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States' rights

In American political discourse, states' rights are political powers held for the state governments rather than the federal government according to the United States Constitution, reflecting especially the enumerated powers of Congress and the Tenth Amendment. The enumerated powers that are listed in the Constitution include exclusive federal powers, as well as concurrent powers that are shared with the states, and all of those powers are contrasted with the reserved powers—also called states' rights—that only the states possess.[1][2]

Background

The balance of federal powers and those powers held by the states as defined in the Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution was first addressed in the case of McCulloch v. Maryland (1819). The Court's decision by Chief Justice John Marshall asserted that the laws adopted by the federal government, when exercising its constitutional powers, are generally paramount over any conflicting laws adopted by state governments. After McCulloch, the primary legal issues in this area concerned the scope of Congress' constitutional powers, and whether the states possess certain powers to the exclusion of the federal government, even if the Constitution does not explicitly limit them to the states.[3][4]

The Supremacy Clause

The Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution states:

This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof; and all treaties made, or which shall be made, under the authority of the United States, shall be the supreme law of the land; and the judges in every state shall be bound thereby, anything in the constitution or laws of any state to the contrary notwithstanding. (Emphasis added.)

In The Federalist Papers, ratification proponent Alexander Hamilton explained the limitations this clause placed on the proposed federal government, describing that acts of the federal government were binding on the states and the people therein only if the act was in pursuance of constitutionally granted powers, and juxtaposing acts which exceeded those bounds as "void and of no force":

But it will not follow from this doctrine that acts of the large society which are not pursuant to its constitutional powers, but which are invasions of the residuary authorities of the smaller societies, will become the supreme law of the land. These will be merely acts of usurpation, and will deserve to be treated as such.

Controversy to 1865

In the period between the American Revolution and the ratification of the United States Constitution, the states had united under a much weaker federal government and a much stronger state and local government, pursuant to the Articles of Confederation. The Articles gave the central government very little, if any, authority to overrule individual state actions. The Constitution subsequently strengthened the central government, authorizing it to exercise powers deemed necessary to exercise its authority, with an ambiguous boundary between the two co-existing levels of government. In the event of any conflict between state and federal law, the Constitution resolved the conflict[3] via the Supremacy Clause of Article VI in favor of the federal government, which declares federal law the "supreme Law of the Land" and provides that "the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding." However, the Supremacy Clause only applies if the federal government is acting in pursuit of its constitutionally authorized powers, as noted by the phrase "in pursuance thereof" in the actual text of the Supremacy Clause itself (see above).

Alien and Sedition Acts

When the Federalists passed the Alien and Sedition Acts in 1798, Thomas Jefferson and James Madison secretly wrote the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions, which provide a classic statement in support of states' rights and called on state legislatures to nullify unconstitutional federal laws. (The other states, however, did not follow suit and several rejected the notion that states could nullify federal law.) According to this theory, the federal union is a voluntary association of states, and if the central government goes too far each state has the right to nullify that law. As Jefferson said in the Kentucky Resolutions:

Resolved, that the several States composing the United States of America, are not united on the principle of unlimited submission to their general government; but that by compact under the style and title of a Constitution for the United States and of amendments thereto, they constituted a general government for special purposes, delegated to that government certain definite powers, reserving each State to itself, the residuary mass of right to their own self-government; and that whensoever the general government assumes undelegated powers, its acts are unauthoritative, void, and of no force: That to this compact each State acceded as a State, and is an integral party, its co-States forming, as to itself, the other party....each party has an equal right to judge for itself, as well of infractions as of the mode and measure of redress.

The Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions, which became part of the Principles of '98, along with the supporting Report of 1800 by Madison, became final documents of Jefferson's Democratic-Republican Party.[5] Gutzman argued that Governor Edmund Randolph designed the protest in the name of moderation.[6] Gutzman argues that in 1798, Madison espoused states' rights to defeat national legislation that he maintained was a threat to republicanism. During 1831–33, the South Carolina Nullifiers quoted Madison in their defense of states' rights. But Madison feared that the growing support for this doctrine would undermine the union and argued that by ratifying the Constitution states had transferred their sovereignty to the federal government.[7]

The most vociferous supporters of states' rights, such as John Randolph of Roanoke, were called "Old Republicans" into the 1820s and 1830s.[8]

Tate (2011) undertook a literary criticism of a major book by John Taylor of Caroline, New Views of the Constitution of the United States. Tate argues it is structured as a forensic historiography modeled on the techniques of 18th-century Whig lawyers. Taylor believed that evidence from American history gave proof of state sovereignty within the union, against the arguments of nationalists such as U.S. Chief Justice John Marshall.[9]

Another states' rights dispute occurred over the War of 1812. At the Hartford Convention of 1814–15, New England Federalists voiced opposition to President Madison's war, and discussed secession from the Union. In the end they stopped short of calls for secession, but when their report appeared at the same time as news of the great American victory at the Battle of New Orleans, the Federalists were politically ruined.[10]

Nullification Crisis of 1832

One major and continuous strain on the union, from roughly 1820 through the Civil War, was the issue of trade and tariffs. Heavily dependent upon international trade, the almost entirely agricultural and export-oriented South imported most of its manufactured goods from Europe or obtained them from the North. The North, by contrast, had a growing domestic industrial economy that viewed foreign trade as competition. Trade barriers, especially protective tariffs, were viewed as harmful to the Southern economy, which depended on exports.

In 1828, the Congress passed protective tariffs to benefit trade in the northern states, but that were detrimental to the South. Southerners vocally expressed their tariff opposition in documents such as the South Carolina Exposition and Protest in 1828, written in response to the "Tariff of Abominations". Exposition and Protest was the work of South Carolina senator and former vice president John C. Calhoun, formerly an advocate of protective tariffs and internal improvements at federal expense.

South Carolina's Nullification Ordinance declared that both the tariff of 1828 and the tariff of 1832 were null and void within the state borders of South Carolina. This action initiated the Nullification Crisis. Passed by a state convention on November 24, 1832, it led, on December 10, to President Andrew Jackson's proclamation against South Carolina, which sent a naval flotilla and a threat of sending federal troops to enforce the tariffs; Jackson authorized this under color of national authority, claiming in his 1832 Proclamation Regarding Nullification that "our social compact in express terms declares, that the laws of the United States, its Constitution, and treaties made under it, are the supreme law of the land" and for greater caution adds, "that the judges in every State shall be bound thereby, anything in the Constitution or laws of any State to the contrary notwithstanding."

Civil War

Over following decades, another central dispute over states' rights moved to the forefront. The issue of slavery polarized the union, with the Jeffersonian principles often being used by both sides—anti-slavery Northerners, and Southern slaveholders and secessionists—in debates that ultimately led to the American Civil War. Supporters of slavery often argued that one of the rights of the states was the protection of slave property wherever it went, a position endorsed by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1857 Dred Scott decision. In contrast, opponents of slavery argued that the non-slave-states' rights were violated both by that decision and by the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850. While historians in the 21st century agree on the centrality of the conflict over slavery,[11] they disagree sharply on which aspects of this conflict (ideological, economic, political, or social) were most important.[12]

Southern arguments

Southern states had a long tradition of using states' rights doctrine since the late eighteenth century.[13] A major Southern argument in the 1850s was that federal law to ban slavery discriminated against states that allowed slavery, making them second-class states. In 1857 the Supreme Court sided with these states' rights supporters, declaring in Dred Scott v. Sandford that Congress had no authority to regulate slavery in the territories.[14]

Jefferson Davis used the following argument in favor of the equal rights of states:

Resolved, That the union of these States rests on the equality of rights and privileges among its members, and that it is especially the duty of the Senate, which represents the States in their sovereign capacity, to resist all attempts to discriminate either in relation to person or property, so as, in the Territories—which are the common possession of the United States—to give advantages to the citizens of one State which are not equally secured to those of every other State.[15]

Southern states sometimes argued against "states' rights" in the context of fugitive slave laws. For example, Texas challenged some northern states having the right to protect fugitive slaves, with the argument that this would make the institution null once a particular slave had crossed into a free state. The question was pivotal in the case of Dred Scott v. Sandford.[16]

Northern arguments

The historian James McPherson[17] noted that Southerners were inconsistent on the states' rights issue, and that Northern states tried to protect the rights of their states against the South during the Gag Rule and fugitive slave law controversies.

