Title 23 U.S.C. § 158 (1982 ed., Supp. III) directs the
Secretary of Transportation to withhold a percentage of otherwise
allocable federal highway funds from States "in which the purchase
or public possession . . . of any alcoholic beverage by a person
who is less than twenty-one years of age is lawful." South Dakota,
which permits persons 19 years old or older to purchase beer
containing up to 3.2% alcohol, sued in Federal District Court for a
declaratory judgment that § 158 violates the constitutional
limitations on congressional exercise of the spending power under
Art. I, § 8, cl. 1, of the Constitution, and violates the
Twenty-first Amendment. The District Court rejected the State's
claims, and the Court of Appeals affirmed.
Held: Even if Congress, in view of the Twenty-first
Amendment, might lack the power to impose directly a national
minimum drinking age (a question not decided here), § 158's
indirect encouragement of state action to obtain uniformity in the
States' drinking ages is a valid use of the spending power. Pp.
483 U. S.
206-212.
(a) Incident to the spending power, Congress may attach
conditions on the receipt of federal funds. However, exercise of
the power is subject to certain restrictions, including that it
must be in pursuit of "the general welfare." Section 158 is
consistent with such restriction, since the means chosen by
Congress to address a dangerous situation -- the interstate problem
resulting from the incentive, created by differing state drinking
ages, for young persons to combine drinking and driving -- were
reasonably calculated to advance the general welfare. Section 158
also is consistent with the spending power restrictions that, if
Congress desires to condition the States' receipt of federal funds,
it must do so unambiguously, enabling the States to exercise their
choice knowingly, cognizant of the consequences of their
participation; and that conditions on federal grants must be
related to a national concern (safe interstate travel here). Pp.
483 U. S.
206-209.
(b) Nor is § 158 invalidated by the spending power
limitation that the conditional grant of federal funds must not be
independently barred by other constitutional provisions (the
Twenty-first Amendment here). Such limitation is not a prohibition
on the indirect achievement of objectives
Page 483 U. S. 204
which Congress is not empowered to achieve directly, but,
instead, means that the power may not be used to induce the States
to engage in activities that would themselves be unconstitutional.
Here, if South Dakota were to succumb to Congress' blandishments
and raise its drinking age to 21, its action would not violate
anyone's constitutional rights. Moreover, the relatively small
financial inducement offered by Congress here -- resulting from the
State's loss of only 5% of federal funds otherwise obtainable under
certain highway grant programs -- is not so coercive as to pass the
point at which pressure turns into compulsion. Pp.
483 U. S.
209-212.
791 F.2d 628, affirmed.
REHNQUIST, C.J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
WHITE, MARSHALL, BLACKMUN, POWELL, STEVENS, and SCALIA, JJ.,
joined. BRENNAN, J.,
post p.
483 U. S. 212,
and O'CONNOR, J.,
post p.
483 U. S. 212,
filed dissenting opinions.
Page 483 U. S. 205
CHIEF JUSTICE REHNQUIST delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner South Dakota permits persons 19 years of age or older
to purchase beer containing up to 3.2% alcohol. S.D.Codified Laws
§ 35-6-27 (1986). In 1984, Congress enacted 23 U.S.C. §
158 (1982 ed., Supp. III), which directs the Secretary of
Transportation to withhold a percentage of federal highway funds
otherwise allocable from States "in which the purchase or public
possession . . . of any alcoholic beverage by a person who is less
than twenty-one years of age is lawful." The State sued in United
States District Court seeking a declaratory judgment that §
158 violates the constitutional limitations on congressional
exercise of the spending power and violates the Twenty-first
Amendment to the United States Constitution. The District Court
rejected the State's claims, and the Court of Appeals for the
Eighth Circuit affirmed. 791 F.2d 628 (1986).
In this Court, the parties direct most of their efforts to
defining the proper scope of the Twenty-first Amendment. Relying on
our statement in
California Retail Liquor Dealers Assn. v.
