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Six Principles of The Constitution
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Principle I: Establishes the responsibilities of the three branches of government
Article I Legislative Branch Congress Senate House of Representatives Writes laws
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Principle I: Establishes the responsibilities of the three branches of government
Article II Executive Branch President (and his staff – bureaucracy) Makes sure the laws are enforced
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Principle I: Establishes the responsibilities of the three branches of government
Article III Judicial Branch Supreme Court (and federal courts) Interprets the laws
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Principle II: Establishes a strong, but limited government
The national government needs to be Strong But, with power divided Limited By a written constitution Balanced By three branches competing for power
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Principle II: Establishes a strong, but limited government
The Articles of Confederation showed the dangers of a weak government. The British monarchy of a super-strong government
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Principle III: A Federal System was established
Federalism divides Power Responsibility Levels of governments National State County Town School
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Principle IV: The Constitution is written so powers are categorized
Expressed Powers CLEARLY stated as powers of the NATIONAL gov’t Implied Powers HINTED at as powers of the NATIONAL gov’t. Reserved Powers Are powers set-aside for STATE gov’t Concurrent powers Shared powers of both the NATIONAL and STATE gov’t
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Principle V: Judicial Review is needed
The Courts can determine if laws are Fair Constitutional Not clearly stated in The Constitution Essential to the power of the Supreme Court
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Principle VI: The Bill of Rights
Not part of the original Constitution First Ten Amendments Added to protect the rights of individuals
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