Chapter 5, Lesson 2 Powers of Congress AUGUST 28, 2015.

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Chapter 5, Lesson 2 Powers of Congress AUGUST 28, 2015

Transcript of Chapter 5, Lesson 2 Powers of Congress AUGUST 28, 2015.

Page 1: Chapter 5, Lesson 2 Powers of Congress AUGUST 28, 2015.

Chapter 5, Lesson 2Powers of CongressAUGUST 28, 2015

Page 2: Chapter 5, Lesson 2 Powers of Congress AUGUST 28, 2015.

Your notes should…

Tell you the main idea of text Give you an idea of chronology if that is

important to the topic ALWAYS include the date and section of reading Be organized (outline)- can use roman numerals

or not. Not include abbreviations unless you are

POSITIVE you will remember them Make sense to you.

Page 3: Chapter 5, Lesson 2 Powers of Congress AUGUST 28, 2015.

More…

When you are done, review your notes to make sure that you understand them

Sketch any important timelines, charts, etc. that you think are important to understanding the information

Pay attention to repeated ideas and words

Page 4: Chapter 5, Lesson 2 Powers of Congress AUGUST 28, 2015.

Legislative powers Expressed/Enumerated powers- clearly

stated in the Constitution. Ex. Print money. Listed in Article 1, Section 8 of the

Constitution Implied powers- not specifically stated in

the Con. but understood to be granted Elastic clause- clause 18 in Article 1,

Section 8. Gives Congress the power to make all laws that are “necessary and proper” to carrying out their expressed powers.

Table on page 166!

Page 5: Chapter 5, Lesson 2 Powers of Congress AUGUST 28, 2015.

Lawmaking powers- many fall into three categories: Money- ex. Make bankruptcy laws &

collect taxes for defense (expressed) Commerce- ex. Regulate foreign and

interstate commerce (expressed) Military- ex. Declare war, regulate

National Guard, punish acts committed on international waters (expressed)

Others- naturalization, post offices, govern Washington D.C., all laws “necessary and proper”

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Non-legislative powers- duties other than making laws Suggest amendments to the constitution Check other branches- ex. approve/reject

presidential nominees. Impeach- accuse government officials of

misconduct in office Andrew Johnson & Bill Clinton. Neither

found guilty.Give examples

to help you relate the ideas

to reality

Define words you don’t know or

won’t remember

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Limits on Congressional power Constitution also explains what Congress can’t

do. Bill of Rights- Congress can’t pass a law

restricting freedom of speech. Article 1, Section 9 explains other limits.

Can’t pass laws favoring one state over another

Can’t block writ of habeas corpus- court order that requires police to bring a prisoner to court to explain why they are holding the person.

Can’t bass bills of attainder- law that punishes a person accused of a crime without a trial.

Can’t pass ex post facto laws- declares an act a crime after it’s committed.

Can’t interfere with powers of states or other branches

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From these notes you can answer all questions at the end of the section. That’s how it should be!

How is the elastic clause related to Congress’s implied powers?

Why do you think that the House rarely impeaches a top government official?

How does preventing Congress from passing a bill of attainder help safeguard rights?

What are three examples of expressed powers of Congress?

What are two nonlegislative powers given to Congress?

Page 9: Chapter 5, Lesson 2 Powers of Congress AUGUST 28, 2015.

El Fin