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FEDERALISM

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Title: FEDERALISM


1
FEDERALISM
2
Federal System - divides government authority
between a national and state governments
  • Unitary System - places formal authority in the
    central government
  • Confederal System - places authority in the hands
    of state governments.

3
  • The framers sought to create a structure that
    combined the best features of both systems
    central government strong enough to deal with the
    larger national problems, and decentralized state
    governments able to address the needs of the
    people in those territories.

Federalism Defined
Federalism is a political system in which
governmental powers are shared between a central
government with nationwide responsibilities and
nationwide powers and decentralized regional
governments with local responsibilities and local
powers in their respective regions.
4
State - Centered federalism (Jefferson)vsNatio
n-Centered Federalism ( Hamilton)
5
Questions for Reflection What roles should
federal and state government play in determining
medical policy? Under what circumstances should
the national government seek to impose one
overarching policy on all of the states?
6
The Roots of the Federal System
  • The Framers worked to create a political system
    that was halfway between the failed confederation
    of the Articles of Confederation and the
    tyrannical unitary system of Great Britain.
  • The three major arguments for federalism are
  • the prevention of tyranny
  • the provision for increased participation in
    politics
  • and the use of the states as testing grounds or
    laboratories for new policies and programs.

7
Federalism Advantages and Disadvantages
  • Advantages
  • Ensures a greater degree of diversity among
    policies and programs in individual states, since
    they are in a better position to meet the needs
    of their citizens.
  • Because there are greater opportunities for
    government to respond to the demands of the
    people, federalism minimizes policy conflict.
  • Federalism disperses power and creates greater
    opportunities for political participation.
  • Federalism encourages experimentation and
    innovation.

8
  • Disadvantages
  • Dispersal of power may allow groups in certain
    regions to protect their interests while
    obstructing or ignoring national mandates.
  • Inequities are inherent to a federal system.

When Congress allows states to set their own
speed limits. Source Hillers View, The Boston
Globe.
9
Balancing Federal-State Relations Policy
Innovation and Protecting Rights
  • State Policy Initiatives
  • As laboratories of democracy (as Justice Louis
    Brandeis described them), the states are active
    in policy innovation.
  • Protection of Rights
  • Because some policy innovations threaten
    fundamental rights, the judiciary must still
    monitor state action.

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The Division of Powers
  • The supremacy clause of the Constitution holds
    that in any conflict between national and state
    laws, the national government always prevails.
  • Delegated or expressed powers are those expressly
    granted or enumerated in the Constitution.
  • Implied powers are powers that, while not
    explicitly granted in the Constitution, can be
    inferred from the express powers.
  • Inherent powers do not appear in the Constitution
    but are assumed because of the very nature of
    government.

Question for Reflection In considering the
dispute in both state and federal governments
over the nature of marriage, which government
should have the predominant power in determining
how people lead their lives?
12
  • Reserved powers are not assigned to the national
    government, but are left to the states or the
    people as directed by the Tenth Amendment.
  • Police powers regulate health, safety, public
    welfare, and morals, and are generally left up to
    the states.
  • Concurrent powers are shared by both the federal
    and state levels of government.
  • Taxes are an example of a concurrent power.
  • The Constitution also denies certain powers to
    the federal and state governments.

13
The Powers of Government
  • National Government - one of
    delegated powers.
  • 3 types of delegated power
  • - enumerated (expressed)
  • - implied
  • - inherent

14
Enumerated powers - literally expressed
  • Article I, section 8
  • lay and collect taxes, duties, and imposts
  • provide for the common defense and general
    welfare of the United States
  • regulate commerce with foreign nations, and among
    the states, and with Indian tribes
  • coin money and regulate the value thereof
  • declare war

15
Implied Powers- not literally stated but
reasonable implied
  • Article I, Section 8, clause 18
  • necessary and proper clause or
  • elastic clause
  • The necessary and proper clause has often been
    used to expand the powers of the national
    government.

16
Inherent powers
  • Powers which belong to the national government by
    virtue of their existence

17
Reserved powers or State Powers (police powers)
  • Most of State powers come from the Tenth
    Amendment that says "The powers not delegated to
    the United States by the Constitution, nor
    prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to
    the States respectively, or to the people."

18
Concurrent powers-
  • Powers shared by the national and state
    governments

19
Denied Powers
  • Article I, section 9 lays out powers denied to
    the central government.
  • For example give preference to ports of one
    state over another
  • Article I, section 10 lays out the powers denied
    to the states.
  • For example enter into treaties, alliances, or
    confederations

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The Supremacy Clause
  • Article IV says that federal law is supreme. (So
    if the states and federal government argue, the
    feds win.)