Midcal Aluminum, Inc., 445 U. S. 97,
445 U. S. 110
(1980), that the
"Twenty-first Amendment grants the States virtually complete
control over whether to permit importation or sale of liquor and
how to structure the liquor distribution system,"
South Dakota asserts that the setting of minimum drinking ages
is clearly within the "core powers" reserved to the States under
§ 2 of the Amendment. [
Footnote 1] Brief for Petitioner 43-44. Section 158,
petitioner claims, usurps
Page 483 U. S. 206
that core power. The Secretary, in response, asserts that the
Twenty-first Amendment is simply not implicated by § 158; the
plain language of § 2 confirms the States' broad power to
impose restrictions on the sale and distribution of alcoholic
beverages, but does not confer on them any power to permit sales
that Congress seeks to
prohibit. Brief for Respondent
25-26. That Amendment, under this reasoning, would not prevent
Congress from affirmatively enacting a national minimum drinking
age more restrictive than that provided by the various state laws;
and it would follow
a fortiori that the indirect
inducement involved here is compatible with the Twenty-first
Amendment.
These arguments present questions of the meaning of the
Twenty-first Amendment, the bounds of which have escaped precise
definition.
Bacchus Imports, Ltd. v. Dias, 468 U.
S. 263,
468 U. S.
274-276 (1984);
Craig v. Boren, 429 U.
S. 190,
429 U. S. 206
(1976). Despite the extended treatment of the question by the
parties, however, we need not decide in this case whether that
Amendment would prohibit an attempt by Congress to legislate
directly a national minimum drinking age. Here, Congress has acted
indirectly under its spending power to encourage uniformity in the
States' drinking ages. As we explain below, we find this
legislative effort within constitutional bounds even if Congress
may not regulate drinking ages directly.
The Constitution empowers Congress to
"lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts, and Excises, to pay the
Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the
United States."
Art. I, § 8, cl. 1. Incident to this power, Congress may
attach conditions on the receipt of federal funds, and has
repeatedly employed the power
"to further broad policy objectives by conditioning receipt of
federal moneys upon compliance by the recipient with federal
statutory and administrative directives."
Fullilove v. Klutznick, 448 U.
S. 448,
448 U. S. 474
(1980) (opinion of Burger, C.J.).
See Lau v. Nichols,
414 U. S. 563,
414 U. S. 569
(1974);
Ivanhoe Irrigation Dist. v. McCracken,
357 U. S. 275,
357 U. S. 295
(1958);
Oklahoma
Page 483 U. S. 207
v. Civil Service Comm'n, 330 U.
S. 127,
330 U. S.
143-144 (1947);
Steward Machine Co. v. Davis,
301 U. S. 548
(1937). The breadth of this power was made clear in
United
States v. Butler, 297 U. S. 1,
297 U. S. 66
(1936), where the Court, resolving a longstanding debate over the
scope of the Spending Clause, determined that
"the power of Congress to authorize expenditure of public moneys
for public purposes is not limited by the direct grants of
legislative power found in the Constitution."
Thus, objectives not thought to be within Article I's
"enumerated legislative fields,"
id. at
297 U. S. 65, may
nevertheless be attained through the use of the spending power and
the conditional grant of federal funds.
The spending power is of course not unlimited,
Pennhurst
State School and Hospital v. Halderman, 451 U. S.
1,
451 U. S. 17, and
n. 13 (1981), but is instead subject to several general
restrictions articulated in our cases. The first of these
limitations is derived from the language of the Constitution
itself: the exercise of the spending power must be in pursuit of
"the general welfare."
See Helvering v. Davis,
301 U. S. 619,
301 U. S.
640-641 (1937);
United States v. Butler, supra,
at
297 U. S. 65. In
considering whether a particular expenditure is intended to serve
general public purposes, courts should defer substantially to the
judgment of Congress.
Helvering v. Davis, supra, at
301 U. S. 640,
301 U. S. 645.
[
Footnote 2] Second, we have
required that, if Congress desires to condition the States' receipt
of federal funds, it "must do so unambiguously . . enabl[ing] the
States to exercise their choice knowingly, cognizant of the
consequences of their participation."
Pennhurst State School
and Hospital v. Halderman, supra, at
451 U. S. 17.
Third, our cases have suggested (without significant elaboration)
that conditions on federal grants might be illegitimate if they are
unrelated "to the federal interest in particular national projects
or programs."
Massachusetts v. United States, 435 U.
