American Government Key Terms PDF
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Fall 2024 HIST-1483-60552
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Summary
This document contains key terms related to American Government; including those related to Anti-Federalists, Articles of Confederation, and other government-related topics.
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Anti-Federalists those who did not support ratification of the Constitution Articles of Confederation the first basis for the new nation’s government; adopted in 1781; created an alliance of sovereign states held together by a weak central government bicameral legislature a legislature with two ho...
Anti-Federalists those who did not support ratification of the Constitution Articles of Confederation the first basis for the new nation’s government; adopted in 1781; created an alliance of sovereign states held together by a weak central government bicameral legislature a legislature with two houses, such as the U.S. Congress Bill of Rights the first ten amendments to the U.S. Constitution; most were designed to protect fundamental rights and liberties checks and balances a system that allows one branch of government to limit the exercise of power by another branch; requires the different parts of government to work together confederation a highly decentralized form of government; sovereign states form a union for purposes such as mutual defense Declaration of Independence a document written in 1776 in which the American colonists proclaimed their independence from Great Britain and listed their grievances against the British king enumerated powers the powers given explicitly to the federal government by the Constitution (Article I, Section 8); power to regulate interstate and foreign commerce, raise and support armies, declare war, coin money, and conduct foreign affairs federal system a form of government in which power is divided between state governments and a national government Federalists those who supported ratification of the Constitution Great Compromise : a compromise between the Virginia Plan and the New Jersey Plan that created a two-house Congress; representation based on population in the House of Representatives and equal representation of states in the Senate natural rights the right to life, liberty, and property; believed to be given by God; no government may take away New Jersey Plan a plan that called for a one-house national legislature; each state would receive one vote republic a form of government in which political power rests in the hands of the people, not a monarch, and is exercised by elected representatives reserved powers any powers not prohibited by the Constitution or delegated to the national government; powers reserved to the states and denied to the federal government separation of powers the sharing of powers among three separate branches of government social contract an agreement between people and government in which citizens consent to be governed so long as the government protects their natural rights supremacy clause the statement in Article VI of the Constitution that federal law is superior to laws passed by state legislatures The Federalist Papers a collection of eighty-five essays written by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay in support of ratification of the Constitution Three-Fifths Compromise a compromise between northern and southern states that called for counting of all a state’s free population and 60 percent of its enslaved population for both federal taxation and representation in Congress : unicameral legislature a legislature with only one house, like the Confederation Congress or the legislature proposed by the New Jersey Plan veto the power of the president to reject a law proposed by Congress Virginia Plan a plan for a two-house legislature; representatives would be elected to the lower house based on each state’s population; representatives for the upper house would be chosen by the lower house :