The historian William H. Freehling[18] noted that the South's argument for a state's right to secede was different from Thomas Jefferson's, in that Jefferson based such a right on the unalienable equal rights of man. The South's version of such a right was modified to be consistent with slavery, and with the South's blend of democracy and authoritarianism.[18] Historian Henry Brooks Adams explains that the anti-slavery North took a consistent and principled stand on states' rights against federal encroachment throughout its history, while the Southern states, whenever they saw an opportunity to expand slavery and the reach of their political influence, termed Slave Power, often conveniently forgot the principle of states' rights—and fought in favor of federal centralization:

Between the Slave Power and states' rights there was no necessary connection. The Slave Power, when in control, was a centralizing influence, and all the most considerable encroachments on states' rights were its acts. The acquisition and admission of Louisiana; the Embargo; the War of 1812; the annexation of Texas "by joint resolution" [rather than treaty]; the war with Mexico, declared by the mere announcement of President Polk; the Fugitive Slave Law; the Dred Scott decision—all triumphs of the Slave Power—did far more than either tariffs or internal improvements, which in their origin were also southern measures, to destroy the very memory of states' rights as they existed in 1789. Whenever a question arose of extending or protecting slavery, the slaveholders became friends of centralized power, and used that dangerous weapon with a kind of frenzy. Slavery in fact required centralization in order to maintain and protect itself, but it required to control the centralized machine; it needed despotic principles of government, but it needed them exclusively for its own use. Thus, in truth, states' rights were the protection of the free states, and as a matter of fact, during the domination of the Slave Power, Massachusetts appealed to this protecting principle as often and almost as loudly as South Carolina.[19]

Sinha[20] and Richards[21] both argue that the Southerners only advocated states' rights when they disagreed with a policy. Examples given are a states' right to engage in slavery or to suppress freedom of speech. They argue that it was instead the result of the increasing cognitive dissonance in the minds of Northerners and (some) Southern non-slaveowners between the ideals that the United States was founded upon and identified itself as standing for, as expressed in the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution of the United States, and the Bill of Rights, and the reality that the slave-power represented, as what they describe as an anti-democratic, counter-republican, oligarchic, despotic, authoritarian, if not totalitarian, movement for ownership of human beings as the personal chattels of the slaver. As this cognitive dissonance increased, the people of the Northern states, and the Northern states themselves, became increasingly inclined to resist the encroachments of the Slave Power upon their states' rights and encroachments of the Slave Power by and upon the federal government of the United States. The Slave Power, having failed to maintain its dominance of the federal government through democratic means, sought other means of maintaining its dominance of the federal government, by means of military aggression, by right of force and coercion, and thus, the Civil War occurred.

Texas v. White

In Texas v. White, 74 U.S. 700 (1869) the Supreme Court ruled that Texas had remained a state ever since it first joined the Union, despite claims to have joined the Confederate States of America; the court further held that the Constitution did not permit states to unilaterally secede from the United States, and that the ordinances of secession, and all the acts of the legislatures within seceding states intended to give effect to such ordinances, were "absolutely null" under the constitution.[22]

Since the Civil War

A series of Supreme Court decisions developed the state action constraint on the Equal Protection Clause. The state action theory weakened the effect of the Equal Protection Clause against state governments, in that the clause was held not to apply to unequal protection of the laws caused in part by complete lack of state action in specific cases, even if state actions in other instances form an overall pattern of segregation and other discrimination. The separate but equal theory further weakened the effect of the Equal Protection Clause against state governments.

In case law

With United States v. Cruikshank (1876), a case which arose out of the Colfax Massacre of blacks contesting the results of a Reconstruction era election, the Supreme Court held that the Fourteenth Amendment did not apply to the First Amendment or Second Amendment to state governments in respect to their own citizens, only to acts of the federal government. In McDonald v. City of Chicago (2010), the Supreme Court held that the Second Amendment right of an individual to "keep and bear arms" is incorporated by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, and therefore fully applicable to states and local governments.[citation needed]

Furthermore, United States v. Harris (1883) held that the Equal Protection Clause did not apply to an 1883 prison lynching on the basis that the Fourteenth Amendment applied only to state acts, not to individual criminal actions.

In the Civil Rights Cases (1883), the Supreme Court allowed segregation by striking down the Civil Rights Act of 1875, a statute that prohibited racial discrimination in public accommodation. It again held that the Equal Protection Clause applied only to acts done by states, not to those done by private individuals, and as the Civil Rights Act of 1875 applied to private establishments, the Court said, it exceeded congressional enforcement power under Section 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment.

Later progressive era and World War II

By the beginning of the 20th century, greater cooperation began to develop between the state and federal governments and the federal government began to accumulate more power. Early in this period, a federal income tax was imposed, first during the Civil War as a war measure and then permanently with the Sixteenth Amendment in 1913. Before this, the states played a larger role in government.

States' rights were affected by the fundamental alteration of the federal government resulting from the Seventeenth Amendment, depriving state governments of an avenue of control over the federal government via the representation of each state's legislature in the U.S. Senate. This change has been described by legal critics as the loss of a check and balance on the federal government by the states.[23]

Following the Great Depression, the New Deal, and then World War II saw further growth in the authority and responsibilities of the federal government. The case of Wickard v. Filburn allowed the federal government to enforce the Agricultural Adjustment Act, providing subsidies to farmers for limiting their crop yields, arguing agriculture affected interstate commerce and came under the jurisdiction of the Commerce Clause even when a farmer grew his crops not to be sold, but for his own private use.

After World War II, President Harry Truman supported a civil rights bill and desegregated the military. The reaction was a split in the Democratic Party that led to the formation of the "States' Rights Democratic Party"—better known as the Dixiecrats—led by Strom Thurmond. Thurmond ran as the States' Rights candidate for President in the 1948 election, losing to Truman.

Civil rights movement

During the 1950s and 1960s, the civil rights movement was confronted by the proponents in the Southern states of racial segregation and Jim Crow laws who denounced federal interference in these state-level laws as an assault on states' rights.

Though Brown v. Board of Education (1954) overruled the Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) decision, the Fourteenth and Fifteenth amendments were largely inactive in the South until the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (42 U.S.C. § 21)[24] and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Several states passed Interposition Resolutions to declare that the Supreme Court's ruling in Brown usurped states' rights.

There was also opposition by states' rights advocates to voting rights at Edmund Pettus Bridge, which was part of the Selma to Montgomery marches, that resulted in the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

Contemporary debates

In 1964, the issue of fair housing in California involved the boundary between state laws and federalism. California Proposition 14 overturned the Rumsford Fair Housing Act in California and allowed discrimination in any type of housing sale or rental.[25] Martin Luther King Jr. and others saw this as a backlash against civil rights, while actor and future (1967) governor of California Ronald Reagan gained popularity by supporting Proposition 14.[26] The U.S. Supreme Court's Reitman v. Mulkey decision overturned Proposition 14 in 1967 in favor of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.

Conservative historians Thomas E. Woods Jr. and Kevin R. C. Gutzman argue that when politicians come to power they exercise all the power they can get, in the process trampling states' rights.[27] Gutzman argues that the Kentucky and Virginia resolutions of 1798 by Jefferson and Madison were not only responses to immediate threats but were legitimate responses based on the long-standing principles of states' rights and strict adherence to the Constitution.[28]

Another concern is the fact that on more than one occasion, the federal government has threatened to withhold highway funds from states which did not pass certain articles of legislation. Any state which lost highway funding for any extended period would face financial impoverishment, infrastructure collapse or both. Although the first such action (the enactment of a national speed limit) was directly related to highways and done in the face of a fuel shortage, most subsequent actions have had little or nothing to do with highways and have not been done in the face of any compelling national crisis. An example of this would be the federally mandated drinking age of 21, upheld in South Dakota v. Dole. Critics of such actions feel that the federal government is upsetting the traditional balance between itself and state governments.

