Constitutional Law Flashcards

1
Q

Congress’s power over interstate commerce:

A

Congress can regulate the channels and instrumentalities of interstate commerce, persons and things in interstate commerce, or anything that has a “substantial effect” on interstate commerce—meaning, it can regulate anything economic or anything non economic that substantially affects interstate commerce, even if it is purely intrastate.

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2
Q

Dormant/negative Commerce Clause

A

States lack the power to discriminate against interstate commerce or unreasonably burden it.

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3
Q

If a state law discriminates against interstate commerce…

A

It is invalid unless the state can show hat the law was necessary to serve a compelling state interest and there is no reasonable non discriminatory alternative (strict scrutiny).

Usually unconstitutional.

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4
Q

If a state law is non-discriminatory on its face but it still burdens interstate commerce…

A

It is valid only if it serves an important state interest and does not impose an unreasonable burden on interstate commerce.

More likely to be constitutional.

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5
Q

Exception to the Dormant Commerce Clause:

A

Market participant doctrine—the state is acting as a market participant or business rather than a regulator, and is as such allowed to favor its own residents.

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6
Q

Congress has the power to enforce constitutional rights under its enforcement power found in the ___.

A

Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments.

Note: Congress does not have the power to expand rights.

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7
Q

___ is required in order to sue under the First, Fourteenth, or Fifteenth Amendments.

A

State action.

Plaintiff needs to show a government actor or action “fairly attributable to the government.”

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8
Q

State action is present when:

A

A state passes a law or permits its officials to take action, or when a private actor is performing a traditional and exclusive government function (conducting elections/running a company town) or when private action is closely controlled by the state.

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9
Q

Three standards under the Equal Protection Clause

A

Strict scrutiny; intermediate scrutiny; rational basis.

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10
Q

Strict scrutiny

A

The government must prove that the law is narrowly tailored to achieve a compelling interest.

Applies to fundamental rights, racial or ethnic discrimination, and alienage when the classification is made by the state (unless public-function doctrine applies).

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11
Q

Intermediate scrutiny

A

Government must prove the classification is substantially related to an important government interest.

Applies to classifications regarding gender and illegitimacy.

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12
Q

Rational basis

A

Plaintiff must prove that the law is not rationally related to a legitimate government interest.

Applies to every other classification—poverty, wealth, age, education, etc.

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13
Q

If MEE is testing freedom of speech, start your essay with:

A

The First Amendment applies to the states through the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.

Remember, there must be government regulation of private speech.

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14
Q

Government engaging in content-based discrimination or viewpoint-based discrimination:

A

Strict scrutiny.

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15
Q

A law which regulates conduct and places an incidental burden on speech is constitutional if the regulation is

A

Narrowly tailored to an important governmental interest and is unrelated to the suppression of the speech.

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16
Q

A law regulating unprotected speech needs to pass:

A

Rational basis scrutiny

17
Q

Categories of unprotected speech:

A
  • speech inciting immediate lawless or violent behavior (“clear and present danger”): directed at inciting and likely to incite imminent lawlessness
  • fighting words: words likely to incite an immediate violent reaction
  • true threats or words as conduct: defamation, harassment, etc.
  • obscene speech: appeals to a prurient interest in sex, depicts/describes sex in a patently offensive way, and lacks serious literary/artistic/political/scientific value.
18
Q

Commercial speech

A

(1) the speech must be lawful and not misleading (2) the statute must serve a substantial governmental interest (3) the statute must directly advance that interest and (4) the statute must be narrowly tailored.

19
Q

Sexual or indecent speech

A

The law must serve a substantial governmental interest and leave open reasonable alternative channels of communication.

20
Q

Time-place-or-manner restrictions

A

Restriction in a public forum (one historically associated with free speech) or a designated public forum (school that opens its doors to such activities) must be content neutral, narrowly tailored to serve an important governmental interest, and leave open alternative channels of communication.

Restriction in a non-public forum must be viewpoint neutral and reasonably related to a legitimate government interest.

21
Q

Speech in public schools

A

Students have free speech rights, however, speech in schools may be regulated so long as the regulations are reasonably related to legitimate educational concerns.

22
Q

Prior restraints

A

Presumption against constitutionality

23
Q

Overbroad or vague laws

A

Presumed unconstitutional if they prohibit substantially more expression than is necessary (overbroad) or if a reasonable person cannot tell what is prohibited by the law (vague).

24
Q

Rights of the press—free speech

A

The press has no greater free speech rights than anyone else. The press may publish information that is lawfully obtained and that is a matter of public concern.

25
Q

Eminent domain

A

Neither the federal government nor the states may take private property for public use without just compensation.

Arises from the Fifth Amendment and is applied to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment.

“Public use” is defined broadly and may include giving land to a private party for commercial development.

26
Q

A taking can be ___ or ___.

A

Physical or regulatory.

Physical: permanent physical occupation regardless of what public interests it may serve.

Regulatory: regulation deprives an owner of all economically beneficial use of her property or destroys all reasonable investment-backed expectations.

27
Q

Exaction

A

When the government enacts a regulation that restricts the owner’s use of a property as a condition to allowing the owner to develop the land.

Takings unless the government can show a legitimate government interest and “rough proportionality” (the adverse impact of the proposed development is roughly proportional to the loss suffered by the property owner).

28
Q

Eleventh Amendment

A

Precludes a federal court from exercising jurisdiction over a suit by a private party seeking to recover damages from the state. There are exceptions to this (federal statute abrogates immunity).

29
Q

Can Congress make/encourage states to enact laws?

A

Congress cannot commandeer states and force states to enforce federal laws. Congress will either have to regulate directly (within its commerce power) or regulate indirectly by threatening to take away funding if the state does not adopt a law (under Congress’s spending power).