Title: Federalism
1Federalism
2American-Style Federalism
- In a federal system, authority is divided between
two or more distinct levels of government. - In the United States the division is between the
national (federal) government and the states.
3American-Style Federalism
- Federalism is a hybrid arrangement that mixes
elements of a confederation (lower level has real
power) and a unitary (national level monopolizes
constitutional authority) government. - Before adopting a federal system in the
Constitution the nation had experienced both of
these alternatives.
4American-Style Federalism
- Worldwide, unitary governments are far more
common. - Examples of unitary governments are found in the
United Kingdom, France, and Japan.
5American-Style Federalism
- In this type of system, typically the central
government establishes national policies and
raises and distributes funds to the local units
to carry them out. - Lower level units function primarily as the
administrative apparatus of the national
government.
6Qualifications of Federal Systems
- A government must have constitutional relations
across levels, interactions that satisfy three
general conditions - The same people and territory are included in
both levels of government. - The nations constitution protects units at each
level of government from encroachment by the
other units. - Each unit is in a position to exert some leverage
over the other.
7Qualifications of Federal Systems
- The second condition, independence, sets the
stage for the third condition, mutual influence. - Independence was the missing ingredient that made
the national government impotent under the
Articles of Confederation. - Note also that local governments are not a
separate level of government. They are
established by the state and do not exercise
independent, constitutional authority. State law
establishes their responsibilities and the extent
of their discretion over policies.
8Types of Federalism
- Two distinct forms of American federalism have
been identified. - Dual federalism
- Shared federalism
9Dual Federalism
- The simplest possible arrangement.
- This type of federalism leaves the states and the
national government presiding over mutually
exclusive spheres of sovereignty. - The nation, however, has never divided authority
so neatly.
10Dual Federalism
- From the early days of quite limited
responsibility for the national government,
nationalization has shifted authority to the
national side and away from state governments. - Today the national government has a hand in
almost all policies that concern the lives of
the citizenry. - Dual federalism no longer describes that nature
of federal-state relations.
11Shared Federalism
- The second and more accurate conception of
federalism is called shared (or cooperative)
federalism. - It recognizes that the national and state
governments jointly supply services to the
citizenry. - Over the years progressive nationalization has
moved American federalism from mostly dual to
mostly shared.
12Shared Federalism
- Often the scope and complexity of modern problems
mandate a joint, cooperative strategy across
states and levels of government.
13Shared Federalism
- Critics of nationalization argue that the federal
government has so intruded into the traditional
responsibilities of states and local communities
that even shared federalism is a misnomer. - But if there have always been critics, how did we
get to this point?
14Shared Federalism
- Why have states rights advocates had difficulty
partitioning federal and state responsibilities? - As national politicians sought to expand their
authority over the years, they discovered that
the wall between the federal government and the
states was not impregnable. The Constitution
leaves ample room for a variety of federal-state
relations. - Moreover, when nationalization of public policy
proceeded, it rarely triggered a constitutional
crisis.
15Shared Federalism
- But the question of whether or not the federal
government actually assumed responsibility for a
specific policy remained and still is a political
decision.
16The Logic of Nationalization
- How does policy become nationalized?
- Generally, two scenarios
- Realities of collective action (problem solving).
- Purely political considerations (i.e.,
opportunities for political advantage).
17The Logic of Nationalization
- The Road Building game illustrates an important
lesson in federalism state jurisdiction over
public goods that fall within its borders offers
real advantages efficiency and responsiveness. - But once the public good encompasses the larger
community, the logic for local control disappears.
18The Paths to Nationalization
- Throughout the first half of the nineteenth
century, America remained a nation of segmented
communities that did not require much
coordination of commercial endeavors.
19The Paths to Nationalization
- But with the growth, industrialization,
urbanization, and development of national
transportation and communication systems, the
nations desire for public goods that could not
be met by local communities and states increased.
20The Paths to Nationalization
- There are certain things that a local or state
government has difficulty providing. Food safety
standards and commercial regulation are examples. - Interstate Commerce Act of 1887
- Regulation of railroads as farmers protested rate
discrimination and high charges. - Antimonopoly laws.
21The Paths to Nationalization
- The nationalization of public policy grew out of
the requirements of collective action. - First, Americans have at times collectively
decided to adopt policies of such magnitude and
scope that they outstripped the resources of the
state. Roosevelts New Deal and Johnsons War on
Poverty/Great Society. - Second, states have solicited federal
intervention when they cannot solve their
problems by working together individually. - Third, sometimes easier for the majority to work
through Washington, D.C., than through the
states. More efficient. Civil rights is a good
example.
22Historic Transfers of Policy to Washington
- Roosevelts New Deal (1930s).
- Johnsons Great Society (1960s).
- Broadened the scope of federal responsibilities.
