FOUNDATIONS & EARLY GOVERNMENT
CONSTITUTION, FEDERALISM & OHIO GOVERNMENT
BRANCHES OF GOVERNMENT & LANDMARK CASES
RIGHTS, AMENDMENTS & LEGAL PROTECTIONS
PUBLIC POLICY, ELECTIONS & GOVERNMENT ACTIONS
100

What is the social contract?

People agree to be governed in exchange for protection of their rights

100

What does the Supremacy Clause say?

The Constitution is the highest law of the nation.

100

Which branch interprets the law?

 Judicial branch.

100

Which amendment protects freedom of speech?

 1st Amendment.

100

 What is public policy?

Government actions to address issues.

200

What were the Articles of Confederation mainly trying to avoid?

A strong central government like the British monarchy.

200

What does federalism mean?

Power is divided between federal and state governments.

200

Who is Commander-in-Chief of the U.S. military?

The President.

200

What does the 4th Amendment protect against?

What does the 4th Amendment protect against?

200

What is the Electoral College?

System that officially elects the President.

300

What was one major weakness of the Articles of Confederation?

The national government could not tax.

300

What problem in Ohio’s original 1802 Constitution led to major changes in 1851?

The legislature had too much power and debt grew out of control.

300

What does judicial review allow courts to do?

Declare laws or actions unconstitutional.

300

What does the 14th Amendment require states to provide?

Equal protection and due process.

300

Why is mandatory spending hard for Congress to change?

It is required by law (Social Security, Medicare).

400

Why did Shays’ Rebellion convince leaders to replace the Articles of Confederation?

It showed the federal government was too weak to maintain order.

400

Name one major change made in the Ohio Constitution of 1851.

Examples: more elected judges, limited legislature debt, created district courts.

400

How did McCulloch v. Maryland strengthen federal power?

It upheld the Necessary & Proper Clause and federal supremacy.

400

What did Gideon v. Wainwright guarantee?

Right to an attorney even if you cannot afford one.

400

What is fiscal policy?

Government taxing and spending.

500

 What Enlightenment ideas most influenced the U.S. Constitution?

Limited government, separation of powers, natural rights (Locke, Montesquieu).

500

How does the Ohio Constitution mirror the U.S. Constitution in the structure of government?

 Both have three branches: executive, legislative, judicial.

500

Why is Tinker v. Des Moines important for student rights?

It protects symbolic speech unless it disrupts learning.

500

 What is the difference between civil liberties and civil rights?

 Civil liberties = freedoms from government.

Civil rights = protections from discrimination.

500

 What is monetary policy and who controls it?

Money supply & interest rates; controlled by the Federal Reserve.

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