THE CONSTITUTION AND
LIMITED GOVERNMENT
by Edward
J. Erler
© 2011, HILLSDALE COLLEGE.
Two cases that
are currently making their way to the Supreme Court may well in the short term
decide the constitutional issue of the reach and extent of the federal
government. At stake, in other words, is the future of limited government. And
together, these two cases present an exceedingly odd situation.
In the case
of the Arizona illegal alien law, the federal government is suing a state for
constitutional violations; and in the case of the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act—that is, Obamacare—more than half the states
are suing the federal government, contesting the ActÕs constitutionality. It is
indeed a litigious season.
But the
Supreme CourtÕs decisions in these two cases may not be the last word, because
both of them present eminently political issues that will have to be decided
ultimately by the American people.
The
administrative state, of course, always seeks to extend its reach and magnify
its power. This is an intrinsic feature of a system where administration and
regulation replace politics as the ordinary means of making policy. If there
are to be limits to the reach of the burgeoning administrative state, they will
be political limits imposed by the people in the ordinary course of partisan
politics. The advent of the administrative state poses the greatest challenge
to limited government, because it elevates the welfare of the
community—whether real or imagined—over the rights and liberties of
individuals. The task today is to confine the federal government to its
delegated powers. The minions of the administrative state seek to destroy
constitutional boundaries in their desire to replace politics with
administration. This is tantamount to denying that legitimate government
derives from the consent of the governed, or that limited government rests on
the sovereignty of the people.
One of the
proofs offered in the Declaration of Independence that King George was
attempting to establish an Òabsolute TyrannyÓ over the American colonies was
the fact that ÒHe has erected a multitude of New Offices, and sent hither
swarms of Officers to harrass our people, and eat out their substance.Ó
Obamacare certainly fits the description of the activities denounced in the
Declaration. The number of regulations and the horde of administrators
necessary to execute the scheme are staggering.
We have only to think here of the Independent
Payment Advisory Board. It is a commission of 15 members appointed by the
President, charged with the task of reducing Medicare spending. This commission
has rule-making power which carries the force of law. The Senate, it is true,
will have the power to override its decisions—but only with a
three-fifths majority. There are no procedures that allow citizens or doctors
to appeal the BoardÕs decisions. The administrative state—here in the
guise of providing health care for all—will surely reduce the people
under a kind of tyranny that will insinuate itself into all aspects of American
life, destroying liberty by stages until liberty itself becomes only a distant
memory.
The advent and extraordinary success of the Tea
Party movement, with its emphasis on restoring limited government, has made
this a propitious time to rethink what the Framers meant by limited government
and how they understood the relationship between limited government and the
protection of rights and liberties. It is rare to see a people acting
spontaneously in a political cause. The Tea Party movement must be regarded as
a testament to the independent spirit—the freedom-loving spirit—of
the American people.
How did the Framers understand limited
government? In the first place, limited government was not for the Framers
identical with small government, as the Tea Party sometimes tends to believe.
The identification of limited government with small government was the position
of the Anti-Federalists who opposed the ratification of the Constitution.
Limited government, for the Anti-Federalists, meant government that was too
weak to threaten the rights and liberties of the people. Small government was,
therefore, both the necessary and sufficient condition of political freedom.
Consequently, the Anti-Federalists preferred a purely confederate form of
government in which the states assumed priority.
The Federalists, on the other hand, regarded
confederate government as an attempt to do the impossible: to create a
sovereignty within a sovereignty. Conflicting claims to sovereignty would be
debilitating and would render the government of the whole ineffective—as
was surely the case under our first constitution, the Articles of
Confederation.
The Framers of the Constitution settled upon a
novel design for government, one that Madison said was Òpartly national, partly
federal.Ó For some purposes, Madison explained, we will be one people; for
others, we will be multiple peoples. With respect to the national
features—those things that concern the nation as a whole—the
federal government will have sovereignty—complete and plenary power to
accomplish the objects entrusted to its care in the Constitution. Those objects
are principally found in Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution. National
defense, for example, is exclusively delegated to the federal government. And
since the exigencies that face nations in foreign affairs are unpredictable and
innumerable, the federal government must have sovereignty to fulfill this
delegated trust.
And if that trust is to be fulfilled, the federal
government must also be accorded the necessary means to achieve that end. If
this entails large government—and today it surely does—then large government
must be compatible with limited government. Similar reasoning applies to all
the objects delegated to the care of the federal government.
The Declaration of Independence provided the
authoritative statement of AmericaÕs political principles. For the first time,
government was said to derive its legitimacy—its just powers—from
Òthe consent of the governed.Ó This was a turning point in world-historical
consciousness: no longer would it be possible to argue that sovereignty
belonged to governments or kings—even if kings claimed appointment by
divine right.
