Foundational Principles
Constitutional Design
Federalism in Practice
Power & Limits of Govt
Rights, Liberties, Courts
100

A mayor ignores a court ruling and continues enforcing an unconstitutional policy. 

What principle of government is being violated?

Rule of Law

100

A plan for government that created a weak central authority and strong states

What are the Articles of Confederation?

100

A state sets its own education standards.

What type of power is this?

Reserved Powers

100

Congress passes a law, but the president refuses to sign it

 What action is this?

Veto

100

A person is forced to testify against themselves in court
 Which amendment applies?

5th

200

Citizens vote out a leader who abused power. 

What principle is being demonstrated?

Popular Sovereignty

200

Delegates feared giving Congress power to tax because of past experiences with this country

Great Britain

200

Congress creates a national bank even though it is not listed in the Constitution.

What type of power is being used here?

Implied powers

200

The president carries out and enforces laws passed by Congress.
What role or hat of the president is being described?

Chief Executive

200

A court case establishes that laws can be declared unconstitutional
What case is this?

Marbury v Madison

300

A government claims authority because people consented to be governed, even if they disagree with current laws. 

What concept explains this?

Social Contract
300

One group supported ratification without a Bill of Rights; the other demanded it

Federalists and Anti-Federalists

300

A conflict arises between a state law and a federal law, and the federal law wins.

What principle applies here?

Supremacy Clause

300

A president expands power during wartime without direct congressional approval
 What concept is being tested?

Executive power

300

A law allows segregation under “separate but equal” What case established this?

Plessy v Ferguson

400

A leader argues that because they were elected, they are not bound by certain laws.
 Which foundational principle does this contradict?

Rule of Law

400

A state refuses to ratify the Constitution unless protections for speech and religious freedom.

What political compromise happened because of this?

Addition of the Bill of Rights

400

The federal government passes a law that all states must follow, but a state disagrees and refuses to follow it. 

What constitutional principle determines which law wins?

Supremacy Clause

400

The Supreme Court declares a law unconstitutional
What power is being used?

Judicial Review

400

The government attempts to keep someone imprisoned until they get around to the trial.

What amendment is being violated

6th

500

Explain how rule of law and limited government work together in a democracy.

Rule of law ensures laws apply equally; limited government restricts power—together they prevent tyranny

500

Explain how the Constitution directly addressed TWO major weaknesses of the Articles

Created power to tax and enforce laws; added executive and judicial branches

500

Why might states want to keep powers like education or local laws instead of giving them to the federal government?

Because states can better address local needs, maintain control, and reflect the will of their citizens

500

Explain how checks and balances prevents any one branch from becoming too powerful. 

Give an example

Each branch has powers to limit others (veto, override, judicial review, etc.)

500

Explain the long-term impact of judicial review on the balance of power in government

It gives courts the final say on constitutionality, strengthening judicial influence