Federalism
Constitution
Legislative Branch
Executive Branch
Judicial Branch
100

What is Federalism?

The system of government which is divided between a national government and state governments. 

100

What type of government did the federalists and anti-federalists want?

Federalists - strong central 

Anti-federalists - strong state 

100

Congress is a ____________ legislature 

bicameral 

100

What is the function of the executive branch?

to enforce the laws 

100
Explain what the dual court system is?

The US court system that means we have a national court system and a state court system. 

200

What is limited government? 

A government that is restricted in what it is allowed to do. People have individual rights that the government cannot take away. 

200

What is separation of powers?

Power is divided among executive, legislative, and the judicial branches 

200

What are the two houses that make up congress? 

House of representatives and the senate 

200

What are the qualifications of the presidency?

natural born citizen, at least 35 years old, residency in the US for at least 14 years 

200

What is jurisdiction? Give an example too. 

The authority to hear and decide on a court case. 

300

What is the name of a power that is given to both the state and national government?

Concurrent power 

300

Name 2 of the goals listed in the constitution (in the preamble) 

perfect union, establish justice, domestic tranquility, common defense, general welfare, blessings of liberty 
300

Name a power of congress 

declare war, impeachment, approve federal spending, taxation, currency, regulating commerce, necessary and proper clause 

300

What is the term length of the president and the max amount of years they can serve? 

4 years, 8 years 

300

Tell me the difference between original and appellate jurisdiction.

The first court to ever hear a case has original jurisdiction. If a case get appealed and goes to a higher court then this 2nd court has appellate jurisdiction. 

400

What is the difference between an expressed power and an implied power? 

Expressed powers are written in the constitution and implied powers are not. 

400

What is checks and balances?

Each branch of government has the authority to check or restrain some powers of the other two branches 

400

What is the difference between a bill and a law?

A bill is a proposed law that has not made it through the legislative process to be signed into a law. 

400

Who is the designated survivor 

A person within the presidential cabinet that is hidden away during large events to make sure someone survives if the rest of the presidential line of succession dies. 

400

Explain the difference between the plaintiff and defendant and a civil vs criminal court case. 

Plaintiff: the person making the legal complaint, Defendant: the person against whom the complaint is filed. 

Criminal: major criminal offense that harms others, Civil: less major offense 

500

Give 2 examples of state powers and 2 examples of national powers.

National Powers 

Coin money, taxation, foreign policy, declare war, control the military, mail services, control borders, operate federal courts

State powers 

taxes, conduct local elections, licenses, education, healthcare, insurance 

500

Name at least 3 amendments in the Bill of Rights 

1 - freedom of speech, press, religion, assembly 

2 - bear arms 

3 - quartering 

4 - search and seizure 

5 - plead the 5th 

6 - fair trial 

etc. etc. 

500
Name as many of the steps of the legislative process in order as you can. 
1. Bill is introduced

2. Bill goes to committee 

3. Bill goes to the floor 

4. Bill goes to conference committee

5. Bill goes to the president 

500

what is executive privilege?

the power that allows the president to refuse to release information to congress or a court

500

What is the difference between judicial restraint and judicial activism? 

Restraint: the judges interpret the constitution to the writers intention 

Activism: the judges interpret the constitution understanding more modern or contemporary issues