In order to form just government, the people
delegate a portion of their sovereignty to government to be exercised for their
benefit. The fact that only a portion of sovereignty is ceded by the people is
the origin of the idea of limited government. The people delegate only some of
their sovereignty to government, and what is not granted is retained by the
people—the people, for example, always reserve (and can never cede) the
ultimate expression of sovereignty, the right of revolution. The Declaration
describes this right as Òthe Right of the People to alter or to abolishÓ
government when it becomes destructive of its proper ends—namely, the
protection of the safety and happiness of the people. This right of revolution,
as understood by the Founders, was the right that secures every other right,
because it serves as a constant reminder of the sovereignty of the people.
The Anti-Federalists never understood these
revolutionary implications; they seemed to believe still that governments, not
the people, were the ultimate repositories of sovereignty, and that the only
way to secure the rights and liberties of the people was to weaken the power of
government—as if freedom existed only in the exceptions to government
power. But as Madison wrote, ÒEnergy in government is essential to that
security against external and internal danger and to that prompt and salutary
execution of the laws which enter into the very definition of good government.Ó
What limits the federal government is not a limit
on its power to act, but the limited range of objects entrusted to its
care—the enumerated powers of government. The powers not delegated to the
federal government nor forbidden to the states in the Constitution (e.g., ex
post facto laws, bills of attainder, and laws impairing the obligation of
contracts) are reserved to the states. These are the police powers, which are
generally described as the power to regulate the health, safety, welfare and
morals of the citizens of the states.
In cases of conflict, the supremacy clause of the
Constitution gives preference to the federal Constitution and laws made in
pursuance of the Constitution. The supremacy clause was described by Madison as
an essential improvement over the Articles of Confederation. Where there is no
final authority to arbitrate disputes between the federal government and the
states in this Òcompound Republic,Ó government will be paralyzed. Madison
confessed, however, that the exact boundary between the powers of the federal
government and the state governments will be impossible to determine in
advance. The precise lines of demarcation will have to be worked out in
practice. The Supreme Court—and through the supremacy clause, the state
courts—will have to determine conflicts on a case by case basis.
An illustration of the difficulties of drawing
clear lines between federal and state authority in our Òcompound RepublicÓ is
the Arizona illegal immigration bill, passed in April 2010. The law allowed
police officers to verify the immigration status of any person after a valid
stop or arrest if there Òis a reasonable suspicion that the person is
unlawfully present in the United States.Ó Everyone remembers the hysteria that
was unleashed when the bill passed. The President called the law irresponsible,
saying that it threatened Òbasic notions of fairness.Ó Others said the
provision of the bill relying on Òreasonable suspicionÓ would mandate racial
profiling; and some of the more hysterical commentators even insisted that the
law was tantamount to genocide. The Assistant Secretary of State felt compelled
to apologize to members of a Chinese delegation visiting the United States for
this egregious assault upon human rights. One can only imagine the bemused
looks on the faces of the Chinese delegation.
The President ordered the Justice Department to
intervene. And to the surprise of many, the Justice DepartmentÕs lawsuit did
not seek to enjoin the law based on racial profiling or equal protection or due
process, arguing instead that the law conflicted with the federal governmentÕs
exclusive power to regulate immigration. Perhaps someone had explained to the
Attorney General that Òreasonable suspicionÓ has been a part of our due process
jurisprudence for many years. It means that a police officer can question on
suspicion that is less than probable cause; reasonable suspicion, of course,
must be something more than a hunch or a guess or an intuition—it must be
based on articulable facts. In addition, the Supreme Court in 1975 ruled that
ethnicity could be one of the factors determining reasonable suspicion. The
Arizona law, in contrast, disallowed any use of ethnicity in determining
whether a person could be asked about his immigration status.
In United States v. Arizona, the Federal District
Court judge enjoined the operation of the law because it intruded upon the
federal governmentÕs exclusive power to regulate immigration and control
foreign policy. On appeal from the District Court, one piece of evidence
adduced by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals that the Arizona law was an
unconstitutional impingement upon the federal governmentÕs exclusive power to
conduct foreign policy was the fact that the President of Mexico and the heads
of several other Latin American countries had expressed severe criticisms of
the bill both in the press and in amici briefs! Rarely do we encounter such
humor in court opinions, however unintended the humor might be.
The Constitution, of course, does not
specifically grant control over immigration to the federal government. Instead
Congress has power to Òestablish a uniform Rule of Naturalization.Ó Control
over naturalization, however, seems to imply control over immigration—so
uniform rules governing immigration would seem, by necessary implication, to
fall within the scope of federal power. The real question here—although
it was not addressed by the District Court or the Court of Appeals—was
what power, if any, devolves upon state governments when the federal government
fails to carry out its obligations. The District Court had candidly noted that
the Arizona law was passed Òagainst a backdrop of rampant illegal immigration,
escalating drug and human trafficking crimes, and serious public safety
concerns.Ó In the face of federal inaction or manifest indifference, does
Arizona have the reserved power—indeed the obligation—to secure the
safety of its citizens? The PresidentÕs recent remarks that the border has been
secured and that it is now time to think of providing a path to citizenship for
illegal aliens is, in reality, a statement of declared indifference to the
people of the State of Arizona and to all the border states similarly situated.
