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Understanding Federalism: The Division of Power in the U.S.

Explore the concept of federalism, the division of power between national and state governments, and its importance in decentralizing politics and policies. Learn about the constitutional basis of federalism, intergovernmental relations, and the distribution of federal grants.

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Understanding Federalism: The Division of Power in the U.S.

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  1. Figure 3.1- Governments in the U.S.  Back

  2. Figure 3.2- Systems of Government  Back

  3. Federalism in the World today

  4. Defining Federalism • What is Federalism? • Federalism: a way of organizing a nation so that two or more levels of government have formal authority over the land and people • Unitary governments: a way of organizing a nation so that all power resides in the central government • Confederation: The United Nations is a modern example. • Intergovernmental Relations: the workings of the federal system- the entire set of interactions among national, state and local governments

  5. Importance of Federalism • Why Is Federalism So Important? • Decentralizes our politics • More opportunities to participate • Decentralizes our policies • Federal and state governments handle different problems. • States regulate drinking ages, marriage, and speed limits. • States can solve the same problem in different ways and tend to be policy innovators.

  6. National Powers • Enumerated powers:powers of the national government explicitly listed in the constitution ( Article 1, Section 8.) Include coining money, providing army, creating courts. • Necessary and proper clause:Clause in Article I that gives Congressthe power to do whatever it deemsnecessary and proper to implement itsenumerated powers. This is the basisfor the implied powers. • Article VI includes supremacy clause.

  7. State Powers • Tenth Amendmentdeals with powers not enumerated. • Reserved Powers: areas mentioned in the 10th Amendment over which states retain sovereignty. These reserve rights for states or the people. Includes regulation for health, safety, and morals. • Other powers are concurrent, or shared. These include taxation, making laws, chartering banks. • Other powers are expressly denied (Article 1, Sec. 10) • eminent domain: authority of gov’t to compel a property owner to sell private property to government

  8. The Constitutional Basis of Federalism

  9. The Constitutional Basis of Federalism • The Division of Power • Supremacy Clause, Article VI of the Constitution states the following are supreme: • The U.S. Constitution • Laws of Congress • Treaties • Yet, national government cannot usurp state powers. • Tenth Amendment

  10. The Constitutional Basis of Federalism • Establishing National Supremacy • Implied and enumerated powers • McCulloch v. Maryland (1819) • Commerce Powers • Gibbons v. Ogden (1824) • The Civil War (1861-1865) • The Struggle for Racial Equality • Brown v. Board of Education (1954)

  11. Article IV: States’ Obligations to Each Other • Full Faith and Credit: Each state must recognize official documents and judgments rendered by other states. • Privileges and Immunities: Citizens of each state have privileges of citizens of other states. • Extradition: States must return a person charged with a crime in another state to that state for punishment.

  12. Intergovernmental Relations Today • Dual Federalism (1800-1932) • Definition: a system of government in which both the states and the national government remain supreme within their own spheres, each responsible for some policies • Like a layer cake • Narrowly interpreted powers of federal government • Ended in the 1930’s

  13. Intergovernmental Relations Today • Cooperative Federalism • Definition: a system of government in which powers and policy assignments are shared between states and the national government • Like a marble cake • 3 Major Characteristics: 1. Shared Costs2. Shared Administration3. Federal Guidelines

  14. Where Do Federal Grants Go? • Fiscal Federalism • Definition: the pattern of spending, taxing, and providing grants in the federal system; it is the cornerstone of the national government’s relations with state and local governments

  15. Intergovernmental Relations Today

  16. Intergovernmental Relations Today • Fiscal Federalism (continued) • The Grant System: Distributing the Federal Pie • Categorical Grants: federal grants that can be used for specific purposes; grants with strings attached • Project Grants: based on merit • Formula Grants: amount varies based on formulas • Block Grants: federal grants given more or less automatically to support broad programs • Grants are given to states & local governments.

  17. Intergovernmental Relations Today • Fiscal Federalism (continued) • The Scramble for Federal Dollars • $450-460 billion in grants every year • Grant distribution follows universalism—a little something for everybody. • The Mandate Blues • Mandates direct states or local governments to comply with federal rules under threat of penalties or as a condition of receipt of a federal grant. • Unfunded mandates

  18. Advantages for Democracy Increases access to government Local problems can be solved locally Hard for political parties or interest groups to dominate all politics Disadvantages for Democracy States have different levels of service Local interest can counteract national interests Too many levels of government and too much money Understanding Federalism

  19. Understanding Federalism

  20. Understanding Federalism

  21. No Child Left Behind (NCLB) • A federal law that requires state governments and local school districts to institute basic skills testing in reading and mathematics for students in grades three through eight • Uses the results to assess school performance • Requires schools to assess students progress, not just for the entire school, but also by subgroups based on race, ethnicity, income level, English proficiency, and special education status

  22. No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Continued • NCLB, created under G.W. Bush, substantially increases the role of the federal government in public education. What is the proper federal role in public education?

  23. Understanding Federalism • Federalism and the Scope of Government • What should the scope of national government be relative to the states? • National power increased with industrialization, expansion of individual rights, and social services. • Most problems require resources afforded to the national, not state governments.

  24. Understanding Federalism

  25. Summary • American federalism is a governmental system in which power is shared between a central government and the 50 state governments. • The United States has moved from dual to cooperative federalism; fiscal federalism. • Federalism leads to both advantages and disadvantages to democracy.

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