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The Living Constitution
Chapter 5 Section 4
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5 Purposes of Constitution
Establish Legitimacy Create Appropriate Structures Describe and Distribute Power Limit Government Powers Allow for Change
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Preamble We the people of the United States,…, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America Sets forward six concepts behind the constitution
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Article I: The Legislature
Section 1: Splits the Legislature into 2 houses Section 2: The House of Representatives Section 3: The Senate
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Cont. Section 4: Congressional Elections
Section 5: Rules and Procedures Section 6: Payment and Privileges Section 7: How a bill becomes a Law
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Cont. Section 8: Powers Granted to Congress
Section 9: Powers Denied Congress Section 10: Powers Denied the States
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Article II: The Executive
Section 1: The Presidency A. Terms of Office – 4 years B. Electoral College – Vote for president C. Qualifications – Natural Born Citizen, 35 D. Succession – Vice President E. Salary - > $500k F. Oath of Office – Said before entrance
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Cont. Section 2: Powers of the President
A. Military Powers – President is Commander in Chief, Can require opinion of Executive Departments, Can grant pardons and reprieves except in the case of impeachment
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Cont. Section 2: Powers of the President B. Treaties, Appointments
C. Vacancies
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Cont. Section 3: Presidential Duties Section 4: Impeachment
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Article III: The Judiciary
Section 1: Federal Courts and Judges - Establishes Supreme Court Section 2: The Court’s Authority 1. General Authority 2. Supreme Court 3. Trial by Jury
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Cont. Section 3: Treason 1. Definition 2. Punishment
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Article IV: Relations Among States
Section 1: State Acts and Records Section 2: Rights of Citizens A. Citizenship B. Extradition
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Cont. Section 3: New States A. Admission B. Congressional Authority
Section 4: Guarantees to the States
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Article V: Amending the Constitution
There are now 27 amendments to the constitution There are 2 methods for proposing and ratifying amendments
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Article VI: Supremacy of the National Government
Section 1: Valid Debts Section 2: Supreme Law Section 3: Loyalty to Constitution
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Article VII: Ratification
Approval of 9 of the 13 states 39 delegates of the 55 which attended signed the Constitution
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The Bill of Rights Proposed by Congress September 25, 1789
Ratified December 15, 1791
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Amendment I Freedom of Religion, Speech, Press, and Assembly (1791)
The first amendment protects the civil liberties of individual citizens
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Amendment II Bearing Arms (1791)
Does it really mean the right to carry weapons?
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Amendment III Quartering Troops (1791)
People have a right to privacy in their own homes Based on Colonists grievances to Britain during American Revolution
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Amendment IV Searches and Seizures (1791) Protects Privacy
Must be a reasonable cause for search Evidence seized illegally cannot be used in court
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Amendment V Rights of Accused Persons (1791)
- Person must be indicted by jury - Double jeopardy - Military Law - Martial Law - Person can refuse to answer questions that may incriminate them
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Amendment VI Right to a Speedy, Fair Trial (1791) - Impartial Jury
- Evidence is presented - Witnesses from both sides - Government must provide a lawyer
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Amendment VII Civil Suits (1791) - $20 Amendment
- Jury trial is provided for in Civil Case
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Amendment VIII Bail and Punishment (1791)
- Bail cannot be to set to high - No cruel and unusual punishment can be inflicted
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Amendment IX Powers Reserved to the People (1791)
- People’s rights are not limited to those found in the constitution
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Amendment X Powers Reserved to the States (1791)
- Protects states and people from a powerful federal government - States that the people and states retain all power except for those specified
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Amendment XI Suits Against States (1795)
- Lawsuits against a state cannot be tried in federal court - Stems from Chisholm v. Georgia
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Amendment XII Election of President and Vice-President (1804)
- Changes Article II, Section 1, Clause 3 - States that voters are to cast separate ballots for President and Vice President
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Amendment XIII Abolition of Slavery (1865) - Act which ended slavery
- Prohibits the binding of a person to service due to debt - Congress had the Power to Enforce by legislation
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Amendment XIV Rights of Citizens (1868)
- Penalized Southern states that refused to grant all citizens the right to vote - Kept Confederate leaders form serving in government - War debts had to be paid
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Amendment XV The Right to Vote (1870) - No longer left to states
- Poll taxes would still be paid at some places - Congress was given power to reinforce amendment by legislation
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Amendment XVI Income Tax (1913)
- Supreme Court had previously stated that income taxes were unconstitutional - This amendment authorized a tax based on a direct basis
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Amendment XVII Direct Election of Senators (1913)
- Power to Elect Senators was given to each to the people - State must empower a person to fill a vacancy if necessary
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Amendment XVIII Prohibition of Alcoholic Beverages (1919)
- Prohibited the production, transport, or sale of alcoholic beverages - repealed by the 21st
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Amendment XIX Women Suffrage (1920)
- This gave all women the right to vote - Congress had power to enforce legislation
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Amendment XX “Lame-Duck” Amendment (1933)
- Section 1: shortened length of time between election & inauguration - Section 2: a new congressional session begins on Jan. 3 - Section 3: V-Pres. takes office if president dies before inauguration - Section 7: Ratification by states is 7 years
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Amendment XXI Repeal of Prohibition (1933)
- Ratified by state conventions rather than state legislatures - It nullified the 18th amendment
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Amendment XXII Limit on Presidential Terms (1951)
- President can only serve two terms
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Amendment XXIII Presidential Electors for the District of Columbia (1961) - People in Washington, D.C. now had the right to vote for president - They cast three electoral votes
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Amendment XXIV Abolition of the Poll Tax (1964)
- Poll taxes could no longer be used in Presidential or Congressional Elections - In 1966, Supreme Court banned them in state elections
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Amendment XXV Presidential Disability and Succession (1967)
- Replacing the President & Vice-President - Replacing President with Consent - Replacing President w/o Consent
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Amendment XXVI Eighteen-Year-Old Vote (1971)
- Previously, one must be 21 to vote - Vietnam played a large role on this
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Amendment XXVII Restraint on Congressional Salaries (1992)
- Any increase in salaries of members of Congress will take place in the next session of Congress
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