S. 444,
435 U. S.
461
Page 483 U. S. 208
(1978) (plurality opinion).
See also Ivanhoe Irrigation
Dist. v. McCracken, supra, at
357 U. S. 295
("[T]he Federal Government may establish and impose reasonable
conditions relevant to federal interest in the project and to the
over-all objectives thereof"). Finally, we have noted that other
constitutional provisions may provide an independent bar to the
conditional grant of federal funds.
Lawrence County v.
Lead-Deadwood School Dist., 469 U. S. 256,
469 U. S.
269-270 (1985);
Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U. S.
1,
424 U. S. 91
(1976) (per curiam);
King v. Smith, 392 U.
S. 309,
392 U. S. 333,
n. 34 (1968).
South Dakota does not seriously claim that § 158 is
inconsistent with any of the first three restrictions mentioned
above. We can readily conclude that the provision is designed to
serve the general welfare, especially in light of the fact that
"the concept of welfare or the opposite is shaped by Congress. . .
."
Helvering v. Davis, supra, at
301 U. S. 645.
Congress found that the differing drinking ages in the States
created particular incentives for young persons to combine their
desire to drink with their ability to drive, and that this
interstate problem required a national solution. The means it chose
to address this dangerous situation were reasonably calculated to
advance the general welfare. The conditions upon which States
receive the funds, moreover, could not be more clearly stated by
Congress.
See 23 U.S.C. § 158 (1982 ed., Supp. III).
And the State itself, rather than challenging the germaneness of
the condition to federal purposes, admits that it "has never
contended that the congressional action was . . . unrelated to a
national concern in the absence of the Twenty-first Amendment."
Brief for Petitioner 52. Indeed, the condition imposed by Congress
is directly related to one of the main purposes for which highway
funds are expended -- safe interstate travel.
See 23
U.S.C. § 101(b). [
Footnote
3]
Page 483 U. S. 209
This goal of the interstate highway system had been frustrated
by varying drinking ages among the States. A Presidential
commission appointed to study alcohol-related accidents and
fatalities on the Nation's highways concluded that the lack of
uniformity in the States' drinking ages created "an incentive to
drink and drive" because "young persons commut[e] to border States
where the drinking age is lower." Presidential Commission on Drunk
Driving, Final Report 11 (1983). By enacting § 158, Congress
conditioned the receipt of federal funds in a way reasonably
calculated to address this particular impediment to a purpose for
which the funds are expended.
The remaining question about the validity of § 158 -- and
the basic point of disagreement between the parties -- is whether
the Twenty-first Amendment constitutes an "independent
constitutional bar" to the conditional grant of federal funds.
Lawrence County v. Lead-Deadwood School Dist., supra, at
469 U. S.
269-270. Petitioner, relying on its view that the
Twenty-first Amendment prohibits
direct regulation of
drinking ages by Congress, asserts that
"Congress may not use the spending power to regulate that which
it is prohibited from regulating directly under the Twenty-first
Amendment."
Brief for Petitioner 52-53. But our cases show that this
"independent constitutional bar" limitation on the spending power
is not of the kind petitioner suggests.
United States v.
Butler, supra, at
297 U. S. 66, for
example, established that the constitutional limitations on
Congress when exercising its spending power are less exacting than
those on its authority to regulate directly.
Page 483 U. S. 210
We have also held that a perceived Tenth Amendment limitation on
congressional regulation of state affairs did not concomitantly
limit the range of conditions legitimately placed on federal
grants. In
Oklahoma v. Civil Service Comm'n, 330 U.
S. 127 (1947), the Court considered the validity of the
Hatch Act insofar as it was applied to political activities of
state officials whose employment was financed in whole or in part
with federal funds. The State contended that an order under this
provision to withhold certain federal funds unless a state official
was removed invaded its sovereignty in violation of the Tenth
Amendment. Though finding that "the United States is not concerned
with, and has no power to regulate, local political activities as
such of state officials," the Court nevertheless held that the
Federal Government "does have power to fix the terms upon which its
money allotments to states shall be disbursed."
