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Title: CHAPTER 3:


1
CHAPTER 3 THE U.S. CONSTITUTION
2
IDEALS OF THE CONSTITUTION
  • A. Consent of the Governed
  • 1. Popular Sovereignty - consent of the
  • governed.
  • 2. Preamble - introduction that explains
  • why the U.S. Constitution was written.
  • a. Begins with We the people

3
  • B. Goals of the Constitution (6 of them)
  • 1. To form a more perfect union
  • 2. To establish justice
  • 3. To ensure domestic tranquillity
  • a. Peace within the nation.
  • 4. To provide for the common
  • defense
  • 5. To promote the general welfare
  • 6. Secure the blessings of liberty
  • a. Safeguard the freedom of people.

4
IN YOUR SMALL GROUPS RANK THE GOALS FOR THE U.S
GOVERNMENT IN ORDER FROM MOST IMPORTANT TO LEAST.
WHY DOES YOUR GROUP FEEL THIS WAY? (5 MIN)
5
C. A FEDERAL SYSTEM
  • 1. Division of Powers - concerned with the
  • relationship between two levels of
  • government. (Federalism)
  • 2. Delegated Powers - Powers granted
  • federal government by the Constitution.
  • (Article 1)
  • 3. Reserved Powers - States, or the people
  • can keep some powers for themselves.
  • (10th Amendment)

6
  • 4. Concurrent Powers - Powers that belong
  • to the states and national government.
  • a. National Supremacy - When state and
  • national laws conflict, national laws
  • must be followed.
  • b. Preempted - national government laws
  • overruling state laws.
  • 5. Federal government rules are spelled out.
  • 6. Any rules not mentioned are left for the
  • states or people.

7
IN YOUR SMALL GROUPS LIST AS MANY DELEGATED,
CONCURRENT, AND RESERVED POWERS AS YOU CAN. ( 4
MIN.)
8
HOW FEDERAL AND STATE POWERS ARE DIVIDED
9
D. WHAT DOES THE CONSTITUTION SAY
ABOUT THE STATES.
  • 1. Does not tell states exactly how they
  • should be run.
  • 2. Several parts of the Constitution are
  • especially important for understanding
    the
  • role of state government.

10
E. RELATIONS BETWEEN STATES
  • 1. Each state honors acts of other states.
    (Article IV)
  • 2. Rights of State Citizenship - Each citizen
  • of the U.S. is also a citizen of the state
    in
  • which he or she lives. (14th amendment)
  • 3. States cooperate through extradition.
  • a. Extradition - sending back an accused
  • person of a crime.
  • b. Can be denied but are usually granted.

11
F. National Promises to the States
  • 1. Promises concerning new states.
  • a. Congress can admit new states to the
  • union. (Article IV)
  • 2. Promise of republican government.
  • a. No state will be allowed to fall under
  • the control of an absolute.
  • 3. Promise of Defense
  • a. National government will protect each
  • state from foreign and internal
  • invasion.

12
THE GROWTH OF NATIONAL SUPREMACY
  • 1. Constitution, laws and treaties are the
  • national law of the land.
  • A. Implied Powers
  • 1. McCulloch v. Maryland
  • a. Congress tried setting up a federal
  • bank.
  • b. States felt that this was illegal.
  • c. Maryland tried to punish its
    branch
  • of the federal bank by giving it
    a
  • high tax.

13
  • d. State of Maryland sued the bank cashier
  • when that bank refused to pay the tax.
  • e. Supreme Court ruled that the tax was
  • unconstitutional and did not have to be
  • paid.
  • KNOWING WHAT YOU KNOW ABOUT THE THREE TYPES OF
    POWERS IN YOUR SMALL GROUPS DISCUSS IF THE
    SUPREME COURT WAS CORRECT IN ITS DECISION.
  • - National government was exercising a
  • delegated power.

14
  • -Court ruled that setting up the bank was
  • necessary and proper or an implied
  • power.
  • f. Elastic Clause - Necessary and proper
  • laws can be stretched to give the
  • national government more power.
  • (Made the tenth amendment less
  • important.)
  • B. STATES MAY NOT SECEDE
  • 1. Secede - leave the union.

15
  • 2. Southern states became frustrated that
  • they could not get Congress to pass the
  • laws they wanted.
  • a. Lead to the Civil War (1861-1865)
  • -Abolished slavery
  • -Strengthen national supremacy
  • C. National Laws Cannot Be Nullified
  • 1. Brown v. Topeka Board of Education
  • a. Unconstitutional for there to be
  • separate schools for blacks and
  • whites.

16
  • b. Some states tried to nullify
    (disregard)
  • the national law.
  • c. President Eisenhower sent troops to
  • enforce the decision.

17
THE THREE BRANCHES OF GOVERNMENT
  • 1. The government is divided into three
  • branches.
  • a. Legislative
  • b. Executive
  • c. Judicial
  • 2. Each branch has a different function.
  • 3. The members of each branch are chosen
  • in different ways.
  • 4. Each branch has the same amount of
  • power.

