The Trojan Horse of Cooperative Federalism
For decades, Democrats and Republicans alike have
invested heavily in governance schemes that erode the Constitution’s separation
of powers and mar its proper functioning. The Federal judiciary has uniformly
rubber-stamped these schemes. The consequence has been an unsustainable spree
of borrowing, spending and overregulation at the Federal level, cyclical fiscal
crises at the state level, and less accountable and less representative government
at every level.
These governance schemes are generally of two kinds:
one erodes the separation of powers between Federal and state governments,
while the other erodes the separation of powers within the Federal government.
In the first category is “cooperative federalism”, whereby the Federal
government uses monopoly powers to coerce and subvert the prerogatives of state
governments. In the other is Congress’s delegation of vast rule-making
authority to administrative agencies.
These two categories of concern are often treated as
being entirely distinct, but they share profound similarities. Both are methods
for Congress to escape accountability by hiding its power in other institutions
of government. Cooperative federalism allows Congress to hide its power within
the decision-making of state governments, while its delegation of rule-making
authority allows it to hide its power in the far-flung bureaucracy of the
Executive Branch.
The Federal judiciary has a crucial role to play in
maintaining and policing the boundaries of America’s basic institutions of
state. It is a role it abdicated when confronted with the popular nationalist
programs of the New Deal. The constitutional doctrines the judiciary has
invoked to let Congress blur these critical separations of power are deeply
flawed as a matter of constitutional law, and they have ultimately become
unsustainable as a matter of political economy. Federal courts must begin to
enforce a strict separation of powers, both between the Federal and state governments
and within the Federal government itself. And Congress itself must start
undoing the consequences of its own self-indulgence.
There are two main species of cooperative federalism.
The first is Federal assistance grants such as Medicaid, in which Congress
gives money to state governments on condition that their programs comply with
Federal preferences. The second is cooperative regulation, in which the Federal
government allows states to implement Federal regulations themselves, also on
condition that they meet certain requirements (known as “conditional
preemption”).
Both sound nice, but both violate the principle of
federalism in the Constitution, under which states are declared sovereign and
the powers of the Federal government are specifically enumerated and
correspondingly limited. Both allow anti-competitive political cartels in
Congress to strangle innovation and regulatory competition at the state level
by using the federal machinery to impose an uncompetitive policy baseline on
everybody.
At the Supreme Court, federalism has staged a
promising comeback, though it is still little more than a rear-guard action.
The Court ruled inGarcia v. San Antonio Metropolitan Transit Authority (1984)
that the limits on Congress’s power to control state governments depend on the
national political process itself—in other words, on Congress’s self-restraint.
Backing away from this dangerous idea, two crucial cases of the Rehnquist Court
established the blanket principle that the Federal government cannot command
state governments to do anything.
New York v. United States (1992) struck down part of a
Federal law because it required states either to take title to low-level
radioactive waste generated within their borders or to regulate its disposal
according to Congress’s instruction. “In this provision”, reasoned the Court’s
majority, “Congress has crossed the line distinguishing encouragement from
coercion.” Congress could not force states to choose between two alternatives,
neither of which Congress had the power to impose “as a free standing
requirement.” Writing for the majority, Justice Sandra Day O’Connor wrote,
“While Congress has substantial powers to govern the Nation directly, including
in areas of intimate concern to the States, the Constitution has never been
understood to confer upon Congress the ability to require the States to govern
according to Congress’ instructions.”
The rule of New York was strengthened five years later
in Printz v. United States, when the Court struck down a part of the Brady Act
that required states to conduct background checks on prospective gun
purchasers. The Court insisted that Federal and state governments occupy
separate spheres in a “structural framework of dual sovereignty” and that the
states must remain “independent and autonomous within their proper sphere of
authority.” In a majority opinion by Justice Antonin Scalia, the Court ruled
that if a Federal law offends “the structural framework of dual sovereignty”,
it is not “proper” and is “an act of usurpation.” Hence, Congress simply cannot
command a state official to do anything.
If New York and Printz blasted away the foundations of
Garcia’s cooperative federalism, they managed nevertheless to leave undisturbed
its twin pillars: conditional Federal grants and cooperative regulation. Under
New York, both are forms of “encouragement” not rising to the level of
“coercion.” Where the Federal government merely “encourages state regulation
rather than compelling it, state governments remain responsive to the local
electorate’s preferences; state officials remain accountable to the people.”