More recently, the issue of states' rights has come to a head when the Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) Commission recommended that Congress and the Department of Defense implement sweeping changes to the National Guard by consolidating some Guard installations and closing others. These recommendations in 2005 drew strong criticism from many states, and several states sued the federal government on the basis that Congress and the Pentagon would be violating states' rights should they force the realignment and closure of Guard bases without the prior approval of the governors from the affected states. After Pennsylvania won a federal lawsuit to block the deactivation of the 111th Fighter Wing of the Pennsylvania Air National Guard, defense and Congressional leaders chose to try to settle the remaining BRAC lawsuits out of court, reaching compromises with the plaintiff states.[29]

Current states' rights issues include the death penalty, assisted suicide, same-sex marriage, gun control, and cannabis, the last of which is in direct violation of federal law. In Gonzales v. Raich, the Supreme Court ruled in favor of the federal government, permitting the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to arrest medical marijuana patients and caregivers. In Gonzales v. Oregon, the Supreme Court ruled the practice of physician-assisted suicide in Oregon is legal. In Obergefell v. Hodges, the Supreme Court ruled that states could not withhold recognition to same-sex marriages. In District of Columbia v. Heller (2008), the United States Supreme Court ruled that gun ownership is an individual right under the Second Amendment of the United States Constitution, and the District of Columbia could not completely ban gun ownership by law-abiding private citizens. Two years later, the court ruled that the Heller decision applied to states and territories via the Second and 14th Amendments in McDonald v. Chicago, stating that states, territories and political divisions thereof, could not impose total bans on gun ownership by law-abiding citizens.

These concerns have led to a movement sometimes called the State Sovereignty movement or "10th Amendment Sovereignty Movement".[30]

10th Amendment

The Tenth Amendment of the United States Constitution has been used as a prominent tool of invoking nullification, a common tactic of those that believe in the primacy of States' rights. The Tenth Amendment reads as follows:

The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.[31]

Notably, the Tenth Amendment has been successfully utilized to nullify restrictive federal laws pertaining to gun rights,[32] immigration,[33] cannabis,[34] and more. Additionally, organizations such as the Tenth Amendment Center seek to utilize the Tenth Amendment to achieve, "Liberty through decentralization".[35] The Tenth Amendment center chiefly focuses on encouraging state representatives to submit bills that nullify federal laws by providing model legislation on their website that provides a rubric for state legislators to follow.[36]

In 2009–2010 thirty-eight states introduced resolutions to reaffirm the principles of sovereignty under the Constitution and the 10th Amendment; 14 states have passed the resolutions. These non-binding resolutions, often called "state sovereignty resolutions" do not carry the force of law. Instead, they are intended to be a statement to demand that the federal government halt its practices of assuming powers and imposing mandates upon the states for purposes not enumerated by the Constitution.[4]

States' rights and the Rehnquist Court

The Supreme Court's University of Alabama v. Garrett (2001)[37] and Kimel v. Florida Board of Regents (2000)[38] decisions allowed states to use a rational basis review for discrimination against the aged and disabled, arguing that these types of discrimination were rationally related to a legitimate state interest, and that no "razorlike precision" was needed." The Supreme Court's United States v. Morrison (2000)[39] decision limited the ability of rape victims to sue their attackers in federal court. Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist explained that "States historically have been sovereign" in the area of law enforcement, which in the Court's opinion required narrow interpretations of the Commerce Clause and Fourteenth Amendment.

Kimel, Garrett and Morrison indicated that the Court's previous decisions in favor of enumerated powers and limits on Congressional power over the states, such as United States v. Lopez (1995), Seminole Tribe v. Florida (1996) and City of Boerne v. Flores (1997) were more than one time flukes. In the past, Congress relied on the Commerce Clause and the Equal Protection Clause for passing civil rights bills, including the Civil Rights Act of 1964.[24]

Lopez limited the Commerce Clause to things that directly affect interstate commerce, which excludes issues like gun control laws, hate crimes, and other crimes that affect commerce but are not directly related to commerce. Seminole reinforced the "sovereign immunity of states" doctrine, which makes it difficult to sue states for many things, especially civil rights violations. The Flores "congruence and proportionality" requirement prevents Congress from going too far in requiring states to comply with the Equal Protection Clause, which replaced the ratchet theory advanced in Katzenbach v. Morgan (1966). The ratchet theory held that Congress could ratchet up civil rights beyond what the Court had recognized, but that Congress could not ratchet down judicially recognized rights. An important precedent for Morrison was United States v. Harris (1883), which ruled that the Equal Protection Clause did not apply to a prison lynching because the state action doctrine applies Equal Protection only to state action, not private criminal acts. Since the ratchet principle was replaced with the "congruence and proportionality" principle by Flores, it was easier to revive older precedents for preventing Congress from going beyond what Court interpretations would allow. Critics such as Associate Justice John Paul Stevens accused the Court of judicial activism (i.e., interpreting law to reach a desired conclusion).[citation needed]

The tide against federal power in the Rehnquist court was stopped in the case of Gonzales v. Raich, 545 U.S. 1 (2005), in which the court upheld the federal power to prohibit medicinal use of cannabis even if states have permitted it. Rehnquist himself was a dissenter in the Raich case.[citation needed]

States' rights as code word

Since the 1940s, the term "states' rights" has often been considered a loaded term or dog whistle because of its use in opposition to federally-mandated racial desegregation[40] and, more recently, same-sex marriage and reproductive rights.[41][42]

During the heyday of the civil rights movement, defenders of racial segregation[43] used the term "states' rights" as a code word in what is now referred to as dog-whistle politics: political messaging that appears to mean one thing to the general population but has an additional, different, or more specific resonance for a targeted subgroup.[44][45][46] In 1948 it was the official name of the "Dixiecrat" party led by white supremacist presidential candidate Strom Thurmond.[47][48] Democratic Governor George Wallace of Alabama, who famously declared in his inaugural address in 1963, "Segregation now! Segregation tomorrow! Segregation forever!" later remarked that he should have said, "States' rights now! States' rights tomorrow! States' rights forever!"[49] Wallace, however, claimed that segregation was but one issue symbolic of a larger struggle for states' rights. In that view, which some historians dispute, his replacement of segregation with states' rights would be more of a clarification than a euphemism.[49]

