Constitution and Government – Flashcards
Flashcard maker : Alexander Barker
Articles of Confederation
rough draft of the Constitution; intentionally created bad because we were hesitant for a central government; under this, there was one state=one vote; laws were to be passed by ⅔ majority; Congress could require tax only request; there was no executive branch; each state was essentially sovereign
Problems with Articles
population was misrepresented (each state=1 vote); laws had to be passed by ⅔ majority (super majority); there was no executive branch which meant no enforcing of laws; Congress did not have any power (no forcing taxes, only request); no control over trade: they were broke; the states each thought they were in charge of themselves which weakened the argument for having our own country
Constitutional Convention
met in 1787 to draft a new superior Constitution which would touch on all the issues; George Washington was the one who is given credit for bringing the states there; they agreed to many things to create a new Constitution
James Madison
kept the only documentation of the meeting where they discussed a new Constitution and also was the one who narrowed down the huge list to the 10 individual rights which are the first ten amendments to the Constitution
Great Compromise
the agreement which combined elements of the two plans that were being presented when drafting a new constitution; led to the two chamber Congress
⅗ Compromise
it allowed slaves to also be represented in Congress
Separation of Powers
the three branches of government were given different powers and they had a checks and balances system; each branch has different responsibilities
Federalists
supported the new constitution; Madison and Hamilton
Anti-Federalists
were not in support of the constitution because they did not like a central government; Jefferson
BIll of Rights
First Ten Amendments; it was what got the ratification of the people against the constitution because it gave the individual their own rights
Issues addressed in the Constitution
individual freedoms, the separation of powers, the division of powers, checks and balances, 3/5 compromise, established executive branch, bicameral legislature
Themes of the constitution
popular sovereignty, separation of powers, checks and balances, federalism
Popular Sovereignty
the concept that power to rule is given from the people
Checks and balances
each branch can check each other with certain overpowering/overlapping powers; example of this would be the president vetoing a bill and Congress can override this with a 2/3 majority in both chambers; the judicial can declare any law by the legislation or an action by the executive branch to be unconstitutional
Federalism
two layers of government (state and national)
Legislative
this branch makes laws and is covered by Article 1 in the Constitution
Executive
this branch enforces laws and is covered by Article 2 in the Constitution;
Judicial
this branch interprets laws and is covered by Article 3 in the Constitution
Federal Powers
examples of this would be national tax, printing money, war decisions, immigration; also thought of as “delegated powers”
State powers
examples of this would be establishing schools, forming the local governments, elections and marriage laws; also though of as “reserved powers”
Shared powers
concurrent powers; tax, establishing law enforcement, borrowing money, health/welfare of people, schools
Liberals
want government out of social but in some things; believe that change is good; they want rapid change; the left; currently Democrats; the party of the common people;
Conservatives
want government out of business because they want free trade; traditional; want to stay in certain way because it has worked before; the right; currently Republicans; the party of business; want social support in local things
Conservatives
generally believe in lower taxes
Liberals
generally believe in higher taxes
Conservatives
believe that the death penalty should be kept
Liberals
believe that the death penalty should be abolished
Liberals
care much more about the environment
Conservatives
not as much worried about the environment as long as it doesn’t hurt business
Conservatives
want sex ed taught in schools
Liberals
want social programs protected
Conservatives
don’t believe that social programs are stable at the moment
Liberals
want business/economy regulations
Conservatives
do not want business/economy regulations
Liberals
all for the U.S.’s role in the world and especially through the UN
Conservatives
do not want the U.S. in the world’s affairs as much and especially not through the UN
Liberals
support legal immigration and are generally much more willing to allow freedoms to undocumented citizens too
Conservatives
only support legal immigration and illegal immigration is one of the major problems for the country
Conservatives
the right
Liberals
the left
Changing the Constitution
this can be done in either of two ways: by a 2/3 majority vote by both the House of Representatives and the Senate OR by the ratification of 3/4 of the states (38)
Division of powers
the reason for this was so that no one part of government would become too strong
Separation of powers
a system that involves giving powers to the different the three branches of government and the checks and balances between them
Legislative Branch
the writers of the constitution thought that this branch should be the most closely linked to the people; it is bicameral with the House of Representatives and the Senate
House of Representatives
the limit is 435 reps for the country and this number is divided up between the states of the country; the people in this have a 2 year term and for this reason are held very accountable; Washington State has 10 representatives
Speaker of the House
the name for the person who is in charge of the House of Representatives; Paul Ryan is the current one
Senate
every state gets two representatives in this chamber of congress; they are elected for 6 year terms; they are not so worried about job security or keeping the position because they have 6 year terms in which they can vote in more of a way that they feel like; Washington state’s representatives here are Maria Cantwell and Patty Murray
President of the Senate
in reality it is just the vice president of the United States; comes during ties to vote
President Pro Tempore
this person organizes the Senate daily
Bill to law process
the bill is introduced in either the house or the senate, it is given a number, the bill gets referred to a committee and put on calendar to discuss/debate, the bill gets voted on by the committee and either dies or passes on to full chamber, bill gets put on calendar for discussion and debate by full chamber, bill gets discussed and debated on by full chamber, either dies or gets passes to other house, Bill gets put on committee, then discussed/debated by other house and passed on to to full chamber, if there are changes the joint committee then it goes back to both houses to be discussed, if it gets passed by both chambers it goes to the president, president can veto, sign or ignore for ten days (which would automatically become a law), in case of veto Congress can override with 2/3 majority rule by both chambers
Presidential election
through the electoral college; each state gets same number of electoral votes as the total number of senators and reps in the house of reps that they have; these electors are supposed to vote for the state and 99.99% of the time vote in the same way that the state as a majority does
