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Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

Dec 27, 2015

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Page 1: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

Federalism

Page 2: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

Objectives

• Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart

• Examine scenarios and identify the type of power

Page 3: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

Key Questions

• Is the federal system the best way to govern the country?

• How is power divided between the federal government and the States?

Page 4: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

Federalism

• Division of power between national, state, and local government.

Page 5: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

POWERS

• Expressed, implied, Inherent • (powers given to Federal Govt)• Concurrent:

• Powers of both State and Federal

• Reserved: Only for the States

Page 6: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.
Page 7: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

Why did the Framers choose federalism?

• 1. government power inevitably poses a threat to individual liberty

• 2. Therefore, government must be restrained.

• 3. To divide power is to prevent abuse of that power.

Page 8: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

1. Expressed Powers

• These powers are stated in the constitution (Article 1, Section 8)

• Gives federal government 27 powers which include things like: tax, print money, regulate interstate commerce, declare war, control armed forces, etc etc.

Page 9: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

2. Implied Powers

• Not specifically stated in the constitution but reasonably suggested by the expressed powers

Page 10: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

3. Inherent Powers

• Powers that belong to the government because it is in charge of the country. Or These powers exist because the USA exists.

• Powers include: regulate immigration, deport aliens, acquire territory, grant diplomatic recognition, protect the country from rebellion

Page 11: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.
Page 12: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

You know federal law says…

• All young men have to register for military service at age 18.

• Most employers pay a minimum wage.

• No person can be denied a job based on their race or ethnicity.

Page 13: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

You also know state law says…

• You need to have a drivers license to operate a motor vehicle.

• You must be 21 or older to purchase alcohol

• Only those meeting certain requirements can own firearms.

Page 14: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

You even know local law says…

• When you can or cannot burn trash.

• How late you can have a party before you violate a noise ordinance.

• What tags your dogs need to have.

Page 15: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.
Page 16: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

Federalism in Practice

• Produces a “Dual” system of government: which means there are two basic levels of government, each with its own field of authority, and operating over the same people at the same time.

Page 17: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

Put another way…

• It allows local action on local matters and national actions on bigger concerns. • Example: Federal Government controls who we go to war

with• While individual states decide if they want the death

penalty or not.

Page 18: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

Laboratories of Government• Have you ever gotten gas in New

Jersey? How did you get it?• Washington and Oregon allow

physician assisted suicide.• Alaska, Delaware, new Hampshire,

Montana and Oregon do not have sales tax.

Page 19: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

So what powers does the Federal government have?

• 3 Delegated (given to) powers• 1. Expressed• 2. Implied• 3. Inherent

Page 20: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

Where do the implied powers come from?• Art 1, Sec 8, Clause 18• Congress has the power:

• “to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing powers and all other powers vested by this Constitution.”

• This is sometimes called the elastic clause. Why?

Page 21: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

Regulate Interstate Commerce

• Pa gun crimes• Heart of Atlanta Motels

(segregation)• National Highways

Page 22: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.
Page 23: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

Powers/Duties

National GovtDeclare War

ConcurrentFBI/State Police

StatesPublic Schools

Recap

Expressed

Implied

Inherent

Don’t Forget the elastic/ necessary and proper clause!!!

Page 24: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

Powers denied the Federal Government• 1. Expressly

• Ex: can’t take private property without payment, can’t prohibit free speech, can’t conduct illegal searches

• 2. Through Silence• Can’t create public schools, can’t set up

local government

• 3. Because of federalism itself• Can’t tax states

Page 25: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

The States

• They are governments of reserved powers AKA they get all the powers that the federal government does not get that they also are not denied.

• ***10th Amendment***

Page 26: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

What kind of laws can states enact? (almost anything)

• Marriage age, sale of pornography, permit or prohibit gambling, lawyer/teacher licenses, public schools, land use, utilities, drinking age, etc etc etc. (Most things government does are done by the states, not the fed)

Page 27: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

Why is the drinking age 21 in almost all states?

Page 28: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

Powers denied to States

• Can’t print money• Can’t make alliances• Can’t tax the federal government• Can’t deprive a person of life

liberty or property without due process of law

Page 29: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

Concurrent Powers (Overlap)• Some powers are shared or

overlap between the federal government AND the states at the same time• Ex: tax, borrow money, establish

courts, define crimes, environment and health standards, establish a police force, protect national borders

Page 30: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

What if the laws conflict?

• The Supremacy Clause (Art 6, Sec 2)

• In a nutshell, the Constitution is #1, acts of congress and treaties are #2, then the state laws are #3.

Page 31: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

How is the Supremacy Clause applied?

• By the Supreme Court• Ex. McCulloch v. Maryland• “The states have no power to

retard, impede, burden, or in any manner control, the operations of the constitutional laws enacted by congress”

Page 32: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

Pro’s and Con’s of Federalism

Pro’s:

• Fosters state loyalties: Because states have powers all their own citizens feel closely connected to their states.

• Practices Pragmatism: Each state is unique and state and local government can more efficiently respond to unique local issues.

• Laboratories of Democracy: State governments can experiment with policies and other states and the federal government can learn from their success and failures.

• Political Stability: By removing the federal government from some contentious policy areas federalism allows the government to achieve and maintain stability.

Page 33: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

Pro’s and Con’s of Federalism

Pro’s:

• Encourages pluralism: Allows citizens multiple points of access and influence in government (local, state, national).

• Ensures separation of powers and prevents tyranny: Even if one person or group (faction) took control of all three branches of the federal government federalism ensures that state governments would still function independently (Federalist #10 and Federalist #51).

Page 34: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

Pro’s and Con’s of Federalism

Con’s:

• Prevents creation of national policy: The United States often doesn’t have a single policy on issues; it often has 51 policies. (marijuana, gay marriage)

• Leads to a lack of accountability: The overlap of responsibilities makes it hard to assign blame or find the roots of failure in policies.

• Citizen Ignorance: Since most Americans know very little about their state and local governments and turnout in these elections is typically less than 25%, citizens often ignore the level of government that has the greatest ability to affect their lives.

Page 35: Federalism. Objectives Define and give examples of national and State powers by completing a chart Examine scenarios and identify the type of power.

Recap

Supreme Court

Federal Government

States