In 2010, some claimed that Texas Governor Rick Perry's use of the expression "states' rights" was "reminiscent of an earlier era when it was a rallying cry against civil rights."[50] During an interview with The Dallas Morning News, Perry made it clear that he supports the end of segregation, including passage of the Civil Rights Act. The Texas president of the NAACP, Gary Bledsoe, stated that he understood that Perry was not speaking of "states' rights" in a racial context, but others still claimed to feel offended by the term because of its past misuse.[50]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Gardbaum, Stephen. "Congress's Power to Pre-Empt the States", Pepperdine Law Review, Vol. 33, p. 39 (2005).
  2. ^ Bardes, Barbara et al. American Government and Politics Today: The Essentials (Cengage Learning, 2008).
  3. ^ a b "The United States Constitution - The U.S. Constitution Online - USConstitution.net".
  4. ^ a b Orbach, Callahan & Lindemmen, "Arming States' Rights: Federalism, Private Lawmakers, and the Battering Ram Strategy", Arizona Law Review (2010)
  5. ^ Gutzman, Kevin R. C. (2012). James Madison and the Making of America. pp. 274–76.
  6. ^ Gutzman, Kevin R. C. (2004). "Edmund Randolph and Virginia Constitutionalism". Review of Politics. 66 (3): 469–97. doi:10.1017/S0034670500038870. JSTOR 4149191. S2CID 145724474.
  7. ^ Gutzman, Kevin R. (1995). "A troublesome legacy: James Madison and "The principles of '98'". Journal of the Early Republic. 15 (4): 569–89. doi:10.2307/3124014. JSTOR 3124014.
  8. ^ Risjord, Norman K. (1965). The Old Republicans: Southern Conservatism in the Age of Jefferson.
  9. ^ Tate, Adam (2011). "A Historiography of States' Rights: John Taylor of Caroline's New Views of the Constitution". Southern Studies. 18 (1): 10–28.
  10. ^ James M Banner, To the Hartford Convention: the Federalists and the origins of party politics in Massachusetts, 1789–1815 (1970)
  11. ^ Mackowski, Chris (January 22, 2019), "Primary Sources: Slavery as the Cause of the Civil War", Emerging Civil War, from the original on January 20, 2021, retrieved September 15, 2021
  12. ^ Aaron Sheehan-Dean, "A Book for Every Perspective: Current Civil War and Reconstruction Textbooks," Civil War History (2005) 51#3 pp. 317–24
  13. ^ McDonald, Forrest (2000). States' Rights and the Union. University Press of Kansas.
  14. ^ John Mack Faragher, Mari Jo Buhle, Daniel Czitrom Out of Many: A History of the American people (2005) p. 376
  15. ^ Jefferson Davis' Resolutions on the Relations of States, Senate Chamber, U.S. Capitol, February 2, 1860, from The Papers of Jefferson Davis, Volume 6, pp. 273–76. Transcribed from the Congressional Globe, 36th Congress, 1st Session, pp. 658–59.
  16. ^ "Confederate States of America – A Declaration of the Causes which Impel the State of Texas to Secede from the Federal Union". Yale Law School. March 1845. Retrieved 1 July 2015.
  17. ^ James McPherson, This Mighty Scourge, pp. 3–9. Speaking of alternative explanations for secession, McPherson writes (p.7), "While one or more of these interpretations remain popular among the Sons of Confederate Veterans and other Southern heritage groups, few professional historians now subscribe to them. Of all these interpretations, the state's-rights argument is perhaps the weakest. It fails to ask the question, state's rights for what purpose? State's rights, or sovereignty, was always more a means than an end, an instrument to achieve a certain goal more than a principle.
  18. ^ a b William H. Freehling, The Road to Disunion: Secessionists Triumphant, 1854–1861
  19. ^ Adams, Henry (1882). John Randolph (1st ed.). Boston, MA, USA: Houghton Mifflin and Co. p. 270. OCLC 3942444. Retrieved 2009-07-26. John Randolph.
  20. ^ Sinha, Manisha (2000). The Counter-Revolution of Slavery: Politics and Ideology in Antebellum South Carolina. Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-2571-6. OCLC 44075847. Retrieved 2009-03-14.
  21. ^ Richards, Leonard L. (2000). The Slave Power: The Free North and Southern Domination. Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA: LSU Press. ISBN 978-0-8071-2600-4. OCLC 43641070.
  22. ^ Murray pp. 155–59.
  23. ^ Bybee, Jay S. (1997). "Ulysses at the Mast: Democracy, Federalism, and the Sirens' Song of the Seventeenth Amendment". Northwestern University Law Review. Chicago, IL. 91: 505.
  24. ^ a b "Civil Rights Act of 1964 - CRA - Title VII - Equal Employment Opportunities - 42 US Code Chapter 21 - findUSlaw". finduslaw.com.
  25. ^ Skelton, George (May 7, 2014) "Thank you, Donald Sterling, for reminding us how far we've come" Los Angeles Times
  26. ^ Pillar of Fire, Taylor Branch, p. 242
  27. ^ Thomas E. Woods, Jr. and Kevin R. C. Gutzman, Who Killed the Constitution?: The Federal Government Vs. American Liberty from World War I to Barack Obama (Random House Digital, 2009) p. 201
  28. ^ K. R. Constantine Gutzman, "The Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions Reconsidered: 'An Appeal to the Real Laws of Our Country'", Journal of Southern History (Aug 2000), Vol. 66 Issue 3, pp. 473–96
  29. ^ "Judge Rules Favorably in Pennsylvania BRAC Suit (Associated Press, 26 August)".[permanent dead link]
  30. ^ Johnston, Kirk. "States' Rights Is Rallying Cry for Lawmakers" The New York Times March 16, 2010
  31. ^ "Tenth Amendment – Reserved Powers – Contents" (PDF). GPO.gov. United States Government Printing Office.
  32. ^ "State Legislators Want to Nullify Federal Gun Control". Reason. July 2021.
  33. ^ "Are Sanctuary Cities the New Confederates?". National Review. October 15, 2015.
  34. ^ "Can States or Citizens 'Nullify' Federal Cannabis Prohibition?". Cannabis Now. June 20, 2018.
  35. ^ "About the Tenth Amendment". Tenth Amendment Center. Retrieved February 11, 2022.
  36. ^ "Model Legislation". Tenth Amendment Center. Retrieved February 11, 2022.
  37. ^ "Board of Trustees of the University of Alabama et al. v. Garrett et al., U.S. Supreme Court, decided February 21, 2001".
  38. ^ "Kimel v. Florida Board of Regents, U.S. Supreme court, decided January 11, 2000".
  39. ^ "United States v. Morrison". LII / Legal Information Institute.
  40. ^ Herbert, Bob (October 6, 2005). "Impossible, Ridiculous, Repugnant". The New York Times.
  41. ^ Craver, Jack (March 31, 2013). "New GOP line on gay marriage: It's about states' rights". The Capital Times. Retrieved November 9, 2021.
  42. ^ Abrams, Abigail (January 1, 2020). "Here's How Conservatives Are Using Civil Rights Law to Restrict Abortion". Time. Retrieved November 9, 2021.
  43. ^ White, D. Jonathan (2009). "States' Rights". Encyclopedia of Alabama. Retrieved 2010-09-09. After the Civil War and Reconstruction, Alabama, along with other southern states, used states' rights arguments to restore a system of white supremacy and racial segregation. ... The term still appears on occasion in political speech, in some cases as code language indicating support of discriminatory practices or outright racism; as a result, its use is often met with skepticism or suspicion by the public at large.
  44. ^ Haney López, Ian (2014). Dog Whistle Politics: How Coded Racial Appeals Have Reinvented Racism and Wrecked the Middle Class. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 4. ISBN 978-0-19-996427-7.
  45. ^ Full Show: Ian Haney López on the Dog Whistle Politics of Race, Part I. Moyers & Company, February 28, 2014.
  46. ^ Yao, Kevin (November 9, 2015). "A Coded Political Mantra". Berkeley Political Review: UC Berkeley's Only Nonpartisan Political Magazine. Retrieved February 5, 2016.
  47. ^ Lichtman, Allan J. (2008). White Protestant Nation: The Rise of the American Conservative Movement. New York: Atlantic Monthly Press. p. 165. ISBN 978-0-87113-984-9.
  48. ^ Bass, Jack; Thompson, Marilyn W. (2006). Strom: The Complicated Personal and Political Life of Strom Thurmond. New York: PublicAffairs. p. 102. ISBN 1-58648-392-7.
  49. ^ a b Carter, Dan T. From George Wallace to Newt Gingrich: Race in the Conservative Counterrevolution, 1963–1994. p. 1.
  50. ^ a b Slater, Wayne (November 19, 2010). "Analysis: Perry's 'states' rights' battle cry evokes history that could damage his message". The Dallas Morning News. Retrieved November 21, 2010.

References

  • Althouse, Anne (October 2001). "Why Talking About "States' Rights" Cannot Avoid the Need for Normative Federalism Analysis: A Response to Professors Baker and Young". Duke Law Journal. 51 (1): 363–376. doi:10.2307/1373236. JSTOR 1373236. Retrieved 2 December 2011.
  • Baker, Lynn A.; Young, Ernest A. (October 2001). "Federalism and the Double Standard of Judicial Review". Duke Law Journal. 51 (1): 75. doi:10.2307/1373231. JSTOR 1373231. Retrieved 2 December 2011., which argues at 143–49: "To many, [the notion of states' rights] stands for an anachronistic (and immoral) preference for the race-based denial of essential individual rights....".
  • Farber, Daniel A., "States' Rights and the Union: Imperium in Imperio, 1776–1876" Constitutional Commentary, Vol. 18, 2001
  • Kirk, Russell K., Randolph of Roanoke: A Study in Conservative Thought (1951)
  • Gutzman, Kevin R. C. James Madison and the Making of America (2012)
  • Gutzman, Kevin R. C. "A troublesome legacy: James Madison and "The principles of '98'", Journal of the Early Republic (Winter 1995), Vol. 15 Issue 4, pp. 569–89
  • Gutzman, Kevin R. C. "The Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions Reconsidered: 'An Appeal to the Real Laws of Our Country'", Journal of Southern History (Aug 2000), Vol. 66 Issue 3, pp 473–96
  • McDonald, Forrest, States' Rights and the Union: Imperium in Imperio, 1776–1876 (2002)
  • Murray, Robert Bruce. Legal Cases of the Civil War (2003) ISBN 0-8117-0059-3
  • Risjord, Norman K., The Old Republicans: Southern Conservatism in the Age of Jefferson (1965)
  • Sinha, Manisha, "Revolution or Counterrevolution?: The Political Ideology of Secession in Antebellum South Carolina" Civil War History, Vol. 46, 2000 in JSTOR
  • Sinha, Manisha (2000). The Counterrevolution of Slavery: Politics and Ideology in Antebellum South Carolina. University of North Carolina Press. p. 362. ISBN 0-8078-2571-9.
  • Orbach, Barak Y., et al. "Arming States' Rights: Federalism, Private Lawmakers, and the Battering Ram Strategy", Arizona Law Review, vol. 52, 2010

Further reading

  • Sotirios A. Barber, The Fallacies of States' Rights. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2013.
  • Jefferson Davis, "The Doctrine of State Rights" (1890). The North American Review, Vol. 150, No. 399, pp. 205–219.
  • Frederick D. Drake, ed. States' Rights and American Federalism: A Documentary History (1999)
  • James J. Kilpatrick. The Sovereign States: Notes of a Citizen of Virginia Chicago: Henry Regnery Company, 1957.