Id. at
330 U. S. 143.
The Court found no violation of the State's sovereignty because the
State could, and did, adopt
"the 'simple expedient' of not yielding to what she urges is
federal coercion. The offer of benefits to a state by the United
States dependent upon cooperation by the state with federal plans,
assumedly for the general welfare, is not unusual."
Id. at
330 U. S.
143-144 (citation omitted).
See also Steward Machine
Co. v. Davis, 301 U.S. at
301 U. S. 595
("There is only a condition which the state is free at pleasure to
disregard or to fulfill");
Massachusetts v. Mellon,
262 U. S. 447,
447 U. S. 482
(1923).
These cases establish that the "independent constitutional bar"
limitation on the spending power is not, as petitioner suggests, a
prohibition on the indirect achievement of objectives which
Congress is not empowered to achieve directly. Instead, we think
that the language in our earlier opinions stands for the
unexceptionable proposition that the power may not be used to
induce the States to engage in activities that would themselves be
unconstitutional. Thus, for example, a grant of federal funds
conditioned on invidiously discriminatory state action or the
infliction of cruel and unusual punishment would be an illegitimate
exercise of the Congress'
Page 483 U. S. 211
broad spending power. But no such claim can be or is made here.
Were South Dakota to succumb to the blandishments offered by
Congress and raise its drinking age to 21, the State's action in so
doing would not violate the constitutional rights of anyone.
Our decisions have recognized that, in some circumstances, the
financial inducement offered by Congress might be so coercive as to
pass the point at which "pressure turns into compulsion."
Steward Machine Co. v. Davis, supra, at
301 U. S. 590.
Here, however, Congress has directed only that a State desiring to
establish a minimum drinking age lower than 21 lose a relatively
small percentage of certain federal highway funds. Petitioner
contends that the coercive nature of this program is evident from
the degree of success it has achieved. We cannot conclude, however,
that a conditional grant of federal money of this sort is
unconstitutional simply by reason of its success in achieving the
congressional objective.
When we consider, for a moment, that all South Dakota would lose
if she adheres to her chosen course as to a suitable minimum
drinking age is 5% of the funds otherwise obtainable under
specified highway grant programs, the argument as to coercion is
shown to be more rhetoric than fact. As we said a half century ago
in
Steward Machine Co. v. Davis:
"[E]very rebate from a tax when conditioned upon conduct is in
some measure a temptation. But to hold that motive or temptation is
equivalent to coercion is to plunge the law in endless
difficulties. The outcome of such a doctrine is the acceptance of a
philosophical determinism by which choice becomes impossible. Till
now, the law has been guided by a robust common sense which assumes
the freedom of the will as a working hypothesis in the solution of
its problems."
301 U.S. at
301 U. S.
589-590.
Here Congress has offered relatively mild encouragement to the
States to enact higher minimum drinking ages than they would
otherwise choose. But the enactment of such laws remains the
prerogative of the States not merely in theory,
Page 483 U. S. 212
but in fact. Even if Congress might lack the power to impose a
national minimum drinking age directly, we conclude that
encouragement to state action found in § 158 is a valid use of
the spending power. Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of
Appeals is
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
Section 2 of the Twenty-first Amendment provides:
"The transportation or importation into any State, Territory, or
possession of the United States for delivery or use therein of
intoxicating liquors, in violation of the laws thereof, is hereby
prohibited."
[
Footnote 2]
The level of deference to the congressional decision is such
that the Court has more recently questioned whether "general
welfare" is a judicially enforceable restriction at all.
See
Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U. S. 1,
424 U. S. 90-91
(1976) (per curiam).
[
Footnote 3]
Our cases have not required that we define the outer bounds of
the "germaneness" or "relatedness" limitation on the imposition of
conditions under the spending power.
Amici urge that we
take this occasion to establish that a condition on federal funds
is legitimate only if it relates directly to the purpose of the
expenditure to which it is attached.
See Brief for
National Conference of State Legislatures
et al. as
Amici Curiae 10. Because petitioner has not sought such a
restriction,
see Tr. of Oral Arg.19-21, and because we
find any such limitation on conditional federal grants satisfied in
this case in any event, we do not address whether conditions less
directly related to the particular purpose of the expenditure might
be outside the bounds of the spending power.
JUSTICE BRENNAN, dissenting.
