Implied Powers Necessary and Proper. Implied Powers are those powers that are not written into the USC but drawn from those that are…. Necessary and Proper.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Magruder’s American Government
Advertisements

Implied Powers.
The Powers of Congress Magruder Chapter 11.
Chapter 11: Powers of Congress
Unit H: Legislative Branch Chapter 11 Powers Of Congress
C H A P T E R 11 Powers of Congress
Powers of Congress Chapter 11.
 Congress only has the powers given to it by the Constitution  Many powers are denied to Congress by the Constitution › Cannot create a nation public.
Congressional Power— Congressional power is limited by the fact that it has only those powers delegated to it by the Constitution. Congress cannot create.
Chapter 6 Section 2: The Powers of Congress
CHAPTER 11 POWERS OF CONGRESS.
Chapter 11 POWERS OF CONGRESS.
Chapter 11 – Congressional Powers
Powers given to Congress by the Constitution The Power to Tax Taxes are charges levied on a person or property by the government to support public needs.
Congress PowerPoint 2 The scope of congressional powers.
THE POWERS OF CONGRESS CHAPTER 11. THE SCOPE OF CONGRESSIONAL POWERS Congressional Power Congress has only the powers granted to it by Congress. Three.
Chapter 11- The Powers of Congress
Expressed Powers of Congress  1) The Power to Tax: in order to meet public needs, protect domestic industry, or protect public health & safety  Limitations:
Powers of Congress Chapter 11. Section 1: The Scope of Congressional Powers Congressional Power The Constitution grants Congress a number of specific.
Congressional Power (1) Expressed powers are explicit in the Constitution. (2) Implied powers are granted by reasonable deduction from.
Presentation Pro © 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc. Magruder’s American Government C H A P T E R 11 Powers of Congress.
The Powers of Congress CH 8.2. Framer’s Goals Found in the Preamble of the Constitution –“to form a more perfect union” –“insure domestic tranquility”
CHAPTER 11.2 The Implied Powers of Congress. The Necessary and Proper Clause *The constitutional basis for the implied powers is found in one of the expressed.
Congress needs your help to reduce the national debt. The ProblemThe Problem Debt Clock Debt Clock IIDebt ClockDebt Clock II You need a book. Get a regular.
Quiz Use first 5 minutes to review notes, chapter 10.
Ch. 11. Strict Versus Liberal Construction Strict Constructionists  led by Thomas Jefferson  argued that Congress should only be able to exercise its.
Expressed and Implied Powers
Chapter 6.2 The Powers of Congress. Legislative Powers  Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution lists Congress’s specific or expressed powers. Clause.
The Implied Powers & Non-Legislative Powers of Congress
Ch. 11 Powers of Congress. Congressional Power Congress is given power in 3 ways:  Expressed  Implied  Inherent.
123 Go To Section: 4 5 Article I, Section 8 Article I, Section 8 (U.S. debt clock)U.S. debt clock Chapter 11, Section
Chapter 6 Congress. The Powers of Congress Section 2.
Presentation Pro © 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc. Magruder’s American Government C H A P T E R 11 Powers of Congress.
Presentation Pro © 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc. Magruder’s American Government C H A P T E R 11 Powers of Congress.
Expressed Powers Power to Tax Tax – a charge levied by government on persons or property to raise money to meet public needs Direct taxes are paid directly.
Powers of Congress Chapter types of Congressional Power Expressed powers-spelled out in the Constitution Implied powers-suggested by the Constitution;
Presentation Pro © 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc. Magruder’s American Government C H A P T E R 11 Powers of Congress.
The Powers of Congress. The Scope of Congressional Power.
Chapter 7.  The Constitution grants Congress a number of specific powers in three different ways. (1) The expressed powers are granted to Congress explicitly.
Presentation Pro Mr. Jason Cargile Mission Hills High School Mr. Jason Cargile Mission Hills High School.
© 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc. MAGRUDER’S AMERICAN GOVERNMENT C H A P T E R 11 Powers of Congress.
SECTION1 © 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc. Magruder’s American Government C H A P T E R 11 Powers of Congress.
Presentation Pro © 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc. Magruder’s American Government C H A P T E R 11 Powers of Congress.
The Legislative Branch: Powers of Congress Chapter 11 American Government Ms. Powers.
Congressional Powers. Quick Review  Expressed Powers  Enumerated Powers  Implied Power  Necessary and Proper Clause.
The Legislative Branch Chapter 4 Section 4 The Implied and Non-legislative Powers.
Magruder’s American Government
Magruder’s American Government
Chapter 5 Section 3 (pgs ) The Powers of Congress
The Powers of Congress Magruder Chapter 11.
C H A P T E R 11 Powers of Congress
Magruder’s American Government
American Government Chapter 11 Notes.
The Implied Powers Chapter 11 Section 3.
Powers of Congress Unit 2.
Magruder’s American Government
The Powers of Congress.
The Implied Powers Chapter 11- Section 3.
Chapter 11: Powers of Congress Section 3
Chapter 11: Powers of Congress Section 3
Chapter 11: Powers of Congress
Chapter 5 Section 3 (pgs ) The Powers of Congress
NONLEGISLATIVE POWERS
Magruder’s American Government
The Scope of Congressional Powers
Powers of Congress.
Powers of Congress (Article I)
Implied and Nonlegislative Powers
Magruder’s American Government
Presentation transcript:

Implied Powers Necessary and Proper

Implied Powers are those powers that are not written into the USC but drawn from those that are…. Necessary and Proper Clause: – Article I, Section 8 – “to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying out into execution the foregoing powers, and all other powers vested by this Constitution in the government of the U.S….”

Necessary and Proper Clause Known as the ‘elastic clause’ – because its been stretched so far over the years The debate over the meaning of the this clause continues today: – Strict constructionist – Liberal constructionist

Strict Constructionist Led by Thomas Jefferson Congress should have its expressed powers and only those powers absolutely necessary to carry out the expressed powers Jefferson said, “that government is best which governs least.”

Liberal Constructionist Led by Alexander Hamilton Favored a liberal interpretation of the USC that gave the federal government broad powers Hamilton, said in Federalist #70, America needed an “energetic government”

McCulloch v. Maryland Supreme Court case that upheld the concept of implied powers Since then the power of the federal government has grown exponentially Factors for growth: – Wars – Economic crises – National emergences – People demand more and more services

McCulloch v. Maryland Court found the creation of a national bank was necessary and proper based on the expressed powers of: – Taxing power – Borrowing power – Currency power – Commerce power

Doctrine in Practice Liberal interpretation has allowed the National government to meet the challenges of times Has virtually eliminated the need to amend the Constitution. Congress has exercised implied powers based on : – Commerce power – Power to tax and spend – War powers

Commerce Power Gives Congress the power to regulate domestic and foreign trade “Commerce” interpreted to mean: – Production of goods – Buying and selling of goods – Transportation of people and good

Commerce Clause Basically regulate any economic activity – Manufacturing – Regulation of wages (minimum wage) – Food and drugs – Air travel – Building of the interstate highway system – REGULATION OF THE INTERNET!!! Net neutrality

Limits on Commerce Power Congress not free to do whatever it likes – SCOTUS has reigned in Congress when it has overstep its bounds Can’t pass laws to promote the ‘general welfare of the United States’ Can tax and spend money to do so: – Education, farm subsidies, unemployment compensation, social security, medicare, ……..

War Powers Implied power used to execute Congress’s war power – Exception is that it can’t violate any other provision of the USC. – Can provide for the “draft” To raise an army or navy

Other Powers Non-Legislative

Non-legislative Powers Constitutional Amendments Electoral Duties Impeachment Executive Powers Power to Investigate

Constitutional Amendments 2/3 Vote of both houses of Congress can propose an amendment to the USC – All 27 amendments added this way Article V of USC allows for the states to call for a convention of states to amend – 2/3 of states (34) must request of Congress Article V – proposals = balanced budget amendment, prayer in public school, outlaw abortions …….

Electoral Duties If no one receives a majority of electoral votes for President – The House of Representatives voting by states is to decide the issue. – Each state has only one vote to cast with a majority of states present – Senate must choose the Vice president when no one receives a majority vote – Each Senator gets one vote, majority of states to decide the issue.

Impeachment The House has the sole power to impeach – to accuse or bring charges – against officials The Senate has sole power to judge or convict in impeachment cases ‘be removed from office on impeachment for, and conviction of treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors…’

Impeachment Two presidents impeached – not guilty – so remained in office – Andrew Johnson – Bill Clinton Richard Nixon – resigned when faced with Articles of Impeachment from the House – Would have been convicted.

Executive Powers Must approve appointments to office – Cabinet members, judges, etc Must approve all treaties with foreign nations

Power to Investigate Congress has the power to investigate any matter that falls within the scope of its lawmaking authority

Questions to Ponder 1.What is the necessary and proper clause and why is it important? 2.Summarize the difference between strict constructionist and liberal constructionist. 3.What are the non-legislative powers of Congress?