These are the 2 Chambers of Congress.
What are the Senate and House of Representatives?
What is the electoral college?
What is the Supreme Court?
Congress can do this if the president vetoes a bill
What is an veto override?
This document outlines the separation of powers in government.
What is the Constitution?
This Chamber has the power to initiate bills
What is the House of Representatives?
This is the way that a president can strike down a bill without officially vetoing the bill.
What is the pocket veto?
There are this many Supreme Justices.
How many is 7?
The judicial branch has this power over the legislative branch.
What is the power of judicial review?
This was the argument Federalist 51.
This is the process when congressional district boundaries are redrawn.
What is Redistricting?
This is a way that a president can have something accomplished without having to pass a law through both chambers of Congress.
What is an executive order?
This power was established for the Courts in Marbury v. Madison.
What is the power of Judicial Review?
This is how the Senate can check the president's power in his appointments.
What is reject the president's cabinet appointments?
This was the effect of Plessy v Ferguson.
What is the establishment of separate but equal?
This is the difference between a standing committee and a select committee.
idk how to format this bru. A standing committee is permanant, a select committee is formed for a quicker process like conducting an investigation.
This is the difference between a formal and informal power of the president.
This is the difference between original and appellatte jurisdiction.
Explain how impeachment is an example of checks and balances.
If the president is not meeting the demands of the country and being completely ridiculous, Congress can start the motion to impeach the president through a majority of votes.
This is what Gibbons v Ogden did.
It established Congress' ability to regulate commerce and even some intrastate commerce.
This is the process that a majority would limit the political electability power of a group that they don't want to have power.
What is gerrymandering?
This is a way that a president can influence the public mind and draw their attention to a specific issue.
What is the bully-pulpit?
This is the way that a decision is reached in the Supreme Court.
What is the rule of 4?
President Trump being impeached following the January 6th insurrection
This was the impact of Baker v Carr on redistricting.
What is making redistricting an issue that can be reviewed in judicial courts?