I agree with JUSTICE O'CONNOR that regulation of the minimum age
of purchasers of liquor falls squarely within the ambit of those
powers reserved to the States by the Twenty-first Amendment.
See post at
483 U. S. 218.
Since States possess this constitutional power, Congress cannot
condition a federal grant in a manner that abridges this right. The
Amendment, itself, strikes the proper balance between federal and
state authority. I therefore dissent.
JUSTICE O'CONNOR, dissenting.
The Court today upholds the National Minimum Drinking Age
Amendment, 23 U.S.C. § 158 (1982 ed., Supp. III), as a valid
exercise of the spending power conferred by Article I, § 8.
But § 158 is not a condition on spending reasonably related to
the expenditure of federal funds, and cannot be justified on that
ground. Rather, it is an attempt to regulate the sale of liquor, an
attempt that lies outside Congress' power to regulate commerce
because it falls within the ambit of § 2 of the Twenty-first
Amendment.
My disagreement with the Court is relatively narrow on the
spending power issue: it is a disagreement about the application of
a principle, rather than a disagreement on the principle itself. I
agree with the Court that Congress may attach conditions on the
receipt of federal funds to further "the federal interest in
particular national projects or programs."
Massachusetts v.
United States, 435 U. S. 444,
435 U. S. 461
(1978);
see Oklahoma v. Civil Service Comm'n, 330 U.
S. 127,
330 U. S.
143-144 (1947);
Steward Machine Co. v. Davis,
301 U. S. 548
(1937). I also subscribe to the established proposition
Page 483 U. S. 213
that the reach of the spending power "is not limited by the
direct grants of legislative power found in the Constitution."
United States v. Butler, 297 U. S. 1,
297 U. S. 66
(1936). Finally, I agree that there are four separate types of
limitations on the spending power: the expenditure must be for the
general welfare,
Helvering v. Davis, 301 U.
S. 619,
301 U. S.
640-641 (1937), the conditions imposed must be
unambiguous,
Pennhurst State School and Hospital v.
Halderman, 451 U. S. 1,
451 U. S. 17
(1981), they must be reasonably related to the purpose of the
expenditure,
Massachusetts v. United States, supra, at
483 U. S. 461,
and the legislation may not violate any independent constitutional
prohibition,
Lawrence County v. Lead-Deadwood School
Dist., 469 U. S. 256,
469 U. S.
269-270 (1985).
Ante at
483 U.S. 207-208. Insofar as two of
those limitations are concerned, the Court is clearly correct that
§ 158 is wholly unobjectionable. Establishment of a national
minimum drinking age certainly fits within the broad concept of the
general welfare, and the statute is entirely unambiguous. I am also
willing to assume,
arguendo, that the Twenty-first
Amendment does not constitute an "independent constitutional bar"
to a spending condition.
See ante at
483 U. S.
209-211.
But the Court's application of the requirement that the
condition imposed be reasonably related to the purpose for which
the funds are expended is cursory and unconvincing. We have
repeatedly said that Congress may condition grants under the
spending power only in ways reasonably related to the purpose of
the federal program.
Massachusetts v. United States,
supra, at
435 U. S. 461;
Ivanhoe Irrigation Dist. v. McCracken, 357 U.
S. 275,
357 U. S. 295
(1958) (the United States may impose "reasonable conditions
relevant to federal interest in the project and to the over-all
objectives thereof");
Steward Machine Co. v. Davis, supra,
at
301 U. S. 590
("We do not say that a tax is valid, when imposed by act of
Congress, if it is laid upon the condition that a state may escape
its operation through the adoption of a statute unrelated in
subject matter to activities fairly within the scope of national
policy and power"). In my view, establishment of a minimum
drinking
Page 483 U. S. 214
age of 21 is not sufficiently related to interstate highway
construction to justify so conditioning funds appropriated for that
purpose.
In support of its contrary conclusion, the Court relies on a
supposed concession by counsel for South Dakota that the State "has
never contended that the congressional action was . . . unrelated
to a national concern in the absence of the Twenty-first
Amendment." Brief for Petitioner 52. In the absence of the
Twenty-first Amendment, however, there is a strong argument that
the Congress might regulate the conditions under which liquor is
sold under the commerce power, just as it regulates the sale of
many other commodities that are in or affect interstate commerce.
