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The Bill of Rights & the 17 Amendments to the US Constitution

The Bill of Rights & the 17 Amendments to the US Constitution. Amending the Constitution –Art. 5. Amending the Constitution. Allowed by Article 5 of the Constitution Amendments may be proposed by: Congress (2/3 in both houses) National Convention (requested by 2/3 of state legislatures)

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The Bill of Rights & the 17 Amendments to the US Constitution

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  1. The Bill of Rights & the 17 Amendments to the US Constitution Amending the Constitution –Art. 5

  2. Amending the Constitution • Allowed by Article 5 of the Constitution • Amendments may be proposed by: • Congress (2/3 in both houses) • National Convention (requested by 2/3 of state legislatures) • Amendments may be ratified: • ¾ of all state legislatures • special state convention in ¾ of all states

  3. Bill of Rights • Introduced by James Madison in 1789 by the request of Anti-federalists • Came into effect in 1791 after ratified by ¾ of the states • Also known as the first 10 Amendments to the Constitution

  4. Amendment I • Freedom of Religion(No gov’t establishment of & free exercise) • Freedom of Speech • Freedom of Assembly (to meet) • Freedom of thePress • Freedom to Petitionthe Government for redress of grievances

  5. Amendment II • Right to bear arms • Right of States to maintain an armed militiafor its own protection

  6. Amendment III • No quartering of troops in any house without the consent of the owner

  7. Amendment IV • Right to be free of search and seizure You may only be search or arrested if the police have a warrant • Reinforced by the Exclusionary Rule developed by the Supreme Court, disallowing as evidence anything obtained through a violation of the 4th amendment

  8. Amendment V • Cannot be tried for a serious federal crime without indictment from a Grand Jury • No double jeopardy • Right to remain silent (no self-incrimination) • Cannot be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process • Private property cannot be taken by government without just compensation (eminent domain)

  9. Amendment VI • Right of the accused to a speedy and public trial before an impartial jury • Accused must be informed of charges and have the right to cross-examine hostile witnesses • Right to require testimony of favorable witnesses (subpoena) • Right to be represented by an attorney at every stage of the criminal process

  10. Amendment VII • Right to a trial by jury in civil cases in Federal court if the amount of money exceeds $20. • Right to a jury trial can be waived by both parties (bench trial—tried before a judge)

  11. Amendment VIII • Prohibits: • Excessive bail • Excessive fines • Cruel & unusual punishment

  12. Amendment IX • Unenumerated rights • The fact that many civil rights are expressly set forth in the Constitution does not mean that there are not others retained by the people.

  13. Amendment X • Powers reserved for the people • All powers the Constitution does not grant to the federal gov’t & not expressly forbidden to the States belong to the the States and people of each State

  14. Amendment XI -1795 • States cannot be sued by another State or foreign country or by citizens of other States or by its own residents. • Repealed part of Article III section II of the Constitution

  15. Amendment XII -1804 • Election of the President and Vice President • Changes part of Article II section 1 • Each elector in the Electoral College casts two ballots now: one for President and one for Vice President. (Before, the person with the 2nd highest number of votes was elected Vice President)

  16. Amendment XIII -1865 • Forbids slavery or involuntary servitude in the United States -except as punishmentfor a crime.

  17. Amendment XIV -1868 • Defines citizenship • Any person who is born or naturalized in the U.S. • You are a citizen in the state where you live. • No State shall deprive a U.S. Citizen of life, liberty or property, without due process of law. • No State shall deny to any person equal protection of the laws. • Removes the 3/5 clause from Article I Section II

  18. Amendment XV -1870 • No one can be denied the right to vote because of race, color or “previous condition of servitude.”

  19. Amendment XVI -1913 • Creates federal Income Tax • Before this amendment, only the states could tax an individual’s income

  20. Amendment XVII -1913 • Senators elected by popular vote instead of by State legislatures • If vacancy occurs, governor must call a special election. • The governor may appoint a replacement for the remainder of the term if the state legislature authorizes that step.

  21. Amendment XVIII -1919 • Prohibition of the production, possession, sale, distribution and importation of intoxicating liquors • Later repealed by the 21st amendment • Only amendment to be repealed

  22. Amendment XIX -1920 • Women’s vote – Right to vote cannot be denied on the basis of sex.

  23. Amendment XX -1933 • Changes date for start President’s/VP’s term to Jan 20th • Moved start of Congress’ term to January 3rd • Lame Duck Amendment

  24. Amendment XXI -1933 • Repeal of the 18th Amendment (End of Prohibition)

  25. Amendment XXII -1951 • Two term limit for President • If President succeeded to the Presidency in the last half of the previous presidency, maximum term limit 10 years.

  26. Amendment XXIII -1961 • Added Presidential Electors for the District of Columbia –Washington D.C. • Maximum the same number of Electors for the least populous State (3)

  27. Amendment XXIV -1964 • No one may be denied the right to vote in any federal election for not paying any poll tax or other tax.

  28. Amendment XXV -1967 • Provision for presidential succession • Provided for the replacement of the V.P. when there is a vacancy. • (President nominates, subject to majority vote of both Houses of Congress • President can make written declaration to Senate pro tem and Speaker of the House that he is incapacitated, temporarily relieved by Vice President until he delivers rescindment letter.

  29. Amendment XXVI -1971 • Voting age reduced from 21 to 18 • A State may enact a lower age to vote.

  30. Amendment XXVII -1992 • Limits Congress’ control over its wages by delaying implementation of any increase until after the next regular Congressional election.

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