The distinction between the Federal commandeering of
state governments, which is prohibited, and cooperative Federal programs that
states are theoretically free to turn down, which is allowed, is an utterly
illusory one because in either case there is a penalty. If officials disobey a
legal requirement, they may be dismissed, and are subject to writs of mandamus
and criminal penalties. But if they don’t accept “voluntary” Federal grants
(and comply with the attached conditions), there is also a penalty: The tax
revenue their citizens have already contributed to the program will be
transferred to other states and they will lose all use of it. And if states
don’t accept Congress’s invitation to implement Federal law “voluntarily”, the
Feds take over, diminishing the state’s regulatory autonomy.
The imputation of a penalty is the difference between
law and a suggestion for good conduct. It’s the difference between putting up
posters to encourage schoolchildren to eat broccoli and giving them detention
for not doing so. Every law presupposes the free will of those subject to it.
They can choose to obey or suffer the penalty for not obeying. Hence, every law
contains elements of both encouragement and compulsion. That is as true of the
prohibition on murder as it is of the conditions attached to cooperative
Federal-state programs. Though murder is malum in se, there is no difference in
the form or operation of the command: Obey, or you will lose something you’re
otherwise entitled to have. Simply put, the penalties in cooperative federalism
give such programs the force of legal compulsion.
If we reverse the logic of O’Connor’s distinction
between encouragement and coercion and start by asking whether a Federal law
leaves elected state officials free to regulate “in accordance with the views
of the local electorate”, it becomes obvious that virtually all instances of
cooperative federalism boil down to the Federal commandeering of state
agencies. That commandeering is no less effective or compelling just because it
operates “indirectly” through the leverage of penalty.
South Dakota v. Dole (1987) upheld a Federal law that
threatened states with the loss of 5 percent of Federal highway funds if they
did not raise their drinking age to 21. Dole noted that the penalties attaching
to such programs could not be so onerous as to “pass the point at which
pressure turns into compulsion.” Dole insists that state prerogatives must be
preserved, both in theory and in fact, but the ruling would have us believe
that the state’s freedom to refuse the funding and its conditions constitutes
freedom of choice. It does, but only in the sense that I am free to disregard
the prohibition of murder.
The fact remains that states must either obey the
Federal will or accept an onerous penalty: the loss of their state’s share of
funding for the program in question. Dole imagines a spectrum of penalties from
mild to onerous, and some imaginary point in between that Congress cannot
cross. This rule is so indeterminate that it proved impossible for courts to
apply in the decades after Dole was handed down. No Federal court applying Dole
ever struck down a Federal penalty as coercive, no matter how coercive it
was—until the June 2012 Obamacare ruling.
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, a.k.a.
Obamacare, requires that states expand their Medicaid programs from
arrangements to help specific categories of poor people with healthcare
(pregnant women, the disabled, needy families, children) into a vast
wealth-redistribution scheme for the entire nonelderly population up to 133
percent of the Federal poverty level. It threatened states with the loss of all
Federal Medicaid funds if they did not comply with the new mandates. That
draconian penalty was too much for the Roberts Court, which ruled that the
Federal government could refuse states the subsidies that Obamacare provides
for the expansion itself, but could not cut off existing Medicaid funds for
states that refused to comply.
Compared with the modest penalty in Dole, the threat
of losing all Federal Medicaid funding (more than 20 percent of a typical state’s
budget) was “much more than relatively mild encouragement”, wrote Roberts: “It
is a gun to the head.” Wherever the point is between encouragement and
compulsion, the penalty for not complying with the Medicaid expansion was well
beyond it. But we are still left to wonder: Where is that all-important point?
The answer is: Nowhere. The point doesn’t exist, or
rather it exists wherever the Court chooses to place it in any given
case…before it decides to move it again. The Court has not recognized that, where
the conditions attached to Federal grants go beyond the narrow Federal interest
in how the money is spent, and impact broader state policies and programs, such
grants are coercive, not by degrees along a spectrum, but categorically. In all
such cases, the Federal government taxes money away from the residents of a
state and offers to give it back to the state only on condition that its
government complies with Federal preferences on a whole range of
quintessentially state policy matters. Even under the Court’s Obamacare ruling,
states that refuse to expand their Medicaid programs will still be subsidizing
the Medicaid expansion of other states. That is coercion, pure and simple.
