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Title: OConnor and Sabato, Chapter 3: Federalism


1
OConnor and Sabato, Chapter 3 Federalism
  • Presentation 3.2 The Evolution of Federalism

2
Key Topics
  • Early Pronouncements (Nation-Building,
    1788-1835)
  • Dual Federalism (1835-1934)
  • The Civil War Beyond
  • The 16th 17th Amendments
  • The New Deal (Cooperative Federalism)

3
Introduction
  • The federalism is fundamentally a struggle for
    power and influence among multiple partners
  • National govt. vs. state governments
  • Nationalists vs. states rights advocates
  • Long alternating periods where one side or the
    other has dominated
  • The critical role of the Supreme Court as
    interpreter/defender of the Constitution

4
1) Early PronouncementsNation-Building, 1788-1835
  • The relative inactivity of the Supreme Court
    between 1788-1800
  • John Marshalls appointment to chief justice led
    to a period of judicial activity that helped
    create a strong national govt.
  • Important rulings in McCulloch v. Maryland (1819)
    Gibbons v. Ogden (1824)

5
Founder ProfileJohn Marshall (1755-1835)
  • Fought in the Revolutionary War
  • Ardent federalist opponent of his cousin,
    Thomas Jefferson
  • John Adams Secretary of State, elevated to the SC
    in 1800

John Marshall, 4th Chief Justice Picture
courtesy From Revolution to Reconstruction
website
6
1a) McColloch v. Maryland
  • National banks as the brainchild of Alexander
    Hamilton as a way of handling the national debt
  • The controversial nature of the 2nd National Bank
    of the United States
  • States did not like national banks
  • Viewed as an infringement of state power

7
1ai) McCulloch cont.
  • Maryland passed a law requiring all banks not
    chartered by Maryland to
  • Buy expensive stamped paper
  • Pay 15,000 per year
  • Go out of business
  • James McCulloch refused, and Maryland brought suit

James McCulloch, cashier. Picture courtesy
From Revolution to Reconstruction Website
8
1aii) Key Issues
  • Did Congress have the authority to charter a
    national bank?
  • Not clearly established in Article I
  • If so, did the states have the power to tax
    federal entities?
  • Defenders argued that the 10th Amendments
    reserved powers clause gave states this
    authority

9
1aiii) Marshalls Decision
  • Distinguished between enumerated and implied
    powers
  • The federal govt. could not be limited to what
    was written down
  • The power to charter a bank would further
    Congresss ability to regulate commerce
  • Article 1, Sec. 8s necessary and proper clause
    as the constitutional justification

10
1aiv) Can States Tax Federal Entities?
  • Marshall the power to tax implies the power to
    destroy
  • Granting states the power to destroy federal
    entities would undermine the sovereign power of
    the national govt.
  • State tax violates Article VIs supremacy clause

11
1b) Gibbons v. Ogden (1824)
  • Both NY and NJ wanted to monopolize river traffic
    on the Hudson River
  • Simple question what was the scope of the
    Congress authority to regulate commerce?

Voyage of Robert Fultons Claremont. Picture
courtesy Robert Fulton website
12
1bi) Gibbons cont.
  • States argued for a very narrow interpretation of
    commerce
  • Wanted the court to interpret commerce only to
    involve direct dealings in products (as opposed
    to actual trafficking of products)
  • The Court, however, adopted a very expansive
    interpretation of commerce

13
1bii) Gibbons cont.
  • The opinion of the Court was that the commerce
    clause must be very broad in order for Congress
    to truly regulate commerce
  • Therefore, Congress commerce powers were
    limited only to explicitly denied powers
    (favoring one state over another)
  • The Court struck down NYs monopoly grant

14
2) Dual Federalism (1835-1932)
  • Marshalls retirement the appointment of Roger
    Taney ushered in a new era of federalism
  • Taney, appointed by Andrew Jackson, was an ardent
    advocate of states rights

Roger Taney (1777-1864), architect of dual
federalism.
15
2i) Dual Federalism in a Nutshell
  • A legal interpretation of federalism based on the
    belief that the national and state government
    occupied separate and distinct zones of
    sovereignty
  • Based on this belief, the national govt. should
    not exceed its enumerated powers
  • Also called layer-cake federalism

16
2a) Federalism and Slavery
  • During Taneys tenure on the Supreme Court
    (1835-1863), slavery was the most controversial
    issue
  • A growing movement in the North viewed slavery as
    immoral, and Southerners were angered by the
    assault on their peculiar institution
  • The Court attempted to settle the issue

17
2ai) Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857)
  • The key issue did a slave become free once they
    had lived in free territory?

Dred Scott, 1800-1857. Picture courtesy Encarta
18
2aii) Dred Scott cont.
  • Taney declared that slaves had no rights that
    white persons had to respect
  • Also struck down the Missouri Compromise
  • Expanded the power of the states and proscribed
    the power of the national govt.
  • Hastened the march toward civil war

19
2aiii) The Caning of Charles Sumner
In 1859, Senator Charles Sumner was brutally
caned by SC Rep. Preston Brooks after Sumner
delivered a speech denouncing slavery that was
considered libelous to SC Sen. Andrew Pickens
Butler, a Brooks family friend. Picture courtesy
CSA Net Great Southern Men
20
2b) The Civil War and BeyondDual Federalisms
2nd Phase
  • The Civil war dramatically increased the power of
    the federal govt.
  • However, the Supreme Court persisted in its
    application of dual federalism
  • Despite the passage of numerous constitutional
    amendments that should have changed the nature of
    federalism, dual federalism remained in place
    between 1865-1933

