Federalism

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A political system where there are national and local units of government that can make decisions on some governmental activities.

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Federalism. A political system where there are national and local units of government that can make decisions on some governmental activities. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Federalism

Page 1: Federalism

A political system where there are national and local units of government that can make decisions on some governmental activities.

Page 2: Federalism

Federalist 39 The Constitution “is in strictness, neither a national nor a federal constitution, but a composition of both” Federalist 46 Both the state and federal governments “are in fact but different agents and trustees of the people”

Federalist 28 “…if their (the people) rights are invaded by either, they can make use of the other as an instrument of redress”

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National Government

States

The People of the State

Sovereignty Sovereignty is sharedis shared

Both national Both national & state gov & state gov have power have power over the peopleover the people

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States

Central Government

The People of the state

States sovereignStates sovereign

States enter for States enter for defense / tradedefense / trade

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Sovereignty wholly Sovereignty wholly in the hands of the in the hands of the national governmentnational government

Local government can be Local government can be altered/abolished by altered/abolished by national governmentnational government

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“…a Federal Republic”

• No historical precedent• Both levels of government would have certain

powers, but neither would have supreme power• Different agents/trustees of the people• If people’s rights are invaded by either, they can

make use of the other as the instrument of redress• 10th Amendment – an afterthought• Different interpretations by different Framers

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Two Views…Two Views…

• “Parasitic and Poisonous”

Harold Laski

• “Main effect of federalism since the Civil War has been to perpetuate racism”

William Riker

• “virtue of the federal system lies in its ability to develop and maintain mechanisms vital to the perpetuation of the unique combination of government strength, political flexibility, and individual liberty…”

– Daniel Elazer

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FEDERALISM

• Protects powerful local interests

• Caters to self-interest of corrupt politicians

• Maintains racial segregation

• Protects vested interests• Facilitates corruption

• Mobilizes political activity

• Promotes individual liberty

• Attacks segregation• Regulates harmful

economic practices• Purifies politics before

ideas gain national support

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Effects of Federalism…

Mobilizes political activity

•More people will become involved in political activity

•Decentralizes authority

•Lowers the cost of organized political activity

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McCulloch v. Maryland (1819)

• Does Congress have the power to establish a bank?– Is it an enumerated

power?

– Article 1, sec 8

– Is it a delegated power?

• If Congress does have the right to establish a bank, can a federal bank be taxed by a state?

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State / Federal Conflicts

»Nullification

»Dual Federalism

»Interstate v. Intrastate Commerce

»State Sovereignty

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Social

Economic

20TH Century

Imbalance of power between national and state governments

National gov. assumed more responsibility/authority to deal with issues

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GRANTS IN AID•Land grants by government to finance education

•State universities built with land grant money

•Congress gave $200,000to pay for militia

1925 $114 million

1937 $300 million

1985 over $100 billion

1994 15% of total federal spending/

25-30% of state budgets from feds.

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5 Largest Programs

• Low income housing

• Medicaid

• Highway construction

• Services to unemployed

• Welfare for disabled & mothers dependent children

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REASONS WHY FEDERAL MONEY WAS ATTRACTIVE TO STATE OFFICIALS

Practical Reasons:

•Helped state and local governments solve problems

•Gave states access to tax money of the fed. Gov.

•Washington pays bills / states run programs

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Economic Reasons:

•Federal gov. had surplus of money in budget

•Federal income tax

•Federal control of money supply

•Federal authority to print more money if needed

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Political Reasons:

Free money for state projects

a. whole country pays, not just the state

b. money to one state literally guaranteed money to all states

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1960’s Shift

From what states demanded…

To what feds considered national need

Combat crime

Reduce pollutionDeal with drug abuse

Aid to the poor

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• CATEGORICAL GRANTS

• For a specific purpose• “strings attached”• States must match

some of grant $• Conditions –in - aid

• BLOCK GRANTS

• General rather specific purpose