James Madison's Decentralized Republic
The Constitution was intended to preserve state sovereignty, not create an all-powerful central government.

Happy birthday to James Madison, who is, pound-for-pound, the most distinguished Founding Father. A driving force behind the drafting and ratification of the Constitution, Madison shepherded the young, fractious United States from confederacy to republic. And to make explicit the new government's commitments to personal liberty, the Virginian authored the Bill of Rights.
Madison's ideal union was a far cry from the reality of modern American governance. He envisioned a self-sufficient federal—or "general"—government, vested with the powers necessary to conduct foreign policy, mediate interstate conflicts, and perform a grab bag of other tasks. The federal government's powers are few and defined, however, and the Framers intended that everyday governing be left to the statehouses.
In fact, in 1787, when the Constitutional Convention submitted its final product for state ratification, many argued that the proposed Constitution would create a central government capable of tyranny. In response, Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and John Jay penned a series of defenses of the new constitution—The Federalist Papers.
In Federalist No. 39, Madison, writing under the trio's collective pen name, Publius, countered Anti-Federalist charges that the proposed government would be overly centralized and could subsume the powers rightfully exercised by the states. He rejected this, writing that while the federal government would be supreme when exercising its enumerated powers, the state governments are to be "no more subject, within their respective spheres, to the general authority, than the general authority is subject to them, within its own sphere."
Indeed, Madison continued, the federal government's "jurisdiction extends to certain enumerated objects only, and leaves to the several States a residuary and inviolable sovereignty over all other objects." Clearly implied by the original Constitution's text, these sentiments were in 1791 codified as the 10th Amendment, which states that "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."
The benefit of a separation of powers between the federal government and state governments is the same as that of a separation of powers between branches of a single government: It constrains the power of feckless majorities over their dissenting brethren. John Adams once wrote, "The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man living with power to endanger the public liberty."
Since 1789, the federal government has assumed massive, all-encompassing powers. Congress, the chief culprit in this overreach, has further delegated vast legislative powers to the executive branch or stood idly by while the latter seized them; and the Supreme Court has largely rubber-stamped these efforts in such cases as NLRB v. Jones & Laughlin Steel (1937) and Wickard v. Filburn (1942)—which wildly expanded Congress' powers under the commerce clause.
Nevertheless, we can still see on Madison's 272nd birthday that his revolutionary contribution to political science and human liberty provides an aspirational guidepost for any large, free, and diverse nation.
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Except for abortion.
I read both the Federalist and Anti-Federalist collections and was persuaded by the Anti-Federalists. But then, I had the advantage of hindsight, having read them in the 1980s not the 1780s.
yes I remember being Anti-F as a ute in the 80s also
I remember getting all of my political views in the 80s from Ted Koppel and Morton Downey Jr.
Conservative Opportunity Society on cspan
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Getting close to a large contingent of conservatives who believe the same, sites like The Federalist.
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>>from the reality of modern American governance
Madison didn't have to deal with septua/octogenerians who wouldn't give up the ghost or the fucking reins
You mean like Benjamin Franklin?
exactly. completely negates my point.
Does the numerical age matter? People ended childhood earlier, had kids earlier, went to work(!) earlier, and died earlier. Most old farts were in their 50s. How many of the founders were still considered "senior statesmen"?
Who was it who said the Bill of Rights would result in a government of powers only limited by the BoR, as opposed to one of powers defined by the Constitution?
They had foresight. For sure.
Without the Bill of Rights, the Congress would simply do whatever it wanted via the Necessary and Proper Clause, especially after McCulloch v. Maryland, 17 U.S. 316 (1819). The Bill of Rights originally was simply a list of exceptions to that clause.
If all the Constitution says is "Congress shall do everything necessary and proper to regulate commerce and promote the general welfare" then what's the point in enumerated powers?
The constitution doesn't say that. Federal judges, primarily of the left, do. But you knew that.
We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America....
...To make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any Department or Officer thereof....
...To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes;...
I just reworded it a little, and dropped a few parts. Left the parts the politicians use.
#1… The Preamble on the back of the book isn’t the book itself.
You don’t get to use the described purpose (introduction) of the Constitution to VOID/Re-Write it however one sees fit. It's same illegal activity the left uses to think they can re-define the USA.
#2… ‘among the several States’ i.e. State to State trade of goods. Federalist papers further describe this as a means to prevent State to State trade battles (i.e. Tariff wars)
#3… Which the left has used compulsively. The ‘taxing’ clause for the General Welfare of the United States ( the VERY NAME of the newly created ‘federal/national’ government the constitution is written to create)…. It is taxing for the general welfare of the federal government ( as-if the pay the national debts didn’t give that away ).
The constitution is actually written very well; It’s the flat out lying of it by word-picking manipulation and illogical deception of cherry-picked words out of context that leftard officers have used to destroy/VOID it.
Retarded retard is retarded. Fucking shit.
Federal power to tax just about anything, federal control over citizenship, necessary and proper clause, supremacy clause, treaties the law of the land, no religious test clause. States prohibited from impairing contracts, having their own currency, or conducting a foreign policy.
All supported by Madison.
Never forget to judge the past by today's standards.
This is good, as far as it goes. I can support what it sounds like Madison wanted. The problem comes in when you realize the Spooner critique is fundamentally right. Either Madison wanted a constitution that would empower a federal leviathan or the constitution he did want was impotent to stop it. Either way, we should hardly be impressed with the consequences.
If the government was actually OBEYING that Constitution you'd have point. Instead you're just blaming it on being ignored.
