The Formal and Informal Amendment Process

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 3 Section 2 Formal Amendments.
Advertisements

Chapter 3 The Constitution
Warm-Ups (09/10) Name two of the 6 principles included in the Constitution. Tutorials next week Tues. & Weds.
Chapter 3: The Constitution
INFORMAL AND FORMAL AMENDING. INFORMAL AMENDING Sometimes the Constitution can be changed and added to without a nationwide vote.
United States Constitution
CONSTITUTION NOTES.
Informal Amendment. The Constitution Very brief document Very vague and even skeletal in nature Describes basic organization and processes Informal Amendment.
Amendment Process. Formal Amendments  Formal Amendment – Change or addition that becomes part of the written language of the Constitution itself through.
The Legislative Branch Article I of the Constitution establishes the powers of and limits on Congress.
Chapter 3: The Constitution Section 2- 3
American Government Unit 3: Foundations of American Government
The Constitution Supreme Law of the Land
Chapter 3: The Constitution
Warm-Ups (01/25) Create a new cover-page, table of contents and warm-ups page for Unit II –Cover (Right): Unit II – Constitution & Federalism –Table of.
Chapter 3 The Constitution. An Outline Endured for 200 years because it deals with basic principles – not details and it has built-in provisions for accommodating.
The Constitution Chapter 3.
Chapter 3 The Constitution. Common Checks and Balances President recommends legislation to congress Presidential veto Congressional override of veto Senate.
Separation of Powers. Legislative Branch House of Representatives ( 435 members) Serves 2-year term Must be 25 years old and been a citizen for 7 years.
Amending The constitution.
1. 2 Amendments Allowed by Article V The Constitution proposes two methods for proposal and two methods for ratification This makes four total methods.
THE CONSTITUTION.
Amending the Constitution. What in our country has changed? When society changes do social values and laws change?
The Constitution Chapter 3.  Outline of Constitution  Framework and procedures  Limits and conduct  Preamble- short introduction  Articles- Sections.
Legislative, Executive, and Judicial Branches
Amending the Constitution
Amendments and other means. Changes… Why? Then… Small, Agricultural 1,300 miles Less than 4 million Now… million 50 states.
Chapter Three The Constitution. Section One The Six Basic Principles.
Chapter 3: The Constitution
The Constitution is the United States’ fundamental law The Constitution is the United States’ fundamental law It is also “the supreme Law of the Land”
CHAPTER 3 The Constitution. Section 1: Structure and Principles  A. Structure of the Constitution  Preamble  Seven (7) Articles  Twenty-seven (27)
The Constitution Six Basic Principles of the Constitution.
Chapter 3 The Constitution
The Constitution The Constitution sets out the basic principles upon which government in the United States was built. The Constitution is a fairly brief.
Nuts and Bolts of the Constitution Review: The Principles Popular Sovereignty Limited gov’t aka “Constitutionalism” or “rule of law” Separation of Powers.
OBJECTIVES: IDENTIFY HOW BASIC LEGISLATION HAS CHANGED THE CONSTITUTION OVER TIME. DESCRIBE THE WAYS IN WHICH THE CONSTITUTION HAS BEEN ALTERED BY EXECUTIVE.
Legislative Branch House of Representatives House of Representatives (435 members) (435 members) (makes the laws) (makes the laws) 1. Representatives.
Popular Sovereignty People give government the power to rule Limited Government Government is NOT all powerful; can only do what people give it power.
Amending the Constitution
Basic Principles of the Constitution Popular Sovereignty By Consent Limited Government Separation of Powers Checks and Balances Federalism.
Government Chapter 3. Section 1 Principles of the Constitution The Constitution is the supreme law of the land. It does not go into great detail about.
The Constitution Chapter Three. The Six Basic Principles Section One.
ESSENTIAL QUESTION: HOW CAN THE U.S. CONSTITUTION BE CHANGED? Chapter 3 Section 3 (Pgs ) An Enduring Document.
UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT Monday, September 28, 2015.
Definitions Six Basic Principles Formal Amendments True or False Informal Procedures $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $ 500$500.
The Constitution Chapter 4. Principles  Popular sovereignty  Separation of powers  Checks and balances  Limited government  Federalism  Popular.
1 American Government The Constitution. 2 Outline of the Constitution Six Basic Principles Outline of the Constitution THE CONSTITUTION.
Ch. 3 – The Constitution. The Six Principles of Government Popular Sovereignty. – Citizens are the only source of power. Limited Government – Govt may.
The Three Branches of Government
Amending the Constitution
U.S. Constitution (CH. 3) Introduction to Constitution is the __________ Original document is intro, articles, and signatures - how many articles in Constitution?
Legislative Branch -Congress- their job is to make laws House of Representatives (435 people) *representation is based on POPULATION Serve a 2 year term.
Amending the Constitution
Chapter 3: The Constitution
Chapter 3 Section 3 (Pgs ) An Enduring Document
BASIC PRINCIPLES OF THE CONSTITUTION
Chapter 3 The Constitution.
Chapter 3 The Constitution.
The Constitution The Constitution is made up of 8 sections
CHAPTER 3-INFORMATION “THE CONSTITUTION”
[ 3.2 ] Amending the Constitution
Amendment Process.
House of Representatives
Constitution The Amendments.
Changing the Constitution
Is it in the Constitution?
Amending the Constitution
Informal Amendments.
INFORMAL AND FORMAL AMENDING
Constitutional Matrix
Presentation transcript:

