Federalism Could Heal a Divided Nation
There’s less reason to fight when one-size-fits-all policies are replaced with local diversity.

Anybody expecting politicians' empty promises that they'll savage one another more politely in the future to settle the country's tensions is dreaming. Vicious rhetoric by candidates may fan the flames of political hatred, recently fueling the attempted assassination of Donald Trump. But those flames were lit long ago. To damp those fires, the best way to reduce the likelihood of Americans with opposing views battling for political control is to reduce the power of government—starting with the feds.
You are reading The Rattler from J.D. Tuccille and Reason. Get more of J.D.'s commentary on government overreach and threats to everyday liberty.
Nasty Words and Nastier Sentiments
"MAGA Republicans do not respect the Constitution. They do not believe in the rule of law. They do not recognize the will of the people," President Joe Biden charged in a 2022 speech in Philadelphia.
GOP candidate Donald Trump returns the sentiment, including at a March rally in Ohio when he claimed, "If we don't win this election, I don't think you're going to have another election in this country."
That's raw stuff, but it's not just candidates. Partisans of the major political parties are increasingly disdainful of one another, according to the American National Election Studies. On a scale of 1–100, Republicans and Democrats were "meh" about each other from 1978 to 2000, with ratings in the 40s. After the turn of the millennium, those figures declined to 20 and below in 2020.
"A majority of Democrats (55%) say the GOP makes them feel afraid, while 49% of Republicans say the same about the Democratic Party," Pew Research reported in 2016. "And nearly half of Democrats (47%) and Republicans (46%) say the other party makes them feel angry."
That's led to considerable discussion about "hatred" dominating relations between the political factions—language that's not overblown when you see how the sides view each other.
"Roughly half (52% Biden voters, 47% Trump voters) viewed those who supported the other party as threats to the American way of life," the University of Virginia's Center for Politics found last year. "About 40% of both groups (41% Biden voters, 38% Trump voters) at least somewhat believed that the other side had become so extreme that it is acceptable to use violence to prevent them from achieving their goals."
And here we are, amidst escalating political violence culminating in an assassination attempt on a former president who seeks a return to the White House. The country's dominant political factions are convinced elections are too important to lose. Given how awful the factions are, perhaps they're right.
Turn Down the Heat With Decentralized Power
But if conflict is found in elections that mutually loathing partisans think they can't afford to lose, maybe the temperature can be turned down by making contests less important. If the federal government had a smaller role in our lives, it wouldn't matter so much who wins control of the White House and Congress. If power is transferred from D.C. to states and localities that are closer to their constituents and easier for dissenters to escape by loading moving trucks, maybe political battles don't have to be so nasty.
There's even an opening for such decentralization in the 2024 Republican Party platform.
"We are going to close the Department of Education in Washington, D.C. and send it back to the States, where it belongs, and let the States run our educational system as it should be run," reads the document.
On abortion, the platform similarly celebrates the overturning of Roe v. Wade, not by calling for a national ban, but by saying "power has been given to the States and to a vote of the People."
"California is going to want to have a different policy from Ohio, Ohio is going to want to have a different policy from Alabama, and it is reasonable to let voters in states make the decisions," Sen. J.D. Vance (R-Ohio) told Sean Hannity on Fox News after he was selected as the GOP vice-presidential pick.
That's not enough to satisfy true believers on either the pro-life or pro-choice-side—some Republicans got very upset over the shift from the party's older hard-line position—but it's a reasonable approach for reducing conflict over an issue on which people strongly disagree.
Rediscovering Federalism and Voting With Your Feet
That's a reinvention of federalism, of course—a principle on which the structure of the United States was based. But two and a half centuries on, power has been hoovered up by federal officials who increasingly impose one-size-fits-whoever-is-in-charge policies. That's a recipe for the political conflict we see around us as people battle to impose their preferred policies and escape those of their enemies.
"The diversity federalism creates can also help promote unity, by reducing the conflict that arises when the federal government has the power to impose one-size-fits-all policies throughout the country," George Mason University law professor Ilya Somin told a Federalist Society symposium last year. "Decentralizing authority can mitigate that conflict."
