1 / 37

Formal Amendment

Formal Amendment. Chapter 3 Section 2. Key Terms. Amendment Ratification Formal Amendment Bill of Rights. Process of Constitutional change By formal amendment and By other informal means Amendment- that is for change in its written words

marsha
Télécharger la présentation

Formal Amendment

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Formal Amendment Chapter 3 Section 2

  2. Key Terms Amendment Ratification Formal Amendment Bill of Rights

  3. Process of Constitutional change • By formal amendment and • By other informal means • Amendment- that is for change in its written words • Article IV set out two different methods of ratification of amendments • Four possible methods of formal amendment

  4. First Method May be proposed by a 2/3’s vote in each house of Congress and 3/4’s vote of the States legislatures (38) Of 27 amendments 26 were adopted in this manner.

  5. Second Method May be proposed by Congress Ratified by conventions called for this purpose in 3/4’s of the States Only 21st Amendment was adopted this way When Congress proposes and amendment it chooses the method of ratification Conventions were used for 21st because delegates were popularly elected for convention

  6. Third Method May be proposed by national convention called by Congress At the request of 2/3’s of States legislatures (34) It must then be ratified by 3/4’s of States legislature Congress has not called this type of convention

  7. Fourth Method May be proposed by a national convention The ratified by conventions in 3/4’s of the States This is the way the constitution was adopted.

  8. Federalism and Popular Sovereignty Proposals take place at a national level Ratification State by State Represents the people’s sovereign will Some criticize amendments being sent to the state instead of a convention Elected to office for different reasons Were not chosen for the amendment

  9. Proposed Amendments One restriction on the subjects with which an amendment may deal Article V declares that “No State without its Consent, shall be deprived of its equal suffrage in the Senate” President does not sign an amendment Their influence may affect the success

  10. Proposed Amendments State rejection- can late reconsider Once approves that can not be undone 15,000 joint resolutions since 1789 33 have been sent to the States 27 have been fully ratified One unratified was offered by Congress in 1789 Along with 10 proposals (Bill of Rights)

  11. 7th amendment in 1992 (Congressional pay raise) 1789 unratified dealt with distribution of seat in the House of Representative Others have included: 1861 prohibit any amendment relating to slavery 1924 Regulate child labor 1972 Equal Rights amendment (ERA) fell three states short in 1982 1978 Give Washington D.C. congressional seats

  12. Later Amendments Congress proposed 18th amendment in 1917 Gave it a seven year deadline Supreme court held Congress can place a reasonable time limit Congress set similar time frame for each of the amendments except the 19th Amendment Congress gave a three year extension to ERA Amendment

  13. Bill of Rights Were added less then three years after the Constitution took effect Each arose from a controversy during ratification. Thomas Jefferson would only support it if there was a Bill of Rights The great Constitutional guarantees

  14. Later Amendments 11th declares that no state may be sued in federal courts by a citizen of another State or a citizen of any foreign state. (1795) 12th changes in Electoral Procedure 13th Abolished slavery as a direct result of civil War (1865)

  15. Later Amendments 18th Nationwide prohibition on alcohol Called the Nobel Experiment Lasted fewer than 14 years 18th was repealed by the 21st in 1933 22nd limit on Presidential terms 26th 1971 gave 18 year olds the right to vote “OLD ENOUGH TO FIGHT, OLD ENOUGH TO VOTE”

  16. LATER AMENDMENTS • 27TH TOOK 203 YEARS TO PASS • Was written by James Madison • Forbids members of congress from raising their own pay during that term • Proposed 1789 ratified 1992

  17. Describe the four possible methods of formal amendment.

  18. Method 1 2/3’s Congress - 3/4 State legislatures Method 2 2/3’s Congress – by Conventions 3/4 of States Method 3 National convention called by Congress by 2/3’s of States legislatures- ratified by 3/4 Method 4 National convention by Congress request 2/3’s States ratified by conventions in 3/4 of the States

  19. Which method of formal amendment has been used only once?

  20. Amendment proposed by 2/3’s vote in Congress and ratified by conventions in 3/4 of States.

  21. For which Amendment was it used?

  22. 21st

  23. Explain how the ratification process is an example of popular sovereignty?

  24. Popularly elected congressional representatives propose amendments which are ratified by elected representatives in State legislatures or elected delegates to State Conventions.

  25. Why was the Bill of Rights adopted to the Constitution?

  26. To gain support of Anti-Federalists who wanted a basic bill of rights.

  27. What rights do these amendments protect?

  28. Guarantees of freedom of belief and expression, of freedom and security of person, and of fair and equal treatment before the law.

  29. How might news reports differ if freedom of speech and the press were not part of the Constitution?

  30. The government could dictate content to news reporters

  31. Some people have criticized the ratification of amendments by States legislatures instead of popularly elected delegates. • Why has the process been criticized?

  32. Because people elect convention delegates based solely on the delegates views of the proposed amendment; the people elect State legislatures for many other reasons.

  33. Do you agree? Why or why not?

  34. Ratification by delegates chosen by the people for that purpose would better represent the people’s will. • Or • The people have already elected the States legislatures to represent their interests and the amendment would be another example of their interest

  35. How has the Constitution been amended through the normal amendment process?

  36. Most successful amendments have been proposed by Congress by a 2/3’s vote in both houses and ratified by 3/4 of the States legislatures.

  37. In 2006 the Senate defeated a constitutional amendment, preventing it from passing to the states know as the Flag Desecration Amendment. • Would have banned burning the American Flag • Was sought as a way to overrule the Supreme Court who twice struck down similar laws. • First Amendment bedrock “It is that the government may not prohibit expression of an idea because society finds it offensive • Should the flag be burned?

More Related