Surely those states have the constitutional right, sustained by their police
powers, to protect themselves through laws that are as unobtrusive as the
Arizona law. But in the District CourtÕs judgment, the Arizona law invoked Òan
inference of preemptionÓ because it placed an Òimpermissible burdenÓ on federal
Òresources and prioritiesÓ and inevitably Òwill result in the harassment of
aliens.Ó The burden on federal resources stems from the fact that there will be
an increased number of requests to verify immigration status. This increased
burden will in turn force the immigration services to reallocate resources away
from other priorities. Such is the logic of the District Court.
These reasons seem trivial when compared to the
real and pressing dangers that Arizona faces as a result of federal inaction
and indifference. Surely this is not what the Framers had in mind when they
crafted the supremacy clause, while at the same time reserving to the states
the essential responsibility of protecting the safety and welfare of their
citizens. Madison wrote in The Federalist that Òthe powers reserved to the
several States will extend to all the objects which, in the ordinary course of
affairs, concern the lives, liberties and properties of the people, and the
internal order, improvement, and prosperity of the State.Ó This extensive power
reserved to the states should weigh heavily on preemption decisions. In this
light, the Arizona law seems to have been a clear exercise of the stateÕs
police powers, and any burden imposed on the federal government to have been
incidental and insignificant.
Obamacare is another issue that tests our
understanding of the Constitution and the role of limited government. In
federal courts, the Obama administration has defended the bill as a legitimate
exercise of CongressÕ power to regulate commerce. At issue here is the
individual mandate that forces individuals to purchase health care insurance
and carries a penalty for failure to do so. Congress has the power to regulate
commerce; but does it, as here, have the power to create commerce—i.e.,
to force individuals to engage in interstate commerce by purchasing health care
insurance from private providers? Another way to look at the issue would be to
ask whether, under the commerce clause, Congress has the power to regulate
inactivity, i.e., the refusal to buy insurance. This would indeed be a novel
extension of commerce clause jurisprudence and utterly impossible to square
with any notion of commerce that was held by the framers of the Constitution.
In addition to the commerce clause argument, the
Obama administration maintains that the individual mandate is authorized by
CongressÕ power to tax and spend for the general welfare. CongressÕ power here
is extensive. Over the years, the Court has generally deferred to Congress in
determining what constitutes the general welfare. This is proper, since
Congress represents the nation and what promotes the general welfare is
essentially a political question. If Congress determines that a universal
health care system serves the general welfare, then the courts will not
interfere. The power to Òlay and collect Taxes,Ó however, has been subject to
judicial scrutiny. While Congress may tax for the purpose of raising revenue,
it may not use the power of taxation for the express purpose of regulation. A
tax that is merely a subterfuge for regulating activities will not be allowed,
although a tax that only incidentally regulates behavior will pass
constitutional muster as long as the principal purpose is raising revenues.
Madison argued that the general welfare clause
was actually a limitation on the federal government. Taxes could be imposed and
money spent only for the general welfare—meaning the welfare of the whole
of the American people. It is true that Alexander Hamilton had a more extensive
view of the general welfare clause, but throughout much of our history
MadisonÕs view prevailed. Today, however, the idea that the general welfare
clause was ever intended as a limit on the reach of government has been
destroyed by the progressive architects of the welfare state.
In any case, if the individual mandate is to be
defended under the general welfare clause, what the plain language of the bill
calls a penalty must be regarded as a tax for the express purpose of raising
revenue. If the penalty can be sold as a tax, the Obama administration argues,
then Obamacare is authorized by the general welfare clause. In the Florida
District Court case, the Justice Department made the wholly
tendentious—not to say absurd—argument that since the IRS was
charged with administering the individual mandate and collecting the penalties,
this was sufficient to convert a penalty into a tax. But as Florida District
Court Judge Roger Vinson remarked: ÒBesides the fact that President Obama
confidently assured the American people that there would be no new taxes to
support the medical insurance scheme, no amount of administrative indirection
should be allowed to convert a penalty into a tax for raising revenue. This is
not a revenue raising measure and therefore cannot be justified under the general
welfare clause.Ó
But here is a somber thought: If, instead of
using the individual mandate, Congress had relied on its general
revenue-raising powers, under current Supreme Court doctrine, it is almost
certain that Obamacare would be constitutional. It would be an example of
Congress spending money for the general welfare.
In
conclusion, the only certain method of defeating universal health care and
other cases of federal overreach—as it appears that the American public
desires to do—is political opposition. A political party dedicated to
genuinely limited government—not small government—is an urgent
political task. Whether the Tea Party is up to this task remains to be
seen—but it is probably our best hope. The Tea Party will have to learn,
however, that the task today is not to weaken the power of government—it
is to confine the government to the exercise of its delegated powers and to
restore to its full vigor the partly national, partly federal form of
government that was the legacy of the Founders.
Reprinted by permission from
Imprimis, a publication of Hillsdale College.
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