Decentralized policymaking also makes it easier for people to "vote with their feet," Somin adds, by moving from jurisdictions dominated by policies they don't like to ones where they feel comfortable. He wrote a whole book on that topic.
We've seen that happening with the "big sort" captured in Bill Bishop's 2008 book of the same name, and the phenomenon continues.
"Americans are segregating by their politics at a rapid clip, helping fuel the greatest divide between the states in modern history," the AP reported last summer. "The split has sent states careening to the political left or right, adopting diametrically opposed laws on some of the hottest issues of the day."
Of course, that only works if states and localities are allowed to make their own policies. Unfortunately, Democrats have long preferred centralizing power and making policies uniform across the country. Uses of "federal" in that party's most recent platform overwhelmingly refer to increasing D.C.'s role.
But that document is four years old, and the country has become more divided and conflict-ridden since. Democrats briefly rediscovered an interest in federalism when Trump was in the White House and may again with him poised to return. Enjoying the policies they prefer locally—or having the option to move where they've been implemented—could strike them as better than national conflict and violence.
If Americans can be convinced to make federal elections not worth fighting over by shifting power to states and localities, we should talk about decentralizing even further. All the way to the individual would be best.
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Federalism couldn't heal a nation divided over slavery, back in the 1850s, and Federalism isn't going to be able to heal a nation with our current deep divisions. "'A house divided against itself cannot stand' ... I do not expect the Union to be dissolved - I do not expect the house to fall - but I do expect it will cease to be divided. It will become all one thing, or all the other."
Ahh, but federalism could have healed the slavery divide. The problem was the lack of federalism. Look at the so-called "states right" rationale for secession. It was nothing of the sort.
* The slavocracy's support of post office censorship was federal action, not states rights.
* The fugitive slave law was federal action, not states rights.
* Secession itself was federal sour grapes because they lost the election; I'd have more respect for so-called "Southern honor" if they had seceded before the election. They'd have been pissed as hell if the Northern states had seceded for a pro-slavery candidate winning, and in fact called New England's talk of secession during the War of 1812 treason.
This 1000% agreed.
Does it really matter what law was made to set up a trial when the verdict will become public and attest before the entire world what quality of fairness and consideration of evidence prevailed?
Well, yes. Many times law enforcement, and thus law itself, results in death sentences because someone (presumed to be with the equal rights regardless of personal limitations of deafness or whatever) is not responsive to police commands.
The left is vehemently opposed to federalism or any type of large regional political variation. They are not content living underneath a government they approve of, they have to stamp out “injustice” wherever it is, even in places thousands of miles away they’ve never been too.
^^^This.
See California’s travel ban to most of the rest of the USA
There is no cohabitation with those people unless they are far removed from any power
Evangelicals gotta preach (and impose) the gospel.
A similar message says that people are not "entitled" to their choice of mate nor sex partner as rather basic fact, and that pedophiles are no exception just because they can find an especially vulnerable one to judge as mate or burden with a fatherless eighteen years sentence, or worse.
How many faux pas can a man make after calling himself American in the mother tongue, btw?
++
It is nonsensical to think that major policies like slavery, abortion (IVF and contraception too), high capacity semiautomatic guns, broadcast and Internet pornography restrictions, or other religiously-based laws, would permit completely opposing restrictions (or lack thereof) in adjacent States. How would you enforce a complete ban without securing state borders? If abortion is outlawed in virtually all instances including Plan B in State A while an adjacent State B allows for abortion in virtually all instances, how could State A possibly hope to limit its citizens from receiving one easily? If State A allows for mail and shipping companies to deliver products without going through something akin to Customs, and if it allows its citizens to cross State borders easily, It's rules are effectively unenforceable. If State B allows for the same kinds of shipping and travel, but disallows any high capacity gun magazine that is sold just across the border with State A, how can that law be enforced.
