The modern, centralized American state was supposedly born in the Great
Depression of the 1930s. Kimberley S. Johnson argues that this
conventional wisdom is wrong. Cooperative federalism was not born in a
Big Bang, but instead emerged out of power struggles within the nation's
major political institutions during the late nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries.
Examining the fifty-two years from the end of Reconstruction to the
beginning of the Great Depression, Johnson shows that the "first New
Federalism" was created during this era from dozens of policy
initiatives enacted by a modernizing Congress. The expansion of national
power took the shape of policy instruments that reflected the
constraints imposed by the national courts and the Constitution, but
that also satisfied emergent policy coalitions of interest groups, local
actors, bureaucrats, and members of Congress.
Thus, argues Johnson, the New Deal was not a decisive break with the
past, but rather a superstructure built on a foundation that emerged
during the Gilded Age and the Progressive Era. Her evidence draws on an
analysis of 131 national programs enacted between 1877 and 1930, a
statistical analysis of these programs, and detailed case studies of
three of them: the Federal Highway Act of 1916, the Food and Drug Act of
1906, and the Sheppard-Towner Act of 1921. As this book shows,
federalism has played a vital but often underappreciated role in shaping
the modern American state.