FDR blatantly rewrote the Constitution. He even called it a New Deal-meaning he's revoking the old deal and it's dead and buried. Pray he doesn't alter it any further (spoilers, everyone did).
The organization set up by the Constitution chose to ignore said constitution. And the constitution didn't anticipate this? It didn't create any countervailing power that would bring it back into line? That sounds pretty flawed on a fundamental level, to me.
It's the Supreme Courts Job and Sworn Oath of offices.
There is no such thing as a legal system on the planet that can be enforced by its own means. Electing criminals consistently and compulsively who not only won't enforce it but actually campaigns on breaking it is the problem.
The Supreme Court is appointed and confirmed by the same politicians they are supposed to restrain.
Madisons original drafts of the Constitution envisioned a robust Federal Government. His critique of the Articles of the Confederacy - the One and True states rights government - were devastating. States looked out for their own interests and to devil with everything else. A war for independence was fought with the the states persistently not honoring the provisions for monetary requisitions. He had a dim view of state legislatures which passed laws to favor vested interests or favored majorities at the expense of minority rights. Madisons original proposal was to to have a Federal congress with the ultimate veto power over state laws. He also wanted strict proportional representation. Frankly his original design sounds far better than the chaotic approach that is now our system of Federal government.
Consti-what? Who cares (or is allowed to care) what a bunch of white male slavers thought best? We should do exactly the opposite of whatever they wrote down. Cuz Equity!
The United States was plural in the beginning.
...For ONLY enumerate powers and the number one reason was a strong national defense.
Nowhere in this article does it seem to explain the failure of Madison's assurances that the original intent was to play the Federal power against the states. The moment the Federal government gained the authority to tax individual incomes in every state, it gained the one tool it needed to subvert the states' jealous desire to keep the Federal power in check. They gained the ability to seize unlimited amounts of money from the states with the means of only returning that money to them with strings attached. It has now become almost impossible to put the Genie back in the bottle. So much for Madison.
They gained the ability to seize unlimited amounts of money from the states with the means of only returning that money to them with strings attached.
That is NOT an enumerated power. Once again; blaming the Constitution for being ignored isn't the Constitutions fault.
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The problem is us - not some interpretation or misinterpretation of Madison or any founders. They did what they did. Some of it worked - some didn't. The founders even put in a mechanism for state legislatures to call for a convention if the federal government overreached its powers. There could have quite easily been a mechanism put in to amend the constitution via initiative if the federal government overreaches individual rights.
We have chosen to not do any of that. We no longer even think about increasing representation of individual citizens in the House - eg the House could have doubled overnight with women's suffrage.
Instead we worship the founders as saints and praise ourselves for having the oldest (read most out of date) constitutional system. And do nothing.
One wonders what it would all look like today if it hadn't been for the toxic evil of slavery.
In Federalist No. 39, Madison, writing under the trio's collective pen name, Publius, countered Anti-Federalist charges that the proposed government would be overly centralized and could subsume the powers rightfully exercised by the states.
Boy, we sure showed those Anti-Federalists!
What Constitution?
Oh yeah; that thing we don't follow but will BLAME it anyways?
Finally found the best Article written in Reason all year long and now most of the comments are F'En retarded.
It DID work VERY WELL when followed. IT didn't fail this nation; this nations ability to FOLLOW it is what failed this nation.
We now live in a nation where treasonous representatives champion "save our democracy" not "save our Constitution". This is NOT the USA per the Constitution anymore. Electing Treasonous criminals that pay no mind to the Constitution or what this NATION *IS* by its very definition is where the FAILURE is.
You don't hire criminals to run the bank.
But too many did; On promises to gimmie, gimmie, gimmie STOLEN stuff.
James Madison’s Decentralized Republic The Constitution was intended to preserve state sovereignty, not create an all-powerful left wing woke socialist Dictatorship central government with Joe Biden as Dictator in chief.
No wonder the Democrats wanted to Federalize elections last Congress while they held the Presidency and both Houses of Congress. No wonder the Democrats want to censor and end the 1st and 2nd Amendments. No wonder the Democrats illegally harass the opposition party politicians. No wonder the Democrats lock up political protestors for years without charges, access to lawyers, bail or charges. Their goal is to take over forever.
Remember, we have a two party system, we are always one party away from dictatorship.
We don't have a two party system in most of the US. Most elections are non competitive with one party anointed the winner by the party that chooses not to compete.It only looks like two party because they collude in selecting different districts
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SCOTUS is the problem from the first major decision Hylton v. United States before Marbury v Madison. The US Constitution by forming a government of enumerated powers MUST be narrowly interpreted by the court or those powers grow inch by inch over time as successive decisions expand the powers until they are not recognizable. (The Court, taking the position that the direct tax clause constituted in practical operation an exception to the general taxing powers of Congress, held that no tax ought to be classified as “direct” that could not be conveniently apportioned, and on this basis sustained the tax on carriages as one on their “use” and therefore an “excise.”) So the court basically said, "What the Federal Government wants to do is not permissible so we must make a argument to allow it." This did 2 things, it set the precident that the Court can "make law" and it started the process by which the to change the Constitution use the courts instead of the 1 allowed method, amendment. This turned into the perception that it is so difficult to amend. BS, 2/3 vote by both houses is the same as to overide a VETO and if 2/3 will do it most likely 3/4 of states will ratify. If not then it can't be such a great amendment. Roberts even used Hylton in support of OBAMA CARE tax/penalty. The only way to interpret Constitution of enumerated powers is to judge conservatively disputes between goverment and citizen in favor of citizen, and between state gov and federal gov in favor of states. Then it forces the proper change of using the power of amendment if needed.
+10000 Well Said!