The Formal and Informal Amendment Process Chapter 2 Constitution

Formal Amendments 4 methods All similar 27 formal amendments over the last 226 years

Methods 1st method 26 of 27 happened this way Proposed in congress by a 2/3s vote in both houses Ratified by ¾ of the the state legislatures

Cont. 2nd Method 21st amendment was done this way Proposed in congress by a 2/3s vote in both houses Ratified by conventions held in ¾ of the states

Cont. 3rd method Proposed at a National Convention called by congress when requested by 2/3rds of the state legislatures Ratified by ¾ of the the state legislatures

Cont. 4th Method Proposed at a National Convention called by congress when requested by 2/3rds of the state legislatures Ratified by conventions held in ¾ of the states

Why? Maintain the Federal character of the government Proposals start at the national level and ratification is in the states. Federalism Will of the people The president does not sign an amendment This is not lawmaking – it is bigger – we are changing our philosophy about something.

Why the State Legislature? States legislatures can ask the people in an advisory vote. States can change their mind if they disapprove the first time

The Amendments 10,000 proposed 33 to the states 27 approved

Notable Amendments 1-10 Bill of Rights 12 – Choosing the President, VP 13,14,15 – Civil War Amendments 16 – Income Tax 17 – Senators – Popular Vote 18 – 21 Prohibition – Repeal 19 – Women’s Suffrage 22 – Presidential Term Limits 25 – Presidential Disability and Succession 26 – Voting Age set at 18 yrs

The Informal Amendment Process The process by which many changes have been made in the Constitution that have not led to changes in the document’s written words. Five ways Passing basic legislation Actions of the President Decisions made by the Supreme Court Activities of Political Parties Custom

Basic Legislation Constitution is a basic skeleton Congress has added the flesh (laws) that define the meanings in the Constitution Creation of the Executive Branch and Judicial System

Executive Action A presidents different interpretation of the Constitution and how he acts on that interpretation can create an informal amendment. Executive order 9066 – Japanese Internment Executive order 9981 – integration of the Armed Forces Use of the armed forces Executive Agreement – Foreign Treaties – Kyoto Protocol.

Court Decisions The Supreme Court and lower courts can make decisions that either declare the unconstitutionality of something or create a legal precedent the can be followed thus modifying the constitution. Brown v. Board of Education

Political Parties The Constitution makes no mention of them The Founders warned against them They have come to dominate our political and governing processes Candidates are nominated Electoral College The Legislative and Executive Branches are organized around them.

Custom Unwritten customs can be as strong as written laws Presidential Cabinet Vice Presidential succession (25th in 1967) No third term for President (22nd in 1951)