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4. Checks and Balances 1. The Constitution and the Electoral Process 2.

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Presentation on theme: "4. Checks and Balances 1. The Constitution and the Electoral Process 2."— Presentation transcript:

1 4. Checks and Balances 1

2 The Constitution and the Electoral Process 2

3 The Articles of the Constitution Article I: The Legislative Article – Defines bicameral legislature and its operations, duties and qualifications of members – Lists enumerated powers Also has “necessary and proper clause” Article II: The Executive Article – Establishes executive branch, election procedures, qualifications, and duties and powers 3

4 How Many Pens Does It Take to Sign a Bill into Law? 4

5 The Articles of the Constitution Article III: The Judicial Article – Supreme Court is highest court; Congress to decide rest – Federal judges serve for life 5

6 The Articles of the Constitution The Remaining Articles – Article IV--Treatment of other states’ citizens and the Addition of new states – Article V---How to Amendment the Constitution – Article VI--Supremacy clause— ”Constitution is the highest law of the land” – Article VII---Ratification process—3/4 vote!

7 The Framer’s Motives Most important: inability of government to maintain order under the Articles of Confederation Economic stability also a motive 7

8 The Slavery Issue To ensure passage, Constitution essentially condoned slavery “The Great Compromise” counted slaves as 3/5ths of a person when allocating representation in House Slave trade not to be ended for 20 years Fugitive slaves to be returned to masters 8

9 Selling the Constitution To take effect, 9 state conventions must ratify Two groups vied for supporters; formed basis of later political parties – Proponents known as Federalists – Those against new constitution were Antifederalists 9

10 Ratification Federalists favored strong central government and the new Constitution – Proponents had time, money and power – Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, James Madison-- Anti-Federalists preferred to keep status quo – Feared overbearing central government – Patrick Henry, Samuel Adams 10

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12 The Federalist Papers Eighty-five newspaper articles written to support ratification of Constitution – Essays written by James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and John Jay under the name of “Publius” – Most famous is Federalist No. 10 about factions; Federalist No. 51 about same issue Both found at http://www.cengage.com/politicalscience/jandahttp://www.cengage.com/politicalscience/janda Federalist # 10 -- stating that one of the strongest arguments in favor of the Constitution is the fact that it establishes a government capable of controlling the violence and damage caused by factions. 12

13 Antifederalists wrote additional articles under pen names “Brutus” and “Federal Farmer” In large republics, factions will be numerous, but they will be weaker than in small, direct democracies where it is easier for factions to consolidate their strength.

14 The March to the Finish The vote by the Virginia ratification convention was essential and somewhat close. The New York vote was even closer and put the Constitution “over the top.” At this point, North Carolina and Rhode Island had little choice but to join. 14

15 A Concession: The Bill of Rights Many citizens unhappy Constitution did not address basic civil liberties This omission chief barrier to adoption George Washington proposed adding Bill of Rights after Constitution ratified – Over 100 proposed; 12 approved and sent to states – Ten became part of Constitution in 1791 15

16 Ratification of the Constitution 16

17 The Bill of Rights Twelve drafted by Madison, ten ratified by states – A “Bill of Limits” – No explicit limits on state government powers – Did not apply to state governments 17

18 Table 3.2 The Bill of Rights 18 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tlt6R1KD 4E0&feature=BFa&list=FLGQwD21o9I7LyOe8 uG_EdbQ&lf=mh_lolz

19 Ratification Constitution took effect after New Hampshire became 9th state to ratify June 21, 1788 – Success of new government guaranteed when New York and Virginia ratified document in July 1788 19

20 Constitutional Change By formal amendment By judicial interpretation By political practice 20

21 Amending the Constitution Although 11,000 amendments have been considered by Congress, only 33 have been submitted to the states after being approved, and only 27 have been ratified since 1789. 21 11,000 27

22 22

23 The Formal Amendment Process Two ways to propose; two to ratify Most frequently used is proposal by 2/3 vote of House and Senate; ratification by vote of ¾ of state legislatures Congress generally sets seven years as deadline for approval Most amendments reflect changes in political thinking 23

24 Amending the Constitution 24

25 Constitutional Amendments Last approved was 27 th Amendment, one of the original 12 proposed in 1789 Only six proposed to states not approved 25

26 Amendments The strongest theme among the amendments is the expansion of citizenship rights. – Prohibition against slavery (Thirteenth, 1865) – Right to vote for women (Nineteenth, 1920) 26 Women’s suffrage The Granger Collection, New York

27 Amendments to the Constitution 27

28 Interpretation by the Courts Concept of judicial review not spelled out in Constitution In Marbury v. Madison (1803), Supreme Court declared it had power to nullify government acts that conflict with Constitution In interpreting Constitution, new meaning may be given 28

29 Informal Methods of Constitutional Change Congressional Legislation Presidential Action Judicial Review Interpretation, Custom, and Usage 29

30 Political Practice Constitution silent on many issues Other provisions have fallen out of use Presidential responses to national crises have enlarged power of presidency – Founders viewed Congress as most powerful branch of government 30

31 Major Constitutional Shifts Early 1800s: national authority over states – McCulloch v. Maryland Post Civil War: Reconstruction Amendments – Abolish slavery, establishes black men as citizens with voting rights, equal protection and due process – Provides Congress with broader powers Great Depression: rulings and political practice – New Deal practices regulate business – Court acquiesces to FDR 31

32 Freedom, Order, and Equality in the Constitution Constitution balances order and freedom, with little attention to equality – When adopted, social equality not considered to be objective of government – Political equality also not addressed; later amendments expanded suffrage 32

33 The Constitution and Models of Democracy U.S. Constitution follows pluralist model of democracy – Federalist No. 10’s factions – Federalist No. 51’s explanation of how separation of powers and checks and balances protect against majority rule – U.S. government has no single center of government power 33


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