Commerce Clause, Katzenbach v. McClung (user search)
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  Commerce Clause, Katzenbach v. McClung (search mode)
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Author Topic: Commerce Clause, Katzenbach v. McClung  (Read 2865 times)
A18
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Posts: 23,794
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E: 9.23, S: -6.35

« on: October 16, 2005, 07:23:11 PM »
« edited: November 12, 2005, 03:34:54 PM by A18 »

Katzenbach v. McClung, 379 U.S. 294 (1964)

A thoroughly ridiculous ruling. As I've explained at length in earlier posts, interstate commerce has everything to do with trade between the states--or specifically, the shipping of goods across state lines--and nothing to do with racial discrimination. (See: Justice Story's Exposition on the Commerce Clause)

Justice Douglas even went as far as to argue that the Fourteenth Amendment's Equal Protection Clause was grounds for sustaining the act. I find this assertion to be patently absurd. The amendment is not ambigious at all: "No State shall ... deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws."
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A18
Atlas Star
*****
Posts: 23,794
Political Matrix
E: 9.23, S: -6.35

« Reply #1 on: November 12, 2005, 04:00:13 PM »

Katzenbach represents the ultimate corruption of the Court's Commerce Clause jurisprudence. Whereas NLRB v. Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp. was just an awful decision, Katzenbach was verging on self-parody.

A few of the Court's arguments are worth reciting:
(1) Discrimination by Ollie's and other businesses contributed in various ways to a lower level of general business activity and productivity in Alabama, thereby decreasing the flow of all kinds of goods into and out of Alabama.
(2) Because a significant part of Ollie's food had crossed a state line, Congress was entitled to regulate all further dealings with that food.
(3) Discrimination by Ollie's and other similar restaurants made life more difficult for African-American interstate travelers in Alabama.

Needless to say, these "arguments" are more an excuse for sustaining the act than anything else. If part of the Constitution had to be distorted to uphold the Civil Rights Act, one of the Reconstruction Amendments would have been more appropriate--my preference would have been the Thirteenth.

But this case was really just the culmination of what began in United States v. Darby: if the activity has some remote relation to interstate commerce, the Congress can regulate it. And when Congress can regulate that, it can regulate anything.

I would have dissented.
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