Bill of Rights socialism

The concept was first coined by Gus Hall, General Secretary of Communist Party USA.

Writing for the Future of Freedom Foundation, Richard Embley described Franklin D. Roosevelt's Second Bill of Rights and the idea of a socialist United States Bill of Rights as a command economy and "regulatory socialism".

[4] Other critics argue that socialism in the form of central planning is inherently incompatible with the constitutionally enforced federalism in the United States that includes a separation of powers and a degree of decentralization.

[5][6] Additionally, some American socialists believe that federalism protects established political interests and wish for a constitutional amendment to change it.

[7] Similarly, about federalism in China, a centralized unitary socialist state, Wu Bangguo, former Chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress, said: "There will be no separation of powers between the different branches of government and no federal system.

Gus Hall, who first coined the term (1984)