Extreme Federalism is a neat concept. It is completely impractical in all but the most inconsequential instances. We are finding that out with the overturning of Roe. When the only way for a State to enforce its laws on its citizens is to secure its borders with neighboring States we've ceased to be a country. How would that affect the national economy? People are used to being allowed to drive without being forced to stop for anything gas from California to Maine and from Florida to Washington. We can't have both that ability to freely travel around the country AND to have radically differing laws on fundamental issues. Anyone who says otherwise is not using Reason.
E kept federalism is itself a partisan issue, with the Democrats being "against" as a rule. It seems unlikely to be able to heal divisions with a principle that is itself a bone of contention.
It should be an obvious point to make. You can't blame both sides for violent sentiments when one uses it for aggressive acts and the other is just starting to advocate for it defensively.
2chili, you need to stop using the wrong word.
It's one-size-fits-nobody.
I disagree, they fit the federal bureaucrats quite nicely. Unless your un-personing them, you monster.
Only one party pushes federalism. A great example is Trump letting states manage Covid. Or the abortion issue post Roe.
Also federalism is a dirty word. Jeff is going to freak out.
Trump is not the one who wanted states to manage covid.
On April 13, 2020, two different interstate compacts were announced - the Eastern States MultiState Council (NY, NJ, RI, CT, PA, DE, MA) and the Western States Pact (CA, OR, WA and a couple weeks later CO and NV). Both specifically were about managing covid. I don't know exactly why they were both formed - on the same day - but I suspect it is because they did not want PPE or medical equipment or such confiscated by and/or distributed by the feds.
That DAY - Trump claimed total authority. Specifically - “When somebody’s president of the United States, the authority is total,” Trump said at a press briefing Monday when asked about the governors’ plans. “And that’s the way it’s got to be. It’s total. It’s total. And the governors know that.”
Trump essentially said interstate compacts can't exist - and/or that if they do exist they exist only under Presidential authority. Which is the opposite of what the Constitution says - which is that they have to be approved by Congress but the entire exec branch has no authority at all. He specifically ordered individual states to create their own individual plans re covid.
The next week, a third interstate compact was formed - the Midwest Governors Regional Pact (MN, WI, MI, IL, IN, OH, KY) for the same purpose. The remaining states never chose to form any compact among themselves or anything else regional. They chose to see the issue as purely an individual state issue (which was how Trump framed the issue) rather than an issue where states might have to cooperate. And thus they deferred to the feds on everything.
No surprise either that on that day when Trump declared that he had 'total authority' - and in so doing was overstepping his authority and being 'anti-federalism' - Sullum wrote an article saying that the Prez couldn't do what he was claiming he could do.
While jesseaz was just jerking off in the comments defending Trump from any comparison of him to Obama. And now he wants to claim that Trump was the one pushing for states to manage covid. Totally full of shit you are.
Two main points in this article:
"To damp those fires, the best way to reduce the likelihood of Americans with opposing views battling for political control is to reduce the power of government—starting with the feds."
"Unfortunately, Democrats have long preferred centralizing power and making policies uniform across the country. Uses of "federal" in that party's most recent platform overwhelmingly refer to increasing D.C.'s role."
When one party is hell bent upon lording it over the other, a peaceful detente is not at all likely.
Even with federalism, one role the federal government has is providing remedies for civil rights violations.
Not likely since all the Commie-Californians are bolting their Commie-State and Bernie Sanders continues to refuse localization of his stupidity.
[Na]tional .......... is a big part of the So[zi]alist mentality.
Federalism Could Heal a Divided Nation
So, then, is the Open Borders idiocy dead, buried, and forgotten or is this some sort of half-baked, loosely stitched together "We need more regional governments with more regional borders so that we can open them all up." Frankenstein's monster idiocy?
Asking because I'm dubious of Reason "Kyle Rittenhouse shouldn't have been there." Magazine's (liberty and) Federalist and socio-political policy foresight bona fides.
What makes you think either side wants healing? No, each one wants to subjugate the other.
Both sides but fairly weak.
1 head pat from Jeff.
Ebb and flow.
In the 80s it was the religious right demanding me to conform to their morality. Now liberals are doing that in a way that makes the religious right look like chumps.
The religious right didn't infiltrate my job and require me to be indoctrinated on gender issues.
