Friday Activity Suzuki

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Across
  1. 3. Right of states to invalidate acts of Congress they believe to be illegal.
  2. 7. Government structure that authorizes each branch of government (executive, legislative, and judicial) to share powers with the other branches, thereby holding some scrutiny of and control over the other branches.
  3. 10. Authority of courts to declare laws passed by Congress and acts of the executive branch to be unconstitutional.
  4. 11. Gives Congress the power to pass all laws necessary and proper to the powers enumerated in section 8.
  5. 12. Broad coalitions of interests organized to win elections in order to enact a commonly supported set of public policies.
  6. 13. Compromise over slavery at the Constitutional Convention that granted states extra representation in the House of Representatives based on their number of slaves at the ratio of three-fifths.
  7. 16. System of government in which ultimate authority rests with the regional governments.
  8. 17. Gives Congress the power to tax to provide for the general welfare.
  9. 18. To formally withdraw from a nation-state.
  10. 21. Required states to return runaway slaves; negated by the Thirteenth Amendment
  11. 22. First ten amendments to the Constitution, which provide basic political rights.
  12. 24. Meeting in 1787 at which twelve states intended to revise the Articles of Confederation but ended up proposing an entirely new Constitution.
  13. 26. Initial governing authority of the United States, 1781-88
  14. 27. Powers held by both the national and state government in a federal system.
  15. 28. System of government in which sovereignty is constitutionally divided between national and state governments.
  16. 29. System of government in which ultimate authority rests with the national government.
  17. 30. Formal process of changing the Constitution
Down
  1. 1. Form of government in which power derives from citizens, but public officials make policy and govern according to existing law.
  2. 2. Government structure in which authority is divide among branches (executive, legislative, and judicial), with each holding separate and independent powers and areas of responsibility.
  3. 4. Powers not expressly granted to Congress but added through the necessary and proper clause.
  4. 5. Document or set of documents that establish the basic rules and procedures for how a society shall be governed.
  5. 6. Those who opposed the new proposed Constitution during the ratification period.
  6. 8. Powers expressly granted to Congress by the Constitution.
  7. 9. The 1776 document declaring American independence from Great Britain and calling for equality, human rights, and citizen participation.
  8. 14. Initially, those who supported the Constitution during the ratification period; later, the name of the political party established by supporters of Alexander Hamilton.
  9. 15. Compromise on legislative representation whereby the lower chamber is base on population, and the upper chamber provides equal representation to the states.
  10. 19. Powers retained by the states under the constitution.
  11. 20. Authority of the president to block legislation passed by Congress. Congress can override a veto by two-thirds majority in each chamber.
  12. 23. The presidential electors, selected to represent the votes of their respective states, who meet every four years to cast the electoral votes for president and vice president.
  13. 25. Rule by the people.