Amsco Chap. 1
Amsco Chap. 1
Amsco Chap. 1
ESSENTIAL QUESTION:
HOW HAVE THEORY, DEBATE, AND
COMPROMISE INFLUENCED THE
UNITES STATES’ SYSTEM OF
GOVERNMENT THAT BALANCES
GOVERNMENTAL POWER AND
INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS?
Essential Question:
Popular sovereignty –
people are the ultimate ruling
authority
Montesquieu
Separation of Powers –
executive, legislative, and judicial
branches.
Types of Democracy
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3W0a3pzF-5M
(Read text of Declaration of Independence, pg. 619)
Treaty of Paris
Weaknesses-
9 state must agree to enact law
13 (all) must agree to amend
No national currency
Strengths
Congress could engage in international diplomacy
Congress could declare war
1786 – Massachusetts
Farmers (veterans who were not being paid) were
losing farms to foreclosures & failure to pay taxes
Shays asked for gov’t to print more money, lighten
taxes, and suspend mortgages
Armed rebellion occurs and no federal army to stop
them – rich citizens pay to have rebellion put down
Leaders realize need stronger federal government
Meet in Annapolis, MD
agree to meet again in May 1787
55 men in Philadelphia
Borrow money
Raise an army
Few others
Commerce Clause
Article VI
“This Constitution, and the Laws of the
U.S. which shall be made in Pursuance
thereof… shall be the supreme Law of
the Land…”
Ratification
Border protection
Government can now:
Share grand jury testimony and proceedings
Passed in 2015
Upheld certain portions of Patriot Act
Phased out:
Bulk collection of phone and Internet data
Set limits for phone and data collection in certain
circumstances
Representative Republic
Gridlock is by design:
Framers planned lawmaking process to be slow
so branches can discuss, debate, and rewrite
legislation before fully passed.
Bicameralism – 2 houses = extra step
Veto power – may prevent hasty actions by Congress
Bill of Rights - limitations
Due Process – procedure must be followed by Congress
Tenth Amendment – limits Congressional actions
Supreme Court