Constitution PPT
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Transcript Constitution PPT
The Constitution
Mr. Green’s American Government
Classical Liberal Institutions
The Constitution of the United States
The Amendments
The Bill of Rights
Amendments 11 through 27
Preamble
Article One: The Legislative
Section. 1 The legislative powers rests with
Congress composed of Senate and House of
Representatives.
Section 2. The House members qualifications
Serve two years
25 years of age
Elected by the people
7 years a citizen
Apportioned by population
Resident of their district
Article One: The Legislative
Section 2.5
Choose Speaker and other offices
Sole power of impeachment
Section 3 Senate members qualifications
Serve six years
30 years of age
Elected by the state
legislatures
9 years a citizen
Resident of their district
Two senators from each
state
Article One: The Legislative
Section 3.4
Vice President presides
No vote except for ties
Section 3.5 Senate to choose their leaders
Section 3.6 Senate has sole power to try all
impeachments
Section 3.7 Judgment in impeachment is removal
from office
Article One: The Legislative
Section 6.1 Senators and Congressmen
compensated from the treasury
Section 6.2 Senators and Congressmen cannot be
members of the executive branch while in office
Section 7.1 Bills for raising revenue begin in the
House
Section 7.2 The veto
Veto
Article 1
Article 1
Article 1
Article 1
Article One: The Legislative
Review of Section 8
8:1 and 8.2 have general welfare clauses, 8.3 has the
commerce clause, and 8.18 contains the elastic clause
Section 9.7 government cannot spend money
from the treasury except by appropriation
Section 10.1 states cannot make . . . laws
impairing the obligation of contracts
Article Two: The Executive
Section. 1.1 The executive power is vested in the
President of the United States . . .
Section. 1.2 Electoral College
Electoral College
Electoral
College tiff
Electoral
College tiff
Article Two: The Executive
Section 1.4 Qualifications
Natural born citizen
35 years of age
14 years a resident
Section 2.1 Power of commander-in-chief
Section 2.2 Power to make treaties, appoint
ambassadors, and Supreme Court justices with
the advise and consent of two-thirds of the
Senate
Article Two: The Executive
Section 3.1 The
State of the Union
Article Three: The Judiciary
Section 1 Judicial power vested in the supreme
court, and other inferior courts as established by
congress
Section 2 Judicial power limited to cases and
controversies
Article Four
Section 1: Full faith and credit by each state to
other states
Section 2: Citizens of one state are entitled to the
same privileges and immunities of the citizens of
another state
Section 4: Congress guarantees each state a
Republican government
Article Five: Amendment Process
Article Six
Supremacy Clause
Laws and treaties passed by Congress “Shall be the
supreme law of the land”
Ratification
The Bill of Rights
James Madison:
The First Speaker
The Bill of Rights
Civil liberties are negative rights
Constitutional guarantees that instruct the
government not to act in ways that take the lives,
liberties, and property of individuals.
Amendment 1
Amendment 2
Bill of Rights
Amendment two
Collective right or an individual right?
Amendment 3: Quartering troops
Due process of law (underlined in #5)
Amendments 4, 5, and 6
Habeas corpus (Highlighted in #5 and #6)
Contained in Amendment 5 and 6
Amendment 4
Amendment 5
Amendment 6
Bill of Rights
Amendment 7: Guarantee of jury trial
Amendment 8: No excessive bail nor cruel and
unusual punishments
Amendment 9: Rights not listed are still protected
Amendment 10: Powers not delegated to the
federal government are retained by the states
The Other Amendments
Amendments
Amendment 11: Suing a state (1795)
Amendment 12: Presidential candidates run as a
ticket (1804)
Amendments
The Civil War Amendments
Amendment 13: Prohibition of slavery (1865)
Amendment 14: Rights of citizenship (1868)
Amendment 15: Right to vote cannot be denied
because of race (1870)
Amendment 14
Amendments
The Progressive Amendments
Amendment 16: Income tax (1913)
Amendment 17: Direct election of senators (1913)
Amendment 18: Prohibition (1919)
Amendment 19: Women’s suffrage (1920)
Amendment 20: Lame duck amendment (1933)
Amendment 21: Repeal of prohibition (1933)
Amendments
Amendment 22: Presidential term limits (1951)
Amendment 23: Electors for DC (1961)
Amendment 24: No poll tax (1964)
Amendment 25: Presidential succession (1967)
Amendment 26: Suffrage for persons eighteen
years old (1971)
Amendment 27: Congressional pay raises
(Proposed 1789, Ratified 1992)
The End