2.2 The Constitution and Home Rule
constitution
a document that sets the rules and procedures for an organization such as a government, school, business, church, etc.
legislative
the branch which creates laws; (Congress)
judicial
the branch which decides what laws mean and when laws have been broken; (headed by the Supreme Court)
executive
the branch which enforces laws; (headed by the President)
state
the level of American government most responsible for schools, transportation, and most crimes
local
the level of American government most responsible for the police, fireman, parks, libraries, sewers, and waste disposal
federal
the level of American government responsible for creating money, delivering mail, fighting wars
home rule
principle: each level of community should run as much of its own business as possible
majority rule
principle: more than half of the people have to agree on something for it to become law
federalism
principle: national and state governments share power
checks and balances
principle: the ability of each branch of government to limit or obstruct the power of another branch
popular sovereignty
principle: the people are the final authority in government and have the right to rule themselves
separation of powers
principle: the power of government is divided between the three branches of American government
limited government
principle: the powers of the government are limited; government can't do whatever it wants
U.S. Constitution
the document that sets the rules and procedures for the U.S. government; the foundation for American government