Chapter 3 The Constitution
federal bureaucracy
government, how it all fits togeths
elastic clause
mrah
Federal courts try what kinds of cases?
ones that involve US laws, treaties with foreign nations, or interpretations of the constitution, bankruptcy, etc.
popular sovereignty
rule by the people, consent of the governed; authority for govt flows from people
Article 3 of US Constitution
section 1 establishes a Supreme Court to head the judicial branch and gives national govt power to create lower federal courts. section 2 outlines the jurisdiction (authority) of the supreme court and other federal courts to rule on cases. section 3 defines treason against US
Article 6 of the US Constitution
supremacy clause, establishing that the constitution, laws passed by congress, and treaties of the US shall be supreme law of the land.
enumerated powers
1-18
McCulloch v Maryland
addressed whether a strict or a broad interpretation of the constitution should be applied. suprememe court ruled in favor of a broad interpretation. the court supported the idea that the elastic clause gave congress the right to make laws necessary to carry out its other powers
Article 7 of the US Constitution
addresses ratification and states that the Constitution would take effect after it was ratified by nine states
articles
articles re re
Amendments: How many times has constitution been amended?
changes, 27x
how does our system of checks and balances work?
congress passes laws. president can check congress by vetoing its legislation; this veto power is balanced, by the power of congress to override the veto by a two-thirds vote of each house. the federal courts restrain congress by ruling on the constitutionality of laws. this power of the judicial branch is balanced by the power of the president to appoint federal judges. however, this is balanced by the constitution's requirement that the senate approve appointments.
Article 2 of US Constitution
creates executive branch to carry out laws passed by Congress. Detail powers and duties of presidency, describe qualifications for office and procedures for electing president, provide for a vice president
supremacy clause
declaring supreme law of land
checks and balances
each branch of govt exercises some control over the others
jurisdiction of courts
every court has the authority to hear only certain kinds of cases
the first chief justice
john jay
what kinds of powers does the president have
vague and specific powers
separation of powers
3 branches, each branch has its responsibilities, a system that the founders hoped would prevent any branch from gaining too much power
How many articles in constitution?
7
Article 1 of US Constitution
Establishes legislative Branch, creates congress, details about two houses of congress, house of reps and senate, spell out procedures for making laws, list types of laws congress may pass, specify powers that congress does not have
Article 5 of the US Constitution
Spells out the ways that the Constitution can be amended or changed.
two different systems of US courts and descriptions
federal courts: powers derive from constitution and federal laws. and the states courts (the courts of each of the 50 states): powers derive from state constitutions and laws
jurisdiction
the authority of a court to rule on certain cases
limited government
the constitution limits the actions of government by specifically listing powers it does and does not have
judicial review
the power of the courts to declare laws and actions of local, state, or national governments invalid if they violate the Constitution
What two factors determine the jurisdiction of federal courts?
the subject matter of the case, and the parties involved in it
what was the office of the presidency initiated in response to?
the weakness of the articles of confederation
What did the constitution establish?
1. Established a republic in which power is held by voting citizens through elected representatives 2. Provides citizens with information about their rights and about what they may reasonably expect of their government.
Six major principles of US govt that the Constitution rests upon
1. popular sovereignty 2. federalism 3. seperation of powers 4. checks and balances 5. judicial review 6. limited government
3 parts of constitution
1. the Preamble 2. the articles 3. the amendments
Marbury vs. Madison
established the precedent for federal courts to rule on the actions of the government. Chief justice John Marshall announced that the Judiciary Act of 1789 gave the Court more power than the constitution allowed. thus, the act was unconstitutional. So, the power to declare laws unconstitutional, also known as judicial review, elevated the Suprememe Court to a status balancing the powers of the other branches.
Article 4 of US Constitution
explains relationship of the states to one another and to the national govt. requires each state to give citizens of other states the same rights as its own citizens, addresses admitting new states, and guarantees that the national govt will protect the states against invasion or domestic violence.
federalism/federal system
power is divided between national and state governments
expressed powers
powers defined, written