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No, the framers of the Constitution never seriously considered education as a matter for the Federal government. The Constitution does not mention schools or education at all. Further, most people who were citizens were not able to participate in any educational activities in most areas. Blacks, women, Native Americans, and very poor people were not included in public education anywhere until decades after the Constitution became law.
According to article 1, Section 8 of the US Constitution, there is no mention of education as being one of the enumerated powers of the Federal govenment. So the answer is NO! This means that the Department of Education has no constitutional authority in this area and the department should not exist.
There is no mention in the Constitution.
No, it does not. There is no mention of political parties in the constitution, it is just how politics develops.
No. Nowhere in the constitution is "freedom of rights" mentioned
the new constitution was the U.S. constitution, and no, in fact, they don't mention slaves at all
True
No. The U.S. Constitution does not mention political parties at all.
No, there is no mention of political parties in the Constitution.
The Constitution does not mention the number of justices.
The writers of the Preamble mentions liberty and justice to make sure the Constitution protected individual rights
He had doubts about the constitutionality of the purchase. Any power not specifically granted to the federal government by the U.S. Constitution belongs to the states or to the people. The Constitution makes no mention regarding the acquiring of new land. It was eventually reasoned that since the power to make treaties was specifically granted to the President, and since the only way to acquire new land, aside from seizing it, is by treaty, then acquiring land by treaty would be unconstitutional only if the Constitution specifically denied the President that power (it does not).