I also said the election of Abraham Lincoln was accidental. It was “accidental” because Lincoln was a Republican and the Dems hadn't been able to agree on a candidate. The party split; the northern Democrats nominated Douglas and the southern branch chose Breckinridge. The Republicans were a new party, less than 10 years old, but they had already become a potent political force in the north. Hence the presidency was, in a sense, handed to Lincoln. This would in hindsight appear to be intervention by a wiser power, providing just the man to preserve the Union at just the right time.
After the War, the general opinion that the fed gov had only limited powers was left intact. The great bulk of human affairs remained the exclusive province of State gov and law. But as new forms of transportation and industrialization took hold, pressure to expand the scope of federal power would grow and the country would face new constitutional questions about federal and state roles. From Archibald Cox, The Court and the Constitution, p. 111.
The post-Civil War Amendments gave national
guarantees of fundamental rights against aggression by the states. In doing this, in the long run they greatly increased the role of the
Supreme Court. Before the Civil War few individual
rights had received national protection.
The courts, however, have interpreted this clause, with its more inclusive reference to "any person," as providing a basic protection for all persons, not just African Americans.
Shmoop.com, a "student-oriented" site, says: In order to honor both the primary intent of the amendment, and its more inclusive language, the courts have developed a tiered approach to its application. Laws employing racial classifications (i.e. laws that treat white and black people differently) are considered inherently suspect and subject to "strict scrutiny" by the courts. Laws that incorporate other forms of classifications, such as age or income level, are subject to a lower standard; states must prove only that the use of these classifications is reasonable. In recent decades, the Court introduced an "intermediate" standard for assessing laws incorporating gender classifications. Laws that treat men and women differently must serve "important governmental objectives" and states must prove that the dissimilar treatment of men and women is "substantially related to achievement of those objectives."1 Some object to this "unequal approach to equal protection."
The courts, however, have interpreted this clause, with its more inclusive reference to "any person," as providing a basic protection for all persons, not just African Americans.
Shmoop.com, a "student-oriented" site, says: In order to honor both the primary intent of the amendment, and its more inclusive language, the courts have developed a tiered approach to its application. Laws employing racial classifications (i.e. laws that treat white and black people differently) are considered inherently suspect and subject to "strict scrutiny" by the courts. Laws that incorporate other forms of classifications, such as age or income level, are subject to a lower standard; states must prove only that the use of these classifications is reasonable. In recent decades, the Court introduced an "intermediate" standard for assessing laws incorporating gender classifications. Laws that treat men and women differently must serve "important governmental objectives" and states must prove that the dissimilar treatment of men and women is "substantially related to achievement of those objectives."1 Some object to this "unequal approach to equal protection."
After a start on the history of equal protection under law, here are some practical points:
Generally,
a law that treats citizens differently, when they are similar situated, is
likely to violate equal protection.
The
Court has devised a “three-tiered scheme” to handle cases under the EPC. Some types of cases receive “strict
scrutiny,” in which the burden of proof is on the state and the plaintiff has
the benefit of the doubt. Cases
involving certain other laws must pass a much easier test, called “rational
basis scrutiny.” Here, if the defendant
government can state virtually any coherent rationale to justify the law, the
law stands. One commentator says about
this, “Rational basis plaintiffs lose,” usually because the state invokes
police power in the name of public health or welfare. In between strict scrutiny and rational basis
is a “middle tier” that does not reach the level of strict scrutiny but
typically comes kind of close to it. It
is not close to the more lenient “rational basis” test.
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