To provide for the general welfare

To provide for the general welfare
About this book
"This book traces the course of the constitutional controversy over the spending power and the role of that power in driving an expansion in federal activity and authority from 1787 forward. Since the founding of the Republic, American statesmen have seen the federal government as a fitting source of tax dollars to finance improvement and growth, but for decades the constitutional authority for this funding was the subject of fierce and bitter controversy.
Some, like Alexander Hamilton, read the Constitution as granting authority to Congress to spend for these purposes. Others, like James Madison, together with Thomas Jefferson, believed that a constitutional amendment was necessary to confer it.
The true scope of the constitutional authority given to Congress to lay taxes to provide for the "general welfare of the constitutional authority given to Congress to lay taxes to provide for the "general welfare of the United States" was a prominent political and legal issue until the Civil War and was not resolved by the Supreme Court until the 1930s.
This book documents how Americans came to read their Constitution to help them better their roads, schools, colleges, cultural institutions, and health care, and to provide themselves with social insurance and safety net programs for the vulnerable.
The book will contribute important spending power and its potential in helping us confront our most difficult twenty-first-century challenges, as well as a better appreciation of its significance in contemporary constitutional thought.
With the basic constitutional issue put to rest, the prudent and effective exercise of that power should have a positive impact on the resolution of many of the grave problems that Americans will confront in the decades ahead"--BOOK JACKET.
Details
- OL Work ID
- OL6026641W
Subjects
Constitutional lawGovernment spending policyHistoryWelfare clauseUnited StatesUnited states, politics and governmentPolitics and government