The nature of the US constitution Flashcards
What did the constitution do to the three federal branches of government?
Codified and completed them
When was the constitution finished?
Sep 1787
List the three key features of the constitution
- It is codified
- It is a blend of specificity and vagueness
- Its provisions are entrenched
What is codification?
The process of writing down a constitution in a single authoritative document
What does the constitution contain?
It is a collected and authoritative set of rules outlining the rules of American government and politics
List the three branches of government that the constitution created and set out the machinery of
- The legislature, which is responsible for making laws
- The executive, which is responsible for carrying out laws
- The judiciary, which is responsible for enforcing and interpreting the laws
What do the first three articles of the constitution do?
Explain how the three branches of government will work and what powers they have
What does article I do?
Establishes Congress as the national legislature, defining its membership, the qualifications and election of members, as well as its powers
What does article II do?
Invest all executive power into a president elected by the electoral college
What does article III do?
Created the SC and gave it the implied power of acting as the umpire for the constitution
What is the supremacy clause?
The portion of article VI which states that the constitution, federal laws and treaties shall be the supreme law of the land
What type of powers do the first three articles of the constitution give to the three branches of the federal government?
Enumerated
What are enumerated powers?
Powers delegated to the national government under the constitution. These are enumarated in the first three articles of the constitution
Why does the the federal government not have unlimited power in the way that parliament does?
Because it is restricted to the powers given to it by the constitution
Why is the vagueness of the constitution an advantage?
Because it has allowed the constitution to evolve over time without the need for formal amendment
How has the vagueness of the constitution proven to be a disadvantage?
The lack of clarity has led to disputes over what can be considered constitutional
What are implied powers?
Powers of the federal government that the constitution doesn’t explicitly mention, but which are reasonably implied by the enumerated powers
When has the vagueness of the constitution been a cause for war?
The lack of a comment on slavery in the constitution was a major contributor to the breakout of the American Civil War
Where are many of the implied powers deduced from?
The necessary and proper clause, the final clause of article I section 8, which empowers Congress to make all laws necessary and proper to carry out the duties of the federal government
Why is the necessary and proper clause often called the elastic clause?
Because it allows the federal government’s powers to be stretched beyond the enumerated ones
Give an early example of the enumerated clause in action
When the SC ruled that Congress had the right to create a central bank, even though this is not an enumerated power
What is judicial review an example of?
An implied power
What is judicial review?
This is where the SC can declare Acts of Congress actions of the executive or acts and actions of state governments unconstitutional
When was the implied power of judicial review found?
In the 1803 case of Marbury v Madison, as this was the first time that the SC had declared something unconstitutional