External links

  • Tenth Amendment Center Federalism and States Rights in the U.S.
  • States' Rights in Encyclopedia Virginia
  • Missouri Sovereignty Project 2019-08-12 at the Wayback Machine "Institutionalizing" the 10th Amendment into the populace and political fabrics of Missouri.

states, rights, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books. For other uses see States rights disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources States rights news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message In American political discourse states rights are political powers held for the state governments rather than the federal government according to the United States Constitution reflecting especially the enumerated powers of Congress and the Tenth Amendment The enumerated powers that are listed in the Constitution include exclusive federal powers as well as concurrent powers that are shared with the states and all of those powers are contrasted with the reserved powers also called states rights that only the states possess 1 2 Contents 1 Background 2 The Supremacy Clause 3 Controversy to 1865 3 1 Alien and Sedition Acts 3 2 Nullification Crisis of 1832 3 3 Civil War 3 3 1 Southern arguments 3 3 2 Northern arguments 3 3 3 Texas v White 4 Since the Civil War 4 1 In case law 4 2 Later progressive era and World War II 4 3 Civil rights movement 5 Contemporary debates 6 10th Amendment 7 States rights and the Rehnquist Court 8 States rights as code word 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksBackground EditThe balance of federal powers and those powers held by the states as defined in the Supremacy Clause of the U S Constitution was first addressed in the case of McCulloch v Maryland 1819 The Court s decision by Chief Justice John Marshall asserted that the laws adopted by the federal government when exercising its constitutional powers are generally paramount over any conflicting laws adopted by state governments After McCulloch the primary legal issues in this area concerned the scope of Congress constitutional powers and whether the states possess certain powers to the exclusion of the federal government even if the Constitution does not explicitly limit them to the states 3 4 The Supremacy Clause EditThe Supremacy Clause of the U S Constitution states This Constitution and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof and all treaties made or which shall be made under the authority of the United States shall be the supreme law of the land and the judges in every state shall be bound thereby anything in the constitution or laws of any state to the contrary notwithstanding Emphasis added In The Federalist Papers ratification proponent Alexander Hamilton explained the limitations this clause placed on the proposed federal government describing that acts of the federal government were binding on the states and the people therein only if the act was in pursuance of constitutionally granted powers and juxtaposing acts which exceeded those bounds as void and of no force But it will not follow from this doctrine that acts of the large society which are not pursuant to its constitutional powers but which are invasions of the residuary authorities of the smaller societies will become the supreme law of the land These will be merely acts of usurpation and will deserve to be treated as such Controversy to 1865 EditIn the period between the American Revolution and the ratification of the United States Constitution the states had united under a much weaker federal government and a much stronger state and local government pursuant to the Articles of Confederation The Articles gave the central government very little if any authority to overrule individual state actions The Constitution subsequently strengthened the central government authorizing it to exercise powers deemed necessary to exercise its authority with an ambiguous boundary between the two co existing levels of government In the event of any conflict between state and federal law the Constitution resolved the conflict 3 via the Supremacy Clause of Article VI in favor of the federal government which declares federal law the supreme Law of the Land and provides that the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding However the Supremacy Clause only applies if the federal government is acting in pursuit of its constitutionally authorized powers as noted by the phrase in pursuance thereof in the actual text of the Supremacy Clause itself see above Alien and Sedition Acts Edit When the Federalists passed the Alien and Sedition Acts in 1798 Thomas Jefferson and James Madison secretly wrote the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions which provide a classic statement in support of states rights and called on state legislatures to nullify unconstitutional federal laws The other states however did not follow suit and several rejected the notion that states could nullify federal law According to this theory the federal union is a voluntary association of states and if the central government goes too far each state has the right to nullify that law As Jefferson said in the Kentucky Resolutions Resolved that the several States composing the United States of America are not united on the principle of unlimited submission to their general government but that by compact under the style and title of a Constitution for the United States and of amendments thereto they constituted a general government for special purposes delegated to that government certain definite powers reserving each State to itself the residuary mass of right to their own self government and that whensoever the general government assumes undelegated powers its acts are unauthoritative void and of no force That to this compact each State acceded as a State and is an integral party its co States forming as to itself the other party each party has an equal right to judge for itself as well of infractions as of the mode and measure of redress The Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions which became part of the Principles of 98 along with the supporting Report of 1800 by Madison became final documents of Jefferson s Democratic Republican Party 5 Gutzman argued that Governor Edmund Randolph designed the protest in the name of moderation 6 Gutzman argues that in 1798 Madison espoused states rights to defeat national legislation that he maintained was a threat to republicanism During 1831 33 the South Carolina Nullifiers quoted Madison in their defense of states rights But Madison feared that the growing support for this doctrine would undermine the union and argued that by ratifying the Constitution states had transferred their sovereignty to the federal government 7 The most vociferous supporters of states rights such as John Randolph of Roanoke were called Old Republicans into the 1820s and 1830s 8 Tate 2011 undertook a literary criticism of a major book by John Taylor of Caroline New Views of the Constitution of the United States Tate argues it is structured as a forensic historiography modeled on the techniques of 18th century Whig lawyers Taylor believed that evidence from American history gave proof of state sovereignty within the union against the arguments of nationalists such as U S Chief Justice John Marshall 9 Another states rights dispute occurred over the War of 1812 At the Hartford Convention of 1814 15 New England Federalists voiced opposition to President Madison s war and discussed secession from the Union In the end they stopped short of calls for secession but when their report appeared at the same time as news of the great American victory at the Battle of New Orleans the Federalists were politically ruined 10 Nullification Crisis of 1832 Edit One major and continuous strain on the union from roughly 1820 through the Civil War was the issue of trade and tariffs Heavily dependent upon international trade the almost entirely agricultural and export oriented South imported most of its manufactured goods from Europe or obtained them from the North The North by contrast had a growing domestic industrial economy that viewed foreign trade as competition Trade barriers especially protective tariffs were viewed as harmful to the Southern economy which depended on exports In 1828 the Congress passed protective tariffs to benefit trade in the northern states but that were detrimental to the South Southerners vocally expressed their tariff opposition in documents such as the South Carolina Exposition and Protest in 1828 written in response to the Tariff of Abominations Exposition and Protest was the work of South Carolina senator and former vice president John C Calhoun formerly an advocate of protective tariffs and internal improvements at federal expense South Carolina s Nullification Ordinance declared that both the tariff of 1828 and the tariff of 1832 were null and void within the state borders of South Carolina This action initiated the Nullification Crisis Passed by a state convention on November 24 1832 it led on December 10 to President Andrew Jackson s proclamation against South Carolina which sent a naval flotilla and a threat of sending federal troops to enforce the tariffs Jackson authorized this under color of national authority claiming in his 1832 Proclamation Regarding Nullification that our social compact in express terms declares that the laws of the United States its Constitution and treaties made under it are the supreme law of the land and for greater caution adds that the judges in every State shall be bound thereby anything in the Constitution or laws of any State to the contrary notwithstanding Civil War Edit Main articles American Civil War and Origins of the American Civil War Over following decades another central dispute over states rights moved to the forefront The issue of slavery polarized the union with the Jeffersonian principles often being used by both sides anti slavery Northerners and Southern slaveholders and secessionists in debates that ultimately led to the American Civil War Supporters of slavery often argued that one of the rights of the states was the protection of slave property wherever it went a position endorsed by the U S Supreme Court in 1857 Dred Scott decision In contrast opponents of slavery argued that the non slave states rights were violated both by