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Unit 4: The National Government. Class Starter 1.Explain the difference between the Melting Pot Theory and the Tossed Salad Theory. 2.What was the House.

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Presentation on theme: "Unit 4: The National Government. Class Starter 1.Explain the difference between the Melting Pot Theory and the Tossed Salad Theory. 2.What was the House."— Presentation transcript:

1 Unit 4: The National Government

2 Class Starter 1.Explain the difference between the Melting Pot Theory and the Tossed Salad Theory. 2.What was the House of Burgesses? 3.Why was Shays’ Rebellion important? 4.Describe the Supremacy Clause.

3 The Organization of Congress

4 I. U.S. Congress Its Job: to make laws for the United States Contains 2 Houses: House of Representatives Senate Has 535 members total Constituents: the people living in a legislator’s district

5 II. The House of Representatives 435 Members Members serve 2 year terms, unlimited State representation is determined by population More people = More representatives Census—a count of the U.S. population taken every 10 years Gerrymandering: creating odd-shaped elections districts to give one group voting power over another

6 Qualifications to be a member: Must be 25 years old Must live in the district running for Must be a U.S. citizen for 7 years Leader: Speaker of the House Chosen by seniority

7 III. The Senate 100 Members Members serve 6 year terms, unlimited 2 Senators for each state Qualifications to be a member: Must be 30 years old Live in the state running for Be a U.S. citizen for 9 years Leader: President Pro-Temp

8 IV. Congressional Committees Congress does most of its work in committees There are 4 types of committees: Standing committees: Permanent committees Select/Special committees: Temporary committees Joint committees: committees with members from both houses Conference committee: committee in which members from both houses work out the details of a bill

9 Letters to Congress Activity Quick Write Explain something that you think is a problem in your community (city, school, state, country). Why is this issue a problem for you or other people you know? How could the government do something about this problem?

10 1.What are civic responsibilities? 2.How does the Mayflower Compact represent popular sovereignty? 3.Which article describes the Amendment Process? 4.Why do we have checks and balances and separation of powers?

11 1.What are civic duties? 2.Explain the Great Compromise. 3.Why did the Federalists agree to add the Bill of Rights to the Constitution? 4.List 3 powers of Congress.

12 1.What is tolerance? 2.Why was taxation a problem under the Articles of Confederation? 3.What was the main goal of the Constitutional Convention of 1787? 4.Summarize briefly the process for how a bill becomes law in Congress.

13 Executive Branch: The President

14 I. Introduction Main duty: Enforce laws Constitutional Requirements: 1.Must be at least 35 years old 2.Must be a natural born citizen 3.Must be a resident of the US for at least 14 years

15 Indirectly elected through the Electoral College Serves 4 year terms – Amendment 22: The President is limited to 2 terms or 10 years in office Makes $400,000 a year

16 II. The Vice President Main Responsibility: Official leader of the Senate, Be ready to replace the President Must meet same constitutional requirements as President

17 What happens when the President becomes unable to do his/her job? – Amendment 25: The VP will become President Sets up a list of others who will become President (Speaker of the House, President Pro Temp, Secretary of State)

18 Class Starter 1.Explain bias. 2.What were the major products of New England’s economy? 3.Explain how an amendment is added to the Constitution. 4.List 2 things you know about being President.

19 Roles of the President

20 I. Chief Executive Carries out nation’s laws – Can veto laws from Congress Appoints heads of executive agencies, federal judges, and ambassadors (with Senate approval)

21 II. Chief Diplomat Receives leaders and officials from foreign countries Establishes foreign policy for the United States – Main goal: National Security

22 III. Commander in Chief Leader of the US Armed Forces War Powers Act of 1973: The President must notify Congress within 48 hours of troops being sent into battle – Troops must be brought back after 60 days unless Congress approves their stay

23 IV. Legislative Leader President suggests legislation to Congress President gives State of the Union speech each year to explain his goals to Congress

24 V. Economic Leader Prepares the federal government budget each year Suggests legislation to Congress that would impact the economy

25 VI. Party Leader President is the visible leader of his political party Helps other members of his party to get elected to offices

26 VII. Head of State Symbolic leader of the country – Gives medals to heroes, attends important ceremonies, makes appearances all over the US

27 Honors Civics and Economics Roles of the President Activity 1.Read your assigned article. 2.Answer the following questions: 1.What role is the President playing in your article? 2.Pull out 3 details that support which role you think the President is playing 3.Create an illustration to describe which role the President is playing in your article.

28 Civics and Economics Roles of the President Activity 1.Get into your assigned groups 2.Create a large illustration of the Presidential role you have been assigned. 3.Be able to explain how your picture explains the role you were assigned.

29 1.What is volunteerism? 2.How are volunteers beneficial to US society?. 3.Explain the difference between the Virginia and New Jersey Plans of government. 4.Explain Federalism.

30 Pg. 37 #1-4 Pg. 43 #1-3 Pg. 47 #1-4 Pg. 48 #1-6

31 The Federal Bureaucracy

32 I. What is the Federal Bureaucracy? Definition: A group of departments and agencies under the President Their job: Help the President carry out laws Government has to have these depts. to fulfill citizens’ needs

33 II. Parts of the Federal Bureaucracy The Federal Bureaucracy has 3 parts: – Executive Office of the President—The President’s closest advisors (Chief of Staff, Press Secretary) – The Cabinet—a set of 15 departments that assist the President Department of Justice Department of Homeland Security

34 – Federal Agencies—agencies not controlled directly by the President, but he/she picks their leaders Regulatory Agencies—Regulates industries, Ex. FCC, FAA Government Corporations—businesses run by the government, Ex. USPS Independent Executive Agencies—deals with specialized areas of the government, Ex. Federal Reserve, NASA ***See Agencies Chart***


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