Limited government


In political philosophy, limited government is the concept of a government limited in power. It is a key concept in the history of liberalism.

Relationship to Constitutions

Limited government is closely associated with constitutions; the United States Constitution of 1789 and the French Constitution of 1793 were both enacted in an effort to reaffirm limited government, although in different ways. The U.S. Constitution achieved limited government through a separation of powers: "horizontal" separation of powers distributed power among branches of government ; "vertical" separation of powers. James Madison, one of the authors of the Federalist Papers, noted that the Framers of the American Constitution sought to create a government that was capable of both being controlled and of exercising control. Madison wrote in Federalist No. 51 that "the great security against a gradual concentration of the several powers in the same department, consists in giving to those who administer each department, the necessary constitutional means, and personal motives, to resist encroachments of the others."
The 1793 French Constitution, on the other hand, enshrined, legislative supremacy, and was based on idea, that limited government was best achieved through a "rational democratic self-government seeking to give expression to the general will... as the optimal antidote to the arbitrary rule of absolute monarchy."

History

Magna Carta and the U.S. Constitution also represent important milestones in the limiting of governmental power. The earliest use of the term limited government dates back to King James VI and I in the late 16th century. Scholar Steven Skultety argues that although Aristotle never developed principles and tactics of constitutionalism, Aristotle's political philosophy in some ways anticipated the idea of limited government, primarily as a tool for limiting civic distrust and enhancing stability.
When limited government is put into practice it often involves the protection of individual liberty from government intrusion.
Scholar Jennifer Nedelsky argues that the American conception of limited government changed during the period 1787 and 1830 and was based on a number of different strains of thought, but was primarily based on the Federalist perspective, which emphasized private property.

Issues

notes that negative liberalism, positive liberalism, and democratic liberalism all advance different conceptions of the proper limits to government. A Gutmann connects the first two categories to Isaiah Berlin's notions of negative liberty and positive liberty. Gutmann defends the third category, democratic liberalism, and writes that under a democratic liberalism view, "a liberal government should be no more nor less limited than is needed, first, to secure basic liberties and opportunities for all individuals, and second to respect the outcomes of fair democratic procedures as long as they are consistent to the constitutional constraints of securing basic liberties and opportunities for all."