Robert Longley is a U.S. government and history expert with over 30 years of experience in municipal government and urban planning.
Updated on February 03, 2021Article I, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution specifies the “expressed” or “enumerated” powers of Congress. These specific powers form the basis of the American system of “federalism,” the division and sharing of powers between the central government and the state governments.
The powers of Congress are limited to those specifically listed in Article I, Section 8 and those determined to be “necessary and proper” to carry out those powers. The Article’s so-called “necessary and proper” or “elastic” clause creates the justification for Congress to exercise several “implied powers,” such as the passage of laws regulating the private possession of firearms.
In addition, Article III Section 3 of the Constitution grants Congress the power to assess punishment for the crime of treason, and Article IV Section 3 grants Congress the power to create rules and regulations considered “needful” in dealing with the U.S. territories or “other Property belonging to the United States.”
Perhaps the most important powers reserved to Congress by Article I, Section 8 are those to create taxes, tariffs and other sources of funds needed to maintain the operations and programs of the federal government and to authorize the expenditure of those funds. In addition to the taxation powers in Article I, the Sixteenth Amendment authorizes Congress to establish and provide for the collection of a national income tax. The power to direct the expenditure of federal funds, known as the “power of the purse,” is essential to the system of “checks and balances” by giving the legislative branch great authority over the executive branch, which must ask Congress for all of its funding and approval of the president’s annual federal budget.
The complete text of Article I, Section 8 creating the 17 enumerated powers of Congress reads as follows:
The final clause of Article I, Section 8—known as the “Necessary and Proper Clause” is the source of the implied powers of Congress.
One of the first and most famous uses of implied power arose from the Supreme Court’s landmark 1819 McCulloch vs. Maryland decision. In this case, Congress had created the Second Bank of the United States, deeming its action “necessary and proper” for the general welfare of the United States and its people. When Maryland tried to place a tax on notes issued by the bank, U.S. Representative John McCulloch appealed it. The Supreme Court unanimously ruled in McCulloch’s favor, preserving the Second Bank and creating the precedent for Congress to use its implied powers in creating laws.
Since McCulloch vs. Maryland, Congress has used its implied powers in enacting laws regulating firearms, establishing the federal minimum wage, creating the income tax, and establishing the military draft, among others.
In passing many laws, Congress draws its authority from the “Commerce Clause” of Article I, Section 8, granting Congress the power to regulate business activities “among the states.”
Over the years, Congress has relied on the Commerce Clause to pass environmental, gun control, and consumer protection laws because many aspects of business require materials and products to cross state lines.
However, the scope of the laws passed under the Commerce Clause is not unlimited. Concerned about the rights of the states, the U.S. Supreme Court in recent years has issued rulings limiting the power of Congress to pass legislation under the commerce clause or other powers specifically contained in Article I, Section 8. For example, the Supreme Court has overturned the federal Gun-Free School Zones Act of 1990 and laws intended to protect abused women on the grounds that such localized police matters should be regulated by the states.
All powers not granted to the U.S. Congress by Article I, Section 8 are left to the states. Worried that these limitations to the powers of the federal government were not clearly enough stated in the original Constitution, the First Congress adopted the Tenth Amendment, which clearly states that all powers not granted to the federal government are reserved to the states or the people.