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UNITED STATES FEDERALISM Francesca Rosa

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UNITED STATES FEDERALISM. Francesca Rosa. Scheme of analysis. Historical Introduction The (federal and territorial) form of government The state constitutional autonomy The separation of legislative and administrative power The guarantee of the constitution. Historical introduction. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: UNITED STATES FEDERALISM

UNITED STATES FEDERALISMFrancesca Rosa

Page 2: UNITED STATES FEDERALISM

Scheme of analysis

✤ Historical Introduction✤ The (federal and territorial) form of government✤ The state constitutional autonomy✤ The separation of legislative and administrative

power✤ The guarantee of the constitution

Page 3: UNITED STATES FEDERALISM

Historical introduction

✤ Colonization process (XV - XVI century) >✤ corporate colonies✤ colonies founded in a social compact

✤ Economic dependency and political autonomy > Colonies’ system of government***

✤ Strict fiscal policy > No taxation without representation > Revolution

Page 4: UNITED STATES FEDERALISM

The colonies system of government

✤ Governor and Council (executive p.) > Monarch

✤ Legislative Assemblies (legislative p.) > election [limited suffrage]

✤ Local Government > practical and theoretical reasons

Page 5: UNITED STATES FEDERALISM

Historical introduction

✤ 1774 First Continental Congress > Common Army (1775) + Declaration of independence (1776)

✤ 1777 Articles of Confederation > modification

✤ 1783 Treaty of Paris (peace with U.K.)✤ 1787 Federal Constitution

Page 6: UNITED STATES FEDERALISM

Articles of confederation (1777)✤ Confederal Congress > every state has the same

influence in the decision making process✤ Weakness >

✤ limited powers✤ strict dependency on the states

✤ Modification > Convention > Bicameral parliament (compromise > art. 1 sect. 1)

✤ Ratification process > art. VII (1788)

Page 7: UNITED STATES FEDERALISM

Historical introduction

✤ 1788 Federal constitution✤ 1799 Bill of rights (limiting the federation and not the

states)✤ Territorial expansion (south and west)✤ 1861-1865 Civil war > civil war amendments

✤ XIII abolishing slavery✤ XIV due process of law + equal protection clauses✤ XV banning racial discrimination regarding the right

to vote

Page 8: UNITED STATES FEDERALISM

American constitutionalism

✤ Revolution = Opposition to tho fatherland > British v. American constitutionalism > Constitution:

✤ Written v. not written

✤ Republic v. Monarchy

✤ Higher law [at the top of the hierarchy of the sources of law > special procedure for the amendment > rigid]

✤ Strict separation of powers in horizontal (presidential v. parliamentary government) and vertical (federal v. centralized government) dimensions

Page 9: UNITED STATES FEDERALISM

Presidential vs. Parliamentarygovernment

✤ Executive and legislative powers have two different (and democratic) sources of legitimacy > 2 elections

✤ No instruments are provided for resolving conflicts between legislative and executive powers

✤ The head of state has the executive power

Page 10: UNITED STATES FEDERALISM

Presidential vs. Parliamentarygovernment

✤ Executive and legislative powers have the same (democratic) source of legitimacy > 1 elections

✤ Two instruments are provided for resolving conflicts between legislative and executive powers: confidence rule + dissolution power

✤ The head of state has not the executive power

Page 11: UNITED STATES FEDERALISM

Presidential vs. Parliamentary

government (n. 2)strict separation of

powersflexible separation of

powerspeople > legislativepeople > executive

people > legislative > executive

no confidence rule confidence rule

no dissolution power dissolution power

head of state has the executive power

head of state has a neutral role

Page 12: UNITED STATES FEDERALISM

Constitutional monarchy

✤ The Monarch exercises the three state functions

✤ Executive > Government

✤ Legislative > Royal assent

✤ Judiciary > Appointment of judges

✤ The presidential government

✤ Double source of legitimacy for executive and legislative powers > elective / hereditary and elective

✤ Strict interpretation of the division of powers principle > /parliamentary government

Page 13: UNITED STATES FEDERALISM

House of representatives (art. 1 sec. 2)

✤ 435 deputies (1911 statute)

