The Constitution
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Transcript The Constitution
The Constitution
Chapter 4
Principles
Popular sovereignty
Separation of powers
Checks and balances
Limited government
Federalism
Structure of the Constitution:
Preamble: introduction
Articles
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
legislative branch
executive branch
judicial branch
states
amendment process
supreme law of the land
ratification process
Amendments
1 - 10 Amendments: Bill of Rights 1791
11 - 27 Amendments 1798 - 1993
Formal Amendment Process
Two ways to
propose
amendments
2/3 vote of each
house of Congress
National
constitutional
convention
requested by 2/3 of
state legislatures
Two ways to Ratify
Amendments
Ratified by 3/4 of
state legislatures
Ratified by specially
called convention in
at least 3/4 of the
states
27 Amendments
26 proposed by 2/3 of each house of
Congress; approved by 3/4 of the state
legislatures
21st Amendment: different
Proposed by Congress (2/3 each house)
Ratified by 3/4 state conventions (not
legislatures)
No constitutional convention held
Informal Amendment Process
Legislative Action
Laws expand powers in constitution; elastic clause
Executive action
War powers; impoundment of funds; interim
appointments
Judicial interpretation
Judicial review
Changing customs
Cabinet
Two terms practice before amendment 22
Bill of Rights
Amendments 1 - 10
Basic Rights to protect citizens from the
power of the federal government
Two Early Amendments
Eleven: protect states from lawsuits by
citizens of other states or foreign
countries
Twelve: separate voting in the electoral
college for president and vice president
Civil War Amendments
13, 14, 15th Amendment
13th: emancipation of slaves law of the
land
14th: overturned Dred Scott decision granted citizenship to all people born in the
USA
15th: protect voting rights of freedmen
Progressive Era Amendments
Deal with social and political reforms
16th: Congress establish income tax
17th: direct election of senators
18th: prohibition; 21st: repealed
prohibition
19th: women’s suffrage
Amendments deal with
Governance (20th Century)
20th: changed start date for President
and Congress; shorten lame duck
period
22nd: limited President to two terms or
10 years
25th: succession to the President
27th: pay raises; proposed with Bill of
Rights; passed 203 years later
Civil Rights - Era Amendments
23rd: residents of Washington D.C. to
vote in Presidential elections; 3
Electoral College votes
24th: banned poll taxes
26th: lowered voting age from 21 to 18
Principles of the Constitution
Limited government
Government had power to provide for
peace and order but not unlimited power
Limited Government: 6
Guiding Principles
Popular sovereignty
Rule of law
Separation of Powers -- Checks and
Balances
Federalism: delegated powers; reserved
powers; concurrent powers
Independent Judiciary
Individual Rights
Interpreting the Constitution
Text of the constitution
Original intent of Founding Fathers
Court Precedent
Practical consequences for society
Moral and ethical values
Types of Interpretations
Is the constitution living or dead?
Strict construction or originalism or
textualist, narrow construction
Antonin Scalia
Loose construction or interpretivism or
broad construction
William J Brennan
Marbury v. Madison
Chief Justice John Marshall
Established judicial review
1800 John Adams, Federalist party lost
to Thomas Jefferson
Judges; ‘midnight appointments’
McCulloch v. Maryland
Marshall Court
State of Maryland taxed First Bank of
the United States
Elastic clause or ‘necessary and proper
clause’
United States v. Nixon
Reaffirm the rule of law
Watergate scandal (1970)
Tapes denied Senate based on
“executive privilege”
Presidents do have the right to
executive privilege but must be
considered in the light of our historic
commitment to rule of law.
Goss v.Lopez
Due process
Suspending students without a hearing
Remove reference from records
Ohio law - suspend up to 10 days without
hearing
Letter to parents
Decision: before being suspended or
expelled students must know the charges;
prompt disciplinary hearing with evidence