Chapter 3 The Constitution Section 1—The Six Basic Principles • Objectives – Outline the important elements of the Constitution. – List the six basic principles of.

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Transcript Chapter 3 The Constitution Section 1—The Six Basic Principles • Objectives – Outline the important elements of the Constitution. – List the six basic principles of.

Chapter 3
The Constitution
Section 1—The Six Basic
Principles
• Objectives
– Outline the important elements of the
Constitution.
– List the six basic principles of the Constitution.
Section 1—The Six Basic
Principles
• Why It Matters:
– The Constitution is a brief, straightforward
document that has guided American
government for over 200 years. Its authors
wrote the Constitution based upon the
principles that political power resides with the
people, and that National Government should
be limited and divided into three branches to
limit the power of any one of those three
branches.
Section 1—The Six Basic
Principles
• Political Dictionary:
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Preamble
Articles
Constitutionalism
Rule of Law
Separation of Powers
Checks and Balances
Veto
Judicial Review
Unconstitutional
Federalism
Section 1—The Six Basic
Principles
• An Outline of the Constitution
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7,000 words
Few details
Organized in a simple straightforward way.
Eloquent Preamble
7 Articles
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#1-3 establish the 3 branches
#4 deals with the states
#5 is about amendments
#6 deals with It as Supreme Law
#7 deals with ratification
Section 1—The Six Basic
Principles
• The Basic Principles
– Popular Sovereignty
• The people are sovereign—the only source of
power.
• Government can ONLY govern with the consent of
the governed.
Section 1—The Six Basic
Principles
• The Basic Principles (cont.)
– Limited Government
• No government is all powerful.
• Sometimes called “Constitutionalism”
• Sometimes called the “Rule of Law”
– All are subject to but never above the Law.
• The Constitution clearly limits government
• Includes the Great Guarantees:
– Freedom of religion, speech, press, assembly and
petition.
Section 1—The Six Basic
Principles
• The Basic Principles (cont.)
– Separation of Powers
• In contrast to the Parliamentary System where all
power resides in the Parliament.
• Article I—Legislative Power
• Article II—Executive Power
• Article III—Judicial Power
• Separation of powers is intended to “limit
government”
Section 1—The Six Basic
Principles
• The Basic Principles (cont.)
– Checks and Balances
• Numerous
• No branch operates independently.
• Veto is a good example
Section 1—The Six Basic
Principles
• The Basic Principles (cont.)
– Judicial Review
• Constitutional vs. “unconstitutional.”
• The case of Marbury vs. Madison in 1803.
– Landmark case to establish Judicial Review
– Federalism
• Division of power between national and states
• Motivated by experience in Articles and colonial
era.
• A Great Compromise
Section 2—Formal Amendment
• Objectives:
– Identify the four different ways by which the
Constitution may be formally changed.
– Explain how the formal amendment process
illustrates the principles of federalism and
popular sovereignty.
– Outline the 27 amendments that have been
added to the Constitution.
Section 2—Formal Amendment
• Why It Matters:
– The Framers of the Constitution realized that,
inevitably, changes would have to be made in
the document they wrote. Article V provides
for the process of formal amendment. To this
point, 27 amendments have been added to
the Constitution.
Section 2—Formal Amendment
• Political Dictionary:
– Amendment
– Formal amendment
– Bill of Rights
Section 2—Formal Amendment
• 4 million to 290 million
• 13 colonies to 50 states
• Constitution is NOT the same now as in
1787.
Section 2—Formal Amendment
• Formal Amendment Process
– Article V
• Proposal by 2/3 of each house of Congress to be ratified by
3/4 of states (38).
– This method has been used 26 out of 27 amendments
• Proposal by 2/3 of each house and a call for conventions in
the states. Then approved by 3/4 of states (38).
– Only used once on the 21st amendment in 1933.
• Call from 2/3 of state legislatures (34) for a national
convention to consider amendment. It must then be ratified
by 3/4 of states (38). Never used.
• An amendment may be proposed by a national convention
and then ratified in 3/4 of state conventions (38). Never
used.
Section 2—Formal Amendment
• Formal Amendment Process (cont.)
– Federalism and Popular Sovereignty
• Approval process reinforces federalism and
indirectly sovereignty.
• Sometimes criticized as being representative and
not direct.
• The state legislature must act first.
Section 2—Formal Amendment
• Formal Amendment Process (cont.)
– Proposed Amendments
• No state may be deprived of its representation in
the Senate.
• The President is NOT involved—does not sign.
• If rejected by a state it may later be reconsidered,
once approved, however, it is final.
– 10,000 amendment proposals have been submitted.
» Only 33 have been sent to the states and only 27
ratified.
Section 2—Formal Amendment
• Formal Amendment Process (cont.)
– Proposed Amendments (cont.)
• 10,000 amendment proposals have been submitted.
– Only 33 have been sent to the states and only 27 ratified. Six
failed:
» One proposed in 1789 with the Bill of Rights died.
» One offered in 1789 became the 27th (Congressional
Compensation).
» 1810-foreign titles void citizenship.
» 1861-no slavery amendments.
» 1924 an act to regulate child labor.
» 1972 Equal Rights Amendment by 1984 fell short.
» 1978 representation for the District of Columbia
» A 7 year time limit for enactment started in 1917 (ERA in
1979 was given a 3 year extension).
Section 2—Formal Amendment
• The 27 Amendments
– The Bill of Rights
• Proposed in 1789—ratified by 1791.
– The Later Amendments
• The 12th corrected a electoral college problem after
the election of 1800.
• The 13th abolished slavery in 1865, the 14th
granted citizenship to blacks in 1868, and in 1870
the 15th granted the right to vote to blacks.
Section 2—Formal Amendment
• The 27 Amendments (cont.)
– The Later Amendments (cont.)
• The 18th in 1919 prohibited alcohol and was repealed by the
21st in 1933..
• The 19th in 1920 granted women the vote.
• The 22nd in 1951 limited the presidency to two terms.
• The 25th in 1967 deals with presidential succession.
• The 26th in 1971 granted the vote to all over 18.
• The 27th in 1992 prohibits congressional raises during the
“current” term.
Section 3—Constitutional Change
by Other Means
• Objectives:
– Identify how basic legislation has changed the
Constitution over time.
– Describe the ways in which the Constitution
has been altered by executive and judicial
actions.
– Analyze the role of party practices and
custom in shaping the Constitution.
Section 3—Constitutional Change
by Other Means
• Why It Matters:
– The 27 formal amendments to the
Constitution have not been a major part of the
process by which that document has kept
pace with more than 200 years of far-reaching
change in this country. Rather, constitutional
change has more often occurred as a result of
the day-to-day, year-to-year workings of
government.
Section 3—Constitutional Change
by Other Means
• Political Dictionary:
– Executive Agreement
– Treaty
– Electoral College
– Cabinet
– Senatorial Courtesy
Section 3—Constitutional Change
by Other Means
• Basic Legislation
– Expanded into the detail
– Tens of thousands of “laws”
• Executive Action
– Commander in Chief
– Executive Agreement—used frequently now
– Treaty—cumbersome process
Section 3—Constitutional Change
by Other Means
• Court Decisions
– Marbury v. Madison in 1803
– A “constitutional convention in continuous
session”
• Party Practices
– Not in the beginning—Washington warned
against.
– Party Conventions
– Electoral College
Section 3—Constitutional Change
by Other Means
• Custom
– Unwritten
– Cabinet
– Vice President role developed
– Senatorial courtesy—a nominee must be
acceptable in home state.
– No third-term for 150 years