Foundational Documents
Views on Democracy/Government
Check Your Balance
Federalism
Surprise!
100

This Foundational Document "plagiarizes" from the ideas of John Locke

Declaration of Independence

100

Viewpoint that each individual person in a democracy has an equal voice and should work to express their views.

Participatory Democracy

100

This legislative power allows Congress to interview members of the other branches under oath about their actions.

Congressional Oversight

100

Perspective that there should clear lines between what the Federal Government is in charge of and what State Governments are in charge of

Dual Federalism

100

This historical event (rioting, violence) convinced many founding fathers that the Articles of Confederation need to be replaced

Shays Rebellion

200

This document tried to convince Americans NOT to support the Constitution

Brutus

200

Someone who believes that only the most educated should have the majority of control in a democracy.

Elitism

200

You need this amount of votes in the Senate to ratify a treaty or remove a president from office.

2/3 or (67)

200

These allow the Federal Government to "encourage" states to follow Federal Policy without mandating states to agree.

Grants (Categorical, Block)
200

This amendment states that all powers not mentioned in the Constitution are "reserved" to states

10th Amendment

300

Under this foundational document, you needed 9/13 states to agree in order to pass a law

Articles of Confederation

300

This philosopher came up with the ideas of "Natural Law" and the Social Contract

John Locke

300

This informal power allows President to state how they intend to interpret/enforce a law passed by Congress (which may be different from what Congress had in mind!)

Signing Statements

300

This court case represented a shift by the Supreme Court to restrict Federal Power and return more authority to state governments.

U.S. v Lopez

300

Both the Federal Government and State Governments have the ability to tax.  The name for when both levels of government share a power is called.

Concurrent Powers

400

This document discusses how the Constitution allows for disagreement/factions but limits how much they can do.

Federalist 10

400

Potential downside of a democratic society where there are so many factions/interest groups fighting for power that nothing ever gets done.

Hyperpluralism

400

This (now illegal power) allowed the President to reject specific parts of a spending bill while signing the rest of the bill into law.

Line Item Veto

400

This specific line in Article 1 of the Constitution has allowed the Federal Government to grow in power compared to states

Necessary and Proper Clause (Elastic Clause)

400

This "freedom" listed in the original Constitution says that the Federal Government cannot arrest you without explaining their reasoning. (Sounds like a spell from Harry Potter)

Habeas Corpus

500

This Compromise between big and small states led to the creation of a bicameral legislature (House, Senate)

Connecticut Compromise or "Great Compromise"

500

Philosopher who argued democracy was stupid and that the government should be controlled by one king.  He also wrote the Leviathan

Thomas Hobbes
500

This resolution passed by Congress (during the Vietnam War) allowed the President to send troops into conflict without needing approval from Congress

Gulf of Tonkin Resolution

500

This line in the Constitution is what allows for the Federal Government to regulate the Internet and Airline industries despite these topics not existing in the Constitution.

Commerce Clause (Interstate)

500

In order to add an amendment to the Constitution, you need _______ of votes in House & Senate AND _______ Of state governments to agree

2/3 in house and Senate

3/4 of state governments

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