Federalism Basics
Branches and Powers
State vs. Federal Conflicts
Limits and Protections
Civil Rights and Lawmaking
100

This principle divides power between national and state governments.

What is federalism?

100

This branch of government makes laws.

What is the legislative branch?

100

Some cities limit cooperation with ICE and federal immigration enforcement.

What are sanctuary cities?

100

Congress cannot pass laws that punish people retroactively.

What is an ex post facto law?

100

This Supreme Court decision declared school segregation unconstitutional.

What is Brown v. Board of Education?

200

This amendment says powers not given to the federal government belong to the states or the people.

What is the Tenth Amendment?

200

This chamber of Congress is based on state population.

What is the House of Representatives?

200

This law is legal in many states but illegal under federal drug law.

What is marijuana?

200

Members of Congress can’t be arrested for things they say during debate.

What is legislative immunity?

200

This 1964 law banned discrimination in public places and employment.

What is the Civil Rights Act?

300

This clause makes federal laws stronger than conflicting state laws.

What is the Supremacy Clause?

300

This chamber of Congress gives each state equal representation.

What is the Senate?

300

After this case, states can now restrict or ban abortion.

What is Dobbs v. Jackson?

300

This section of the Constitution prevents states from forming their own money or treaties.

What is a limit on state power?

300

This 1965 law protected voting rights, especially in the South.

What is the Voting Rights Act?

400

This clause lets Congress make laws needed to do its job, even if not listed in the Constitution.

What is the Necessary and Proper Clause?

400

This power allows Congress to investigate or hold hearings.

What is oversight?

400

Southern states used this to justify keeping segregation before federal laws changed it.

What are states’ rights?

400

This clause allows Congress to regulate trade between states and with foreign nations.

What is the commerce clause?

400

Southern states used these laws to enforce segregation after Reconstruction.

What were Jim Crow laws?

500

This concept explains why the U.S. sometimes has different laws in different states.

What are states’ rights?

500

This term refers to powers that are not listed but necessary to carry out listed ones.

What are implied powers?

500

This legal principle says the federal government can’t force states to carry out federal programs.

What is the anti-commandeering principle?

500

This process allows Congress to pass a law even if the president vetoes it.

What is a veto override?

500

This case showed how federal power could stop states from ignoring civil rights protections.

What is Brown v. Board of Education?