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The Constitution Section 1 Six Basic Principals

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The Constitution. Section 1 Six Basic Principals. Supreme Law of the Land. The Constitution, written in 1787, ratified in 1789, is still used over 200 years later. It is called the Supreme Law of the Land, or highest law in the US. Outline of the Constitution. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Constitution

The Constitution

Section 1Six Basic Principals

Page 2: The Constitution

Supreme Law of the Land

•The Constitution, written in 1787, ratified in 1789, is still used over 200 years later.

•It is called the Supreme Law of the Land, or highest law in the US

Page 3: The Constitution

Outline of the Constitution•The Constitution is a fairly

short document that is written in a way that it did not become outdated.

•When it was written, there were no phones, TV, radio, planes, even the pony express and Morse Code were almost 100 years away.

Page 4: The Constitution

Outline of the Constitution

•It was written to allow for growth, which is why some parts are vague.•The first section is the Preamble, which you have already learned

Page 5: The Constitution

Outline of the Constitution

• It is followed by 7 Articles, 6 are still used today

•The first 3 describe the qualifications, duties and responsibilities for the 3 branches of government.

Page 6: The Constitution

Outline of the Constitution

•The Amendments are at the bottom.

•The first 10, the Bill of Rights, were written in 1791.

•The other 17 were written and ratified over the last 215 years.

Page 7: The Constitution

Basic Principles•The Constitution is build around 6 principles:

•Popular sovereignty•Limited government•Separation of powers•Checks and balances•Judicial review•federalism

Page 8: The Constitution

Basic Principles

•Popular Sovereignty – all political power resides in the hands of its citizens. Government exists only with the consent of its people

Page 9: The Constitution

Basic Principles•Limited Government – the government and its officials can only do things that the people allow them to do•Constitutionalism and rule of law enforce this

Page 10: The Constitution

Basic Principles

•Separation of Powers – the 3 branches have different duties and responsibilities. No other branch can take on the responsibilities of another.

Page 11: The Constitution

Basic Principles

•Checks and Balances – each branch as the duty to check on the other branches to prevent them from becoming too powerful.

Page 12: The Constitution

Checks and Balances

Legislative BranchCan override Presidential vetoesConfirms appointmentsDeclares war

Judicial BranchDeclares laws unconstitutionalJudicial Review

Executive BranchCan vetoAppoints members to Supreme CourtMoves troops

Page 13: The Constitution

Executive Branch Powers

•The President’s powers are to:

•Sign or veto laws•Enforce laws•Lead the military as Commander in Chief•Nominate cabinet and Supreme Court members

Page 14: The Constitution

Legislative Branch Powers

•The Legislative Branch is Congress•There are 2 houses in Congress

•Senate – 100 members elected for 6 years•House of Representatives – 435 members elected for 2 years

Page 15: The Constitution

Legislative Branch Powers

•The House’s powers are to:•Make laws•Declare war•Impeach a president

Page 16: The Constitution

Legislative Branch Powers

•The Senate’s powers are to:•Make laws•Declare war•Remove a president•Override a presidential veto•Approve presidential appointments

Page 17: The Constitution

Judicial Branch Powers

•The Senate’s powers are to:

•Decides the Constitutionality of legislation.

Page 18: The Constitution

Judicial Review

•The Supreme Court can look at and review any legislation to determine its constitutionality.•Marbury v. Madison, 1803, established the power of judicial review.

Page 19: The Constitution

Judicial Review•The Supreme Court hears cases brought before it to decide the Constitutionality of a case.•If the case was not legal, the defendant gets a new trial.

Page 20: The Constitution

Miranda v. Arizona

•Miranda was arrested for the rape of an Arizona girl. He confessed during questioning.•The confession was used in court and he was sentenced.