I presume you worked for a company that qualified for regulation under the Commerce Claus.
So... "a business", then.
Uh, sure. How eager do you think the people in small town Iowa feel about subjugating progressives in Berkeley and Portland, compared to the inverse? Which side wants to be left alone?
“To damp those fires, the best way to reduce the likelihood of Americans with opposing views battling for political control is to reduce the power of government—starting with the feds.”
OK; just for the record, one party is totally dedicated to increasing the power of the federal government to the point of total control over every aspect of the citizen's lives.
So they will never stop battling for control until they achieve it absolutely.
'"MAGA Republicans do not respect the Constitution. They do not believe in the rule of law. They do not recognize the will of the people," President Joe Biden charged in a 2022 speech in Philadelphia.'
and
'GOP candidate Donald Trump returns the sentiment, including at a March rally in Ohio when he claimed, "If we don't win this election, I don't think you're going to have another election in this country."'
OK, which quote is closer to true? And which quote is more like a projection?
I can't tell. Which side said the military is the guardian of democracy and the other political party is the enemy of democracy?
It is reasonably easy for me talk to my Mayor.
It is extremely difficult for me to talk to my Governor.
It is next to impossible for me to talk to my President.
Rural America and Urban America in many aspect of life are very different and what is most important to them. Geographical regions and topography further alters the realities of people. It is silly and ignorant to believe that one policy dictated from the bubble called Washington DC would be in the best interest of anyone other than the residents of the bubble.
There is an argument for some federal government, but it should be very limited with the vast majority being much more locally based. Even state government should be more limited than current.
“”Rural America and Urban America in many aspect of life are very different and what is most important to them.””
Having grown up in the first, lived over 30 years in second, this is very true. COVID restriction rules for example, the stricter rules made more sense is a packed city like NYC. But not where I grew up. Trump left it to the states which I thought was the wise move. The left said he was killing people by not acting like a king.
That is also what FDR thought in 1930. In his case then, I believe his main push for federalism was re alcohol prohibition and his view of the 1928 election where Al Smith was demonized in large parts of the country because of that. But a transcript of a speech back then is almost a headscratcher. FDR said this?
It [our geographic and economic diversity] was clear to the framers of our Constitution that the greatest possible liberty of self-government must be given to each state and that any national administration attempting to make all laws for the whole nation, such as was practicable for Great Britain, would inevitably result at some future point in a dissolution of the Union itself…
The moment a mere numerical superiority by either states or voters proceeds to ignore the needs and desires of the minority…that moment will mark the failure of our constitutional system…
The doctrine of regulation and legislation by ‘master minds’, in whose judgement and will, all the people may gladly and quietly acquiesce, has been glaringly apparent at Washington the last ten years. Were it possible to find ‘master minds’ so unselfish, so willing to decide unhesitatingly against their own personal interests or private prejudices; men almost godlike in their ability to hold the scales of justice with an even hand, such a government might be to the interest to the country, but there are none such on the horizon and we cannot expect a complete reversal of the teachings of history.
Also - there are some states that quite deliberately make representative government at the state level as impossible as possible. CA is the obvious worst case.
They froze their assembly size (80) with their 1880 Constitution. When the state population was 900,000 - and CA had six critters in Congress. So it was quite a bit easier then to WANT to deal with issues at the state level.
Today- the CA assembly is still 80 - with a state peeps of many tens of millions - and fifty+ critters in Congress.
IOW - CA has spent 150 years REDUCING its ability to govern itself at the state level (by reducing the representation of its citizens in its assembly) and INCREASING the relative ability to contact one of their federal critters rather than one of their state critters (esp since I believe they have term limits now so a lot of their state critters are either corrupted or don't even know where the bathrooms are).
The fall of individual State power started with the War of 1861 (you leave we kill you), continued with the 16th amendment permitting income taxes (money, money, money), and followed 2 months later with the final nail in the coffin, the 17th amendment requiring direct election of Senators (Welcome to the Party). Without addressing at least the last two, States will never have the power the founders intended.
"The fall of individual State power started with the War of 1861 (you leave we kill you),..."