Alas, the steady erosion of state autonomy that coercion entails will continue
until the Court finally confronts the fatal flaw in Dole.
The essential problem in conditional Federal funds for
the states arises from the lack of restraints on the purposes for which
Congress may use its taxing and spending power. Under the Constitution,
Congress has the power to levy taxes only in order “to provide for the common
Defense and general Welfare of the United States.” But nothing in the Supreme
Court’s inordinately deferential interpretation of this clause prevents
Congress from using that power in order to provide for the welfare of special
interest groups. The door to intergovernmental collusion and anti-competitive
fiscal cartels is thus left wide open.
The Constitution originally required that all “direct
taxes” (which the Supreme Court eventually interpreted to include income taxes)
be apportioned among the states according to population. In order to meet the
apportionment requirement, residents of poor states had to pay much higher tax
rates than residents of rich states, a grossly regressive scheme that made it
virtually impossible for Congress to enact any direct tax. Until early in the
20th century, Congress had to rely on indirect taxation (such as import duties
and excise taxes), a severely constrained source of revenue. But the 16thAmendment
gave Congress the power to levy income taxes without apportionment, putting
vast sums of taxpayer money at its disposal.
For the separation of Federal and state powers, the
consequences were fatal. Congress could now offer state officials this Faustian
bargain: Give up your autonomy in exchange for Federal funds, and you will be
able to offer your constituents more goodies while avoiding accountability for
increased taxation. As Michael Greve observes in The Upside-Down
Constitution(2012), this blurring of accountability has allowed officials at
the Federal and state levels to claim credit for much more spending than if
they had to account for it entirely by raising taxes on their own.
The dramatic expansion in the American public sector
since World War II has occurred almost entirely at the state level: As a share
of GDP, Federal revenue has remained steady while state revenue (not including
Federal assistance, which has exploded in recent years) has nearly tripled and
has almost pulled even with Federal revenue. Greve is almost certainly correct
that this expansion has been due to the collusive intermingling of state and
Federal finances. Worse, the collusion readily lends itself to the formation of
state fiscal cartels in Congress—cartels designed to diminish regulatory
competition and diversity among the states and impose the preferences of
uncompetitive states on everybody. In 1926, for example, Congress adopted a
Federal inheritance tax coupled with an offset for state inheritance taxes. This
not only neutralized the competitive advantage of states with low tax rates but
also strongly incentivized states to raise their rates. Among the effects of
this whole arrangement is the exacerbation of inequalities between rich states
and poor states (especially through the vehicle of matching funds) and the
amplification of cyclical state fiscal crises. And when this fiscally fueled
takeover of state governments runs into the political limits of what Congress
can tax, Congress does what no state can do: It borrows to the tune of
trillion-dollar deficits.
In terms of both flawed constitutional doctrine and
disastrous political economy, the problems are largely the same in the context
of cooperative regulation, the other main species of cooperative federalism.
This governance scheme (which legal scholars confusingly refer to as
“conditional preemption”) involves the Federal government giving states
“permission” to implement Federal law on condition that their programs meet
Federal specifications. The penalty here is not the threat of transferring the
state’s wealth to other states, but rather the threat of the Federal government
implementing Federal standards itself if states cannot or will not do so. The
ground for collusion is laid by a combination of the Supremacy Clause and
concurrent Federal-state jurisdiction over the same range of conduct, which
arose largely from the vast expansion of Federal commerce power after the New
Deal.
The arrangement contemplated in the Clean Air Act is
typical. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) says to each state,
“We’ll give you permission to implement our regulations yourself, so long as
you design your State Implementation Plan according to our specifications.
Otherwise we will pre-empt your regulation and impose our own Federal
Implementation Plan.” Because the business community is increasingly terrified
of the EPA (with good reason), states usually jump at the chance to implement
the regulations themselves, even at their own expense. The fiction of “voluntary”
state acceptance is even more tenuous here than in the conditional grants
context, because the state gets a bad deal no matter what choice it
makes—hardly the paradigm of an arms’ length contract freely entered into.
