No.
state law would be overturned it it violated the constitution
According to the US Department of Labor, when federal and state labor laws conflict, the law that most benefits the employee the law that should be applied to the circumstances. That means that whenever both federal law and state law address the same issue, whichever law provides you the most protection is the one that will be applied to your situation.
Federal. The dual government is set up in such a way that if federal and state are in conflict, federal trumps. The order is as follows: Federal constitution Federal statute Federal case law Federal regulations and administrative law State constitution State statute State case law State regulations and administrative law
The Constitution.
No the constitution states that government law is superior to state law.
Yes, federal law can override a state constitution if there is a conflict between the two. Federal law, as established by the U.S. Constitution, is considered the supreme law of the land and takes precedence over state laws or constitutions.
Federal law comes first and then state law as said in the constitution.
No, federal law supersedes state constitutions.
The Constitution cannot be overruled by any state or law. It is the main part of land.
The supreme law of Illinois is the US Constitution followed by the Illinois state constitution.
The Governor of a state or the Present of the U.S. has the power to declare martial law in case of a state emergency. Either case is debatable in the U.S. Constitution and the state's Constitution.
In the Constitution, it states that Federal law was supreme over State law. Therefore, the power for a state to nullify a federal law would go against the Constitution.