- Were accompanied by large national majorities to
Congress from the presidents party. A mandate
for new collective goods.
23The New Deal
- Roosevelts New Deal was a comprehensive set of
economic regulations and relief programs (massive
in size and scope) intended to fight the Great
Depression. - To justify its unprecedented intervention in the
economy, FDR invoked the commerce clause.
24The Great Society
- Elected in 1964, Lyndon Johnson and his
Democratic Congress launched a War on Poverty --
part of a Great Society agenda. - Passed more than 100 new categorical grant
programs. - Spent over 5 billion 1964-65.
- Grants supplemented state programs/national
goals. - Traditional state and local responsibilities
became federal ones.
25Nationalization The Solution to States
Collective Dilemmas
- The kinds of collective action dilemmas that
prompt states to ask Washington for help often
fall into one of three categories - Coordination problems
- Reneging and shirking
- Cutthroat competition
26Coordination Problems
- A nation composed of fifty states is bound to
face coordination problems. - Example of drivers license laws
- Lobby to standardization for interstate truckers
-- what led to this federal intervention? - Creation of bureau within DOT to centralize
records of traffic violations. - Easier to create centralized record keeping than
to require each state to update its records with
those of every other state.
27Reneging and Shirking
- States may always honor their commitments to
their sister states. - The Constitution and national laws solve many of
these dilemmas by authorizing the federal
government to take direct action raising
resources and administering policy. - Example polluted air/water. Without enforcement
states continue to pollute.
28Cutthroat Competition
- Under the Articles of Confederation, each state
was free to conduct its own international trade
policy. - Foreign governments and merchants would exploit
the competition among the states for their own
ends. - Classic prisoners dilemma -- why?
- Negotiate from a united front best strategy, but
states underbid each other or engaged in
cutthroat competition.
29Cutthroat Competition
- At various times cutthroat competition has
prompted state officials to lobby Washington to
prevent bidding wars. - Examples minimum wage standards, environmental
regulation. - Competition can also emerge as states bid against
each other for economic reasons getting
companies to relocate to their state by providing
tax breaks or special services.
30The Political Logic of Nationalization
- Sometimes those promoting a policy find that it
is in their interest to shift their focus from
the states to the national government. Why? - Difficult to lobby/persuade 50 separate states.
- More efficient method a single federal law can
change policy in all 50 states at once. - National government may be more receptive.
- Can you think of some recent examples?
31The Political Logic of Nationalization
- Sometimes the reverse political process occurs,
as groups that lose at the national level see
smaller victories in those states where they
enjoy majority support. - Example social conservatives on the issues of
abortion rights (see Table 3-2) and school prayer.
32The Political Logic of Nationalization
- As James Madison emphasized in Federalist No. 10,
states and the national government combined the
citizenrys preferences into different groupings. - The result the two levels of government may
adopt different, even opposite, policies to
address the same problem. - Moreover, national majorities have the
institutional resources to nationalize many
policy questions that once were the exclusive
domain of the states.
33The Constitution and Federalism
- Greatest victory of states righters during the
Constitutional Convention was the creation of a
Senate whose members were to be selected by the
state legislatures.
34Transformation of the Senate
- In the 19th century the equal representation of
states regardless of population, combined with
the selection of senators by the state
legislatures, gave the Senate the motive and
means to defend state prerogatives. - 1913 public pressure forced Congress and state
legislatures to ratify the Seventeenth Amendment
-- complaints that individuals were buying Senate
seats with bribes to legislators. - Consequence diminishment of one of the props of
federalism.
35Constitutional Provisions Governing Federalism
- The ratification of the Constitution was by state
conventions that directly represented the people,
not by the state governments themselves. - Thus the people created the government, not the
states. - Language governing the relationship of the
national government to the states runs throughout
the Constitution. But the end result was a system
open to nationalizing forces.
36The Supremacy Clause
- This Constitution, and the Laws of the United
States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof
that is, in keeping with the principles of the
Constitution shall be the supreme law of the
land.
37The Supremacy Clause
- The provision of the Constitution with the most
profound implication for modern American
federalism is the so-called supremacy clause in
Article IV. - This clause does not give the federal government
free license. - Framed to avoid impasses over jurisdiction rather
than to cede to the national government broad,
preemptive authority over the states.
38The Powers of Congress
- Article I, Section 8 lists powers of Congress
(enumerated powers). - These powers are important to federalism because
they create jurisdictional boundaries between the
states and the national government.
39The Powers of Congress
- Some powers are broadly stated and thus helped
open up state policy to national intervention.
Example the commerce clause. - In addition the elastic clause (necessary and
proper clause) also eventually undermined the
restrictive purpose of the enumerated powers.
