Constitutional Clauses
Required Supreme Court Cases
Civil Liberties & the Bill of Rights
The Presidency & Executive Power
Congress & Legislative Process
100

The clause that makes the Constitution and federal law the highest law in the land, overriding state law.

What is the Supremacy Clause?

100

The 1803 case that established the power of judicial review.

What is Marbury v. Madison?

100

The standard courts use when a fundamental right or suspect classification is at issue — the government must show a compelling interest

What is strict scrutiny?


100

The president's power to reject a bill passed by Congress.

What is the veto?


100

The Senate procedure requiring 60 votes to end debate and force a vote.

What is cloture?

200

The clause giving Congress power to make all laws "necessary and proper" to carry out its enumerated powers.

What is the Necessary and Proper (Elastic) Clause?

200

The case that ruled racial segregation in public schools unconstitutional.

What is Brown v. Board of Education (1954)?

200

The First Amendment protection that prevents the government from punishing speech before it's made.

What is prior restraint?

200

International agreements made by the president that do NOT require Senate ratification.

What are executive agreements?

200

he House committee that controls the rules and time limits for floor debate on every bill.

What is the Rules Committee?

300

The clause that prohibits Congress from establishing an official religion.

What is the Establishment Clause?

300

The 1971 case in which the Supreme Court ruled the government could NOT use prior restraint to stop newspapers from publishing the leaked Pentagon Papers.

What is New York Times Co. v. United States?


300

The Miranda v. Arizona decision requires police to inform suspects of these rights.

What is the right to remain silent and the right to an attorney?


300

This 1973 law limits the president to 60 days of military deployment without congressional approval.

What is the War Powers Resolution?

300

The type of committee made up of both House and Senate members, formed to reconcile differences in a bill's two versions.

What is a conference committee?

400

The clause used in McDonald v. Chicago to apply the Second Amendment to the states.

What is the 14th Amendment Due Process Clause

400

The case that ruled the government cannot sponsor prayer in public schools, based on the Establishment Clause.

What is Engel v. Vitale (1962)?

400

Tinker v. Des Moines ruled that students don't "shed their constitutional rights at the schoolhouse gate" this was the right at issue

What is freedom of speech (symbolic speech)?

400

The term for the president's role as head of the military, established in Article II.

What is Commander in Chief?


400

Congress's power to review and oversee the actions of executive agencies.

What is congressional oversight?


500

The clause that guarantees all citizens equal protection under the law, used in nearly every civil rights case.

What is the Equal Protection Clause (14th Amendment)?

500

The 2010 case that ruled political spending by corporations is protected free speech under the First Amendment.

What is Citizens United v. FEC?

500

The legal doctrine, applied through the 14th Amendment, that makes most of the Bill of Rights apply to state governments.

What is selective incorporation?

500

The informal expansion of presidential power beyond what's written in the Constitution, justified by the Vesting and Take Care Clauses.

What are the informal powers of the President?

500

The constitutional process by which Congress can remove the president from office the House charges, the Senate tries.

What is impeachment?