Constitutional Law Flashcards
Congress’s Power Pursuant to Commerce Claus
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
- It can regulate anything economic or anything noneconomic that substantially affects interstate commerce
Commandeering
Congress cannot commandeer states to enforce federal law.
- Congress will either have to regulate directly or regulate indirectly by threatening to take away funding if states do not adopt a certain law
Dormant Commerce Clause
States lack the power to discriminate against interstate commerce or unreasonably burden it
- If a state law discriminates against interstate commerce, it is invalid unless the state can show that the law is NECESSARY to serve a COMPELLING state interest and there is no reasonable nondiscriminatory alternative (SS)
- IF a state law is nondiscriminatory on its face but still burdens interstate commerce, it is valid only if it serves an important state interest and does not impose an unreasonable burden on interstate commerce
Market Participant Exception
If the state is acting as a market participant, it is allowed to favor its own citizens
Congress’s powers are limited to:
Those given to it by the constitution
- It has the power to enforce constitutional rights under its enforcement power found in the 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments, but it does not have the power to expand rights
Suits pursuant for Free Speech (1st), EPC (14th), or Voting Rights (15th)
If a P is suing pursuant to any of those amendments, P needs to find a government actor or action fairly attributable to the government
- State action is present when a state passes a law, when a state permits its officials to take action, when a private actor is performing a traditionally government funciton, or when private action is closely controlled by the state
Three Standards Pursuant to Equal Protection Clause
SS: applies to fundamental rights, racial or ethnic discrimination, and alienage when the classification is made by the state
- gov must prove narrowly tailored to achieve compelling interest
IS: Gender and illegitimacy
- gov must prove classification is substantially related to important gov interest
RB: every other classification (poverty, wealth, age, education, etc.)
- P must prove no rational relationship to legit gov interest
The First Amendment applies to the states through:
The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amentment
- government regulation of private speech
Content BASED or VIEWPOINT based Discrimination
Forbidding communication about certain ideas or viewpoints
- Subject to SS
Symbolic Speech
Law that regulates conduct and places an incidental burden on speech is constitutional if the regulation is narrowly tailored to an important government interest and unrelated to suppression of speech
Unprotected Speech
Law regulating unprotected speech needs to pass rational basis
- Speech inciting immediate lawless or violent behavior
- Fighting words
- True threats or words as conduct (defamation, harassment)
- Obscene speech
Commercial Speech
(1) speech must be lawful and not misleading,
(2) law must serve a substantial governmental interest,
(3) law must directly advance that interest, and
(4) law must be narrowly tailored
Sexual or Indecent Speech
Law must serve substantial government interest and leave open reasonable alternative channels
Time-place-or-manner restriction
Public Forum: must be content neutral, narrowly tailored to serve an important governmental interest, and leave open ample channels of communication
Nonpublic Forum: Viewpoint neutral and reasonably related to legit governmental interest
Speech in Public Schools
May be regulated so long as regulations are reasonably related to legit pedagogical concerns