General Welfare

  • September 15, 2011
    Guest Post

    This post is part of an ACSblog Constitution Week Symposium. By Martha F. Davis, Professor of Law, Northeastern University School of Law.


    The national Constitution is a singular document, but it is not unique. All fifty states of the U.S. and Puerto Rico have their own constitutions, some of which -- through text or interpretation -- stake out approaches that are very different from the federal document. It is worth thinking about the alternative paths that these state documents take, and the possibilities that they raise, as we celebrate and critique the national Constitution on this Constitution Day.

    This entry focuses on one area of significant difference between state and federal constitutions: their treatment of economic and social rights.

    The national Constitution addresses economic and social rights prominently but with little specificity. The Preamble states that an overriding purpose of the U.S. Constitution is to “promote the general welfare,” indicating that issues such as poverty, housing, food and other economic and social welfare issues facing the citizenry were of central concern to the framers. However, the Bill of Rights has been largely construed to provide procedural mechanisms for fair adjudication of those rights rather than carving out claims on the government to ensure that individuals actually have any social and economic assets to protect. Efforts to convince courts of alternate constitutional interpretations have generally failed. The Supreme Court has ruled, for example, that while the due process clause of the 14th amendment ensures fair processes for welfare recipients, there is no underlying constitutional right to a minimum standard of living. Similarly, the Supreme Court has not found a general right to education derived from the more explicit constitutional guarantees of political participation and equal protection that might be deemed to presuppose an educational baseline.

  • January 4, 2010

    After extensive dabate, Congress seems on the verge of passing health care legislation. But courts may offer determined opponents their last avenue of attack.

    Last week, Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum suggested that his state may challenge the constitutionality of individual health insurance mandates in court. McCollum, who is running for the Florida governor's mansion this year, announced his concerns about health care reform on the heels of an ACS Issue Brief assessing its constitutionality. 

    The Issue Brief was authored by Simon Lazarus, public policy counsel at the National Senior Citizens Law Center and a former member of President Jimmy Carter's domestic policy team. Lazarus argues that individual insurance mandates are "lawful and clearly so - pursuant either to Congress' authority to ‘regulate commerce among the several states,' or to its authority to ‘lay and collect taxes to provide for the General Welfare.'" Lazarus writes that arguments against the constitutionality of individual mandates "appear unlikely to gain traction with the current Supreme Court, and, indeed, represent approaches and theories that have been repudiated by justices across the Court's ideological spectrum."