Pete du Pont: Congress and courts seek to aid federalism
Monday, 6 September 1999
By Pete du Pont
Federal courts, including the Supreme Court, recently have begun to take more seriously
their responsibility to act as a check on the federal government via judicial review.
After President Franklin D. Roosevelt threatened to pack the Supreme Court over its
refusal to find his Depression-era New Deal policies constitutional, the court largely
abdicated its responsibility to constrain federal legislative reach within the Constitution's
limits.
The result: for more than 50 years, Congress has been allowed to delegate legislative
authority, including the power to levy taxes, to unelected bureaucrats in administrative
agencies, and, under a liberal interpretation of the Constitution's ``commerce clause,''
to pass laws that violate federalism.
Federalism, it should be noted, is the principle that the federal government is limited
to a carefully defined role in solving problems beyond the effective control of the
individual states, and that in purely intrastate regulatory matters, only the states
should establish and enforce regulations.
In a series of decisions that have surprised many legal experts, federal courts have
begun to reverse course.
In U.S. vs. Lopez (1995), the Supreme Court struck down a federal law that prohibited
possession of a gun within 1,000 feet of a school. The court found that the federal
government had overstepped its constitutional power to regulate interstate commerce
and meddled in matters best left to the states. Congress had failed to show a reasonable
nexus between mere possession of a firearm within 1,000 feet of school and commerce.
In a 1996 decision, the Supreme Court reaffirmed in Loving vs. U.S. that ``the lawmaking
function belongs to Congress . . . and may not be conveyed to another branch or entity.''
This ruling is likely to be used in challenges to federal agencies' attempts to impose
taxes in the form of fees based on vague statutory authority.
For instance, the Federal Communications Commission has proposed imposing a new 5
percent federal tax on long-distance phone bills - the so-called Gore tax - to pay
for universal service and Internet access in poorer schools.
In May, in American Trucking Association vs. EPA, a federal appeals court struck
down the Environmental Protection Agency's new air-quality standards - regulating
the amount of ozone and particulate matter in the air - as unconstitutional.
The standards were to be phased in over six years, beginning this year. But in a
2-to-1 decision, the court said the EPA's process of setting the standards amounted
to an unconstitutional delegation of powers by Congress. More specifically, the court
found that the EPA failed to articulate or offer an ``intelligible principle'' for
its authority to set the standard. EPA has challenged that ruling.
In addition, Congress evidently feels empowered to rein in regulatory discretion
and live within its own constitutionally delineated bounds.
For instance:
* Rep. J.D. Hayworth, R-Ariz., and Sen. Sam Brownback, R-Kan., reintroduced their
``Congressional Responsibility Act,'' which would require Congress to approve major
agency rules and regulations before they become binding.
* Rep. George Gekas, R-Pa., introduced the ``Taxpayer's Defense Act,'' which would
stop any tax levied by an administrative agency from going into effect unless Congress
formally approves - thus upholding the principle of ``no taxation without representation.''
* Sen. Fred Thompson, R-Tenn., and Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., have offered the ``Federalism
Accountability Act,'' which would require that Congress and regulatory agencies explicitly
state the extent to which a bill pre-empts state or local laws and specify the reasons
and constitutional authorization for doing so.
These reforms would increase accountability in three ways. First, regulatory agencies
would finally have to justify their rules before the sole body of government charged
by the Constitution with writing law.
Thus agencies won't be able to interpret congressional intent in ways that increase
their budgets and staff and expand their power while improperly pre-empting state
laws.
Second, it will not be as easy for Congress to pass the buck for bad regulations,
because it will have the obligation to review regulations before they become law.
If costly and ineffective regulations do become law, the voters can hold legislators
accountable.
Third, states and localities would be authorized to challenge federal rules that
improperly pre-empted current state or local laws - by not being explicit or by misidentifying
proper constitutional authority.
Individual liberty and unlimited government are incompatible. Recent court decisions
have set us back on the path of a government of specifically delegated limited powers
split between federal and state governments.
Now it's time for Congress to do its fair share to uphold the Constitution by reclaiming
its sole authority to legislate and by limiting the scope of the laws it passes.
This would be the best legacy we could leave to future generations.
Pete du Pont is former Republican governor of Delaware and the policy chairman
of The National Center for Policy Analysis. This piece was distributed by Knight
Ridder/Tribune Information Services.
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