Electoral College
electoral process for the president; they are supposed to vote in the same way as the state; same number of electoral votes as the total number of senators and reps in the house of reps that they have
President
head of the executive branch
money
bills dealing with _____ have to start in the House of Representatives
Supreme Court Justices
these nine people are appointed by the president on lifelong terms as the head of the judicial branch
Supreme Court cases
the case must start at a local level and move up in the courts to reach the ultimate court; the ultimate court only accepts a very limited amount of cases for when they are in session; each side gets four hours but only 30 mins to make case
Supreme Court nominations
done by the president but approved by the Senate
Thurgood Marshall
first black Supreme Court judge; also was a lawyer who had won 19/22 Supreme Court cases and most amazing lawyers barely get 1 chance at the Supreme Court
Sandra Day O’Connor
first woman Supreme Court judge
Anthony Kennedy
known to be the Supreme Court judge swing vote
Executive
approve/vetoes bills (power over legislative)
Executive
can grant pardons (power over judicial)
Executive
appoints judges
Legislative
can override presidential veto
Senate
the part of the Legislative that can refuse to approve/approve Supreme Court nominations (power over executive)
Judicial
can declare the laws or a president’s actions to be unconstitutional (power over two branches)
House of Representatives
the part of the budget that regulates the budget
Senate
the part of the Legislative that can refuse presidential nominees
Legislative
both chambers can impeach the president;
Legislative
although it makes/passes laws, both chambers must be able to agree on it to do this
Judicial
the branch of government that is considered the final decider in cases relating to the Constitution
First Amendment
speech, religion, press, assembly, petition
Tinker vs Des Moines
In 1965, students wanted to wear black armbands to school; this was a sign of symbolic speech; the SC ruling was that the freedoms should not be harming the learning environment; this case was called
Freedom of Speech
this freedom in the first amendment can be limited when advocating a government rebellion or libel/slander; for libel (written) and slander (spoken) it needs to be proven to be false and written/spoken with the intent to harm
Freedom of Religion
this freedom in the first amendment has two parts: Establishment Clause and the Free Exercise Clause
Establishment Clause
part of the first amendment’s freedom of religion; says government cannot establish official religion/church or give preference
Free Exercise Clause
part of the first amendment’s freedom of religion; says government cannot intervene with your right to practice your beliefs; but the government can intervene when public health is violated
Freedom of the Press
this freedom in the first amendment came about because the British were formerly not allowing colonists to publish freely what they wanted; the limits to this is it has to be peaceful and cannot cause unreasonable inconvenience to the public
Right to Bear Arms
the second amendment; the individual right to have guns must be balanced by the greater social needs of society and citizens’ right to safety; the right of arms plus the right of society to be safe from those arms
Fourth Amendment
Search and Seizure; the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and affects, against unreasonable searches and seizures; but there can be probable cause for a warrant to be issued;
Exclusionary Rule
evidence seized in improper search can”t be used to prove guilt
Probable Cause
the thing that cops would need for a warrant and is a higher burden of proof
Reasonable Suspicion
much lower standard of needed proof for a warrant (mostly for schools)
Fifth Amendment
no person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury nor shall any person be subject for the same offense to twice be put in jeopardy of life; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself nor be deprived of life, liberty, property without due process, nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation; no double jeopardy; “plead the fifth”
Sixth Amendment
speedy, public trial; jury of state/district where crime committed; accused must be told of charges against them; right to cross examine a witness; accused must be provided with counsel (Miranda Rights)
Eighth Amendment
excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed nor cruel or unusual punishment; this has brought debate to what is cruel/unusual punishment? death penalty vs life in prison? being charged as a minor vs an adult?
Ninth Amendment
an amendment; just because certain rights are written in Constitution doesn’t mean that those are your only rights’ there are rights beyond the constitution
Tenth Amendment
federal government cannot invent new rights for themselves that were not written in the Constitution; if it isn’t written, it belongs to the states or the people
Fourteenth Amendment
equal protection clause;no state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the U.S.; comes up in civil rights issues and in marriage laws;
Legislative
the only branch that we truly vote for
Executive
this branch we only vote for the president
Battleground states
Nevada, Arizona, Colorado, Iowa, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, Virginia, North Carolina, Florida
Bush vs Gore
this presidential election was one recent example of the presidential candidate with the more individual votes ended up with less electoral votes and therefore lost; it was 271-266 (one elector abstained from voting)
Citizens United
this was a Supreme Course case in which a movie was made about Hillary less than 30 days to the general election and this violated an act passed by the government many years earlier; it went up to the Supreme Court; Obama talked about it in 2010 in his State of the union address
Amish case
A family didn’t want to keep their kid in school after 14 because of religion; the SC allowed this but said for the parents to continue educating at home at least
Peyote Case
Native American tribe needed drug Peyote for religious practice and were fired because of that and not allowed unemployment; SC ruled that you cannot break given laws for religion but Congress passed a law for Native Americans specifically to use certain drugs for their practices
Selective Service
Protesters burned draft cards in protest of not wanting to go to war; SC: this was not freedom of speech or symbolic speech as they had better means to speak up;
Ritual Animal Sacrifice
cult ritual animal sacrifice; Voodoo religion in Florida was not allowed in the area; SC: the religious group won to freely exercise killing animals for their reasons
Fraser vs Bethel SD
Fraser’s speech was inappropriate for school; the school district warned him not to do it; SC: not allowed to speak like that in school sponsored events
National Socialists
Nazis in America wanted to display the symbol in a city of many Jews; Illinois Supreme Court: allowed it; SC: didn’t hear it
Conscientious Objector
Man getting drafted applied to avoid draft but not for religious reasons and sent to jail for not showing up; the man won because his moral convictions were enough for a replacement for religion in this case