40The Tenth Amendment
- Given the fear of tyranny as articulated by the
Antifederalists it is not surprising that Madison
had to promise the addition of a Bill of Rights
as an incentive for ratification. - Many members of the first Congress wanted
protections for the states as well as for
individual citizens.
41The Tenth Amendment
- The Tenth Amendment offers the most explicit
endorsement of federalism to be found in the
Constitution. - Yet despite its plain language, the Tenth
Amendment has failed to play a major role in
fending off national authority. - Why?
42Interpreting the Constitutions Provisions
- Sweeping language with which the Constitution
variously endorses national power and states
rights has given politicians easy openings to
interpret the Constitution according to their own
political objectives.
43Interpreting the Constitutions Provisions
- Prior to the Civil War, southern leaders
attempted to use the Tenth Amendment to justify
the doctrine of nullification. - Their argument was that states are no less
sovereign than the national government and thus
retain the prerogative to ignore federal law.
44Supreme Court as Federal/State Arbitrator
- The Framers envisioned the Supreme Court as the
referee of disputes between the national and
state governments. - When resolved created powerful precedents.
- Allowed national policy to develop free of state
prerogatives. - McCulloch v. Maryland (1819)
- Protected the national government from actions of
the state. - Gibbons v. Ogden (1824)
- Only Congress possesses authority to regulate
commerce. - Garcia v. San Antonio Metro Transit Authority
(1985) - Federal wage hours applied to state and local
employees.
45Modern Federalism
- Preemption legislation federal laws that assert
the national governments prerogative to control
public policy in a field. - Relatively little preemption prior to the New
Deal. Afterwards, much more. - Owes its existence to the supremacy clause.
- But on balance, federal government has not
usurped states jurisdictions so much as it has
joined with the states in formulating policy. - Result shared federalism.
- How does the federal government induce
cooperation from the constitutionally independent
states? Carrots and sticks.
46The Carrot Federal Grants to the States
- During the last fifty years federal grants-in-aid
become an important part of intergovernmental
relations. - Few grants prior to New Deal.
- All of these programs enlist categorical grants,
in which federal dollars are tied to particular
programs or categories of spending. - These grants are inducements to states to carry
out particular programs, but they also allow the
national government to define these state
programs.
47The Carrot Federal Grants to the States
- Another alternative to categorical grants block
grants. - Like categorical grants, funds are appropriated
to achieve a particular policy goal with specific
administrative procedures. BUT, policy targets
are only generally stated and fewer strings are
attached.
48The Stick Unfunded Mandates
- Since the 1960s the federal government has relied
increasingly on rules to pursue policy objectives
(see Table 3-3). - States are required to administer policies they
might object to, and they may even be asked to
pay for the administration of the policies. - One of most controversial Education for all
Handicapped Children Act of 1975. - Why?
49Methods Used to Prescribe State Policy
- The national government uses four basic methods
to prescribe state policy and supervise its
administration. - Cross-cutting requirements.
- Crossover sanctions.
- Direct orders.
- Partial preemption.
50Cross-cutting Requirements
- Statutes that apply certain rules and guidelines
to a broad array of federally subsidized state
programs. - Example failure of any state to follow federal
guidelines that prohibit discrimination can
result in the prosecution of state officials as
well as loss of grants. - Has been used to enforce civil rights laws.
51Crossover Sanctions
- Stipulations that to remain eligible for full
federal funding for one program a state must
adhere to the guidelines of an unrelated program. - Example Congresss stipulation that federal
highway funds be tied to state adoption of a
minimum drinking age of twenty-one. - Example bill restricting sale of soft drinks on
school grounds tied to school aid funds.
52Direct Orders
- Requirements that can be enforced by legal and
civil penalties. - Example the Clean Water Act.
53Partial Preemption
- Certain federal laws allow the states to
administer joint federal-state programs so long
as they conform to federal guidelines. - If an agency fails to follow the instructions of
the federal agencies, the state might lose
control of the program. - Example state air pollution policies.
- Public law and the EPA set minimally acceptable
standards, but enforcement of these standards
rests mostly with state agencies.
54Trends in Federal Regulation of States
- Federal grants plentiful before 1970s, few
regulatory policies in place. - Since the 1970s the more coercive forms of
regulation, direct orders and partial preemption,
have been favored. - Federal regulation of states concentrated in two
areas environment and civil rights. - Unfunded Mandates Reform Act, which required that
new federal laws pay for the programs and
regulations they imposed on the states. - The practice of unfunded mandates and preemptive
legislation has continued.
55Federalism A Byproduct of National Policy
- Federal-state relations are dynamic and have been
dramatically transformed during the twentieth
century. - Nationalization of public policy is not based on
a grand design planned by the Framers, but is
rather the product of problem solving and
constituency service the interplay of political
interests. - Likely to continue in this form.