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GEORGIA HISTORY 12/2/21012  INTRODUCTION TO: THE STATE LEVEL OF GEORGIA’S GOVERNMENT /CHAPTER 15 1) EXECUTIVE BRANCH 2) LEGISLATIVE BRANCH 3) JUDICIAL.

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Presentation on theme: "GEORGIA HISTORY 12/2/21012  INTRODUCTION TO: THE STATE LEVEL OF GEORGIA’S GOVERNMENT /CHAPTER 15 1) EXECUTIVE BRANCH 2) LEGISLATIVE BRANCH 3) JUDICIAL."— Presentation transcript:

1 GEORGIA HISTORY 12/2/21012  INTRODUCTION TO: THE STATE LEVEL OF GEORGIA’S GOVERNMENT /CHAPTER 15 1) EXECUTIVE BRANCH 2) LEGISLATIVE BRANCH 3) JUDICIAL BRANCH  SS8CG3: The student will analyze the role of the “Executive Branch” in Georgia state government.  ELACC-8WHTSP: TODAY I WILL DRAW EVIDENCE FROM INFORMATIONAL TEXT TO SUPPORT ANALYSIS REFLECTION AND RESEARCH  EQ: WHAT IS THE ROLE OF THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH  DAY 1 NOTES/EXECUTIVE BRANCH  STUDENTS COMPLETE: 1) GRAPHIC ORGANIZER E-BRANCH 2) WRITE A 5 SENTENCE REFLECTION/MUST HAVE ONE SITED SOURCE TO SUPPORT YOUR ANALYSIS3) FINISH SQUARES AND STORIES FROM FRIDAY

2 State Executive Branch  Made up of the Governor>Nathan Deal, Lt. Governor>Casey Cagle, and advisors at the State Level  The Governor and Lt. Governor must be at least 30, citizen of the U.S. for 15 years, and a resident of the state for at least 6 years.  Governor can only serve 2 consecutive terms, but can run again four years later.  Governor is in charge of creating state budget

3 Powers of the Governor  Formal powers are those written in the State Constitution. * Executive Powers a) appoint state officials b) enforce civil and criminal laws * Legislative Powers a) signing or vetoing bills b) calling special sessions of legislation * Judicial Powers a) pardon criminals b) appoint state justices Informal Powers – powers that are a result of custom and tradition and are used to enforce formal powers

4 Other Elected Officials  Unlike the Vice President, the Lt. Governor is elected separately from the Governor  If something happens to the Governor the Lt. Governor takes over.  State Attorney General: Chief legal officer  Secretary of State: Maintains the states official records  State School Superintendent: head of Education.

5 State Senate (56 Members)  They serve 2 year terms  They are elected by voters in the house or senate district  A Senator must be 25 years of age, a citizen of the U.S. and of Georgia for 2 years

6 State House of Representatives  180 members  Serve 2 year terms  Rep. must be 21, a citizen of the U.S. and Georgia for 2 years, and a legal resident of district for 1 year.

7 Georgia’s General Assembly  Meets each year for a 40 day session that starts the 2 nd Monday in January.  Can pass legislation on taxes, education, contracts, personal property  Makes laws on fines, imprisonment, or death in criminal matters  Considers public regulations – laws affecting issues like morals, public health, business regulations, general welfare

8 House of Representatives  The Speaker of the House is the leader of the House. * Appoints chairpersons & members to committees. * Assigns bills to committees  There are 36 regular committees in the House of Representatives (most members serve on 2 to 3)  Minority leader is leader of minority party in the house  Floor leader usually represents the party of the governor

9 Senate  Lieutenant governor is the president of the Senate (leader of Senate) * Appoints chairpersons and members to committees. * Assigns bills to committees  The other leader in the Senate is the president pro tempore (leader of the Senate majority party)  There is also a majority and minority leader for each party  There are 26 committees in the Senate (each Senator is on at least three committees)

10 Committees  All bills go through a committee before they are voted on by the whole house or senate  Committee are used so that pieces of legislation can be studied closely  Most of the work done on a bill happens in committee

11 How A Bill Becomes a Law  Anyone can come up with the idea for a bill.  They submit it to their Congressperson, and he or she creates the bill.  It is presented in either the House or Senate and then assigned to committee.  Committee examine and work with the bill and decide whether to act on it.  When it comes out of committee it is voted on by the body of representatives  If passed in both bodies of Congress goes to the president

12 The Judicial Branch?  Interprets the laws…can declare laws unconstitutional!  The U.S. Supreme court

13 Judicial Vocabulary  felony – a serious crime punishable by a year or more in prison, a fine of at least $1,000, or both  misdemeanor – a less serious crime punishable by less than a year in prison, a fine less than $1,000 or both  Appellate jurisdiction – reviews decisions of lower federal courts and highest state courts  Original jurisdiction- the court that hears the case first.

14 Judicial Vocabulary  Grand Jury – determines whether or not persons accused of crimes should be officially charged.  Trial Jury – a group of citizens who are charged with judging a person with a crime  Criminal Law – cases dealing with people violating the law  Civil Law – cases dealing with conflict between private parties  jurisdiction – the range of actions over which the court has control or influence  Trial Courts - hear original cases such as criminal and civil cases

15 State Courts  Supreme Court – reviews cases that are appealed from lower ranking courts. (appellate court) * interprets the state constitution * justices are elected to 6 year terms * decisions made have final authority at state level  Court of Appeals * made up of 12 judges elected to 6 year terms * only hears cases appealed from lower courts  Superior Court – original and appellate jurisdiction * felonies, divorces, and appeals from lower courts

16 State Courts  State Court –misdemeanors, traffic violations, civil cases  Juvenile Courts – cases dealing with juveniles  Probate Court – cases dealing with wills, estates, appointing guardians  Magistrate Courts – * Criminal – pretrial proceedings, warrants, bail * Civil Cases under $5,000


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