If the concerns for accountability and representative
government expressed in New York and Printz have proved only marginally
troubling for the Supreme Court in the face of coercive Federal grants such as
the one in Doleand Obamacare, those concerns have troubled the Court even less
in the arena of cooperative regulation. Its two major cooperative regulation
cases, Hodel v. Virginian Surface Mining (1981) and FERC v. Mississippi (1982),
appear to foreclose any constitutional challenge to such schemes on federalism
grounds. Hodel upheld a Federal law that established national standards for
surface coal mining and allowed each state to implement the standards through
regulatory programs subject to Federal approval. Absent a federally approved
state program, the Federal government would implement the standards itself in
that state. The Court ruled that, because Congress could simply have pre-empted
all state regulation, “We fail to see why the Surface Mining Act should become
constitutionally suspect simply because Congress chose to allow the States a
regulatory role.”
In fact, though the Justices failed to see it, there
was a very good reason to doubt the constitutionality of the Surface Coal
Mining Act. In effect, it deputized state governments into implementing Federal
regulations, diminishing both accountability and representative government. The
Act threatened the “States’ ability to function effectively in a federal
system” and their “separate and independent existence”, prerogatives which,
under Printz, are supposed to be categorically inviolable. (Incidentally, the
Act also violated separation of powers within the Federal government by
delegating to the states the President’s exclusive authority to see that the
laws are faithfully executed.)
The Court’s decisions in this area have been unstable
and contradictory for decades. There is room to argue that if Garcia is ever
finally overruled on the basis of New York and Printz, then Hodel and FERC
should fall with it. The “national political process” exalted in
Garciapresupposes that Congress can be held accountable for the costs and
consequences of its own policies. But it is precisely this accountability that
cooperative regulation allows Congress to escape by deputizing state
governments. That is why cooperative regulation is more than just a
lesser-included power of wholesale preemption and should be viewed as a
distinct kind of power.
The institutional incentives point in the same
direction. Acting through the EPA’s cooperative regulatory programs, Congress
does not merely hide accountability for its own policies within state agencies.
It also escapes the vital limitations that the legislative process imposes on
it when it must provide for the implementation of its own programs. If the EPA
didn’t have the option of subverting states into implementing its new
greenhouse gas regulations, for example, it might have to hire tens of
thousands of bureaucrats to process permit applications from the six million
businesses that could eventually be subject to the new regulations. It is
inconceivable that Congress would appropriate such vast sums to implement an
imposition that, in the form of “cap and trade”, couldn’t pass Congress even
with a Democratic supermajority. But if the EPA has the money to implement the
scheme in just a few states, it can threaten most of them into compliance.1
Hence, both of cooperative federalism’s two major
manifestations tend to create anti-competitive political cartels that diminish
self-government while increasing the power of Congress. But Printz still offers
hope for a historic shift in the Court’s thinking. If states must remain
“independent and autonomous within their proper sphere of authority”, then it
may once again be possible to trace the outer boundaries of the Federal
government’s delegated powers by tracing the outer boundaries of the states’
reserved powers.
It doesn’t really matter where the line is drawn. The
key thing is to draw it somewhere, and keep the functions of state and Federal
government strictly separate. The first step is for the Supreme Court to start
giving real teeth to its habitual insistence (repeated most recently in the
Obamacare decision) that the Federal power to regulate commerce “among the
several States” presupposes a judicially enforceable distinction between what
is national and what is truly local.
Giving Self-Government Away
In 1912, one of the New Republic’s original
triumvirate of writers, Walter Weyl, wrote: “In truth, the Constitution is not
democratic. It was, in intention, and is, in essence, undemocratic.” The
Progressives’ contempt for the Constitution went hand in hand with their
exaltation of supposedly scientific knowledge as a criterion of legitimacy for
legislation of all kinds. Both tendencies entailed a dangerous threat to
accountable, representative government—and to the power of the Supreme Court.
The Court’s authority to enforce the Constitution
would now be assailed by an increasingly powerful constituency for expanding
Federal power well beyond the limits that had been understood since the
Constitution’s ratification. Once Franklin D. Roosevelt was elected President,
the Court was continually on the ropes defending the Constitution against the
New Deal’s encroachments, until finally, after Roosevelt’s failed
“Court-Packing” proposal of 1937, it simply caved in. After Wickard v.
