to describe the emergence of federal programs
aimed at, or implemented by, state and local governments.
2. Often these mandates came without federal funds, i.e., "unfunded mandates," to cover any of the implementation costs. For this reason, mayors, governors, and local officials have bemoaned the problem of unfunded mandates. They simply put an unwanted financial burden of states and local communities.Unfunded mandates are federal laws that require states to meet certain regulatory standards, but provide no money to help the states comply. Congress enacted a law in 1995 to curtail the practice. New York spent $1.3 billion to make its subways accessible to the disabled, without federal assistance. 3. In the mid-1980s, President Reagan put forward his view of a "new federalism," which amounted to cutting taxes, saying money was not available for many social programs, then cutting funding and forcing the states to pick up more of the costs. "Reagan's Revolution," or his "new federalism" was a concept to restore to state governments the responsibility for making and implementing policies. 4. The pressure for a strong national role seems to be predicated on the fact that we have national goals being set that may or may not be equally popular in every state and locality. 5. The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act became law in 1995. It requires Congress to fund mandates placed on the states unless a majority of the House and Senate voted not to do so. The law only applies to new legislation.
B. The new Constitution followed the much weaker Articles of Confederation in a country with little sense of national identity. C.
To replace the old system, the alternatives needed examination.
2. Regional diversity also would have made a strong central control system like the unitary one unlikely. 3. The supporters of federalism at the convention could argue that distributing powers between states and the central government would assure that the latter would not become too powerful.
2. The "necessary and proper" clause (often called the "elastic clause") at the end of Article I and court interpretations of its meaning buttress the idea that the national government, through the Congress, has implied powers. 3. The Supreme Court has also held (United States v. Curtiss-Wright Export Corp., 1936) that the federal government has some "inherent" powers that go along with being a government (Example: foreign policy direction). 4.
The Supreme Court, as arbiter between the federal system and the states,
has fluctuated between states' rights and expanded federal power. The Rehnquist
Court however, has made the greatest shift toward "states' rights" since
the creation of the country.
2. Ruling by Marshall in this case supports "necessary and proper," implied powers concept. "Necessary and proper" is synonymous with "elastic clause" and "loose and flexible construction." 2. At issue: Can Congress create a bank? At stake: How large and creative a role could the federal government adopt, anchored by the "necessary and proper, clause? 3. Another issue in the case was whether the state of Maryland could authorize taxes against a federal institution. The Court rules that "the power to tax involves the power to destroy." Consequently, the national government can establish a national bank, even though the Constitution does not say it can. It is implied in the language of the Constitution 4.
The Court additionally held that the national government, which is supreme
to the states when it is acting within its sphere of action, has
certain implied powers that go beyond its enumerated, delegated, or expressed
powers. State laws preempt national laws when the national government clearly
exceeds its constitutional powers and intrudes upon the power of the state.
2. In McCulloch, the Court supported the idea that powers need not be "expressly" stated to be acceptable under the document. Marshall took a very expansive view of the federal role, at the expense of the states. 3. Marshall's successor, Justice Taney, leaned in a states' rights direction. For almost 100 years, subsequent courts agreed, but no court to the extent that the present day Rehnquist Court has.. 4.
Today's states' rights advocates depend on the language of the Tenth Amendment
for support.
b.
Today, however, the national government is often viewed as representing
the people, not just the states.
2. Among many other limits, states are forbidden to coin money, or pass bills of attainder or ex post facto laws. 3. The Bill of Rights and the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments restrict states in denying rights to former slaves. 4.
Local governments are technically an arm of the state, so state limits
apply to them as well.
2. Federal government is obligated to protect the states from invasion or domestic violence 3.
Congress is to handle the arrangements for admitting new states by doing
the following:
b.
Marriage licenses may be a problem where divorce decrees are issued (Williams
v. North Carolina).
b.
States still discriminate (Example: In-state and out-of-state tuition for
college students).
b.
Custodial decisions and violations of court orders involving parents kidnapping
their children have been a problem for this principle.
b. Interstate compacts are becoming a useful tool for planning and cooperative development in bi-state, major metropolitan areas.
B. Senator Dirksen commented that soon, Rand McNally will soon be the only one interested in state boundaries, implying that the national government will be dominant. C.
Why the rise of big government?
2. The taxing power of the federal government and public pressures for general welfare programs have mushroomed. 3. Federal powers under the commerce clause have grown in recent decades, especially in the 1960s under LBJ's Great Society, and in the 1930s under FDR's New Deal. 4.
Opposition from conservatives who opposed big government handouts during
these years was unable to roll back the momentum that large government
had created. For example, programs like Social Security and Medicare
were not put on the chopping block.
2. The program provided for huge cuts in domestic spending in programs like social welfare, food stamps, and housing subsidies for low-income people. The upshot: the poor got poorer. 3. Since the national government was doing less than it planned, states and localities would be asked to pick up the slack. 4.
Since that time, it is unlikely that the role for the federal government
for these programs will diminish much because the public likes the idea
of having some national leadership in these areas. Cuts are likely to be
marginal at most.