The fact that the Twenty-first Amendment is crucial to the State's
argument does not, therefore, amount to a concession that the
condition imposed by § 158 is reasonably related to highway
construction. The Court also relies on a portion of the argument
transcript in support of its claim that South Dakota conceded the
reasonable relationship point.
Ante at
483 U. S.
208-209, n. 3, citing Tr. of Oral Arg.19-21. But
counsel's statements there are, at best, ambiguous. Counsel
essentially said no more than that he was not prepared to argue the
reasonable relationship question discussed at length in the Brief
for the National Conference of State Legislatures
et al.
as
Amici Curiae.
Aside from these "concessions" by counsel, the Court asserts the
reasonableness of the relationship between the supposed purpose of
the expenditure -- "safe interstate travel" -- and the drinking age
condition.
Ante at
483 U. S. 208.
The Court reasons that Congress wishes that the roads it builds may
be used safely, that drunken drivers threaten highway safety, and
that young people are more likely to drive while under the
influence of alcohol under existing law than would be the case if
there were a uniform national drinking age of 21. It hardly needs
saying, however, that, if the purpose of § 158 is to deter
drunken driving, it is far too over- and under-inclusive. It is
overinclusive because it stops teenagers from drinking even when
they are not about to drive on interstate
Page 483 U. S. 215
highways. It is under-inclusive because teenagers pose only a
small part of the drunken driving problem in this Nation.
See,
e.g., 130 Cong.Rec. 18648 (1984) (remarks of Sen. Humphrey)
("Eighty-four percent of all highway fatalities involving alcohol
occur among those whose ages exceed 21");
id. at 18651
(remarks of Sen. McClure) ("Certainly, statistically, if you use
that one set of statistics, then the mandatory drinking age ought
to be raised at least to 30");
ibid. (remarks of Sen.
Symms) ("[M]ost of the studies point out that the drivers of age
21-24 are the worst offenders").
When Congress appropriates money to build a highway, it is
entitled to insist that the highway be a safe one. But it is not
entitled to insist as a condition of the use of highway funds that
the State impose or change regulations in other areas of the
State's social and economic life because of an attenuated or
tangential relationship to highway use or safety. Indeed, if the
rule were otherwise, the Congress could effectively regulate almost
any area of a State's social, political, or economic life on the
theory that use of the interstate transportation system is somehow
enhanced. If, for example, the United States were to condition
highway moneys upon moving the state capital, I suppose it might
argue that interstate transportation is facilitated by locating
local governments in places easily accessible to interstate
highways -- or, conversely, that highways might become overburdened
if they had to carry traffic to and from the state capital. In my
mind, such a relationship is hardly more attenuated than the one
which the Court finds supports § 158.
Cf. Tr. of Oral
Arg. 39 (counsel for the United States conceding that to condition
a grant upon adoption of a unicameral legislature would violate the
"germaneness" requirement).
There is a clear place at which the Court can draw the line
between permissible and impermissible conditions on federal grants.
It is the line identified in the Brief for the National Conference
of State Legislatures
et al. as
Amici Curiae:
Page 483 U. S. 216
"Congress has the power to
spend for the general
welfare, it has the power to
legislate only for delegated
purposes. . . ."
"The appropriate inquiry, then, is whether the spending
requirement or prohibition is a condition on a grant or whether it
is regulation. The difference turns on whether the requirement
specifies in some way how the money should be spent, so that
Congress' intent in making the grant will be effectuated. Congress
has no power under the Spending Clause to impose requirements on a
grant that go beyond specifying how the money should be spent. A
requirement that is not such a specification is not a condition,
but a regulation, which is valid only if it falls within one of
Congress' delegated regulatory powers."
Id. at 19-20.
This approach harks back to
United States v. Butler,
297 U. S. 1 (1936),
the last case in which this Court struck down an Act of Congress as
beyond the authority granted by the Spending Clause. There the
Court wrote that
"[t]here is an obvious difference between a statute stating the
conditions upon which moneys shall be expended and one effective
only upon assumption of a contractual obligation to submit to a
regulation which otherwise could not be enforced."
