1 / 25

Why didn’t Americans want to give up power to a strong central government?

1. Why didn’t Americans want to give up power to a strong central government? Americans didn’t want anyone to rule over them. Americans wanted a big military. Americans didn’t want a government like they had in Great Britain. . 2. Why couldn’t Congress set up an army?

nelia
Download Presentation

Why didn’t Americans want to give up power to a strong central government?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 1. Why didn’t Americans want to give up power to a strong central government? • Americans didn’t want anyone to rule over them. • Americans wanted a big military. • Americans didn’t want a government like they had in Great Britain.

  2. 2. Why couldn’t Congress set up an army? • The people didn’t want one. • The Articles of Confederation wouldn’t allow the government to create one. • The country didn’t have the money.

  3. 3. What caused Shays’ Rebellion? • Farmers were angry that they were getting over taxed and their farms were being taken away. • Daniel Shay wanted slavery. • The government was taking their crops.

  4. 4. Why was it clear that the Articles of Confederation could not make the states work together? • It said the government couldn’t collect taxes. • The government couldn’t create an army. • The government couldn’t control trade. • All of the above.

  5. 5. How many delegates traveled to Philadelphia for the Constitutional Convention? • 11 • 50 • 55 • none of the above

  6. 6. Which people were allowed to take part in the Constitutional Convention? • Women and Men • Slaves • British people • Only white males

  7. 7. What is a written form of government called? • Constitution • Declaration of Independence • Bible • Economy

  8. 8. When did the states accept the Articles of Confederation? • 1776 • 1781 • 1787 • 1788

  9. 9. Who is considered “The Father of the Constitution”? • Thomas Jefferson • James Madison • George Washington • Ben Franklin

  10. 10. What is a veto? • A law • A change made to the Constitution • A ruling in a supreme court case • When the President stops a bill becoming a law

  11. 11. What is a minor change made to the Constitution called? • Veto • Amendment • Bill of Rights • Articles of Confederation

  12. 12. How many senators does each state elect to Congress? • 2 • It is based on the state’s population • As many as they want • The President picks them

  13. 13. How many representatives all elected from each state into The House of Representatives? • 2 • Based on the state’s population • They are not elected • The President chooses them

  14. 14. How does Congress raise money? • Fundraising • Donations • They can’t raise money. It says so in the Constitution. • Taxes

  15. 15. What is the job/duty of the Supreme Court? • Raise taxes • Make sure the laws follow the Constitution • Makes laws • Enforce the laws

  16. 16. What is the job/duty of the Executive Branch of our government? • Enforce the laws • Make the laws • Check the law to see that it follows the Constitution • Raise taxes

  17. 17. What is the job/duty of the Legislative Branch? • Make laws • Enforce the laws • Check the laws for errors

  18. 18. The U.S. Constitution is the plan for our what? • Peace • Democracy • Freedom • Land

  19. 19. Who must follow the Constitution? • Men • Women • White men • Everyone

  20. 20. The Executive Branch is the most powerful branch of the U.S. government. True False

  21. 21. How do the three branches of government not ever get too powerful? • Veto • Amendment • Checks and Balances • Ratification

  22. 22 Why do we have two parts (Senate and House of Representatives) to Congress?

  23. 23 Which two plans came together to form the Great Compromise?

  24. 24. Why do we have three branches of government?

  25. 25 What are the first words of the Constitution?

More Related