Aim: What are the six basic principles of the US Constitution?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
A Positive Lecture Experience Brought To You By Mr. Haskell
Advertisements

LEARNING OBJECTIVES/ GOALS/ SWBAT
The Constitution.
Six Principles of the Constitution 1. Popular Sovereignty 2. Limited Government 3. Separation of Power 4. Checks and balances 5. Judicial Review 6. Federalism.
3.1.  How is the Constitution organized?  How is the U.S. government one that practices popular sovereignty?  What does it mean to suggest the U.S.
SECTION 1 The Six Basic Principles (3-1) What are the six basic principles of the Constitution? What are the important elements (parts) of the Constitution?
Four Principles of the Constitution. Popular Sovereignty Basic principle of the American system of government which asserts that the people are the source.
7 Principles of the Constitution. Popular Sovereignty The natural rights concept that ultimate political authority rests with the people (we vote)
SIX BASIC PRINCIPLES OF THE UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION POPULAR SOVEREIGNTY, LIMITED GOVERNMENT, SEPARATION OF POWERS, CHECKS AND BALANCES, JUDICIAL REVIEW,
An Outline of the Constitution The Constitution sets out the basic principles upon which government in the United States was built and operates today.
CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES of AMERICA. SIX PRINCIPLES 1.POPULAR SOVEREIGNTY – people are the power.
STANDARD(S): 12.1 Students explain the fundamental principles and moral values of American democracy. LEARNING OBJECTIVES/ GOALS/ SWBAT 1.Understand the.
The Six Principles of Government in America Principle #1 Popular Sovereignty: This is a basic principle of the American system of government; that the.
3-1 (9-15) Basic Principles of the Constitution. Journal (9-15 Constitution) 1 paragraph Why has the plan of government provided by the U.S. Constitution.
Chapter 3.1 The Constitution. Outline of the Constitution 1. brief document that sets out the framework and procedures of our government 2. sets limits.
Five Fundamental Principles Chapter 3 Section 4. Popular Sovereignty Supreme power belongs to the people “We the people…” Examples: Electing the President.
Chapter 3: The Constitution Section 1
The Constitution The Supreme Law of the Land
Chapter 3: The Constitution Section 1
LEARNING OBJECTIVES/ GOALS/ SWBAT
Chapter 3: The Constitution Section 1
Chapter 3: The Constitution Section 1
7 Principles of the Government
Chapter 3: The Constitution
The Six Basic Principles of the Constitution
Six Principles of the Constitution
The Constitution is Built on 6 Key Principles
The Constitution.
Aim: What are the six basic principles of the US Constitution?
The Fundamental Principles of the U.S. Constitution
The Principles of the Constitution
The Constitution.
Principles of the Constitution
Cornell Notes Unit: Foundations of Government
Seven Principles of the Constitution
Chapter 3: The Constitution Section 1
Basic Principles of the Constitution
The U.S. Constitution Chapter 2 Sections 1 and 2.
Agenda: Tues 9/13 & Wed 9/14 Constitution Outline & Discussion Questions (Assignment #9) Journal Entry #10 Constitution Quiz Review Crash Course: Separation.
Six Principles of the Constitution
Intro to Poli Sci – 2/10/17 Objective: SWBAT describe the six principles of our Constitution. Agenda: Six Principles Chart Six Principles WS Homework:
Chapter 1-Section 1-Basic Principles
Four Principles of the Constitution
Principles of the Constitution
Basic Principles of the Constitution
Basic Principles of the Constitution
The U.S. Constitution.
Chapter 1-Section 1-Basic Principles
The Six Basic Principles
Principles of the Constitution
Chapter 3: The Constitution Section 1
Chapter 3-The Constitution
Chapter 3: The Constitution Section 1
Chapter 3: The Constitution Section 1
Chapter 3: The Constitution Section 1
Chapter 1-Section 1-Basic Principles
Six Principles of the Constitution
The United States Constitution
Warmup.
7 PRINCIPLES OF THE CONSTITUTION.
Setting up Government.
The Constitution.
Chapter 3: The Constitution Section 1
The Principles of the U.S. Government
Chapter 3: The Constitution Section 1
Chapter 3: The Constitution Section 1
Chapter 3: The Constitution Section 1
Chapter 3: The Constitution Section 1
Six Basic Principles of the Constitution
The Six Basic Principles
Presentation transcript:

Aim: What are the six basic principles of the US Constitution? Con Law Lesson 06 Aim: What are the six basic principles of the US Constitution?

The Six Basic Principles Popular Sovereignty Limited Government Separation of Powers Checks and Balances Judicial Review Federalism

Popular Sovereignty All political power resides in the people. The people are the only sources for any and all governmental power. Government only governs with the consent of the governed. We the people of the United States…..

Limited Government The government may only do things which the people have given it the power to do. Government must obey the law of the land- "The Constitution" All leaders of the government are subject to the "Rule of Law" Major parts of the Constitution start with the words; "Congress Shall Make No Law…"

Separation of Powers The Constitution divides the power of government amongst three branches of government. The Congress has the Legislative power The President has the Executive power The Supreme Court has the Judicial power

Checks and Balances The federal government is made of three branches; Legislative, Executive, Judicial The three branches are not separate but they are independent of one another either They each rely on a system where each branch has constitutional restraints where each can check what the other is doing

Judicial Review The power of a court to determine the constitutionality of a government action Judicial Review is the power to declare Unconstitutional an action found to be in violation of the constitution The Constitution does not specifically give the power of Judicial Review but it is implied and the Supreme Court seized the power in 1803.

Federalism The basic principle of federalism is the division of power among a central government and several regional governments or in the case of the United States- the federal government and the state governments. The framers set this system up to keep the federal government strong but also give the state governments power and authority. It was meant to be a balance.