Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

To: Rockingham; JRandomFreeper
This provides a clear constitutional basis

LOL! Try again!

§ 1075....... The question comes to this, whether a power, exclusively for the regulation of commerce, is a power for the regulation of manufactures? The statement of such a question would seem to involve its own answer. Can a power, granted for one purpose, be transferred to another? If it can, where is the limitation in the constitution? Are not commerce and manufactures as distinct, as commerce and agriculture? If they are, how can a power to regulate one arise from a power to regulate the other? It is true, that commerce and manufactures are, or may be, intimately connected with each other. A regulation of one may injuriously or beneficially affect the other. But that is not the point in controversy. It is, whether congress has a right to regulate that, which is not committed to it, under a power, which is committed to it, simply because there is, or may be an intimate connexion between the powers. If this were admitted, the enumeration of the powers of congress would be wholly unnecessary and nugatory. Agriculture, colonies, capital, machinery, the wages of labour, the profits of stock, the rents of land, the punctual performance of contracts, and the diffusion of knowledge would all be within the scope of the power; for all of them bear an intimate relation to commerce. The result would be, that the powers of congress would embrace the widest extent of legislative functions, to the utter demolition of all constitutional boundaries between the state and national governments. When duties are laid, not for purposes of revenue, but of retaliation and restriction, to countervail foreign restrictions, they are strictly within the scope of the power, as a regulation of commerce. But when laid to encourage manufactures, they have nothing to do with it. The power to regulate manufactures is no more confided to congress, than the power to interfere with the systems of education, the poor laws, or the road laws of the states. It is notorious, that, in the convention, an attempt was made to introduce into the constitution a power to encourage manufactures; but it was withheld. Instead of granting the power to congress, permission was given to the states to impose duties, with the consent of that body, to encourage their own manufactures; and thus, in the true spirit of justice, imposing the burthen on those, who were to be benefited.
Joseph Story, Commentaries on the Constitution

50 posted on 12/17/2013 11:54:47 AM PST by MamaTexan (Due to the newly adopted policy at FR, every post I make may be my last.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 30 | View Replies ]


To: MamaTexan
A lot happened after that was written, with the practical and legal scope of the federal commerce power expanding as interstate commerce expanded.

Especially after the Civil War, large commercial interests such as railroads, river boats, telegraph companies, oil companies, and manufacturers of all sorts, went to Congress for protection against the burdens of state laws and regulations that were often commercially unreasonable and amounted to little more than political shake downs. Federal courts approved these exercises of the federal commerce clause power.

The later New Deal era commerce clause cases that have inspired so much controversy were founded on those precedents. Granted, the federal New Deal programs sought to be implemented marked a dramatic expansion of federal power, but they did not represent a discontinuity with prior commerce clause case law.

Instead of trying to refight old constitutional issues that were long ago settled, the larger issue -- how to restrain the expansion of federal power -- is better addressed through the kind of constitutional amendments that Mark Levin has proposed.

53 posted on 12/17/2013 3:33:58 PM PST by Rockingham
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 50 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson