Posted by Todd Zywicki:
WINE WARS, PART 14—SENATOR BLAINE AND PROPOSED §3:

   Amazingly, Justice O'Connor next turns to proposed §3, and states that
   the decision to delete proposed §3 demonstrates that §2 was intended
   to give plenary power to the states over interstate commerce. I have
   explained previously why this reading of proposed §3 is incorrect.
   Here, therefore, I will limit myself to explaining why Justice
   O'Connor's interpretation of the relevant legislative history doesn't
   support her view.

   She writes, "When the Senate began its deliberations on the
   Twenty-first Amendment, the proposed Amendment included a § 3 not
   present in the adopted Amendment. This section granted the Federal
   Government concurrent authority over some limited aspects of the
   commerce of liquor." As noted previously, her characterization of §3
   as giving the federal government control over "some limited aspects of
   the commerce of liquor" is blatantly incorrect. As Congressman Lea
   himself states--in the paragraph of his speech immediately following
   the "extreme of State rights" passage--§3 was NOT thought to be a
   "limited" provision. Instead, §3 struck at the very heart of the
   problem with Prohibition--the unworkable system of concurrent
   authority over local affairs governing liquor, and the fear that the
   federal government could actually reimpose Prohibition or otherwise
   meddle in local affairs. The purpose of the 21st Amendment, to refresh
   the reader's memory, was to reinstate to the states their local police
   power regarding alcohol, not to give them new powers over interstate
   commerce. So §3 was not by any means a minor or limited power, it
   undermined the central purpose of §2.

   We then turn to Justice O'Connor's key argument, the comments of
   Senator Blaine. "Even Senator Blaine, the Chairman of the Senate
   Subcommittee that had held hearings on the proposed Amendment, opposed
   the limited grant of authority to the Federal Government in § 3.
   According to Senator Blaine, when the Federal Government was organized
   by the Constitution the States had `surrendered control over and
   regulation of interstate commerce.' 76 Cong.Rec. 4141 (1933). He
   viewed § 2 of the Amendment as a restoration of the power surrendered
   by the States when they joined the Union. Section 2 `restor[ed] to the
   States, in effect, the right to regulate commerce respecting a single
   commodity--namely, intoxicating liquor.' Ibid. In his view, the grant
   of authority to Congress in § 3 undercut the import of § 2: `Mr.
   President, my own personal viewpoint upon section 3 is that it is
   contrary to section 2 of the resolution. I am now endeavoring to give
   my personal views. The purpose of section 2 is to restore to the
   States by constitutional amendment absolute control in effect over
   interstate commerce affecting intoxicating liquors which enter the
   confines of the States. The State under section 2 may enact certain
   laws on intoxicating liquors, and section 2 at once gives such laws
   effect. Thus the States are granted larger power in effect and are
   given greater protection, while under section 3 the proposal is to
   take away from the States the powers that the States would have in the
   absence of the eighteenth amendment.' Id., at 4143."

   Note several points here. First, although Justice O'Connor introduces
   Senator Blaine as the Chair of the Senate Subcommittee that had held
   hearings on the Amendment, he specifically notes in the moving to his
   interpretation of §3 that he is giving his "own personal viewpoint,"
   not that of the Subcommittee. It seems obvious and under normal
   circumstances one would think it need not be expressly stated, but if
   Blaine is expressly and clearly drawing a distinction between his
   "personal viewpoint" and that of the committee--doesn't that mean it
   is obvious that his "personal viewpoint" is different from that of the
   committee. Oddly, Justice O'Connor seems to believe that in
   distinguishing his personal viewpoint from that of the committee,
   somehow he is actually speaking for the committee.

   More importantly, Justice O'Connor again loses the context of Blaine's
   remarks. A key exchange between Blaine and Wagner, which I quoted in
   an earlier post, color's the whole tenor of Blaine's remarks. Again to
   quote it: SEN. BLAINE: "Then came an amendment to the Wilson Act known
   as the Webb-Kenyon Act.... The language of the Webb-Kenyon Act was
   designed to give the State in effect power of regulation over
   intoxicating liquor from the time it actually entered the confines of
   the State...." SEN. WAGNER: "Mr. President, will the Senator yield?"
   SEN. BLAINE: "I see my able friend from New York shaking his head. I
   yield to him." SEN. WAGNER: "I do not want to enter into a
   controversy, because it really is not very important, but I do not
   think the Senator meant to say that by this act [Webb-Kenyon] Congress
   delegated to the States the power to regulate interstate commerce;
   Congress itself regulated interstate commerce to the point of removing
   all immunities of liquor in interstate commerce." SEN. BLAINE: "I
   think the Senator. I think he has given the correct statement of the
   doctrine. My understanding of the question was identically the
   same--that it was the action of the Congress of the United States in
   regulating intoxicating liquor that protected the dry State within the
   terms of the law passed by the Congress."