Filburn(1942) removed all effective limits on the Federal commerce power,
Congress began regulating all aspects of economic activity.
Combined with the then-modish infatuation with
science, this opened the floodgates to delegations of legislative authority to
Executive Branch agencies. Given the difficulty of drawing clear boundaries
between legislative, executive and judicial powers, the Court abandoned formal
categories in favor of a functional approach that allowed any delegation for
which Congress supplied “intelligible” guiding principles, and prohibited only
“usurpation” of the powers of other branches. Yet as David Schoenbrod observes,
usurpation is not the only problem: “Legislators enhance their power by
delegating: they retain the ability to influence events by pressuring agencies,
while they shed responsibility for the exercise of power by avoiding public
votes on hard choices.”2
Congressional influence over agency actions is
retained through the power of the purse, and through the Senate’s power to
consent to Executive Branch appointees. But delegations of rule-making
authority vitiate a cardinal purpose of having a Senate in the first place.
Upon his return from the American embassy in France, Thomas Jefferson is said
to have complained to George Washington about the creation of the Senate, for
which he saw no need. The incident supposedly occurred over breakfast. “Why did
you pour that coffee into your saucer?” asked Washington. “To cool it”,
answered Jefferson. “Even so”, replied Washington, “we pour legislation into
the senatorial saucer to cool it.”
In the modern era, the Senate’s “cooling” function is
captured in the power to filibuster, and the requirement of a 60-vote
supermajority to override it. Delegation eliminates this constraint: It allows
legislation to occur in effect even when only a minority in Congress supports
it, rather than blocking legislation when a sizeable minority opposes it. This
was demonstrated by the EPA’s recent greenhouse gas regulations, which never
would have passed in Congress.
Walter Lippmann, the most brilliant of the New
Republic’s founding triumvirate, advocated an approach to lawmaking that presupposed
the superiority of scientific understanding in the cost-benefit analysis that
legislatures routinely make. He assumed that scientific skepticism would win
out over political prurience. He was wrong. The scientific spirit is
quintessentially one of inquiry, skepticism and self-criticism. Those qualities
often go begging when science is proffered as certain knowledge in the service
of a political agenda. Lippmann failed to realize how vulnerable science is to
manipulation as a tool of political advocacy, whether by the Right or by the
Left.
Congress has nevertheless continued to exalt
supposedly scientific knowledge above popular self-government, no doubt partly
because it has such a strong incentive to do so. Its broad delegations of
rule-making authority have allowed it to escape accountability by placing “hard
choices” in the hands of supposed experts in the Executive Branch. The
Administrative Procedure Act of 1946 further blurs the separation of powers by
treating rule-making as a problem of due process rather than of properly
locating the legislative power. When an agency proposes new rules, it must
provide people with notice and an opportunity to be heard, nothing more. Courts
have strengthened these safeguards, but this has only reduced Congress’s
incentive to sort out the competing interests of interest groups, which look
increasingly to the courts to resolve their conflicts. And Humphrey’s Executor
v. United States (1935) ruled that if delegations contain quasi-legislative or
quasi-judicial functions, then the President’s power can also be curtailed,
thereby paving the way for agencies that are effectively independent of any
political control.
The separation of powers within the Federal government
is perhaps the most basic structural design feature of the Constitution.
Article I vests the legislative power in Congress, Article II vests the
executive power in the President, and Article III vests the judicial power in
the Federal courts. Obviously, this arrangement presupposes clear distinctions
between legislative, executive and judicial functions.
The difficulty of drawing distinctions between the
legislative and executive functions of government arises because the power to
execute laws implies the power to interpret them and fill in the gaps with
policy. Chevron v. NRDC (1984) embraced an extreme form of judicial deference
to Executive Branch agencies’ interpretations of Federal law, supposedly out of
respect for the prerogatives of the President. The Court has yet to grasp that
this deference to the President actually increases the power of Congress, as
Schoenbrod explains.
In Mistretta v. United States (1989), the Court
declared,
Our jurisprudence has been driven by a practical
understanding that in our increasingly complex society, replete with ever
changing and more technical problems, Congress simply cannot do its job absent
an ability to delegate power under broad general directives.
This proposition seems obvious enough—except that it
contradicts the Constitution’s most basic structural design feature. Proponents
of delegation point out that the Constitution does not offer much basis for a
judicially enforceable separation of powers.
