Everything about Twenty-first Amendment To The United States Constitution totally explained
The
Twenty-first Amendment (
Amendment XXI) to the
United States Constitution repealed the
Eighteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which had mandated nationwide
Prohibition.
Text
Background
The Eighteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution had ushered in a period of time known as "Prohibition", during which the manufacture, distribution, and sale of alcoholic beverages was made illegal. Passage of the Eighteenth Amendment, in 1919, was the crowning achievement of the temperance movement, but it soon proved highly unpopular. As more and more Americans came to the conclusion that the Eighteenth Amendment had been an error, movement grew for a repeal. However, repeal was complicated by
grassroots politics. Although the US Constitution provides two methods for ratifying constitutional amendments, only one method had been used up to this point in time; that was for the proposed amendment to be ratified by the state legislatures of three-fourths of the states. However, the conventional wisdom of the day was that the state legislators of many states were either beholden to or simply fearful of the temperance lobby. For this reason, when
Congress formally proposed the repeal of Prohibition on
February 20,
1933 (with the requisite two-thirds having voted in favor in each house; 63 to 21 in the Senate and 289 to 121 in the House), they chose to use the alternate ratification method:
state conventions. This is the only Amendment to have been ratified by this method.
The Twenty-first Amendment is also one of only two provisions of the Constitution to prohibit private conduct; the other is the
Thirteenth Amendment. As Laurence Tribe points out: "there are two ways, and only two ways, in which an ordinary private citizen ... can violate the United States Constitution. One is to enslave someone, a suitably hellish act. The other is to bring a bottle of beer, wine, or bourbon into a State in violation of its beverage control laws—an act that might have been thought juvenile, and perhaps even lawless, but unconstitutional?"
Proposal and ratification
The Twenty-first Amendment was fully ratified on
December 5,
1933. It is the only Amendment thus far ratified by
state conventions, specially selected for the purpose, whereas all other amendments have been ratified by state
legislatures. It is also the only amendment that was passed for the explicit and nearly sole purpose of repealing an
earlier amendment to the Constitution. The 21st amendment ended national prohibition in early December.
Implementation
State and local control
The second section bans the importation of alcohol in violation of state or territorial law.
This has been interpreted to give states essentially absolute control over
alcoholic beverages, and many
U.S. states still remained "
dry" (with state prohibition of alcohol) long after its ratification. (
Mississippi was the last, remaining dry until 1966; Kansas continued to prohibit public bars until 1987). Many states now delegate the authority over alcohol granted to them by this Amendment to their
municipalities or
counties (or both), which has led to many
lawsuits over
First Amendment rights when local governments have tried to revoke liquor
licenses.
Court rulings
Court rulings involving this amendment have been rare.
In
Craig v. Boren (1976), the Supreme Court found that analysis of the
Equal Protection Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment hadn't been changed by the passage of the Twenty first Amendment.
In
South Dakota v. Dole (1987), the Supreme Court upheld the withholding of some federal highway funds to South Dakota because they allowed 3.2% beer to be sold to some adults under the age of 21. In a 7–2 decision,
Chief Justice Rehnquist held that the offer of benefits isn't coercion that inappropriately invades state sovereignty.
Justice O'Connor dissented, arguing that the relationship between the highway funds and the drinking age regulation was too attenuated.
In May 2005, the Supreme Court decided in
Granholm v. Heald (2005), by a 5–4 majority, that the Twenty-first Amendment doesn't overrule the
Dormant Commerce Clause with respect to alcohol sales, and states must treat in-state and out-of-state wineries equally.
The Congress proposed the Twenty-first Amendment on
February 20,
1933. The following states ratified the amendment:
- Michigan (April 10, 1933)
- Wisconsin (April 25, 1933)
- Rhode Island (May 8, 1933)
- Wyoming (May 25, 1933)
- New Jersey (June 1, 1933)
- Delaware (June 24, 1933)
- Indiana (June 26, 1933)
- Massachusetts (June 26, 1933)
- New York (June 27, 1933)
- Illinois (July 10, 1933)
- Iowa (July 10, 1933)
- Connecticut (July 11, 1933)
- New Hampshire (July 11, 1933)
- California (July 24, 1933)
- West Virginia (July 25, 1933)
- Arkansas (August 1, 1933)
- Oregon (August 7, 1933)
- Alabama (August 8, 1933)
- Tennessee (August 11, 1933)
- Missouri (August 29, 1933)
- Arizona (September 5, 1933)
- Nevada (September 5, 1933)
- Vermont (September 23, 1933)
- Colorado (September 26, 1933)
- Washington (October 3, 1933)
- Minnesota (October 10, 1933)
- Idaho (October 17, 1933)
- Maryland (October 18, 1933)
- Virginia (October 25, 1933)
- New Mexico (November 2, 1933)
- Florida (November 14, 1933)
- Texas (November 24, 1933)
- Kentucky (November 27, 1933)
- Ohio (December 5, 1933)
- Pennsylvania (December 5, 1933)
- Utah (December 5, 1933)
Ratification was completed on
December 5,
1933. The amendment was subsequently ratified by the following states:
Maine (December 6, 1933)
Montana (August 6, 1934)
In addition, the following state rejected the amendment:
South Carolina (December 4, 1933)
North Carolina voters rejected a convention to consider the amendment on November 7, 1933.(External Link
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