Page 21: The Constitution

Miranda v. Arizona

•His attorney appealed his case because Miranda confessed without knowing he could have an attorney if he asked.•The Supreme Court decided that his confession could not be used at his trial

Page 22: The Constitution

Miranda v. Arizona

•He got a new trial•His victim testified, she did not need to in the first trial•He was again found guilty and sentenced to prison, again.•The Supreme Court did not decide on his guilt or innocence

Page 23: The Constitution

Miranda v. Arizona•Because of this case, we now have the Miranda Rights, explaining all the rights an accused person has before they are questioned.

Page 24: The Constitution

Miranda v. Arizona

•BTW – after Miranda’s second trial, he was stabbed to death by another prisoner.

Page 25: The Constitution

Skinner V. Oklahoma

•OK law stated that Skinner, a 3 time felon, would be castrated•The Supreme Court overturned OK State Law.•There was no new trial as the law was thrown out

Page 26: The Constitution

Federalism

•The federal government can coin money, the states cannot•The State governments can make marriage laws, the federal government cannot

Page 27: The Constitution

Federalism

•Both the federal and state governments can tax people to raise revenue.

Page 28: The Constitution

The ConstitutionSection 2 and 3

Formal Amendments and Other Constitutional

Changes

Page 29: The Constitution

A Living Document

•The framers wanted the new government to be able to grow with the country.•When it was written, America was an agricultural nation with less than 4 million people

Page 30: The Constitution

A Living Document

•Today, we are a technology based country with more than 300 million people.•Even with the changes, the Constitution has only been changed 27 times.

Page 31: The Constitution

Amendments

•The Constitution can be changed 2 ways•Formal amendments, the process is in Article V•Informal amendments

Page 32: The Constitution

Formal Amendments

•Proposals can be made by•2/3 vote in each House •All 27 amendments have been proposed this way

Page 33: The Constitution

Formal Amendments

•Proposals can be made by•2/3 of the state legislatures•This way has never been used

Page 34: The Constitution

Formal Amendments

•Proposals can be ratified by

•¾ vote of the state legislatures•26 of 27 amendments have been approved this way

Page 35: The Constitution

Formal Amendments

•Proposals can be ratified by

•¾ vote at state conventions•Only the 18th Amendment has been ratified this way

Page 36: The Constitution

Formal Amendments•Amendments are difficult to

pass because•2/3 vote needed in Congress

•Heavily populated and sparsely populated states must agree

• ¾ states must agree within 7 years

Page 37: The Constitution

Formal Amendments

•The Equal Rights Amendment did not pass because many states did not agree and court cases were taking care of the problem

Page 38: The Constitution

Formal Amendments

•The 26th Amendment gave 18 year olds the right to vote in 1971

•This had equal appeal for all since boys were drafted to fight in Vietnam

Page 39: The Constitution

Possible Amendments

•Gay Marriage•Flag Burning

Page 40: The Constitution

Amendments

•The last amendment, 1992, gives any pay raises passed by Congress to go into effect during the following Congressional session.

Page 41: The Constitution

Vocabulary

•Executive agreement – a pact made by the president with the head of a foreign nation•Treaty - a formal agreement between 2 states

Page 42: The Constitution

Vocabulary

•Electoral college – the group that elects the president •Cabinet – an advisory body for the president. Members are nominated by the Pres and confirmed by the Senate

Page 43: The Constitution

Other Amendment Methods

•Legislation - Congress passes a law. It’s the fast way to make a change and the way it is usually done

Page 44: The Constitution

Other Amendment Methods

•Executive Action – the president can make things happen, move troops, make agreements with foreign countries and take action to protect America

Page 45: The Constitution

Other Amendment Methods

•Court Decisions – The Supreme Court adapts decisions to modern events•They reversed Plessy v. Ferguson in the 1954 decision, Brown v. Topeka

Page 46: The Constitution

Other Amendment Methods

•Party Practices – Political parties make decisions, platforms, for their candidates t win elections

Page 47: The Constitution

Other Amendment Methods

•Custom – some practices are unwritten but are done because of tradition•There is nothing in the Constitution about a Cabinet but all presidents have one