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AP U.S. GOVERNMENT & POLITICS - Constitution The Constitution part 2.

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Presentation on theme: "AP U.S. GOVERNMENT & POLITICS - Constitution The Constitution part 2."— Presentation transcript:

1 AP U.S. GOVERNMENT & POLITICS - Constitution The Constitution part 2

2 Key Economic Issues AP U.S. GOVERNMENT & POLITICS - Constitution Worthless money printed by states Tariffs states had erected against each other Difficulty of Continental Congress in raising money from the states Regulation of interstate commerce

3 Madisonian Model AP U.S. GOVERNMENT & POLITICS - Constitution Keep most of government beyond control of a popular majority... How? Voters  Electoral College  Prez Voters  State Legislatures  Senate Voters  House of Rep

4 Madisonian Model AP U.S. GOVERNMENT & POLITICS - Constitution Separation of Powers of government Each entity has some power... Results in shared power Example: - Congress holds power to declare war - President is Commander in Chief

5 Madisonian Model AP U.S. GOVERNMENT & POLITICS - Constitution Checks & Balances Examples: House passes a law  Senate must agree Senate passes a law  House must agree Congress passes a law  Prez can veto Prez selects judges  Senate confirms

6 Madisonian Model AP U.S. GOVERNMENT & POLITICS - Constitution Checks & Balances Politics of bargaining Playing one institution against another Encourages moderation & compromise Conservative bias favoring the status quo

7 Ratification AP U.S. GOVERNMENT & POLITICS - Introduction Federalists “Publius” = Madison, Hamilton, Jay Favored a stronger national government

8 Ratification AP U.S. GOVERNMENT & POLITICS - Introduction Anti-Federalists Preferred revision of Art. of Confederation Feared too much power in national Gov’t & - Elite control - Weakening of states - Loss of individual liberty

9 Ratification AP U.S. GOVERNMENT & POLITICS - Introduction Bill of Individual Rights? Compromise... Not included in original Constitution But would add amendments soon after

10 Constitutional Change AP U.S. GOVERNMENT & POLITICS - Constitution The Constitution belongs to the living and not to the dead. ~ TJ

11 Constitutional Change AP U.S. GOVERNMENT & POLITICS - Constitution Formal Changes: Proposal Congress can propose an amendment by 2/3 vote in each house, or National Convention can propose... by 2/3 of states 2 nd method never used

12 Constitutional Change AP U.S. GOVERNMENT & POLITICS - Constitution Formal Changes: Ratification State Legislatures – 3/4 required, or State Conventions – 3/4 of states Convention used only once... for 21 st Amendment (repealing Prohibition)

13 Constitutional Change AP U.S. GOVERNMENT & POLITICS - Constitution Informal Changes: Changing political practice... Parties Technology... Computers, internet Increasing demand on policymakers... growth in Presidential power

14 Constitutional Change AP U.S. GOVERNMENT & POLITICS - Constitution Judicial Review Interpretation of laws by federal courts Established in Marbury v. Madison (1803) Chief Justice John Marshall

15 Reading AP U.S. GOVERNMENT & POLITICS - Constitution Government Text:Pages Origins of the Constitution32 – 37 The Philly Convention41 – 42 The Agenda in Philly43 – 47 Madisonian Model 48 – 51 Ratifying the Constitution 51 – 55 Constitutional Change55 – 61


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