新联邦制、消费权力与联邦刑法

IF 2.5 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW
R. Garnett
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引用次数: 3

摘要

在宪法学界,很难避免这样的观察:我们正在经历一场联邦制的“复兴”。当然,伦奎斯特法院把这样一种观念带回到公法的桌子上,即宪法是一个政府的宪章,它的权力是有限的和列举的,它既受到宪章文本的约束,也受到它所创建的政府结构的约束。然而,这个所谓的“革命性”法院似乎不太愿意修改或重新审视其支出权力原则,它仍然是既定的法律,即国会可以为追求第一条中未明确授权的目的而支付资金,并且可以仅仅通过对其支出的资金附加条件来促进可能超出其列举的权力范围的政策目标。因此,尽管有“革命”的说法,但消费能力继续为国家政府在州和地方生活和政府层面制定政策提供几乎无限的机会。本文考虑国会是否以及在多大程度上可以单独或与必要和适当或“全面”条款相结合地使用其支出权来创建、起诉和惩罚联邦犯罪。特别是,它考察了一项特定的联邦反腐败法规所面临的挑战,并得出结论认为,即使《商业条款》被理解为赋予国会几乎全部的监管权力,钱包的权力也不是警察的权力。也就是说,一部普遍适用的联邦刑事法规不能被视为支出条件,即使是“清扫条款”也不能被视为“饿狗”刑事管辖权的许可证。更重要的是,通过支出扩大联邦刑事管辖权与我们的宪法明确建立和合理暗示的结构不一致,与这些结构旨在促进的价值观不一致,与它们旨在保护的自由不一致。该条款的教义主张与当代宪法的主要主题非常一致。例如,一方面,该条关于有条件支出、全面条款和刑事定罪的论点与另一方面,第一修正案中关于政府言论、论坛分析和表达性协会的当代辩论之间存在丰富的联系。此外,该条中捍卫的对消费能力的理解不仅是对调解机构和公民社会的重新强调的补充,而且是重要的组成部分,约翰·麦金尼斯教授(John McGinnis)将调解机构和公民社会定性为伦奎斯特法院的持久遗产。文章最后暗示,无论在其论证中发现什么“形式主义”,都有一个有价值的教学功能,因为它可能有助于灌输“人民支持地方多样性和特权的既定倾向”,以及“超越即时满足的对自由的有纪律的热爱”,这两者都是“真正强大的联邦制”所必需的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The New Federalism, the Spending Power, and Federal Criminal Law
It is difficult in constitutional-law circles to avoid the observation that we are living through a "revival" of federalism. Certainly, the Rehnquist Court has brought back to the public-law table the notion that the Constitution is a charter for a government of limited and enumerated powers, one that is constrained both by that charter's text and by the structure of the government it creates. This allegedly "revolutionary" Court seems little inclined, however, to revise or revisit its Spending Power doctrine, and it remains settled law that Congress may disburse funds in pursuit of ends not authorized explicitly in Article I and may promote policy goals that might lie beyond the reach of its enumerated powers merely by attaching conditions to the money it spends. Thus, talk of "revolution" notwithstanding, the Spending Power continues to provide practically limitless opportunities for the national government to shape policy at the state and local levels of life and government. This Article considers whether and to what extent Congress may use its Spending Power - standing alone, or in conjunction with the Necessary and Proper, or "Sweeping," Clause - to create, prosecute, and punish federal crimes. In particular, it examines the challenges to a particular federal anti-corruption statute, and concludes that, even if the Commerce Clause is understood to convey to Congress almost plenary regulatory authority, the power of the purse is not the power to police. That is, a generally applicable federal criminal statute cannot be regarded as a spending condition, and not even the Sweeping Clause is a license for "hungry dog" criminal jurisdiction. What's more, the expansion of federal criminal jurisdiction through spending is inconsistent with the structures explicitly created and reasonably implied by our Constitution, with the values these structures were designed to advance, and with the liberties they were intended to protect. The Article's doctrinal claims cohere well with leading themes in contemporary constitutional law. There are, for example, rich connections between the Article's arguments about conditional spending, the Sweeping Clause, and criminalization, on the one hand, and contemporary debates in First Amendment law relating to government speech, forum analysis, and expressive association, on the other. In addition, the understanding of the Spending Power defended in the Article serves not only as a complement to, but a crucial component of, the renewed emphasis on mediating institutions and civil society that has been provocatively identified by Professor John McGinnis as the enduring legacy of the Rehnquist Court. The Article closes with the suggestion that whatever "formalism" might be found lurking in its arguments has a worthy pedagogical function as it helps to instill, perhaps, what the "settled disposition on the part of the people in favor of local diversity and prerogative" and the "disciplined love of liberty that transcends the desire for immediate gratification," both of which are required for a "truly robust federalism."
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
4.00%
发文量
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期刊介绍: Founded in 1915, the Cornell Law Review is a student-run and student-edited journal that strives to publish novel scholarship that will have an immediate and lasting impact on the legal community. The Cornell Law Review publishes six issues annually consisting of articles, essays, book reviews, and student notes.
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