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The Constitution

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Title: The Constitution


1
The Constitution
  • Magruder Chapter Three

2
The Six Basic Principles
  • Section One

3
Basic Principles
  • Popular Sovereignty
  • Government can govern only with the consent of
    the governed
  • Sovereign people created the Constitution and the
    government

4
Basic Principles
  • Limited Government
  • Government may do only those things that the
    people have given it the power to do
  • The government and its officers are always
    subject to the law

5
Basic Principles
  • Separation of Powers
  • The Constitution distributes the powers of the
    National government among Congress (legislative
    branch), the President (executive branch), and
    the courts (judicial branch).

6
Basic Principles
  • Separation of Powers (con)
  • The Framers of the Constitution created a
    separation of powers in order to limit the powers
    of the government and to prevent tyrannytoo much
    power in the hands of one person or a few people.

7
Basic Principles
  • Checks and Balances
  • Each branch of government was subject to a number
    of constitutional restraints by the other
    branches.
  • Veto power, judicial review, nomination and
    confirmation, etc.

8
Basic Principles
  • Checks and Balances (con)
  • Although there have been instances of spectacular
    clashes between branches, usually the branches of
    government restrain themselves as they attempt to
    achieve their goals.

9
Basic Principles
  • Judicial Review
  • Through the landmark case Marbury v. Madison
    (1803), the judicial branch possesses the power
    to determine the constitutionality of an action
    of the government.

10
Basic Principles
  • Judicial Review (con)
  • In most cases the judiciary has supported the
    constitutionality of government acts but in more
    than 130 cases, the courts have found
    congressional acts to be unconstitutional, and
    they have voided thousands of acts of States and
    local governments

11
Basic Principles
  • Federalism
  • Federalism is the division of political power
    among a central government and several regional
    governments
  • United States federalism originated in American
    rebellion against the edicts of a distant central
    government in England

12
Basic Principles
  • Federalism (con)
  • Federalism is a compromise between a strict
    central government and a loose confederation,
    such as that provided for in the Articles of
    Confederation.

13
Formally Amending the Constitution
  • Section Two

14
Formal Amendment Process
  • First Method
  • Amendment is proposed by Congress by a two-thirds
    vote in both houses, then ratified by
    three-fourths of the State legislatures.

15
Formal Amendment Process
  • Second Method
  • Amendment is proposed by Congress by a two-thirds
    vote in both houses, then ratified by special
    conventions in three-fourths of the States

16
Formal Amendment Process
  • Third Method
  • Amendment is proposed at a national convention
    called by Congress when requested by two-thirds
    of the State legislatures, then ratified by
    three-fourths of the State legislatures.

17
Formal Amendment Process
  • Fourth Method
  • Amendment is proposed at a national convention
    called by Congress when requested by two-thirds
    of the State legislatures, then ratified by
    special conventions held in three-fourths of the
    States.

18
Formal Amendment Process
  • Cannot amend the Constitution to changed a
    States representation in the Senate without that
    States consent.

19
The 27 Amendments
  • The first 10 amendments are called the Bill of
    Rights because they set out the great
    constitutional guarantees of freedoms for the
    American people.

20
The 27 Amendments
  • The Civil War Amendments (13th, 14th, and 15th)
    combined to end slavery, define citizenship,
    proclaim the rights to due process and equal
    protection of the law, and outlaw restrictions on
    the right to vote based on race, color, or
    previous condition of servitude.

21
The 27 Amendments
  • Other amendments further define the workings of
    government, empower the government in certain
    ways, or deal with important social issues.

22
Informal Amendments
  • Section Three

23
Informal Amendments
  • Basic Legislation
  • Congress can pass laws that spell out some of the
    Constitutions brief provisions
  • Congress can pass laws defining and interpreting
    the meaning of constitutional provisions.

24
Informal Amendments
  • Executive Action
  • Presidents have used their powers to delineate
    unclear constitutional provisions, for example,
    making a difference between Congresss power to
    declare war and the Presidents power to wage war.

25
Informal Amendments
  • Executive Action (con)
  • Presidents have extended their authority over
    foreign policy by making informal executive
    agreements with representatives of foreign
    governments, avoiding the constitutional
    requirement for the Senate to approve formal
    treaties.

26
Informal Amendments
  • Court Decisions
  • The nations courts interpret and apply the
    Constitution as they see fit, as in Marbury v.
    Madison.
  • The Supreme Court has been called a
    constitutional convention in continuous session.

27
Informal Amendments
  • Party Practices
  • Political parties have been a major source of
    informal amendments.
  • Political parties have shaped government and its
    processes by holding political conventions,
    organizing Congress along party lines, and
    injecting party politics in the process of
    presidential appointments.

28
Informal Amendments
  • Custom
  • Each branch of government has developed
    traditions that fall outside the provisions of
    the Constitution.
  • An example is the executive advisory body known
    as the Presidents cabinet.

29
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