   As this clarifying exchange indicates, Blaine did not intend to state
   that the states were being given the power to regulate interstate
   commerce, although his loose phrasing suggests that. Rather, Congress
   retained the power over interstate Commerce, and §2 simply
   constitutionalized Congress's exercise of its Commerce Clause
   authority to allow states to treat domestic and interstate liquor
   equally.

   Moreover, Blaine places this entire debate over the 21st Amendment as
   the culmination of the long history that I have described in earlier
   posts. He summarizes the history starting with the Wilson Act, and the
   problem with Rhodes v. Iowa, where the Supreme Court held that the law
   did not prohibit interstate importation for personal use. Then
   Webb-Kenyon and the experience with Clark distilling. Then further
   modifications to Webb-Kenyon to tighten other minor holes in the law,
   leading to the present day of political and constitutional uncertainty
   of the states in enforcing their powers to remain dry. As he makes
   clear, the 21st Amendment is merely the culmination of this process,
   and an effort to reassure dry states by constitutionalizing this prior
   history.

   Following his recitation of all of this historical progress Blaine
   then goes on to note the tenuous constitutional and political
   foundation of Webb-Kenyon (described in an earlier post) and adds, "In
   the case of Clark against Maryland Railway Co. there was a divided
   opinion. There has been a divided opinion in respect to the earlier
   cases and that division of opinion seems to have come down to a very
   late day. So to assure the so-called dry States against the
   importation of intoxicating liquor into those States, it is proposed
   to write permanently into the Constitution a prohibition along that
   line. Mr. President, the pending proposal will give the State that
   guarantee." He then states the passage that O'Connor quotes about
   restoring liquor to its pre-Constitutional status, but in so doing he
   uses the same language that Wagner clarified a moment ago, that §2
   would "in effect" give the States power over interstate commerce in
   liquor--which, as he explained then, "in effect" meant that Congress
   was exercising its power to help the states enforce their laws.

   And note his concluding passage, "I am opposed to the dry States
   interfering with the so-called wet States in connection with this
   question of intoxicating liquors; and so, by the same token, I am
   willing to grant to the dry States full measure of protection, and
   thus prohibit the wet States from interfering in their internal
   affairs respecting the control of intoxicating liquors." This is the
   key passage--as Blaine clearly states, §2 relates to returning to the
   states control over the "internal affairs."

   Finally, Blaine's his "personal viewpoint" on which O'Connor relies
   seems consistent with what has been said so far. He states, "Mr.
   President, my own personal viewpoint upon section 3 is that it is
   contrary to section 2 of the resolution. I am now endeavoring to give
   my personal views. The purpose of section 2 is to restore to the
   States by constitutional amendment absolute control in effect over
   interstate commerce affecting intoxicating liquors which enter the
   confines of the States. The State under section 2 may enact certain
   laws on intoxicating liquors, and section 2 at once gives such laws
   effect. Thus the States are granted larger power in effect and are
   given greater protection, while under section 3 the proposal is to
   take away from the States the powers that the States would have in the
   absence of the eighteenth amendment."

   But O'Connor ignores the remainder of Blaine's remarks on this point.
   Blaine states, "The eighteenth amendment is an inflexible police
   regulation which might be appropriate in a municipal ordinance in
   those sections of our country where the people desire a bone-dry local
   regime. The eighteenth amendment does not give the Congress a general
   grant of power to regulate. It is strictly a prohibition, a mandate.
   It is specifically a prohibitive provision of the Constitution.
   Surely, Mr. President, it was never designed that our Constitution
   would be a compilation of local ordinances regulating the lives the
   customs, and the habits of our people. But that is exactly the
   character of the eighteenth amendment. It has no place in the
   Constitution." He then goes on to add that he would support any and
   all versions of sections 2 or 3 of the Constitution, so long as the
   final result was the repeal of Prohibition. "My object is to take the
   eighteenth amendment out of the Constitution." 76 Cong. Rec. 4143-44.

   It is thus clear from Blaine's remarks considered in context that he,
   like everyone else, understood the purpose of the 21st Amendment to be
   to repeal the 18th Amendment and thereby to restore the pre-18th
   Amendment constitutional balance, while constitutionalizing the Wilson
   and Webb-Kenyon Acts to provide assurance to the dry states. There is
   no indication that he specifically meant to repeal the
   nondiscrimination principle that was included in the Wilson and
   Webb-Kenyon Acts in enacting the 21st Amendment. Indeed, as Wagner
   clarified with Blaine, Blaine recognized that those acts were an act
   of the Congressional commerce clause authority, not a ceding of that
   authority to the states.

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