Title: The Principles of the Constitution Popular Sovereignty
1The Principles of the ConstitutionPopular
Sovereignty
- The framers of the constitution included the
principle of Popular Sovereignty in their design
of the new government. - Simply explained, this means that the people rule
this country. - The people elect public officials to represent
them in free and frequent elections. - Citizens can vote at the age of 18.
- We the People of the United Statesdo ordain and
establish this Constitution for the United States
of America.
2Limited Power
- The citizens of the new nation feared tyranny.
They had just gotten done fighting a war to win
their independence from England and were not
about to hand that over to the new National
Government. - Many states pressured the framers of the
constitution to add a Bill of Rights, or a list
of the basic rights of citizens. - The framers also made the national and state
governments share some powers. - The people gave the Government its powers and
have the ability to take them away through
elections.
The Government only has the powers that the
people give it. The Constitution clearly states
what the Government can and cannot do.
3FEDERALISM Sharing of Power
- America's government was based on Federalism,
where power is divided between the Federal
(national) and the state governments. - The constitution states what powers the Federal
government has, what powers are shared, and
leaves the rest for the states. - Whenever a dispute arises the constitution is the
"supreme law of the land. - What it says goes!
4Separation of Powers
- The new federal government had three branches,
the legislative, judicial, and executive. - The legislative branch includes the congress and
house of representatives and has the power to
tax, coin money, and declare war. The legislative
branch makes the laws. - The judicial branch is made up of the Supreme
Court and interprets laws. - The executive branch is made up of the president
and his cabinet. The main purpose of this branch
is to carry out the laws and deals with foreign
affairs and the military.
5Checks and Balances
- Checks and balances is a system where the three
branches can check on each other and possibly
stop the other branch from doing something. - This prevents one branch gaining all the power in
the Government or the branches making
unconstitutional decisions.
6Checks on the Legislative Branch
- The executive branch can control the Legislative
by proposing laws, vetoing laws, calling special
sessions of Congress and negotiating foreign
treaties. - The judicial branch can also check the
legislative branch by declaring acts of branch
unconstitutional.
7Checks on the Executive Branch
- The legislative branch can help control the
executive branch by overriding a veto, ratifying
treaties, declaring war, appropriating money and
impeaching the president. - The Judicial Branch can also declare acts of the
executive branch unconstitutional.
8Checks on the Judicial Branch
- The executive branch appoints judges and can
grant pardons to federal offenders. - The legislative branch checks the judicial branch
by creating lower courts, impeaching, and
removing judges, and proposing amendments to
overrule decisions.
9Judicial Review
- Power of the courts to determine whether the
things that the government does are allowed by
the Constitution - Can declare acts of Congress or the President
unconstitutional - Declare illegal, null and void, of no force and
effect - The doctrine of judicial review was first
announced as part of federal law in 1803, by the
Supreme Court decision Marbury v. Madison.
"The judicial Power of the United States, shall
be vested in one supreme Court, and in such
inferior Courts as the Congress may from time to
time ordain and establish The judicial Power
shall extend to all Cases, in Law and Equity,
arising under this Constitution" (Article III,
US Constitution)
10Who Influenced the Framers of the Constitution?
- The league of the Iroquois was respected by the
framers. They decided to include the unity of the
league in their own government. - From England came the idea of representative
government. They incorporated this idea with
England's Magna Carta, (Great Charter) which is
based on the idea of limiting government power. - The enlightenment thinkers believed that people
could improve society through the use of reason.
One very important enlightenment thinker was John
Locke. Locke said that all people deserved the
right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of
happiness. - Locke believed that the government is an
agreement between the ruled and the ruler. - Montesquieu was a French thinker who published
The Spirit of Laws. - His idea was that government should be divided
among three different branches legislative,
judicial, and executive, and become known as the
separation of powers.