1 Proposal Ratification Added to Constitution.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Memorizing the Amendments: Made Easy
Advertisements

The 27 Amendments.
LET’S DO THIS The 27 Amendments. 1 st Amendment Speech Religion Petition Assembly Press.
U.S. Government Mr. Hand U.S. Government Mr. Hand The 27 Amendments to the U.S. Constitution.
The Amendments to the Constitution.
The Bill of Rights & the 17 Amendments to the US Constitution
The Ten Amendments to the US Constitution. Amendment 1 O Protects the freedom of religion, speech, and the press, as well as the right to assemble and.
Holmen Middle School 8th Grade
1st Amendment - Articulates freedoms of religion, speech, press, assembly and petition. - Called the five basic liberties although none are guaranteed.
Chapters 3, 4, 6, 7. Preamble Articles (7) Amendments (27)
American Federal Government Constitution. Article 1: CONGRESS –Section 1 - all legislative powers to Congress –Section 2 - Choosing of Representatives.
 Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion  Abridging the freedom of speech or press  The right of the people to assemble.
Amendment Review. Right to vote shall not be denied on the account of sex.
 What are civil liberties?  What are libel and slander? › Why are they not protected by the 1 st Amendment?
THE CONSTITUTION The Bill of Rights Amendments Amendments
Amendment One This prohibits Congress from interfering with freedom of speech, press, and religion, and with the right to assemble peaceably and to petition.
Freedom of Religion, Assembly, Speech, Press, and Petition.
1 st AMENDMENT Freedom speech, press, religion, petition, assembly
Amendments 1-27 U.S. Government 1st Freedom of Speech Freedom of Press Freedom of Religion Freedom to Assemble Right to Petition.
AMENDMENTS. The Constitution would not have been ratified without the Bill of Rights.
List the 5 freedoms of the 1 st Amendment: respecting an establishment of religion, impeding the free exercise of religion, abridging the freedom of speech,
How the Constitution Has Been Changed…27 Times!. Religion Speech Press Assembly Petition “First Five Freedoms”
Amendment 1 O Freedom of religion, assembly, press, opinion, and speech.
The 27 Amendments. Amendment 1 Freedom of speech, press, religion, assembly, and petition Freedom of speech, press, religion, assembly, and petition.
27 Amendment By: Tre’Mont Taylor. Speech Press Religion Assembly Petition.
27 th 26 th 25 th 24 th 23 rd 22 nd 21 st 20 th 19 th 18 th 17 th 16 th 15 th 14 th 13 th 12 th 11 th 10 th 9 th 8 th 7 th 6 th 5 th 4 th 3 rd 2 nd 1 st.
The Amendments. Amendments 1-10 Bill of Rights 1 st Amendment (RAPPS) Freedom of Religion Freedom of Religion Freedom to Assemble Freedom to Assemble.
The Amendment Process: The Key to the Living Constitution.
The Constitution Unit 1 Chapter 3 Section 1, 3 and 4.
THE CONSTITUTION A Documentary by Alex Krcmarik How our country was borned.
1 st Amendment. Freedom of Religion, Speech, Press, Assembly, and Petition RELIGION SPEECH PETITION ASSEMBLY PRESS.
The Amendments. The Bill of Rights: The First 10 Amendments September, 1789 – Congress sends to the states 12 proposed Amendments 2 were not adopted The.
SECTION1 The Amendments to the Constitution. SECTION2 Bill of Rights (All ratified 1791) 1 st – No law against religion, freedom of speech (press), freedom.
2 nd Amendements The Right to Bear Arms 3 rd Amendment No forced housing of soldiers.
Process for Amending the US Constitution (27 so far…!) Proposal: –by 2/3 vote in both Houses of Congress (all 27 this way) –by a national convention,
Constitution. Breakdown Preamble Seven Articles Twenty-Seven Amendments –1-10 are the Bill of Rights –13-15 are the Civil War Amendments –15, 19, 23,
The Amendments to the Constitution.
Amendments U.S. Constitution.
Major Amendments to the Constitution
Amendments to the Constitution
27 Amendments Amendment 1: Freedom of Religion…….
Constitutional Amendment Notes
1st Amendment No establishment of religion Free exercise of religion
Aim: How does the Bill of Rights protect civil liberties?
Major Amendments to the Constitution
The Amendments to the Constitution.
27 Amendments.
The Amendments to the Constitution.
Amendment Review 1-27 First 10 Amendments make-up the Bill of Rights.
“The Supreme Law of the Land”
Parts of the Constitution
27 AMENDMENTS.
AMENDMENT 11 Suits against States: Lawsuits against states may not be tried in federal court AMENDMENT 12 Changed Electoral College: Electors cast separate.
The Amendments to the Constitution.
Constitutional Amendments
Amendments to the U.S. Constitution
Constitutional Amendments
Memorizing the Amendments: Made Easy
The Amendments to the Constitution.
The 27 Amendments to the Constitution!!
THE CONSTITUTION The Bill of Rights Amendments Amendments
Reasons why the Constitution has been amended
The Amendments to the Constitution.
Memorizing the Amendments: Made Easy
27 AMENDMENTS TO THE CONSTITUTION
Memorizing the Amendments: Made Easy
Amendments to the Constitution
What amendment gave African –Americans the right to vote?
The Amendments Unit 3.
THE BILL OF RIGHTS.
Presentation transcript:

1 Proposal Ratification Added to Constitution

2 Freedom of religion Freedom of the press Freedom of speech Freedom of assembly Freedom of petition

3 No quartering of troops, in peacetime without the owners consent

4 Congress – Senate & H of R Compensation Override Qualifications Apportionment Impeachment Compensation Override Powers / powers denied

5 Federal court civil cases may have trial by jury Jury trial may be waived

6 RATIFICATION PROCESS

7 Speedy public trial by jury Informed of charges Cross-examine witnesses Have an attorney

8 State may have a militia Right to keep & bear arms

9 No excessive bail No cruel & unusual punishment Based on the seriousness of the crime

10 Rights not listed are still retained by the people

11 Senators chosen by voters in the state Temporary vacancies filled by governor until a special election

12 President & VP Electoral College Qualifications Compensation Powers & duties Impeachment

13 Indictment by a grand jury No double jeopardy No self-incrimination Due process must be followed Eminent domain

14 Income Tax

15 Due Process – No state can act in an unfair or arbitrary manner Equal Protection applies to the states Replaced 3/5 Compromise

16 Qualifications Jurisdiction Jury Trials Treason

17 Voting age changed to 18

18 No unreasonable searches and seizures Need a search warrant obtained with probable cause Exclusionary rule

19 Voting rights for women

20 Powers not given to the federal government nor prohibited to states belong to the states

21 Voting rights can’t be denied because of race, color, or previous condition of servitude

22 If President dies or resigns the VP takes over and appoints a new VP with Senate approval Presidential disability

Full Faith & Credit Clause 23 Full Faith & Credit Clause State to State Privileges & Immunities Extradition New States & Territories Territorial Law

24 National Debts Supremacy of National Law Oaths of Office

25 Congressional pay raises don’t take effect until after the next election

States can’t be sued by other states or foreign countries 26 States can’t be sued by other states or foreign countries

27 Form a more perfect union Establish justice Insure domestic tranquility Provide for the common defense Promote the general welfare Secure the blessings of liberty

Electors choose President and Vice-President on separate ballots 28 Electors choose President and Vice-President on separate ballots

29 President & VP’s term begins Jan. 20th Sessions of Congress begins Jan. 3

30 Outlaw making, selling, transporting, importing or exporting alcoholic beverages

31 There will be presidential electors from Washington, D.C.

32 No poll tax can be required to be eligible to vote

33 President serves no more than two terms or a maximum of 10 years

34 Forbids slavery No forced labor except as punishment for crime

35 Repeal of the18th Amendment