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Constitutional Law

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Title: Constitutional Law


1
Chapter 5
  • Constitutional Law

2
Quote of the Day
  • Give me the liberty to know, to utter, and to
    argue freely according to conscience, above all
    liberties.
  • John Milton, English poet, 1644

3
Government Power
  • One in a million
  • Constitution of the United States is the greatest
    legal document
  • Drafted in 1787, still successful today
  • Short and easy to read
  • Permitted interpretation
  • Versatility

4
Overview
  • First nation in modern history founded on the
    idea that
  • People could govern themselves, democratically
  • States were governing themselves under the
    Articles of Confederation - Gave the central
    government no real power
  • Framers set out to draft a new document and to
    create a government
  • The Constitution is a series of compromises about
    power

5
Overview
  • Separation of powers
  • One method of limiting power
  • Create a national government divided into three
    branches
  • Executive, legislative, and judicial
  • Each independent and equal
  • Individual rights
  • Bill of rights - First 10 amendments were added
    to the Constitution

6
Power Granted
  • Congressional power
  • Members create statutes that influence jobs
  • Article I, section 8 - Lists the 18 types of
    statutes that Congress is allowed to pass
  • National government may create currency
  • Commerce clause Part of Article I, Section 8,
    that gives Congress the power to regulate
    commerce with foreign nations and among states

7
Power Granted
  • Interstate commerce
  • Power to bring coordination and fairness to trade
    among the states
  • Stop the states from imposing the taxes and
    regulations that were wrecking the nations
    domestic trade
  • Substantial effect rule
  • Congress may regulate any activity that has a
    substantial economic effect on interstate
    commerce

8
Power Granted
  • Current application The affordable healthcare
    act
  • May result in as many as 30 million uninsured
    Americans gaining health care coverage
  • State legislative power
  • Dormant aspect holds that a state statute which
    discriminates against interstate commerce is
    almost always unconstitutional

9
Power Granted
  • Supremacy clause Constitution, and federal
    statutes and treaties, shall be the supreme law
    of the land
  • Conflict between federal and state statutes -
    Federal law preempts the field
  • No conflict - Congress demonstrates that it
    intends to exercise exclusive control over an
    issue, federal law preempts

10
Power Granted
  • Executive power
  • Article II of the Constitution defines executive
    power
  • Presidents basic function is to enforce the
    nations laws

11
Power Granted
  • Three of the presidents key powers
  • Appointment - Administrative agencies play a role
    in business regulation
  • President nominates the heads
  • Legislation - The president and his advisors can
    propose bills to Congress and the president can
    veto bills from Congress
  • Foreign policy President
  • Conducts the nations foreign affairs
  • Coordinates international efforts
  • Negotiates treaties
  • Heads the military
  • May not declare war

12
Power Granted
  • Judicial power
  • Article III of the Constitution
  • Creates the Supreme Court
  • Permits Congress to establish lower courts within
    the federal court system
  • Federal courts have two key functions
  • Adjudicating cases - Federal court system hears
    criminal and civil cases
  • Judicial review - Power of federal courts to
    declare a statute or governmental action
    unconstitutional and void

13
Power Granted
  • Judicial review
  • Judicial activism A courts willingness to
    decide issues on constitutional grounds
  • Judicial restraint A courts attitude that it
    should leave law-making to legislators

14
Protected Rights
  • Constitutional rights protect only against
    governmental acts
  • Incorporation Rights explicitly guaranteed at
    one level are incorporated into rights that apply
    at other levels

15
First Amendment Free Speech
  • Political speech
  • Protected unless it is intended and likely to
    create imminent lawless action
  • Government may regulate the time, place, and
    manner of protected speech
  • Morality and obscenity
  • Obscenity has never received constitutional
    protection

16
First Amendment Free Speech
  • Commercial speech Communication that has the
    dominant theme of proposing a business
    transaction
  • Government may regulate other commercial speech
  • Provided that the rules are reasonable, and
    directed to a legitimate goal

17
Fifth Amendment Due process and the Takings
Clause
  • Procedural due process Government must go
    through procedures to ensure that the result is
    fair
  • Steps in analyzing a procedural due process
  • Is the government attempting to take liberty or
    property?
  • How much process is due?
  • Neutral factfinder
  • Attachment of property
  • Government employment
  • Academic suspension

18
Fifth Amendment Due process and the Takings
Clause
  • The Takings Clause When the government takes
    property for public use, it has to pay a fair
    price
  • Eminent domain The power of the government to
    take private property for public use
  • Substantive due process Some rights are so
    fundamental that the government may not take them
    from us at all

19
Fourteenth Amendment Equal Protection Clause
  • Equal protection clause Requires the government
    to treat people equally

20
Fourteenth Amendment Equal Protection Clause
  • Classifications
  • Minimal scrutiny Economic and social regulation
  • Government actions that classify people or
    corporations on these bases are almost always
    upheld
  • Intermediate scrutiny Gender
  • Government classifications are sometimes upheld
  • Strict scrutiny Race, ethnicity, and fundamental
    rights
  • Classifications based on any of these are almost
    never upheld

21
The legal battle over power never stops. As
social mores change in step with broad cultural
developments, as the membership of the Supreme
Court changes, the balance of power between
federal government, state government, and
citizens will continue to evolve.
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