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Giving Power to Congress 3114 Views
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Description:
Would it be necessary and proper for Congress to mandate a national nap time? Probably not, but we wouldn't mind it.
Transcript
- 00:06
Giving Power to Congress, a la Shmoop.
- 00:09
Who doesn't love a little power?
- 00:11
Unfortunately, power in the wrong hands can lead to some very, very bad things.
- 00:15
Just ask Hitler...
- 00:16
... or Mussolini...
Full Transcript
- 00:17
...or Sauron.
- 00:20
So when our Constitution was written and our union formed...
- 00:22
...our founding fathers gave a lot of thought as to the power they would be giving to Congress.
- 00:28
Because no one wanted to wind up with a Mount Doom situation on their hands.
- 00:32
There are two basic types of powers that were granted to Congress -- enumerated and implied.
- 00:39
Enumerated powers were those that were directly stated, while implied powers were more, well... implied.
- 00:49
Congress' implied powers are stated in the "Necessary and Proper Clause" of the Constitution...
- 00:54
...where it says that Congress has the power "to make all Laws which shall be necessary
- 00:59
and proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers vested
- 01:05
by this Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any Department or
- 01:09
Officer thereof."
- 01:11
Whew. Those boys sure did like their long sentences, didn't they?
- 01:17
Essentially, they were giving Congress a bit of wiggle room. If there were certain laws
- 01:21
they deemed "necessary and proper" in order to carry out their other Constitutional
- 01:25
rights, they could enact them.
- 01:27
It would be like if your parents had asked you to babysit your baby brother, and they
- 01:31
gave you the right to deny him dessert after dinner.
- 01:35
While it wasn't implicitly stated, if your brother did reach for a slice of cake anyway,
- 01:39
you might deem it "necessary and proper" to tie him to the couch with bungee cord.
- 01:43
Isn't wiggle room swell?
- 01:46
Okay, those are the implied powers... what about enumerated powers?
- 01:51
You got it. Here's the shortlist of the rights Congress was given by the Constitution
- 01:55
in Article 1, Section 8:
- 01:58
They were granted permission to borrow money for the United States...
- 02:02
...create and collect taxes, as long as those taxes are imposed equally from state to state...
- 02:07
...impose restrictions on commerce...
- 02:10
...establish a Post Office...
- 02:11
...declare war...
- 02:12
...maintain a Navy and provide supplies for them...
- 02:15
...manage, train, and arm a militia...
- 02:17
...and identify and enforce crimes at sea.
- 02:21
So, as you can see, they had their fingers in quite a few pies.
- 02:25
Which you could probably tell just by looking at most of them.
- 02:33
But, despite all that power, Congress was not given complete control...
- 02:36
...thanks to Article 1, Section 9 of the Constitution...
- 02:39
...which laid out a handful of laws Congress could not make.
- 02:43
Congress was specifically forbidden from controlling immigration... until 1808, anyway.
- 02:49
...forbidden from passing any ex post facto laws, meaning laws that could result in the
- 02:53
arrest of a person who committed an illegal act... back before it was made illegal...
- 02:58
...and forbidden... for the most part... from suspending the writ of habeas corpus, which
- 03:02
states that a person needs an arrest warrant to be taken into custody.
- 03:10
They were also forbidden from hogging the Congressional Playstation, but
- 03:13
that was more of a verbal thing.
- 03:15
Sounds like Congress' do's and don'ts are pretty clearly defined, right?
- 03:19
Eh, not so much. Unfortunately, language can always be interpreted in various ways.
- 03:25
Strict constructionists argue that Congress should interpret the Constitution very literally
- 03:29
and narrowly... in other words, they only have the powers explicitly stated in the Constitution.
- 03:35
Broad constructionists are on the flip side of the coin. They say that, because the Constitution
- 03:40
grants Congress implied powers, we should focus more on the intent of the Constitution.
- 03:46
For example, the internet wasn't around in the 1700s, but does that mean Congress
- 03:50
shouldn't have any power to regulate it?
- 03:53
Broad constructionists would argue it's implied that Congress should be able to make
- 03:57
laws concerning the internet. Even if there is no specific "Google Clause" in the
- 04:02
original doc.
- 04:06
So basically, Congress' powers depend on what your definition of "necessary and proper" is.
- 04:11
Sadly, no matter what your viewpoint...
- 04:12
...today's Congress lacks the one power that arguably supersedes all others...
- 04:17
...the power to get anything done.
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