18
A. Legislative Branch
  • 1. Congress is the legislative branch.
  • a. Established by article 1 of the Const.
  • 2. Law MAKING branch of government.
  • 3. Congress is bicameral - made up of two

  • houses.
  • 4. Bicameral legislature was set up because
  • of a compromise between large and small
  • states.

19
  • 5. Why have two houses.
  • a. Slow down the making of laws
  • b. A separation of power between the
  • two houses. (Check and Balance)
  • 6. All tax proposals must originate in the
  • House of Representatives. Why?
  • a. Members are elected from a smaller
  • geographical area. (They thus
  • represent more people.)

20
  • 7. Senate has more responsibility over
  • foreign relations.
  • a. No treaty is valid unless approved by
  • 2/3 vote of Senate.

21
B. THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH
  • 1. Article II of the Constitution gives the
  • executive power to the President.
  • a. The President must carry out the laws.
  • 2. President can not make laws.
  • 3. Presidents other jobs
  • a. Make treaties
  • b. Commander and Chief of the armed
  • forces. (Can not declare war.)
  • c. Has a check and balance over
  • legislation passed. (veto power)

22
  • d. Congress can override the veto.
  • 4. Constitution does not list the Presidents
  • responsibilities at great length.

23
C. THE JUDICIAL BRANCH
  • 1. Main job is to adjudicate or interpret the
  • laws.
  • 2. Established by Article III of the Const.
  • 3. Civil Case - disagreements between
  • persons or between citizens and
  • government.
  • a. Involves claims that one person has on
  • another.
  • b. May involve a contract.

24
  • c. Purpose of a civil trial is to help the court
  • find out who is legally right.
  • d. Civil Laws - laws that tell courts how to
  • settle civil cases, or
    lawsuits.
  • 4. Criminal Cases - Case brought to court
  • because someone has been accused of a
  • crime.
  • a. Kidnapping, robbery are examples.
  • b. Government asks the courts to
  • determine whether accused person are
  • innocent or guilty.

25
  • c. Some types of penalties are fines, jail
  • time, and probation.
  • -Probation - period of time during which
  • people found guilty of crimes must
  • prove that they can change their
  • behaviors.
  • 5. Civil and criminal laws must agree with
  • the Supreme Law of the Land.
  • 6. Judicial Review - power of the courts to
  • interpret the Constitution and to decide
  • when laws, acts, and failures to act are
  • against the Constitution.

26
  • a. Is an important check and balance the
  • courts have over Congress and the
  • President.
  • 7. Supreme Court is the highest court in the
  • United States.

27
D. Checks and Balances
  • 1. Ensures no branch becomes too
  • powerful.
  • 2. Each branch has powers to check, or
  • limit, the powers of the other two
  • branches.
  • a. Listed on pg. 42 of textbook.

28
A FLEXIBLE DOCUMENT
  • 1. Framers planned a system of
  • government that could change to meet
  • the changing needs in the U.S.
  • A. Provide for Change
  • 1. 3 ways the Constitution can provide
  • for change
  • a. Amendment
  • b. Interpretation
  • c. Custom

29
  • B. The Amendment Process
  • 1. Amendment - written change made to
  • the
    Constitution.
  • a. Process Article 5 of Constitution
  • b. 3/4 of states must approve. (38 of
  • 50)
  • 2. May be proposed in two ways
  • a. 2/3 vote of both houses of
  • Congress.
  • b. 2/3 of the states (34 of 50) can
    ask
  • Congress to call a National
  • Convention.

30
  • - Never successfully used.
  • 3. Two ways to ratify amendments
  • a. Sending to state legislatures.
    (Most
  • common method.)
  • b. Sending to state conventions -
  • member are elected by the people in
  • each state.
  • 4. Repeal - cancel, by another amendment.
  • a. Can happen if people do not like the
  • way an amendment is working.
  • b. Has only happened once. (18th
  • amendment.)

31
  • C. Interpreting the Constitution
  • 1. Congress and Supreme Court can
  • interpret the way laws are written.
  • a. Different people have different
  • interpretations.
  • 2. Example minimum wage law
  • D. Custom and Traditions
  • 1. Things that have happened in the past
  • that are now common place.
  • 2. Example George Washingtons
  • cabinet - group of advisors.

32
POSSIBLE ASSIGNMENTS
  • 1. Section review (Pg. 41, 43, 47)
  • 2. Write a Constitution for the student
  • council.
  • 3. College on the functions of the 3
  • branches of government.
  • 4. Summarizing Articles of Confederation.
  • (What, why, where, when, and how was it
  • reported.)
  • 5. Collect and articles that reflect
  • Constitutional questions. (Where is it
  • offered?)
  • 6. Collect and summarize an article on
  • Federalism.
  • 7. Skills worksheet (pg. 3)
  • 8. Reteach worksheet (pg. 5)
  • 9. Building your Portfolio
  • 10. Chapter 12 worksheet
  • 11. American Gov. Wks. (Pg.17, 18)
  • EXTRA CREDIT (10 pts.)
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