US Constitution + Federalism Flashcards
What is the US constitution?
The basis of all government in the USA and the supreme law of the land
Structure of the US constitution
7 articles and 27 amendements
First 10 amendments, ratified in 1791, know as the Bill of Rights
What type of constitution is the US constitution
It is codified - meaning it’s all written in one document
Created by ‘Founding Fathers during War of Independence from Britain
Ratified in 1788 and came into force 1789
It is also entrenched - can’t be changed without a supermajority (2/3rds of votes in Congress)
What are the Bill of Rights?
List entrenched rights -> protected by the Constitution and cannot be changed on a legislative whim
What does Article V do?
Entrenches the US constitution, requiring a supermajority to change amendments or a 3/4 majority in a ratifying convention of the states
Enumerated powers
Explicity given to a branch of government
Set out in Article , section 8
Include power to tax citizens and soend this money and the power to issue currency
Implied powers
Suggested or required for enumerated powers to be used
Article I, Section 8, Clause 8 gives Congress power to make all laws ‘necessary and proper’ for its ability to rule
These powers grown since the constituion was written, allowing Congress to make laws concerning matters not mentioned in the Constitution i.e. an implied power of Congress is the regulation of the sale of substances, and the banning of other substances (some drugs)
Pros of the nature of the constitution
- Simple - codified constitution so all citizens know their rights
- Vaguness - can be adpated to modern world as it can be interpreted differently
- Clarity - seperation of powers between 3 branches of government, preventing too much power in one group
- Entrenched - protects thoughts of Founding Fathers and prevents populist movements from making drastic or poorly though out changes
Cons of the nature of the Constitution
- Difficult to amend due to entrenched nature
- Vagueness - leaves alot to interpretation which the Supreme Court has the final say on -> gives justices a lot of power -> US judiciary politicised and not impartial making this concerning
- Conflict due to vaguness
- Extent of federal government is unclear - ‘Necessary and proper’ clause states Congress can “make all laws which shall be necessary and proper into execution the foregoing powers.” -> led to power of Federal Government expanding -> led to conflicts between states and Federal Government
Article I
Grants all legislative powers to Congress
Outlines the election process for each chamber of Congress and the powers allocated too them
HoR - elected every two years, each state has min. 1 representative and the representatives of each state based on population size
The Senate - serve 6 year terms, elections every 2 years on 1/3 of senatoes, 2 senators per state (100 senators)
Articl II
Grants executive power to a President who sits for a term of 4 years, alongside their Vice-President
Elected via system known as the electoral college
Artcile III
Grants judicial power to the supreme court and an smaller court
No term limit for judges
Supreme Judges appoint by President and approved by Congress
Article IV
Sets out rules and relationships between states
All states have to respect rules of ther states
All citizens should be treated equally and fairly in all other states
The rules for the admittance of other states is outlined
All states have Republican Governments rather than a King or gentry
Article V
Sets out process to amend the Constitution -> need formal support of 3/4 of states and supermajority in both chambers of Congress -> can also be through a Constitutional Convention where amendments are proposed, and amendments are then ratified by 3/4 of state legislatures
Artcile VI
Contains the ‘supremacy clause’ which makes the constitution the highets law in the USa
Also says “no religious test shall ever be required as a qualification” for public office
Article VII
Outlines the ratification process for the Constituion to be put into place
The Amendment Process
Supermajority in both houses of Congress have to vote to introduce an amendment, or 2/3 of states can call a Constitutional Convention to propose amendments
Amendents require the ratification of 3/4 of states
Famous amendments in the Bill of Rights (1st, 2nd, 4th, 6th, 8th, 10th)
1st - freedom of speech/religion
2nd - bear arms
4th - right to not have “unreasonable searches and seizures
6th - right to a fair trial
8th - no cruel or unusual punishments
10th - power not granted ot federal government is granted to states and people
Other famous amendments (13th, 14th, 15th, 19th, 22nd, 26th)
13th, 14th, 15th passed after civil war, abolishing slaves and civil rights ot ex-slaves
19th - gave women the vote
22nd - President can have max two terms in office
26th - voting age from 2 to 18
Pros of amendment process
- Protetects small states’ rights -> smaller populated states protect their rights against larger states -> one of main reasons for electoral college
- Hard for any one group or populist movement to amend it i.e. Trump tweeted he could end birthright citizenship, protected by the 14th amendment, with an executive order. He couldn’t as amendments passed must be decided by the whole country
Protects principles of Founding Fathers i.e. regular elections and seperation of powers
Cons of the amendment process
- States have changing populations -> small states have same say as larger states -> Wyomming = 357,000 people, California = 39.5m people -> both have equal say in ratification process -> makes some states overrepresented and some underrepresented
- Undemocratic - 13 states can block the will of the people i.e. Feminist groups trying to introduce an Equal Rights Amendment since 1921 -> supermajority in Senate in 1972 and in HoR in 1971 -> was blocked by a small group of conservative states refusing to ratify the amendment
Federalism in the US constitution
Power is divided between the federal government (central government) and state governments
Articles I - IV set out powers of the states and the federal government
10th amendment gives all power not given to the federal government in the constitution to the states or the people, forbiding the federal government in ways not allowed by the constitution
Federalism is effective
- Each state has 3 branches of government - Governor (executive), State Congress (legislature and Supreme Court - and can legislate on a wide variety of matters
- State have the power to ratify amendments to the constitution and so have the power to change the foundational document on whihc all US law is based
- Protections, rights and some taxes are different in many states i.e. Oregon doesn’t have a state tax