that decision and by the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850 While historians in the 21st century agree on the centrality of the conflict over slavery 11 they disagree sharply on which aspects of this conflict ideological economic political or social were most important 12 Southern arguments Edit Southern states had a long tradition of using states rights doctrine since the late eighteenth century 13 A major Southern argument in the 1850s was that federal law to ban slavery discriminated against states that allowed slavery making them second class states In 1857 the Supreme Court sided with these states rights supporters declaring in Dred Scott v Sandford that Congress had no authority to regulate slavery in the territories 14 Jefferson Davis used the following argument in favor of the equal rights of states Resolved That the union of these States rests on the equality of rights and privileges among its members and that it is especially the duty of the Senate which represents the States in their sovereign capacity to resist all attempts to discriminate either in relation to person or property so as in the Territories which are the common possession of the United States to give advantages to the citizens of one State which are not equally secured to those of every other State 15 Southern states sometimes argued against states rights in the context of fugitive slave laws For example Texas challenged some northern states having the right to protect fugitive slaves with the argument that this would make the institution null once a particular slave had crossed into a free state The question was pivotal in the case of Dred Scott v Sandford 16 Northern arguments Edit The historian James McPherson 17 noted that Southerners were inconsistent on the states rights issue and that Northern states tried to protect the rights of their states against the South during the Gag Rule and fugitive slave law controversies The historian William H Freehling 18 noted that the South s argument for a state s right to secede was different from Thomas Jefferson s in that Jefferson based such a right on the unalienable equal rights of man The South s version of such a right was modified to be consistent with slavery and with the South s blend of democracy and authoritarianism 18 Historian Henry Brooks Adams explains that the anti slavery North took a consistent and principled stand on states rights against federal encroachment throughout its history while the Southern states whenever they saw an opportunity to expand slavery and the reach of their political influence termed Slave Power often conveniently forgot the principle of states rights and fought in favor of federal centralization Between the Slave Power and states rights there was no necessary connection The Slave Power when in control was a centralizing influence and all the most considerable encroachments on states rights were its acts The acquisition and admission of Louisiana the Embargo the War of 1812 the annexation of Texas by joint resolution rather than treaty the war with Mexico declared by the mere announcement of President Polk the Fugitive Slave Law the Dred Scott decision all triumphs of the Slave Power did far more than either tariffs or internal improvements which in their origin were also southern measures to destroy the very memory of states rights as they existed in 1789 Whenever a question arose of extending or protecting slavery the slaveholders became friends of centralized power and used that dangerous weapon with a kind of frenzy Slavery in fact required centralization in order to maintain and protect itself but it required to control the centralized machine it needed despotic principles of government but it needed them exclusively for its own use Thus in truth states rights were the protection of the free states and as a matter of fact during the domination of the Slave Power Massachusetts appealed to this protecting principle as often and almost as loudly as South Carolina 19 Sinha 20 and Richards 21 both argue that the Southerners only advocated states rights when they disagreed with a policy Examples given are a states right to engage in slavery or to suppress freedom of speech They argue that it was instead the result of the increasing cognitive dissonance in the minds of Northerners and some Southern non slaveowners between the ideals that the United States was founded upon and identified itself as standing for as expressed in the Declaration of Independence the Constitution of the United States and the Bill of Rights and the reality that the slave power represented as what they describe as an anti democratic counter republican oligarchic despotic authoritarian if not totalitarian movement for ownership of human beings as the personal chattels of the slaver As this cognitive dissonance increased the people of the Northern states and the Northern states themselves became increasingly inclined to resist the encroachments of the Slave Power upon their states rights and encroachments of the Slave Power by and upon the federal government of the United States The Slave Power having failed to maintain its dominance of the federal government through democratic means sought other means of maintaining its dominance of the federal government by means of military aggression by right of force and coercion and thus the Civil War occurred Texas v White Edit In Texas v White 74 U S 700 1869 the Supreme Court ruled that Texas had remained a state ever since it first joined the Union despite claims to have joined the Confederate States of America the court further held that the Constitution did not permit states to unilaterally secede from the United States and that the ordinances of secession and all the acts of the legislatures within seceding states intended to give effect to such ordinances were absolutely null under the constitution 22 Since the Civil War EditA series of Supreme Court decisions developed the state action constraint on the Equal Protection Clause The state action theory weakened the effect of the Equal Protection Clause against state governments in that the clause was held not to apply to unequal protection of the laws caused in part by complete lack of state action in specific cases even if state actions in other instances form an overall pattern of segregation and other discrimination The separate but equal theory further weakened the effect of the Equal Protection Clause against state governments In case law Edit With United States v Cruikshank 1876 a case which arose out of the Colfax Massacre of blacks contesting the results of a Reconstruction era election the Supreme Court held that the Fourteenth Amendment did not apply to the First Amendment or Second Amendment to state governments in respect to their own citizens only to acts of the federal government In McDonald v City of Chicago 2010 the Supreme Court held that the Second Amendment right of an individual to keep and bear arms is incorporated by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and therefore fully applicable to states and local governments citation needed Furthermore United States v Harris 1883 held that the Equal Protection Clause did not apply to an 1883 prison lynching on the basis that the Fourteenth Amendment applied only to state acts not to individual criminal actions In the Civil Rights Cases 1883 the Supreme Court allowed segregation by striking down the Civil Rights Act of 1875 a statute that prohibited racial discrimination in public accommodation It again held that the Equal Protection Clause applied only to acts done by states not to those done by private individuals and as the Civil Rights Act of 1875 applied to private establishments the Court said it exceeded congressional enforcement power under Section 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment Later progressive era and World War II Edit By the beginning of the 20th century greater cooperation began to develop between the state and federal governments and the federal government began to accumulate more power Early in this period a federal income tax was imposed first during the Civil War as a war measure and then permanently with the Sixteenth Amendment in 1913 Before this the states played a larger role in government States rights were affected by the fundamental alteration of the federal government resulting from the Seventeenth Amendment depriving state governments of an avenue of control over the federal government via the representation of each state s legislature in the U S Senate This change has been described by legal critics as the loss of a check and balance on the federal government by the states 23 Following the Great Depression the New Deal and then World War II saw further growth in the authority and responsibilities of the federal government The case of Wickard v Filburn allowed the federal government to enforce the Agricultural Adjustment Act providing subsidies to farmers for limiting their crop yields arguing agriculture affected interstate commerce and came under the jurisdiction of the Commerce Clause even when a farmer grew his crops not to be sold but for his own private use After World War II President Harry Truman supported a civil rights bill and desegregated the military The reaction was a split in the Democratic Party that led to the formation of the States Rights Democratic Party better known as the Dixiecrats led by Strom Thurmond Thurmond ran as the States Rights candidate for President in the 1948 election losing to Truman Civil rights movement Edit During the 1950s and 1960s the civil rights movement was confronted by the proponents in the Southern states of racial segregation and Jim Crow laws who denounced federal interference in these state level laws as an assault on states rights Though Brown v Board of Education 1954 overruled the Plessy v Ferguson 1896 decision the Fourteenth and Fifteenth amendments were largely inactive in the South until the Civil Rights Act of 1964 42 U S C 21 24 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 Several states passed Interposition Resolutions to declare that the Supreme Court s ruling in Brown usurped states rights There was also opposition by states rights advocates to voting rights at Edmund Pettus Bridge which was part of the Selma to Montgomery marches that resulted in the Voting