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Published byBrandon Jeffery Newton Modified over 9 years ago
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Chapter 3 Section 2
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The Endurance of the Constitution The Constitution is a living document Born September 1789 Currently resides in Washington D. C. It was written very vaguely Not without some changes along the way There are 27 amendments in about 230 years ○ Several issues such a slavery, women's rights, and the voting age was discussed after its ratification
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Framers’ Ideas on Amending the Constitution Thomas Jefferson He viewed change as inevitable and positive to accommodate changes in society. There must be reasoning behind the changes James Madison He feared that changing the Constitution would weaken the new government.
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The Amendment Process The entire process is expressed in Article V of the Constitution. The process is lengthy, drawn–out Requires a Supermajority This was done on purpose Supermajority-is any majority that is more than 51% Examples: 2/3 (67%) and 3/4 (75%)
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Proposing an Amendment Two thirds of Congress must vote in favor of the proposed amendment. or Two thirds of the states legislatures (34 out of 50) must vote on the proposed amendment at a national convention
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Ratifying an Amendment Three fourths of the states (38 out of 50) must vote in order for the amendment to take effect. or Delegates from meet and vote on the amendment at a state wide convention If three fourths of the conventions approve the amendment then it becomes part of the Constitution
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Repealing an Amendment Another way to change the is to repeal (remove) a pervious amendment Example: 18 th amendment=prohibition on alcohol. The 21 st amendment was passed soon after the repeal the 18 th amendment
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