It did not help that that the states trying to leave were doing so in support of the most wretched of causes, that put the stink of slavery on state's rights for several generations.
The States were the ones that DROVE the 17th amendment. Put bluntly - many of those states had no interest holding their own legislature hostage to the national partisan (and corruption) bullshit that required them to select senators. eg In 1897, Oregon legislators refused to swear their own oath of office over a dispute about an open Senate seat - thus eliminating the Oregon legislature from doing anything that year.
By 1910, 31 states had passed legislation demanding a constitutional amendment for the direct election of Senators. More than half of all states (I believe 33) had already implemented some semi form of popular election. Meaning that that amendment was driven by the alternative scenario of an Article 5 convention - which 27 states had already called for.
Reducing the power of government is positive, in almost every case.
Not sure Federalism will really help cure the dividing fire, but can't hurt. One barrier is getting the Federal Government to relinquish power. The other problem is allowing alternative solutions to be tested could demonstrate my (person in power) approach is not as good. We can not allow the Scientific Method to determine the outcomes of social experiments (= every government policy). How would we control thought then?
moved
"Federalism Could Heal a Divided Nation."
What bullshit.
The only thing that will unify this country is a good five dollar double chili cheeseburger.
Anybody expecting politicians' empty promises that they'll savage one another more politely in the future to settle the country's tensions is dreaming.
Double backwards inverse Boaf Sidez, with a twist!
Every year sees continued weakening of D.C. and open defiance of Federal laws that are stupid and/or unconstitutional. Every year sees politicians more focused on their competition than their constituents. Every year sees the People rejecting diktat of whatever whim the Janus Party dreams up.
Every year the rough beast (Federalism), its hour come round at last,
Slouches towards Bethlehem (D.C.) to be born.
Federalism doesn’t really solve any problem unless we can amend the Constitution to peaceably allow states to split up and/or maybe recombine. Which is not even remotely the same as the neo-confederates who only give a shit about unilateral secession.
One of the biggest conflicts occurs within states between two very different philosophies of local governance. One called Dillons Rule is the notion that municipal corporations owe their origin to, and derive their powers and rights wholly from, the legislature. It breathes into them the breath of life, without which they cannot exist. As it creates, so may it destroy. If it may destroy, it may abridge and control
The other is called the Cooley Doctrine (or home rule) – which states that local government is a matter of absolute right derived from the individual right to self-governance so that while states can bring a municipal corporation into existence it can’t abort the muni once it is alive.
The conflict between the city of Cleveland and the state of Ohio over control of pollution on and cleanup of the Cuyahoga River is what drove the EPA into existence. The conflict between the city of Charlotte (?) and the state of North Carolina is what has created the ‘crisis’ of trans bathrooms. The way those conflicts get resolved right now is that the side that loses in the first round tries to use its influence to drive the issue up to federal level. Same as the way large corporations drive issues up to the federal level.
Only if there is an alternative way of resolving those local/state conflicts – often between cities, unchartered/unincorporated municipalities/HOA’s, and rural (county level governance) – will devolution to lower levels of governance work to ease tensions. The only way I can imagine that happening is eg for states to divorce each other internally peaceably via the constitution.
"Federalism doesn’t really solve any problem unless we can amend the Constitution to peaceably allow states to split up and/or maybe recombine."
Been there, done that:
New States may be admitted by the Congress into this Union; but no new State shall be formed or erected within the Jurisdiction of any other State; nor any State be formed by the Junction of two or more States, or Parts of States, without the Consent of the Legislatures of the States concerned as well as of the Congress.
(Article 4, section 3)
It needs to really happen. Not just West Virginia. I hear that CA talks about splitting in three - 220 'attempts' from these archives. But it clearly doesn't go anywhere - even in a state that is the definition of dysfunction - and is also way too high a % of the total population of the US for a single state.
Plus it would allows for long overdue expansion of the House. I suspect that was frozen because some states don't want the House to expand unless the Senate also expands because of Electoral College 'weighting'.