Rights Act of 1965 Contemporary debates EditIn 1964 the issue of fair housing in California involved the boundary between state laws and federalism California Proposition 14 overturned the Rumsford Fair Housing Act in California and allowed discrimination in any type of housing sale or rental 25 Martin Luther King Jr and others saw this as a backlash against civil rights while actor and future 1967 governor of California Ronald Reagan gained popularity by supporting Proposition 14 26 The U S Supreme Court s Reitman v Mulkey decision overturned Proposition 14 in 1967 in favor of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment Conservative historians Thomas E Woods Jr and Kevin R C Gutzman argue that when politicians come to power they exercise all the power they can get in the process trampling states rights 27 Gutzman argues that the Kentucky and Virginia resolutions of 1798 by Jefferson and Madison were not only responses to immediate threats but were legitimate responses based on the long standing principles of states rights and strict adherence to the Constitution 28 Another concern is the fact that on more than one occasion the federal government has threatened to withhold highway funds from states which did not pass certain articles of legislation Any state which lost highway funding for any extended period would face financial impoverishment infrastructure collapse or both Although the first such action the enactment of a national speed limit was directly related to highways and done in the face of a fuel shortage most subsequent actions have had little or nothing to do with highways and have not been done in the face of any compelling national crisis An example of this would be the federally mandated drinking age of 21 upheld in South Dakota v Dole Critics of such actions feel that the federal government is upsetting the traditional balance between itself and state governments More recently the issue of states rights has come to a head when the Base Realignment and Closure BRAC Commission recommended that Congress and the Department of Defense implement sweeping changes to the National Guard by consolidating some Guard installations and closing others These recommendations in 2005 drew strong criticism from many states and several states sued the federal government on the basis that Congress and the Pentagon would be violating states rights should they force the realignment and closure of Guard bases without the prior approval of the governors from the affected states After Pennsylvania won a federal lawsuit to block the deactivation of the 111th Fighter Wing of the Pennsylvania Air National Guard defense and Congressional leaders chose to try to settle the remaining BRAC lawsuits out of court reaching compromises with the plaintiff states 29 Current states rights issues include the death penalty assisted suicide same sex marriage gun control and cannabis the last of which is in direct violation of federal law In Gonzales v Raich the Supreme Court ruled in favor of the federal government permitting the Drug Enforcement Administration DEA to arrest medical marijuana patients and caregivers In Gonzales v Oregon the Supreme Court ruled the practice of physician assisted suicide in Oregon is legal In Obergefell v Hodges the Supreme Court ruled that states could not withhold recognition to same sex marriages In District of Columbia v Heller 2008 the United States Supreme Court ruled that gun ownership is an individual right under the Second Amendment of the United States Constitution and the District of Columbia could not completely ban gun ownership by law abiding private citizens Two years later the court ruled that the Heller decision applied to states and territories via the Second and 14th Amendments in McDonald v Chicago stating that states territories and political divisions thereof could not impose total bans on gun ownership by law abiding citizens These concerns have led to a movement sometimes called the State Sovereignty movement or 10th Amendment Sovereignty Movement 30 10th Amendment EditThe Tenth Amendment of the United States Constitution has been used as a prominent tool of invoking nullification a common tactic of those that believe in the primacy of States rights The Tenth Amendment reads as follows The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution nor prohibited by it to the States are reserved to the States respectively or to the people 31 Notably the Tenth Amendment has been successfully utilized to nullify restrictive federal laws pertaining to gun rights 32 immigration 33 cannabis 34 and more Additionally organizations such as the Tenth Amendment Center seek to utilize the Tenth Amendment to achieve Liberty through decentralization 35 The Tenth Amendment center chiefly focuses on encouraging state representatives to submit bills that nullify federal laws by providing model legislation on their website that provides a rubric for state legislators to follow 36 In 2009 2010 thirty eight states introduced resolutions to reaffirm the principles of sovereignty under the Constitution and the 10th Amendment 14 states have passed the resolutions These non binding resolutions often called state sovereignty resolutions do not carry the force of law Instead they are intended to be a statement to demand that the federal government halt its practices of assuming powers and imposing mandates upon the states for purposes not enumerated by the Constitution 4 States rights and the Rehnquist Court EditThe Supreme Court s University of Alabama v Garrett 2001 37 and Kimel v Florida Board of Regents 2000 38 decisions allowed states to use a rational basis review for discrimination against the aged and disabled arguing that these types of discrimination were rationally related to a legitimate state interest and that no razorlike precision was needed The Supreme Court s United States v Morrison 2000 39 decision limited the ability of rape victims to sue their attackers in federal court Chief Justice William H Rehnquist explained that States historically have been sovereign in the area of law enforcement which in the Court s opinion required narrow interpretations of the Commerce Clause and Fourteenth Amendment Kimel Garrett and Morrison indicated that the Court s previous decisions in favor of enumerated powers and limits on Congressional power over the states such as United States v Lopez 1995 Seminole Tribe v Florida 1996 and City of Boerne v Flores 1997 were more than one time flukes In the past Congress relied on the Commerce Clause and the Equal Protection Clause for passing civil rights bills including the Civil Rights Act of 1964 24 Lopez limited the Commerce Clause to things that directly affect interstate commerce which excludes issues like gun control laws hate crimes and other crimes that affect commerce but are not directly related to commerce Seminole reinforced the sovereign immunity of states doctrine which makes it difficult to sue states for many things especially civil rights violations The Flores congruence and proportionality requirement prevents Congress from going too far in requiring states to comply with the Equal Protection Clause which replaced the ratchet theory advanced in Katzenbach v Morgan 1966 The ratchet theory held that Congress could ratchet up civil rights beyond what the Court had recognized but that Congress could not ratchet down judicially recognized rights An important precedent for Morrison was United States v Harris 1883 which ruled that the Equal Protection Clause did not apply to a prison lynching because the state action doctrine applies Equal Protection only to state action not private criminal acts Since the ratchet principle was replaced with the congruence and proportionality principle by Flores it was easier to revive older precedents for preventing Congress from going beyond what Court interpretations would allow Critics such as Associate Justice John Paul Stevens accused the Court of judicial activism i e interpreting law to reach a desired conclusion citation needed The tide against federal power in the Rehnquist court was stopped in the case of Gonzales v Raich 545 U S 1 2005 in which the court upheld the federal power to prohibit medicinal use of cannabis even if states have permitted it Rehnquist himself was a dissenter in the Raich case citation needed States rights as code word EditSince the 1940s the term states rights has often been considered a loaded term or dog whistle because of its use in opposition to federally mandated racial desegregation 40 and more recently same sex marriage and reproductive rights 41 42 During the heyday of the civil rights movement defenders of racial segregation 43 used the term states rights as a code word in what is now referred to as dog whistle politics political messaging that appears to mean one thing to the general population but has an additional different or more specific resonance for a targeted subgroup 44 45 46 In 1948 it was the official name of the Dixiecrat party led by white supremacist presidential candidate Strom Thurmond 47 48 Democratic Governor George Wallace of Alabama who famously declared in his inaugural address in 1963 Segregation now Segregation tomorrow Segregation forever later remarked that he should have said States rights now States rights tomorrow States rights forever 49 Wallace however claimed that segregation was but one issue symbolic of a larger struggle for states rights In that view which some historians dispute his replacement of segregation with states rights would be more of a clarification than a euphemism 49 In 2010 some claimed that Texas Governor Rick Perry s use of the expression states rights was reminiscent of an earlier era when it was a rallying cry against civil rights 50 During an interview with The Dallas Morning News Perry made it clear that he supports the end of segregation including passage of the Civil Rights Act The Texas president of the NAACP Gary Bledsoe stated that he understood that Perry was not speaking of states rights in a racial context but others still claimed to feel offended by the term because of its past misuse 50 See also Edit American Civil War portalBalkanization Fragmentation of multi ethnic states Bibliography of the American Civil War Compact theory United States foundational philosophy Federalism in the