The Implied Powers & Non-Legislative Powers of Congress

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Implied Powers.
Advertisements

The Powers of Congress Magruder Chapter 11.
Chapter 11: Powers of Congress
Unit H: Legislative Branch Chapter 11 Powers Of Congress
Powers of Congress Chapter 11.
Chapter 11 Section 4 & 5.
 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.
CHAPTER 11 POWERS OF CONGRESS.
Special Powers of Congress
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.
Chapter 11 POWERS OF CONGRESS.
The President of the USA. The office of the President One of the most powerful offices of its kind in the world. The president, the Constitution says,
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.
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’ Non-legislative Powers. Constitutional Amendments Congress has the power to propose amendments to the Constitution by a two- thirds vote in.
CONGRESS CHAPTER 11. JAN NOTES/DISCUSSION NON-LEGISLATIVE CONGRESSIONAL POWERS 2. CHAPTER 12 VOCAB 3. CONGRESS QUIZ TUESDAY JAN CONGRESS.
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 11: Powers of Congress Section 4
SSCG:4b;9;14a Day 5 Same standards as yesterday. EQ: What are Congress’ Impeachment, Investigatory and War Time Powers? Homework: 1. Go on the webpage.
Presentation Pro © 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc. Magruder’s American Government C H A P T E R 11 Powers of Congress.
+ Chapter 11 Powers of Congress. + Congressional Powers The Constitution grants Congress a number of specific powers in three different ways. (1) The.
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.
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.
SECTION1 © 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc. Magruder’s American Government C H A P T E R 11 Powers of Congress.
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
Chapter 11 Powers of Congress. Section One: Scope of Congressional Powers Expressed powers: specifically worded in Constitution Expressed powers: specifically.
Powers of Congress Chapter 11. Congressional Power Expressed Powers ▫Powers of Congress spelled out in Constitution Implied Powers ▫Powers that are suggested.
Chapter 11 Gov. Notes. Congressional Powers Congress has only the powers delegated (granted, given) to it by the Constitution. Congress cannot create:
Congress’ Non-legislative Powers. Constitutional Amendments Congress has the power to propose amendments to the Constitution by a two- thirds vote in.
[ 4.4 ] The Implied and Nonlegislative Powers
Congressional Powers and Legislative Work
Magruder’s American Government
Chapter 5 Section 3 (pgs ) The Powers of Congress
Chapter 5 Section 3 Notes The POWERS OF CONGRESS.
Chapter 11: Powers of Congress
Nonlegislative Powers
The Non Legislative Powers
The Powers of Congress Magruder Chapter 11.
American Government Chapter 11 Notes.
Congress Leaders and Powers
Jan. 5, CNN Student News 2. Mr. Smith Goes to Washington
Powers of Congress Unit 2.
Congress.
Congress and the Legislative Process
Chapter 11: Powers of Congress Section 4
Powers of Congress – Day 2
The Implied Powers Chapter 11- Section 3.
Chapter 11: Powers of Congress
Powers of Congress Chapter 11.
Chapter 5 Section 3 (pgs ) The Powers of Congress
Journal Question (100 Words)
NONLEGISLATIVE POWERS
Chapter 11 Section 5.
Magruder’s American Government
The Scope of Congressional Powers
II. How the Federal Government Works
Chapter 5 Section 3 Notes The POWERS OF CONGRESS.
Powers of Congress.
Implied and Nonlegislative Powers
Presidential Succession and Impeachment
Warm-Up.
Government Chapter 5 Section 3: Powers of Congress
Presentation transcript:

The Implied Powers & Non-Legislative Powers of Congress Chapter 11 Section 4 & 5

Implied Powers Necessary & Proper Clause -”to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing Constitution in the government of the United States, or in any department or officer thereof”

Battle Over Implied Powers 1790-National Bank established Opponents argued the Constitution said nothing about a national bank Proponents looked to the Necessary & Proper clause

McCulloch v. Maryland 1816-Maryland placed a tax on all notes issued by banks not charted by the state legislature McCulloch issued notes without the tax on purpose Maryland argues the strict constructionist view before the court Courts ruled in favor of implied powers and stated no State can lawfully tax any agency of the federal government

Doctrine Principle or fundamental policy Example-implied powers Necessary & Proper clause is also known as the Elastic Clause

Non-Legislative Powers The primary function of Congress is to make laws. But the Constitution does give it some other chores – several non-legislative duties – to perform as well

1. Constitutional Amendments Article V: Congress may propose amendments by a 2/3 vote in each house Recent petitions by state legislators to Congress for amendments Examples….

Recent Petitions for Amendments Balance the Federal Budget every year Prohibit Flag Burning Permit Prayer in Public Schools Outlaw Abortions Prohibit Same-Sex Marriage

2. Electoral Duties Only exercised in unusual situations 12th Amendment: House chooses the President when no candidate receives a majority Senate chooses the V.P. when no candidate receives a majority Thomas Jefferson (1801) John Quincy Adams (1825) 25th Amendment Filling the Vacancy of the VP President appoints a new VP, Congress must approve by 2/3 vote

Example of Electoral Duty President Nixon and Vice President Agnew Agnew Resigned (1972) Nixon chose Ford "Nixon sought advice from Congressional leaders about a replacement. The advice was unanimous. 'We gave Nixon no choice but Ford,' House Speaker Carl Albert recalled". The U.S. Senate voted 92 to 3 to confirm Ford on November 27.

3. Impeachment The Constitution grants Congress the power of removing the President, Vice President, or other civil officers from their office through impeachment. The House has the sole power to impeach, or bring charges against the individual. There is then a trial in the Senate. A 2/3 vote of the senators present is needed for conviction. The penalty for conviction is removal from office.

HISTORICAL DRAMA! First Impeachment Case Andrew Johnson House convicted Johnson of violating the Tenure Act and mistreating southern states after the Civil War Senate acquitted Johnson by one swing vote

HISTORICAL DRAMA! Second Case: Bill Clinton House approved two counts: perjury, obstruction of justice, and making false statements relating to the relationship with a White House intern 13 hours of debate in the House! Goes to the Senate for trial…..Senate acquits Clinton.

HISTORICAL DRAMA! The Close Call: Richard Nixon A “sure impeachment” Watergate Scandal in 1972 Breaking into Democratic Parties National Headquarters in the Watergate Complex Investigators uncovered a long list of illegal acts Bribery, Perjury, Income Tax Fraud, Illegal Campaign Contributions

Nixon Con’t Nixon is convicted of Obstruction of justice, abuse of power, failure to respond to the committee’s subpoenas SUBPOENA A legal order directing one to appear in court and/or to produce certain evidence Obvious the House would charge to impeach and the Senate would convict Most serious violation of the public’s trust in U.S. History

4. Executive Powers Appointments Treaties All major appointments made by the President must be confirmed by the Senate by majority vote. Only 12 of 600 Cabinet appointments to date have been declined. “Senatorial courtesy” is the practice in which the Senate will turn down an appointment if it is opposed by a senator of the President’s party from the State involved. Treaties The President makes treaties “by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate,... provided two thirds of the Senators present concur.” Presently, the President often consults members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

5. Investigatory Powers

Quick Quiz List Three of the Five NON LEGISLATIVE POWERS