21
2bi) Amendments that Affected Federalism,
1865-1920
Red indicates a Civil War-era amendment, while
blue indicates a Progressive Era Reform
22
2bii) Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)
  • Civil rights groups challenged the legality of LA
    segregation law
  • Argued that separation of the races violated the
    14th Amendments equal protection clause
  • Southern states argued that they could use their
    police powers to protect the races by
    separating them

23
2biii) Plessy cont.
  • The majority of the Supreme Court agreed with the
    states
  • Concluded that so long as public facilities were
    separate but equal, states were not violating
    the 14th Amendments equal protection clause
  • Opened the door to wholesale segregation
    throughout the South

24
2biv) Famous Dissent
  • Justice John Marshall Harlan disagreed with the
    majority
  • Argued in a dissenting opinion that The
    Constitution is color-blind

John Marshall Harlan, 1833-1911. Picture
courtesy www.ripon.edu.
25
2bv) The Rise of Jim Crow as a Result of Plessy
  • Separate-but-equal justified southern
    disfranchisement oppression of
    African-Americans
  • Thousands of African-Americans were lynched
    between 1880-1950

Picture courtesy Americanlynching.com
26
2bv) Dual Federalism cont.
  • In the late 19th century, the Supreme Court began
    to allow the federal govt. to regulate commerce
  • However, its commitment to dual federalism often
    led to confusion
  • States could not tax gasoline used by federal
    vehicles
  • Federal govt. could not tax the sale of
    motorcycles to city police departments

27
2bvi) Dual Federalism cont.
  • The Progressive Era led to the establishment of
    several regulatory commissions and laws
  • Interstate Commerce Act (1887)
  • Sherman Anti-Trust Act (1890)
  • However, the Court continued to prevent other
    interventionist efforts to regulate the economy

28
2c) The 16th 17th Amendments
  • The Framers did not raise the issue of a national
    income tax
  • Until the 20th century, the primary revenue
    stream for the federal govt. were tariffs
  • Abraham Lincoln proposed the first income tax
  • Used to help fund the war effort
  • Allowed to lapse in the 1870s

29
2ci) The 16th Amendment
  • Ratified by the states in 1913 gave Congress the
    power to levy collect taxes
  • Gave the national govt. access to enormous
    resources
  • Removed a major restraint on governmental power
  • Also removed incentives for imposing tariffs
    (facilitating free trade)

30
2cii) The 17th Amendment
  • Another Progressive Era reform designed to
    strengthen the national govt. weaken the power
    of state legislatures
  • Ended state legislatures selection of senators
  • Put power in the hands of the people by calling
    for state-wide election of senators
  • States lost their main protectors in Congress
  • State legislatures were typically dominated by
    one economically powerful interest in most states

31
3) The New Deal its Effect on Federalism
  • Dual federalism ended as a result of national
    economic crisis
  • A series of events culminating in the Great
    Depression convinced Americans that the national
    govt. needed to actively combat the crisis
  • Ushered in a period called cooperative federalism
    (a.k.a. layer-cake federalism)

32
3i) Economic Crises, 1921-1929
  • 1921 severe deflation of agricultural prices
  • 1926 construction industry reports significant
    decline
  • Summer 1929 inventories of consumer goods
    reported at an all-time high
  • Increasing number of bank failures throughout the
    1920s
  • 10/29/1929 stock market collapses

33
3ii) Hallmarks of a Depression
  • Deflation of currency
  • Indicator of a loss of consumer confidence in the
    basic value of the currency
  • Bank failures prompted by panicked customers
    withdrawing their savings
  • High unemployment
  • In some states ¾ eligible workforce unemployed

34
3a) The New Deal
  • Franklin Roosevelt was elected in 1932 on the
    promise for direct, vigorous leadership
  • Proposed a New Deal for ordinary Americans
  • Led to sweeping reforms

FDR, 1882-1945. Picture courtesy FDR website
35
3ai) The Effect of the New Deal on Federalism
  • Dramatically enlarged the power of the national
    govt.
  • Proposed the creation of a welfare state w/
    extensive regulation of the economy
  • Quickly led to legal challenges by those who
    feared that FDR was converting the U.S. into a
    socialist dictatorship

36
3aii) The Supreme Courts Response to the New Deal
  • The Supreme Courts commitment to a laissez faire
    (hands-off) relationship between govt. and the
    economy
  • Viewed the depression as a problem for the states
    to be resolved by the states
  • Therefore, ruled many provisions of the New Deal
    unconstitutional

37
3b) Democratic Response
  • FDR and Congress were angry at the Supreme
    Courts arrogance and judicial activism
  • Proposed a court packing law
  • Give the president the power to nominate a new
    justice for every sitting justice over the age of
    75
  • Would have quickly given him a majority on the
    Court

38
3bi) The Failure of the Court-Packing Plan
  • FDR was popular, but his plan was viewed as
    tampering with important traditions
  • The plan failed, but the Supreme Court began to
    reverse itself, and began ruling New Deal
    legislation constitutional
  • Dramatically broadened the historical
    interpretation of the commerce clause
    rediscovered the necessary proper clause

39
3c) The Politics of Cooperative Federalism
  • The New Deal provided incentives for all levels
    of govt. to cooperate with each other
  • Local govts. were a primary beneficiary became
    enthusiastic supporters
  • The New Deal redistributed enormous resources
    integrated state, local national govts. in ways
    not previously attempted

40
3d) Omissions in the New Deal
  • The New Deal was not a complete success
  • Republicans blocked some of the most ambitious
    parts of the New Deal
  • The New Deal was silent on the issue of civil
    rights
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