22
The Evolution and Development of Federalism
  • The allocation of powers in our federal system
    has changed dramatically over the years.
  • The Supreme Court in its role as interpreter of
    constitution has been a major player in the
    redefinition of our Federal system.
  • McCulloch v. Maryland (1819)
  • Gibbons v. Ogden (1824)
  • Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857)

23
McCulloch v. Maryland (1819)
  • McCulluch was the first major decision by the
    Supreme Court under Chief Justice John Marshall
    about the relationship between the states and the
    national government.
  • The Court upheld the power of the national
    government and denied the right of a state to tax
    the bank.
  • The Courts broad interpretation of the necessary
    and proper clause paved the way for later rulings
    upholding expansive federal powers.

24
Gibbons v. Ogden (1824)
  • The Gibbons case centered on the conflict between
    the states and the powers of Congress.
  • Could New York grant a monopoly concession on the
    navigation of the Hudson River? The Hudson River
    forms part of the border between New York and New
    Jersey and the U.S. Congress also licensed a ship
    to sail the Hudson.
  • The main constitutional question in Gibbons was
    about the scope of Congress' authority under the
    Commerce Clause.
  • In Gibbons, the Court upheld broad congressional
    power over interstate commerce.

25
Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857)
  • The Supreme Court articulated the idea of
    concurrent powers and dual federalism in which
    separate but equally powerful levels of
    government is preferable, and the national
    government should not exceed its enumerated
    powers.
  • The Taney Court held that Mr. Scott was not a
    U.S. citizen and therefore not entitled to sue in
    federal court.
  • The case was dismissed and Scott remained a
    slave.
  • Taney further wrote that Congress had no power to
    abolish slavery in the territories and slaves
    were private property protected by the
    Constitution.

26
The Civil War and Beyond
  • Dual federalism remained the Supreme Court's
    framework for federalism even after the adoption
    of the 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments.
  • Dual federalism finally ended in the 1930s, when
    the crisis of the Great Depression demanded
    powerful actions from the national government.

27
The Changing Nature of Federalism
  • Prior to the 1930s, many scholars used the
    analogy of a layer cake to describe federalism.
  • Each layer had clearly defined powers and
    responsibilities.
  • After the New Deal, the analogy of a marble cake
    seemed more appropriate because the lines of
    authority were much more mixed.
  • This marble cake federalism is often called
    cooperative federalism and has a much more
    powerful national government.
  • States have a cooperative role, as did many
    cities.

28
Federalism and the Supreme Court
  • By the 1980s and 1990s, many Americans began to
    think that the national government was too big,
    too strong, and too distant to understand their
    concerns.
  • The Supreme Court, once again, played a role in
    this new evolution of federalism.

29
Presidents and Federalism
  • Roosevelt, Truman, and Eisenhower The Era of
    Cooperative Federalism, 19301963
  • Grants-in-aid became a major tool used by the
    national government to respond to state problems.
  • Lyndon Johnson The Era of Creative Federalism,
    19631968
  • Grants shifted focus from needs the states
    pressed on the national government to needs the
    national government pressed on the states.
  • Richard Nixons New Federalism, 19691974
  • Nixon sought to return fiscal power to the states
    by developing general revenue sharing and special
    revenue sharing programs that did not come with
    the sort of restrictions imposed by the Johnson
    Administration.

30
Creative Federalism Returns under Jimmy Carter,
19771980
  • Carter targeted federal aid to hard-pressed
    communities.
  • He also sought to encourage private investment to
    solve certain problems.

Ronald Reagans New New Federalism, 19811988.
  • Fulfilling a campaign promise to restore power to
    the states, Reagan reordered national spending
    priorities and gave state and local governments
    more flexibility and control.

31
  • The George H.W. Bush Years, 19891992
  • Although he tried to downsize the role of the
    national government, federal grants to the states
    actually increased under Bush.
  • Bill Clinton and New(t) Federalism, 19932001
  • Clinton took office at a time of escalating
    budget deficits.
  • Although federal grant funding to the states
    increased during his term in office, Republican
    control of the Congress forced him to sign a
    reform bill that gave states much more control
    over welfare.
  • George W. Bush, 2001Present
  • With the exception of the No Child Left Behind
    Act, the war against terrorism has largely
    diverted funding and attention away from Bushs
    domestic agenda.

32
The Rehnquist Court and the Future of Federalism
  • Siding with the states, the Rehnquist Court
    curbed congressional power in several significant
    rulings during the 1990s.
  • With the appointment of conservatives Chief
    Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito,
    the Court may favor state power further.

Federalism and Approaching Democracy in the
Twenty-First Century
While the question persists regarding which level
of government is best suited for dealing with the
problems of our day, it is clear that both the
national government and state government are
necessary to fully approach democracy.
33
Continuity and Change
  • Federalism as outlined at Philadelphia in 1787
    has evolved considerably over time.
  • Initially, the states remained quite powerful,
    and the national government was small and weak.
  • Over time the national government became
    progressively stronger.
  • However, we have a Court today that is more
    interested in reinvesting power in the Tenth
    Amendment and in the states.
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