270 likes | 421 Vues
Chapter 7, Section 3. A More Perfect Union. Ideas That Shape the Constitution. Republic : a nation in which voters elect representatives to govern them Americans were the first people to write a constitution setting up a government Many ideas in the Constitution came from other people.
E N D
Chapter 7, Section 3 A More Perfect Union
Ideas That Shape the Constitution • Republic: a nation in which voters elect representatives to govern them • Americans were the first people to write a constitution setting up a government • Many ideas in the Constitution came from other people
League of the Iroquois • Used as a model for their idea of unity • Member nations governed themselves but joined together for defense • At the Constitutional Convention an Iroquois treaty was read, which began “we the people, to form a union…” • Similar language was used in the preamble of the United States Constitution
Ideas from Europe • England: • Magna Cartaincluded limiting power of the ruler • Representative government • English bill of Rights: protected the right of individuals
Ideas from Europe • Enlightenment: to improve society through the use of reason • John Locke: 1690 published Two Treatises on Government • 2 ideas 1. All people had natural rights to life, liberty, and property 2. Government is an agreement between the ruler and the ruled • Ruler must enforce laws and protect the people • If a ruler violates the people’s natural rights the people have a right to rebel
Ideas from Europe • Framers of the Constitution drew up the Constitution as a contract between the people and their government
Ideas from Europe • Montesquieu: 1748 published The Spirit of Laws • Urged that the power of government be divided amongst 3 separate branches • Legislative, executive, judicial • Separation of powers: division was designed to keep any person or group from gaining too muchpower • Powers of government should be clearly defined to keep individuals or groups from using government power from their own purposes
A Federal System • How should they divide power between the national government and the states? • Federalism: division of power between states and the national government • People elect both national and state officials • National government acts for the national as whole. • States have power over many local matters
Powers are spelled out in the Constitution • Coin money, declare war, regulate trade between states and between countries
Powers are spelled out in the Constitution. • Regulate trade within their state’s borders • Powers not given to the federal government belong to the states or the people
“The supreme law of the land” • The Constitution is the supreme law of the land • In any disputes between states or states and the national government, the Constitution is the final authority
Separation of Powers • Created to keep the government from becoming too powerful
The Legislative branch • Congress: to make laws • House of Representatives • Elected for 2 year terms • Senate • 6 year terms • Article 1 of the Constitution sets out the powers of Congress • Collect taxes, regulate foreign and interstate trade, declare war, and raise and support armies
The executive branch • Some objected to the executive branch (memories of King George III) • Madison argued an executive was needed to balance the legislature
The executive branch • Article 2 of the Constitution sets up the Executive branch • Headed by the president • Vice President • Any advisor appointed by the President • Serve 4 year terms • Carry out all laws passed by Congress • Commander and chief of the armed forces • Foreign relation
The executive branch • Article 3 of the Constitution calls for a Supreme Court and allows Congress to set up other federal courts • Hear cases that involve the Constitution or any laws passed by Congress • Also cases arising between 2 or more states
Electing the President • 1700s news traveled slowly, how would voters get to know a candidate for president? • Electoral college; made up of electors from every state • Electors meet and vote for the President and Vice president
A System of Checks and Balances • Checks and balances: each branch of the federal government has some way to check or control the other two branches
Checks on Congress • Bill: proposed law • Congress passes a bill which then goes to the president to be signed in to law
Checks on Congress • Vetoing: rejecting a bill • The president can check the power of Congress by rejecting a bill • Overriding: overruling the President’s veto • Congress can then check the president by overruling the President’s veto • 2/3 of both houses must vote for the bill again • A bill can become a law without the signature of the president
Checks on the president • Senate must approve presidential appointments • Ex. Ambassadors to foreign countries, federal judges • President can negotiate a treaty with other countries • Treaty only becomes a law with 2/3 of the Senate’s approval
Checks on the Courts • President appoints judges that must be approved by the Senate • Congress may remove judges from office
A Living Document • This system has been working for more than 200 years • It is a living document because it can be changed to meet new conditions in the United States