✤ Terms of 2 years

✤ Right to vote > electors of the most numerous chamber of the state parliament

✤ Right to be elected > 25 years + citizen for 7 year + inhabitant of the state he/she represents

✤ First past the post system (federal law) > state legislature defines the boundaries of electoral districts (gerrymandering)

✤ Election of the Speaker (member of the parliamentary majority)

Page 14: UNITED STATES FEDERALISM

Senate (art. 1 sect. 3)✤ 100 senators > 2 senators for every state, every senator has 1

vote

✤ Popular election (since 1913) > right to be elected: 30 years + citizen for 9 year + inhabitant of the state he/she represents

✤ Terms of 6 year

✤ President > Vice-President of the United States > pro tempore President

✤ 2 powers:

✤ approval of treaties signed by the President

✤ advice and consent (presidential apppintments)

Page 15: UNITED STATES FEDERALISM

Bicameralism

✤ Perfect in relation to >✤ The legislative function✤ The impeachment procedure

✤ Imperfect in relation to >✤ The approval of presidential appointments

(Senate)✤ The approval of international treaties (Senate)

Page 16: UNITED STATES FEDERALISM

The executive power (art. 2)

✤ Terms of 4 years✤ Right to be elected: 35 years + natural born

citizen + living in the U.S. for at least 14 years✤ Indirect election > 2 phases

✤ 1) primary elections or caucuses✤ 2) the election of the Electors

Page 17: UNITED STATES FEDERALISM

The indirect presidential election works as a direct election✤ Electors are elected by the people (1832) >

popular legitimacy✤ Primary elections and caucuses > popular

legitimacy of presidential candidates✤ Electors are chosen on the basis of the

presidential candidate to whom they give their support

✤ The “winner takes all” system of election for the Electors

Page 18: UNITED STATES FEDERALISM

The President ✤ Commander in chief of the army and navy

✤ Execution and enforcement of federal law

✤ Treaty making power > Senate

✤ Appointment federal civil servants > Senate

✤ Organization

✤ Executive Office of the President

✤ Cabinet (Secretary)

✤ Agencies

Page 19: UNITED STATES FEDERALISM

Congress > President

✤ The legislative initiative

✤ The approval of the federal budget

✤ The control over the presidential activity (standing committees)

✤ The approval of presidential appointments (Senate)

✤ The approval of international treaties (Senate)

✤ The impeachment procedure

Page 20: UNITED STATES FEDERALISM

President > Congress

✤ Presents the budget proposal✤ The Congress information of the State of the Union

✤ Sign legislation / Veto bills (Art. 1 Sect. 7 cl. 2)

✤ Delegated legislation (secondary legislation)

Page 21: UNITED STATES FEDERALISM

Equilibrium of Presidential Government1) Short term > The Congress tends to prevail in the last period

of the presidential term (elections)2) Medium term- Before the presidential “direct election”the Congress played a

central role in the form of government (XIX century)- Presidential pre-eminence (until the Nixon “imperial presidency”)- Resurgence of Congress (Watergate-1972)- New imperial presidency (International context)3) Long term > Pre-eminence of the President (welfare state +

need of a unitay direction of the administrative action)

Page 22: UNITED STATES FEDERALISM

State constitutional autonomy1) Federal constitution implies the existence of state

constitutions > the federal constitution has to be interpreted together with the state constitutions

2) Written, approuved by a convention and then ratified by the people

3) Apex of the state sources of law system

4) Rigid > special procedure (frequent use of the constitution amendment)

5) Long > dual federalism definition

6) Subject to the supreme law of the land (supremacy clause)

Page 23: UNITED STATES FEDERALISM

Contents of state constitutions (separation of powers)1) Presidential Government [Governor + Bicameral

Parliament]

2) Institutions of direct democracy– Popular initiative (direct / indirect)– Referendum– Recall

3) Guarantee clause (Art. 4 Sect. 4) > Republican form of governmenta) Popular ruleb) No Monarchyc) Rule of law

Page 24: UNITED STATES FEDERALISM

Electoral systems

✤ Majoritarian > effective governance

✤ Plurality > majority of votes

✤ Majority > absolute majority of votes (e.g. double ballots)

✤ Proportional > effective representation of different political opinions

✤ Barrier

✤ Premium of seats