2. With the end of the Cold War, President Bush was pressured for major defense cuts. Supporters of social services were seeking the elusive "peace dividend," which never appeared. The "peace dividend" refers to funds allocated to national defense that might be spent on domestic needs because of the end of the Cold War. 3. Cuts in defense meant lost jobs or wage cuts for the states and citizens wedded to the defense industries.
B.
Federalism affects the structural makeup of governance.
2. House members, though federal officials, are chosen in local districts. Sitting together, they represent the views of their state on national policy issues. 3. Federalism helps assure that the state and local court systems coincide with the federal system. 4. Federalism encourages senatorial courtesy.Senatorial courtesy is a policy that gives senators the "right" to be notified by the chief executive of pending political nominations, usually judicial. Once informed, the approval of the senators from the state from which the judge comes is obtained and the appointment process moves on. This courtesy does not apply to Supreme Court justice nominations. In 2000, the concept of senatorial courtesy resulted in El Paso Enrique Moreno, President Clinton's nominee for a seat on the United States Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, from being effectively "black-balled." Both Senators Gramm and Hutchison of Texas opined that he was not qualified to serve, despite ample evidence to the contrary. 5.
The AFL-CIO, AMA, and ABA demonstrate that large interest groups also organize
along federal lines.
2. Parties themselves are organized along quasi-federal lines, i.e., a national party and fifty state parties. 3.
State parties are autonomous. Some are better organized than others and
provide good governmental officials, while the candidate output of others
and their performance records may be lackluster.
2. Other studies suggest that the amount and quality of social programs correlate with the per-capita income of the state. This factor best explains the disparity of taxing, spending, and social services between states. 3. In states with high levels of political activity by lower socioeconomic groups, policies favored redistribution. 4.
The federal system influences people's lives because it affects the selection
of public officeholders and their penchant for providing social service
programs to those areas from which they came.
2. In 1980 grants to state and local governments accounted for 15 percent of the budget. By 1990 it was 1 percent. In the budget for fiscal year 1997, it was back up to 15 percent. Nonetheless, federal aid to states and cities is most equitably distributed in the United States. 3.Formula grants are grants for specific programs distributed according to community demographic factors, such as population or income. Examples include programs such as Medicaid and Aid for Families with Dependent Children, where applicants automatically qualify for aid if they meet the requirements. 4.
Categorical Grants
b. Annually, they account for about 90 percent of all federal grants. c. There were 618 separate grant programs administered by federal agencies in 1999. d. Requires some matching funds based on the ability of the state to pay, by applying an equalization principle. Equalization is a formula for federal matching requirements that takes into account the state's or community's ability to pay. This process allows poor states and localities to put up relatively less matching money than rich states and localities. Thismatching requirement is a federal requirement that state or local governments must put up some of their own funds in order to get federal money. e.
Requirements are spelled out in law, and administrative regulations by
the administering department.
b. They accounted for approximately 10 percent of all grants in fiscal year 1999. c. Major block grants have included those for community development, social services, health care, employment, and training and education. d.
In 1994 the GOP Congress tried to shift more categorical grants into block
grants to give state and local communities more discretion in the use of
federal monies. In 1996 this type of effort was signed into law by President
Clinton as welfare reform, and continues to this day.
b.
General revenue sharing (see below) was in this category, but was later
discontinued.
b. Critics feared it would be used for frivolities like golf courses. c. Local officials loved it because they saw it as new money for city budgets, with few strings attached. d.
The program was discontinued in 1986, largely due to mismanagement of funds
by states and local communities.
b. State and local governments depend on real estate taxes and sales taxes, which do not grow as fast as the economy-based income taxes. c. More states are getting into the income tax business, though. Only seven states, including Texas, do not tax incomes.
2. These laws also generate a blizzard of paperwork resented by local units. 3.
Typically, federal funds are too limited to cover the costs of meeting
the requirements. This causes federal/local tensions.
2.
Other programs deal with endangered species, clean water and air, education,
employment, the disabled, and age discrimination.
D.
Others tie behavior in one law to a reward or penalty in another.
2. For example, the fifty-five-mile-per-hour speed limit law was tied to federal highway funds. 3.
Another example: federal highways were withheld from states with laws allowing
those under 21 years of age to drink alcohol.
F. States and local governments complain about unfunded mandates (requirements that they enforce federal standards without the federal funds to do so). G. As noted earlier, a 1995 federal law says no unfunded mandates in the future unless a majority of Congress agrees to them.
B.
Innovations are evident.
2. By 1994, thirty-five states and the District of Columbia had circuit breaker property tax relief for fixed income elderly and low-income citizens. 3.
More efforts are being made to deal with area wide metropolitan problems.
D. Many states are still caught in a fiscal squeeze, and may find innovation difficult. Cities with more poor inner-city residents are finding that demands for more services are beyond their fiscal capacities. E. Key question: Can a federal system designed in 1787 continue to meet the demands of the urban, technological society it faces in the twenty-first century? Cathedral Home Page | Irish WebMail | Course Outline | American Government Main Page GOVT 2305 American
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