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Chapter 2 Federal-State and Interstate Relations Federal-State Relations • Cooperative Federalism • Dual Federalism • 10th Amendment • Concurrent Powers • Enumerated Powers • Elastic Clause • McCarran-Ferguson Act of 1945 Federal-State Relations • 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution • 15th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution • 16th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution • Supreme Court rules “one man, one vote.” • Conditional federal grants in aid. • States retain administrative latitude. • McCulloch v. Maryland & implied powers. Federal-State Relations • • • • • • • • Courts gives federal government broad powers. The Power to regulate interstate commerce The “silence of Congress.” Preemptive Statutes Contingent Statutes Minimum Standards Preemption U.S. Constitution reserves rather than devolves. Partial preemption increases gubernatorial authority. It mandates minimal standards. Federal-State Relations • • • • • • • • Police power Restriction on state powers. Voting Rights Act of 1965 Aid for Private and Parochial Schools Federal guarantees to the states. Interstate flight to avoid prosecution. Office of Federal Affairs Constitutional Principles Constitutional Principles • • • • • • • • Principles governing interstate relations: (1) Equal Protection of the laws (2) Full Faith and Credit (3) Interstate Compacts & Administrative Agreements (4) Interstate Free Trade (5) Interstate Rendition (6) Interstate Controversies (7) Privileges and Immunities Interstate Problems • (1) Water disputes • (2) Cigarette taxes & interstate importation • (3) Corporate taxes • (4) Commuter Taxes • (5) Gay marriage • (6) Pollution Standards • (7) In the past: Drinking age Future Problems for New York • Boyd’s estimation of New York State’s problems as they existed before the ’08 Financial Collapse. • (1) Contain the cost of Medicaid • (2) Collecting taxes on retail sales with commerce moving more to Internet sales. • (3) As cost of warfare increases federal budget deficit, burden of government services shifted to state and local agencies. • (4) State shifting costs to local governments. • (5) How to resolve the CFE decision mandate. The Future After ’08 Collapse • (1) How much help will the federal government provide to the states which are impacted by the Financial Collapse & Recession. • (2) All of the problems listed by Boyd still exist, but are compounded by the impact of ’08 FC. • (3) New York is impacted more severely than almost any other state because of its reliance on taxes collected on commercial transactions of the financial marketplace of Wall Street.