United States Division of powers between national state tribal and local governments New Federalism Transfer of certain powers from the United States federal government back to the states Local government Lowest tier of administration within a sovereign state Neo feudalism Theoretic rebirth of antique governance Origins of the American Civil War Rule according to higher law Belief that universal principles of morality override unjust laws States Rights Party disambiguation Subsidiarity Principle of social organization Subsidiarity European Union Principle of governance of the European Union The rights and responsibilities of EU member states Notes Edit Gardbaum Stephen Congress s Power to Pre Empt the States Pepperdine Law Review Vol 33 p 39 2005 Bardes Barbara et al American Government and Politics Today The Essentials Cengage Learning 2008 a b The United States Constitution The U S Constitution Online USConstitution net a b Orbach Callahan amp Lindemmen Arming States Rights Federalism Private Lawmakers and the Battering Ram Strategy Arizona Law Review 2010 Gutzman Kevin R C 2012 James Madison and the Making of America pp 274 76 Gutzman Kevin R C 2004 Edmund Randolph and Virginia Constitutionalism Review of Politics 66 3 469 97 doi 10 1017 S0034670500038870 JSTOR 4149191 S2CID 145724474 Gutzman Kevin R 1995 A troublesome legacy James Madison and The principles of 98 Journal of the Early Republic 15 4 569 89 doi 10 2307 3124014 JSTOR 3124014 Risjord Norman K 1965 The Old Republicans Southern Conservatism in the Age of Jefferson Tate Adam 2011 A Historiography of States Rights John Taylor of Caroline s New Views of the Constitution Southern Studies 18 1 10 28 James M Banner To the Hartford Convention the Federalists and the origins of party politics in Massachusetts 1789 1815 1970 Mackowski Chris January 22 2019 Primary Sources Slavery as the Cause of the Civil War Emerging Civil War archived from the original on January 20 2021 retrieved September 15 2021 Aaron Sheehan Dean A Book for Every Perspective Current Civil War and Reconstruction Textbooks Civil War History 2005 51 3 pp 317 24 McDonald Forrest 2000 States Rights and the Union University Press of Kansas John Mack Faragher Mari Jo Buhle Daniel Czitrom Out of Many A History of the American people 2005 p 376 Jefferson Davis Resolutions on the Relations of States Senate Chamber U S Capitol February 2 1860 from The Papers of Jefferson Davis Volume 6 pp 273 76 Transcribed from the Congressional Globe 36th Congress 1st Session pp 658 59 Confederate States of America A Declaration of the Causes which Impel the State of Texas to Secede from the Federal Union Yale Law School March 1845 Retrieved 1 July 2015 James McPherson This Mighty Scourge pp 3 9 Speaking of alternative explanations for secession McPherson writes p 7 While one or more of these interpretations remain popular among the Sons of Confederate Veterans and other Southern heritage groups few professional historians now subscribe to them Of all these interpretations the state s rights argument is perhaps the weakest It fails to ask the question state s rights for what purpose State s rights or sovereignty was always more a means than an end an instrument to achieve a certain goal more than a principle a b William H Freehling The Road to Disunion Secessionists Triumphant 1854 1861 Adams Henry 1882 John Randolph 1st ed Boston MA USA Houghton Mifflin and Co p 270 OCLC 3942444 Retrieved 2009 07 26 John Randolph Sinha Manisha 2000 The Counter Revolution of Slavery Politics and Ideology in Antebellum South Carolina Chapel Hill North Carolina USA University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 2571 6 OCLC 44075847 Retrieved 2009 03 14 Richards Leonard L 2000 The Slave Power The Free North and Southern Domination Baton Rouge Louisiana USA LSU Press ISBN 978 0 8071 2600 4 OCLC 43641070 Murray pp 155 59 Bybee Jay S 1997 Ulysses at the Mast Democracy Federalism and the Sirens Song of the Seventeenth Amendment Northwestern University Law Review Chicago IL 91 505 a b Civil Rights Act of 1964 CRA Title VII Equal Employment Opportunities 42 US Code Chapter 21 findUSlaw finduslaw com Skelton George May 7 2014 Thank you Donald Sterling for reminding us how far we ve come Los Angeles Times Pillar of Fire Taylor Branch p 242 Thomas E Woods Jr and Kevin R C Gutzman Who Killed the Constitution The Federal Government Vs American Liberty from World War I to Barack Obama Random House Digital 2009 p 201 K R Constantine Gutzman The Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions Reconsidered An Appeal to the Real Laws of Our Country Journal of Southern History Aug 2000 Vol 66 Issue 3 pp 473 96 Judge Rules Favorably in Pennsylvania BRAC Suit Associated Press 26 August permanent dead link Johnston Kirk States Rights Is Rallying Cry for Lawmakers The New York Times March 16 2010 Tenth Amendment Reserved Powers Contents PDF GPO gov United States Government Printing Office State Legislators Want to Nullify Federal Gun Control Reason July 2021 Are Sanctuary Cities the New Confederates National Review October 15 2015 Can States or Citizens Nullify Federal Cannabis Prohibition Cannabis Now June 20 2018 About the Tenth Amendment Tenth Amendment Center Retrieved February 11 2022 Model Legislation Tenth Amendment Center Retrieved February 11 2022 Board of Trustees of the University of Alabama et al v Garrett et al U S Supreme Court decided February 21 2001 Kimel v Florida Board of Regents U S Supreme court decided January 11 2000 United States v Morrison LII Legal Information Institute Herbert Bob October 6 2005 Impossible Ridiculous Repugnant The New York Times Craver Jack March 31 2013 New GOP line on gay marriage It s about states rights The Capital Times Retrieved November 9 2021 Abrams Abigail January 1 2020 Here s How Conservatives Are Using Civil Rights Law to Restrict Abortion Time Retrieved November 9 2021 White D Jonathan 2009 States Rights Encyclopedia of Alabama Retrieved 2010 09 09 After the Civil War and Reconstruction Alabama along with other southern states used states rights arguments to restore a system of white supremacy and racial segregation The term still appears on occasion in political speech in some cases as code language indicating support of discriminatory practices or outright racism as a result its use is often met with skepticism or suspicion by the public at large Haney Lopez Ian 2014 Dog Whistle Politics How Coded Racial Appeals Have Reinvented Racism and Wrecked the Middle Class New York Oxford University Press p 4 ISBN 978 0 19 996427 7 Full Show Ian Haney Lopez on the Dog Whistle Politics of Race Part I Moyers amp Company February 28 2014 Yao Kevin November 9 2015 A Coded Political Mantra Berkeley Political Review UC Berkeley s Only Nonpartisan Political Magazine Retrieved February 5 2016 Lichtman Allan J 2008 White Protestant Nation The Rise of the American Conservative Movement New York Atlantic Monthly Press p 165 ISBN 978 0 87113 984 9 Bass Jack Thompson Marilyn W 2006 Strom The Complicated Personal and Political Life of Strom Thurmond New York PublicAffairs p 102 ISBN 1 58648 392 7 a b Carter Dan T From George Wallace to Newt Gingrich Race in the Conservative Counterrevolution 1963 1994 p 1 a b Slater Wayne November 19 2010 Analysis Perry s states rights battle cry evokes history that could damage his message The Dallas Morning News Retrieved November 21 2010 References EditAlthouse Anne October 2001 Why Talking About States Rights Cannot Avoid the Need for Normative Federalism Analysis A Response to Professors Baker and Young Duke Law Journal 51 1 363 376 doi 10 2307 1373236 JSTOR 1373236 Retrieved 2 December 2011 Baker Lynn A Young Ernest A October 2001 Federalism and the Double Standard of Judicial Review Duke Law Journal 51 1 75 doi 10 2307 1373231 JSTOR 1373231 Retrieved 2 December 2011 which argues at 143 49 To many the notion of states rights stands for an anachronistic and immoral preference for the race based denial of essential individual rights Farber Daniel A States Rights and the Union Imperium in Imperio 1776 1876 Constitutional Commentary Vol 18 2001 Kirk Russell K Randolph of Roanoke A Study in Conservative Thought 1951 Gutzman Kevin R C James Madison and the Making of America 2012 Gutzman Kevin R C A troublesome legacy James Madison and The principles of 98 Journal of the Early Republic Winter 1995 Vol 15 Issue 4 pp 569 89 Gutzman Kevin R C The Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions Reconsidered An Appeal to the Real Laws of Our Country Journal of Southern History Aug 2000 Vol 66 Issue 3 pp 473 96 McDonald Forrest States Rights and the Union Imperium in Imperio 1776 1876 2002 Murray Robert Bruce Legal Cases of the Civil War 2003 ISBN 0 8117 0059 3 Risjord Norman K The Old Republicans Southern Conservatism in the Age of Jefferson 1965 Sinha Manisha Revolution or Counterrevolution The Political Ideology of Secession in Antebellum South Carolina Civil War History Vol 46 2000 in JSTOR Sinha Manisha 2000 The Counterrevolution of Slavery Politics and Ideology in Antebellum South Carolina University of North Carolina Press p 362 ISBN 0 8078 2571 9 Orbach Barak Y et al Arming States Rights Federalism Private Lawmakers and the Battering Ram Strategy Arizona Law Review vol 52 2010Further reading EditSotirios A Barber The Fallacies of States Rights Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 2013 Jefferson Davis The Doctrine of State Rights 1890 The North American Review Vol 150 No 399 pp 205 219 Frederick D Drake ed States Rights and American Federalism A Documentary History 1999 James J Kilpatrick The Sovereign States Notes of a Citizen of Virginia Chicago Henry Regnery Company 1957 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to States rights Tenth Amendment Center Federalism and States Rights in the U S States Rights in Encyclopedia Virginia A copy of transcript of Florida s 1957 Interposition Resolution made available for public use by the State Archives of Florida Missouri Sovereignty Project Archived 2019 08 12 at the Wayback Machine Institutionalizing the 10th Amendment into the populace and political fabrics of Missouri Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title States 27 rights amp oldid 1125727991, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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