Id. at
297 U. S. 73. The
Butler Court saw the Agricultural Adjustment Act for what
it was -- an exercise of regulatory, not spending, power. The error
in
Butler was not the Court's conclusion that the Act was
essentially regulatory, but rather its crabbed view of the extent
of Congress' regulatory power under the Commerce Clause. The
Agricultural Adjustment Act was regulatory but it was regulation
that today would likely be considered within Congress' commerce
power.
See, e.g., Katzenbach v. McClung, 379 U.
S. 294 (1964);
Wickard v. Filburn, 317 U.
S. 111 (1942).
While
Butler's authority is questionable insofar as it
assumes that Congress has no regulatory power over farm
production,
Page 483 U. S. 217
its discussion of the spending power and its description of both
the power's breadth and its limitations remain sound. The Court's
decision in
Butler also properly recognizes the gravity of
the task of appropriately limiting the spending power. If the
spending power is to be limited only by Congress' notion of the
general welfare, the reality, given the vast financial resources of
the Federal Government, is that the Spending Clause gives
"power to the Congress to tear down the barriers, to invade the
states' jurisdiction, and to become a parliament of the whole
people, subject to no restrictions save such as are
self-imposed."
United States v. Butler, supra, at
297 U. S. 78.
This, of course, as
Butler held, was not the Framers' plan
and it is not the meaning of the Spending Clause.
Our later cases are consistent with the notion that, under the
spending power, the Congress may only condition grants in ways that
can fairly be said to be related to the expenditure of federal
funds. For example, in
Oklahoma v. CSC, 330 U.
S. 127 (1947), the Court upheld application of the Hatch
Act to a member of the Oklahoma State Highway Commission who was
employed in connection with an activity financed in part by loans
and grants from a federal agency. This condition is appropriately
viewed as a condition relating to how federal moneys were to be
expended. Other conditions that have been upheld by the Court may
be viewed as independently justified under some regulatory power of
the Congress. Thus, in
Fullilove v. Klutznick,
448 U. S. 448
(1980), the Court upheld a condition on federal grants that 10% of
the money be "set aside" for contracts with minority business
enterprises. But the Court found that the condition could be
justified as a valid regulation under the commerce power and §
5 of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Id. at
448 U. S. 476,
448 U. S. 478.
See also Lau v. Nichols, 414 U. S. 563
(1974) (upholding nondiscrimination provisions applied to local
schools receiving federal funds).
Page 483 U. S. 218
This case, however, falls into neither class. As discussed
above, a condition that a State will raise its drinking age to 21
cannot fairly be said to be reasonably related to the expenditure
of funds for highway construction. The only possible connection,
highway safety, has nothing to do with how the funds Congress has
appropriated are expended. Rather than a condition determining how
federal highway money shall be expended, it is a regulation
determining who shall be able to drink liquor. As such, it is not
justified by the spending power.
Of the other possible sources of congressional authority for
regulating the sale of liquor, only the commerce power comes to
mind. But in my view, the regulation of the age of the purchasers
of liquor, just as the regulation of the price at which liquor may
be sold, falls squarely within the scope of those powers reserved
to the States by the Twenty-first Amendment.
Capital Cities
Cable, Inc. v. Crisp, 467 U. S. 691,
467 U. S. 716
(1984). As I emphasized in
324 Liquor Corp. v. Duffy,
479 U. S. 335,
479 U. S. 356
(1987) (dissenting opinion):
"The history of the Amendment strongly supports Justice Black's
view that the Twenty-first Amendment was intended to return
absolute control of the liquor trade to the States, and that the
Federal Government could not use its Commerce Clause powers to
interfere in any manner with the States' exercise of the power
conferred by the Amendment."
Accordingly, Congress simply lacks power under the Commerce
Clause to displace state regulation of this kind.
Ibid.
The immense size and power of the Government of the United
States ought not obscure its fundamental character. It remains a
Government of enumerated powers.
McCulloch
v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316,
17 U. S. 405
(1819). Because 23 U.S.C. § 158 (1982 ed., Supp. III) cannot
be justified as an exercise of any power delegated to the Congress,
it is not authorized by the Constitution. The Court errs in holding
it to be the law of the land, and I respectfully dissent.