Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

A New Plan of Government Chapter 7, Section 3

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "A New Plan of Government Chapter 7, Section 3"— Presentation transcript:

1 A New Plan of Government Chapter 7, Section 3

2 The Basis of the Constitution
Although the Constitution is a unique American document, it has roots from various countries and political systems. The Founding Fathers used two unique models for the Constitution: Magna Carta (1215) which placed limitations on monarchs. The English Bill of Rights (1689) which stated individuals “natural rights”.

3 The Basis of the Constitution
The Framers viewed the Constitution as a contract between the American people and their government. The contract protected the people’s natural rights by limiting the governments power. The Framers also believed that all or majority of the power should not fall into the hands of one person. The Framers stated that government’s power should be clearly defined, separated and limited to prevent abuse.

4 The Federal System The Constitution created a federal system that divided the powers between the national (federal) government and the states. Federalism- the sharing of power between the federal and state governments.

5 The Federal System

6

7

8 The Legislative Branch
The law making branch or legislative branch of the government is composed of two parts. The House of Representatives: representation is based on population. Senate: two senators per state.

9 CONGRESS Collecting taxes Coin Declare War Money and And pass Budget
laws Coin Money and Budget Management

10 The Executive Branch The Executive Branch carries out the nation’s laws Power to veto (reject) laws It is headed by the president and his cabinet. The president serves as commander in chief of the military and conducts relations with foreign countries.

11 The Judicial Branch The nation’s judicial power resides in the Supreme Court and other lower federal courts. The Supreme Court hears cases involving the Constitution, laws passed by Congress and disputes between states.

12 Checks and Balances Keep any one branch from gaining too much power. In other words, no one branch can dominate the government. Both the House and Senate must pass a bill for it to become a law. The President can then veto (reject) bill or agree to make it become a law. If the president rejects the bill, the bill can still pass if 2/3 of Congress agrees with the bill. The Supreme Court can rule on the constitutionality of the law and presidential actions.

13 Protecting Rights The strongest criticism of the Constitution was that it had no Bill of Rights to protect individual freedoms. For the new Constitution to go into effect 9 of 13 colonies had to approve adoption. On June 21, 1788 the ninth state-New Hampshire-ratified the Constitution and it became the law of the land. It was not until 1791 that the Bill of Rights would be added to the Constitution.

14

15 Amendments Changes to the Constitution 27 total
First 10 (Bill of Rights) added in 1789: 1st: freedom of speech, assembly, religion 2nd: right to bear arms 3rd: no quartering soldiers 4th: no unreasonable searches/seizures 5th-10th: restrict power of government

16 Other Important Amendments
13th- abolishes slavery 15th- voting rights to all races 18th- prohibition of alcohol 19th- women’s suffrage 21st- repeal of 18th amendment 26th- lowers voting age to 18


Download ppt "A New Plan of Government Chapter 7, Section 3"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google