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Federalism and Public Policy. “State”-side …. State constitutions are more detailed and sometimes confer more rights than the federal one Initiative , referendum, recall “Nullification”: states declares null and void federal law they believe violates the Constitution
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“State”-side … • State constitutions are more detailed and sometimes confer more rights than the federal one • Initiative, referendum, recall • “Nullification”: states declares null and void federal law they believe violates the Constitution • Civil War - states cannot nullify federal law • “Obamacare” referendums • Dual federalism: both national and state governments are supreme in their own spheres • “State Sovereignty” - State can do what is not prohibited by the Constitution or preempted by federal policy • States as laboratories of democracy • Voting at 18; women’s suffrage; prohibition
Trickle-down Politics • Commerce Power • Civil Rights Legislation • Federal Aid • Pre-emption (restraints and mandates) • Nutrition labeling • No Child Left Behind • Due process
Access to Government • Bureaucracy • Links local and national goals/interests • Implement policy • Provide jobs • State Culture • “Red and Blue” States • Single member districts
Grants-in-aid Grants show how political realities modify legal authority. • Grants dramatically increased in scope in twentieth century. • Prevailing constitutional interpretation until late 1930s: • federal government can’t spend money for purposes not authorized by Constitution • grants a way around this. Grants were attractive to state officials for various reasons: • Federal budget surpluses & tax increased revenues • Federal control of money supply • Appeared as “free” money for state officials, who did not have to be responsible for federal taxation.
Cooperative federalism A model of federalism in which the states and national government cooperate in solving complex common problems, emphasizes an expanded role for the national government. • The New Deal and Cooperative Federalism. • Response to the Great Depression, implemented social-welfare programs designed to alleviate the bad economic times. • Dual federalism, in contrast, had held that programs such as relief for the poor were entirely outside of the federal role. • Supreme Court struck down dozens of New Deal programs as unconstitutional • After “Court Packing Plan” Court ceased to interfere with attempts to legislate broadly under the commerce clause. • Why “Cooperative Federalism”? -- programs typically funded by the federal government, but administered by states and local governments, thus creating a cooperative framework for federalist relations.
Cooperative federalism • Methods of Implementing Cooperative Federalism. • Categorical Grants: grants to states or local governments that are for specific programs or projects. • Block Grants: federal programs that provide funds to state and local governments for broad functional areas • Federal Mandates: requirement in federal legislation that forces states and municipalities to comply with certain rules
Meeting national needs 1960s shift in grants-in-aid • From what states demanded . . . To what federal officials considered important as national needs • Federal grants to state and local governments increased. • Purpose of federal funds changed. The intergovernmental lobby • Hundreds of state and local officials lobby in Washington • U.S. Conference of Mayors • National Governors Association • National Association of Counties • National League of Cities • Purpose: to get more federal money with fewer strings
The Changing Purpose of Federal Grants to State and Local Governments
Categorical vs. Block grants Categorical grants • Specific purposes defined by federal law • Often require local matching funds. Block grants(AKA special revenue sharing or broad-based aid) • General purposes with few restrictions • States preferred block to categorical grants; more autonomy. Neither achieved goal of giving states more spending freedom • Did not grow as fast as categorical grants • Number of strings actually increased General Revenue Sharing: provided money to states with no strings attached; ended in 1986
Categorical vs. Block grants Block grants grew more slowly than categorical grants due to differences between political coalitions that supported each. • Federal officials, liberal interest groups, organized labor tend to distrust state government • Categorical grants give the national government more power. • Categorical grants are matters of life or death for various state agencies. • Supervising committees in Congress favored growth of categorical grants.
Federal controls on state gov’t activities Conditions of aid: tell state governments what they must do if they wish to receive grant money • traditional control -- Attached to grants; range from specific to general • Divergent views of states and federal government on costs and benefits of these conditions • each side attempts to pass on most of the cost to the other sides Mandates: tell state governments what they must do • federal rules that states or localities must obey; generally have little or nothing to do with federal aid • EX: Civil rights & Environmental protection • May or may not be funded • Mandates more likely in policy areas that receive less federal funding • Waivers exempt some parties from federal mandates. • may also make it difficult for state/local governments to: • raise revenues & borrow funds • privatize public functions • may expose them to financial liability. • Controversial mandates may result from court decisions • state prisons, school desegregation, legalized abortion
The “New Federalism” • Beginning with President Nixon, the Republican Party championed devolution • the transfer of powers from the national government to state or local government • Most Americans favor devolution, but not if that means cuts in government programs that benefit most citizens • Federalism 1990s-2000s: brief break from traditional positions. • Bill Clinton transferred significant control over welfare programs to the states • George W. Bush increased federal control over education • Tea Party Conservatism and Election 2012 • OBAMA: stimulus, educ. Funding, Obamacare (ACA) • ROMNEY: Block Grant Medicaid, devolution • STATES: Personhood, Pot laws, Anti-ACA referendums