NO, The Constitution grants NO powers to the spouse of ANY elected offficial
impeach the president
No, actually the reverse. The Constitution states that all powers not specifically granted to the Federal Government are reserved for the state.
reserved powers
The U.S. Constitution does not grant any :implied" powers to the federal government. The authority delegated to the federal government is narrow and explicit, according to Article 10, all powers not expressly provided by the Constitution is reserved exclusively to the States or to the People.
The different branches of government are given different powers by the Constitution. Powers to tax, declare war, grant pardons, negotiate treaties, interpret the laws, and raise armies are some of the powers granted by the Constitution.
what powers does a state legislature have? They have all of those powers that the state constitution does not grant exclusively to the executive or judicial branches of the State's government or its local units and neither the State constitution nor the United States Constitution denies to the legislature.
The preamble to the Constitution is a general introduction and states the Constitution's purpose, as with any written document. It does not grant any powers to the Federal government. The powers given to the Federal government are few and defined and are specified in Article 1, section 8 of the Constitution.
Bill of Rights
7th September 1977
These powers are conferred on the holder of the office of President by the constitution.
These powers are conferred on the holder of the office of President by the constitution.
The different branches of government are given different powers by the Constitution. Powers to tax, declare war, grant pardons, negotiate treaties, interpret the laws, and raise armies are some of the powers granted by the Constitution.