US Test Review
Across
- 6. This plan, favored by large states, proposed that representation in Congress should be based on a state's population.
- 9. This branch of government was unable to create an army or navy and lacked the power to regulate commerce during the period of the Articles of Confederation.
- 10. This group feared a strong central government and demanded that a Bill of Rights be added to the Constitution to protect individual freedoms.
- 11. This was the British policy that stated colonies existed to provide a market for its products.
- 14. This agreement settled the dispute over how to count the enslaved population for purposes of both representation and taxation.
- 16. This document, written by the pilgrims and named after a ship, is one of America's first examples of self-government.
- 17. As a "strict interpreter," his constitutional view was literally a common one among Anti-Federalists who feared a strong government.
Down
- 1. This national document was the first, weak government of the US that lacked a president and the power to tax, and it gave majority power to the state for fear of a strong central government.
- 2. The famous slogan used by the colonists protesting new British taxes without having a voice in Parliament.
- 3. The type of powers that Hamilton was able to build his national bank with, leveraging the idea of the Elastic clause.
- 4. warned against the dangers of political factions, sectionalism, excessive public debt, and permanent alliances with foreign countries
- 5. If Congress says no to a bill made by the president, it is an example of this governmental concept.
- 7. This name refers to the first ten amendments of the Constitution.
- 8. This major agreement solved the debate over representation by creating a two-house Congress, consisting of the House of Representatives and the Senate.
- 12. This principle divides power among the three branches—legislative, executive, and judicial—to prevent any one part of the government from becoming too powerful
- 13. Alexander Hamilton and the Federalists had this type of constitutional interpretation.
- 15. One of the political rivals, along with Thomas Jefferson, whose disagreements led to the creation of the first political parties.