The state governments retain all powers not specifically delegated to the federal government. So, as you see, it is other way around.
Hence, the answer to this question is ' NO, it does not.' This is FALSE.
true
Delegated powers
It reserved to the states and the peoples all powers not specifically delegated to the federal government
National and State Governments in the Federal Goverment
What are concurrent, delegated and reserved powers and how do they apply to the relationship between state and federal government?
It gives to the states any powers not delegated to the federal government.
Delegated powers
One Constitutional power specifically delegated to the federal government is the power to declare war.
Delegated powers
A delegated power is one that is reserved for the federal government, so obviously the national government has delegated powers.
Yes, it is true.
NO powers are delegated to provincial government/state not federal government.
In the US Constitution, this document specifies what are the responsibilities of the federal government. Duties and responsibilities not specifically delegated to the federal government are therefore the responsibilities of the states.
All the powers the states didn't give to the Federal Government.The delegates to the Constitutional Convention specifically delegated powers to the federal government from each and the several states. The states retained all powers not delegated to the federal government. Any powers not retained by the states are retained by the people.
Delegated powers are distributed authority in a federal system of government, so any federal system would have delegated powers.
It reserved to the states and the peoples all powers not specifically delegated to the federal government
NO powers are delegated to provincial government/state not federal government.
PresidentCommission