There are red areas in blue states, and vice versa. So federalism would only be an improvement if it includes local devolution. So long as right-wing legislatures like Mississippi's can preempt local legislation in cities like Jackson, it's fake decentralization -- just handing over half the country to Apartheid rule by segregationist minorities.
Secession is it…
After 2000 you have Tea Party and the rise of MAGA/Trump and along with it language that are mostly fighting words rather than problem solving words. Eventually, people stopped talking and then you get what we have now.
You need to relearn your recent history. The Tea Party was in response to Obama. Your side has been calling anyone that disagrees with you "Nazis" a lot longer than the Tea Party.
I recall the Family Guy episode (season 7, episode 3) where they went back in time. One of the Nazi soldiers has a "McCain-Palin" campaign button on. That was 2008. It was already common practice to refer to non-Communists as Nazis. The Tea Party did not exist yet.
You need to relearn your recent history. The Tea Party was in response to Obama. Your side has been calling anyone that disagrees with you “Nazis” a lot longer than the Tea Party.
As I mentioned a couple days ago, Truman compared Dewey to the Nazis. Their stormtroopers in the late 60s did the same when they were rioting over Vietnam. Democrats have no high horse to ride when it comes to inflammatory rhetoric.
I say this all the time, and the lolertarians lose their minds.
"The local population has voted to legalize drugs." YAAAAY!
"The local population has voted to ban drugs. OMG WHAT ABOUT MY RIGHTS!?
Never does the notion of leaving the latter population and joining up with the former enter their mind. Because they're entitled babies who want to have their cake and eat it too.
Because they don't want anything but anarchy.
Or benevolent dictatorship.
I can never really tell which.
Federalism IS THE PROBLEM, not the solution.
The States were meant to be separate and distinct COUNTRIES, and the UNITED States was meant to be extremely limited in power over the states, in fact when reading the Constitution that power is so limited that the military (protection from foreign invasion including unlawful entry), roads and rails and interstate commerce, issues between the states, international treaties, were and are pretty much the LIMIT of federal government.
Federalism as we know it is the PROBLEM, not the Solution.
"MAGA Republicans do not respect the Constitution. They do not believe in the rule of law. They do not recognize the will of the people,"
So the GOP (MAGA/Trump) Platform considers that abortion belongs at the states not at the federal level. AND maintains it is up to the voters of those states just as it is for murder, manslauder, etc.
Both the left and the right are outraged. So is REASON going to praise Trump? Did not REASON diss Trump for showing up at the Libertarian convention?
Hypocrites.
I don't think majority [WE] gangsters get to decide what is murder or manslaughter. I think the US Constitution exists above 'democracy'.
Federalism is an attempt to make laws equitable across the entire nation. Under the author's proposal, states are free to outlaw interracial marriage, bring back "whites only" businesses, and many other despicable practices that are wanted in various parts of the country. Some knotheads are advocating doing away with child labor laws; let's get those 10 year-olds back to work.
Anyone familiar with modern American history will know that for over a century, blacks who wanted to make long trips around the country had to plan ahead, which states and cities to avoid because of the danger of racist mistreatment. A breakdown of the automobile could be physically dangerous to the family. Gasoline could only be bought in certain places, and the plan of the trip had to insure that they could get from one gas station that served blacks to another.
The author entertains the bizarre fantasy that anyone who is mistreated in one state or town, can simply up sticks and move to somewhere new - presumably after researching what place to move to, saving enough money to pay for all the necessaries of moving a family some unknown number of miles away. Say goodbye to friends you may have known for many years.
Those of us who have spent some time in the real world know just how difficult moving a family can be. For many of those most subject to mistreatment - women, children, racial minorities - the costs are prohibitive. Divorced and have custody of the children? Good luck getting the spouse to sign off on your moving plans.
So-called conservatives are at the center of usage of government power to intimidate, control, and prescribe acceptable behavior to citizens. I'm old enough to have actually have my father say to me, "I shouldn't have to sell my house to a black man if I don't want to." That's the society that the author and this magazine want us to go back to.
I've been there. I'm not going back.
The article is about ways of reducing the sort of mindless conflict exemplified in the comments.