And it is true: It does not. The Constitution was
designed to achieve balance among the three branches of government at the
Federal level. The Supreme Court has insisted that core functions remain the
preserve of the respective branches, but in cases of overlap it cannot referee
the conflict, which instead must be negotiated in the political arena. The desired
“separation of powers” instead must result mainly from the proper functioning
of the three branches, each under their own recognizance.
In Federalist No. 47, James Madison wrote, “the
accumulation of all powers, legislative, executive, and judiciary, in the same
hands, whether of one, a few, or many, and whether hereditary, self-appointed,
or elective, may justly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny.” All
three branches have contributed procedural safeguards to guard against this
danger in the delegation of rule-making authority. But such safeguards cannot
guard against the loss of accountable, representative government, because that
loss inheres in the delegation itself.
Supposedly, any law that attempts to vest legislative
power in the President or the courts is unconstitutional. Congress has gotten
around that by hiding its power within the policymaking discretion of the
Executive Branch, under the justification that it can enact laws “necessary and
proper for carrying into Execution” its constitutional powers. Members of
Congress can still influence agency action through the power of the purse;
their constituents can manipulate rulemaking through citizen lawsuits or by
“capturing” the agencies wholesale, but they can still disclaim responsibility
for the results. The net result is that agencies are able to ram through
sweeping regulations of society that would never pass Congress. Members of
Congress can claim credit for the benefits, while escaping accountability for
the costs. That is convenient for them, but very inconvenient for the people,
whose ability to control the government through the ballot-box is significantly
diluted.
Under current constitutional law, Congress can
delegate virtually all of its functions to the Executive Branch. Indeed, it
mostly has. Executive agencies add 60,000 pages of new rules every year, vastly
more than the volume of new laws passed by Congress.
The Supreme Court must take a broader view of what
constitutes the “core functions” of each branch. But given the largely
non-justiciable overlap at the margins, the political branches must also do
their part. The incoming Congress will showcase a significant contingent of
conservative legislators (from the elections of 2010 and 2012) who are wary of
Federal power and fiercely protective of the Constitution. Their challenge will
be to understand where Congress has gone too far, and thus where it must start
policing its own boundaries. Congress must reassert its role as the principal
rulemaker. It could start by passing the REINS Act, which would require
congressional approval of major new Executive Branch regulations.
Significant reforms of the laws on administrative
procedure could give the Federal courts a renewed basis for policing the
separation of powers within the Federal government. It will be especially
crucial to find Federal court appointees who understand that Congress increases
its power by hiding it in the Executive Branch, even when that appears to
augment rather than “usurp” executive power. In the meantime, Republicans and
Democrats in Congress will continue to profit from the work of a faceless,
nameless bureaucracy controlled by nobody and whose handiwork is untraceable to
them.
The national crisis the United States faces today has
resulted from specific, deeply flawed constitutional decisions of the Supreme
Court, and the expansions of congressional power those decisions have blessed.
Tinkering at the margins of such decisions in the interests of judicial
restraint makes sense when there is time to wait upon the glacial evolution in
the Court’s constitutional jurisprudence. But when, as now, various deeply
flawed lines of precedent have combined to produce a national crisis, the Court
must be willing to revisit and reverse precedents that are proving unworkable.
Congress also has a crucial role to play. Committee
hearings and reports can flesh out and help develop institutional consensus on
the dangers of cooperative federalism and excessive delegations of rule-making
authority. Proposals such as the REINS Act will have difficulty gaining
adherents in the absence of a broad consensus on the urgent need for sweeping
government reform.
The separation of powers within the Federal government
serves the same function that the Supreme Court has ascribed to federalism: As
the Court said recently, “federalism secures to citizens the liberties that
derive from the diffusion of sovereign power.” This argues for a renewed
national commitment to accountable and representative government, and to the
separation of powers on which it so vitally depends.
1. A similar dynamic applies to states that pass drug
laws at variance with Federal laws. See Jonathan P. Caulkins, Angela Hawken,
Beau Kilmer and Mark Kleiman, “A Voter’s Guide to Legalizing Marijuana”, The
American Interest(November/December 2012).
2. Schoenbrod, Power Without Responsibility: How
Congress Abuses the People through Delegation (Yale University Press, 1995), p.
20.
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