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Chapter 3 The Constitution Section 2 Formal Amendments
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Objectives: * Analyze the processes by which the United States Constitution can be changed and evaluate their effectiveness * Understand the history of the 27 amendments to the Constitution
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Formal Amendments *When the Constitution went into effect, America was a small agricultural nation of fewer than 1,300 families, along east coast * Today, more than 300 million people live in the 50 States of the USA * The US is the most powerful nation in the world * The Constitution has endured for a long time
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Formal Amendment * There are two ways to change the Constitution 1) by formal amendment 2) by informal procedures
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Formal Amendments Changing the Constitution * The Framers knew that the wisest of constitution makers cannot build for all time * The Constitution provides for its own amendment, written changes to this document
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Formal Amendments * Article V sets out two methods for the proposal and two methods for the ratification of the constitutional amendments * Formal Amendment – changes or additions that become part of the written language of the Constitution itself * There are four methods involved
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Formal Amendments First Method > An amendment may be proposed by 2/3’s vote in each house of Congress and ratified by ¾’s of the State Legislatures > 38 State Legislatures must approve the change > 26 amendments had been approved this way
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Formal Amendments Second Method > An Amendment proposed by Congress and then ratified by conventions, called for that purpose, ¾’s of the States approve it > Only the 21st Amendment was passed this way >Repeal of Prohibition
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Formal Amendments Third Method * An amendment may be proposed by a national convention, called by Congress at the request of 2/3s of the States (34 States as of today) * It must be ratified by ¾’s of the State Legislatures * No Amendment has been passed this way
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Formal Amendments Fourth Method * An amendment may be proposed by a national convention and ratified by ¾’s of the States * No Amendment has been passed this way
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Formal Amendments Federalism and Popular Sovereignty * Proposals for amendments take place at the national level and ratified at the state level * There is much criticism about the people selected to ratify the amendment for various reasons * Supreme Court has ruled that a State cannot require an amendment proposed by Congress to be approved by a vote of the people of the State before it is cane be ratified by the State
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Formal Amendments * Court Case that solved this dilemma was Hawke v. Smith in 1920 Proposed Amendments * The Constitution places one restriction on the subjects with which a proposed amendment may deal * Article V declares “No State, without its Consent, shall be deprived of its equal suffrage in the Senate
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Formal Amendments *If both houses of Congress pass a resolution, it does not go to the President to be signed or vetoed. * It is then sent to the States for ratification * More than 10,000 joint resolutions have been proposed in Congress since 1789 * Only 33 of those have been sent to the States
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Formal Amendments * Of those 33 resolutions, 27 have been ratified as Amendments to the Constitution * Congress has the power to place “reasonable time limits” on the ratification of a resolution * The first ten amendments are also called the “Bill of Rights”
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Formal Amendments * They were proposed right after the Constitution was adopted * The Bill of Rights are constitutional guarantees of freedom of belief and expression, freedom and security of the person, and fair and equal treatment before the law
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Formal Amendments The 27 Amendments 1-10) Bill of Rights 11- Immunity of States from certain lawsuits 12 – Changes in electoral college procedures 13 – Abolition of Slavery 14 – Citizenship, due process, equal protection 15 – No denial of vote because of race, color, or previous enslavement
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Formal Amendments The 27 Amendments 16 – Power of Congress to tax incomes 17 – Popular election of US Senators 18 – Prohibition of alcohol 19 – Woman’s suffrage 20 – Change of dates for start of Presidential and Congressional terms 21 – Repeal of Prohibition (18 th )
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Formal Amendments The 27 Amendments 22 – Limit on Presidential terms 23 – District of Columbia vote in presidential elections 24 – Ban on tax payment as voter qualification 25 – Presidential succession, vice-presidential vacancy, & presidential disability
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Formal Amendments The 27 Amendments 26 – Voting Age of 18 27 – Congressional pay
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Formal Amendments 12 th – came about when electoral college did not produce a presidential winner in 1800 13 th – came about in 1865 – abolished Slavery and was a direct result of the Civil War 14 th and 15 th are also direct results of the Civil War 18 th – only to be repealed 22 nd – proposed after the Republican Party gained control of Congress for first time in 16 years after FDR 26 th – added in 1971, lowered voting age from 21 to 18 for all elections in the United States
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Formal Amendments 27 th Amendment is the most recent * it was the first one offered by Congress * this amendment forbids members of Congress from raising their own pay during that term. It was proposed in 1789 and it took nearly 203 years to ratify if in 1992
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