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the 16th amendment removed any need to apportion income taxes among the states.

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Q: How did the 16th Amendment modify Article 1 Section 9 clause 4?
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What phrase is known as the elastic clause in article 1 section 8 of the US constitution?

The elastic clause is the "Necessary and Proper Clause" that enables the Legislature to modify and change laws and regulation without the need for an amendment to the Constitution. This allows the gov. to be 'elastic' because they can slightly modify and expand upon the Constitution.


What is mean amended?

Amended means to alter, modify, or add to or subtract from (a motion, bill, conclusion, etc.) by formal procedure.


What Three ways can the president be out of office?

1) Resign from office.Richard M. Nixon is the only U.S. President to resign (1974).2) Be impeached (indicted), tried, and convicted.Contrary to popular opinion, impeachment is only indictment, not conviction and removal from office.Two U.S. Presidents have been impeached: Andrew Johnson (1868) and William Jefferson Clinton (1998); neither was convicted.The President may be impeached by the House only for "treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors", and then be tried and convicted by at least 2/3 of the Senate "members present", with the Chief Justice of the U.S. presiding; once convicted, the President would therefore be removed from office and replaced by the Vice President -- Article II, Section 4 of the Constitution of the United States of America, combined with Article I, Section 2, last clause, and Article I, Section 3, last two clauses.Impeachment is further restricted by Article II, Section 2, first clause and Article III, Section 2, last clause.If convicted, the person would be barred from holding "any office of honor, trust, or profit under the United States" -- Article I, Section 3, last clause and Article II, Section 4.Once convicted, removed from office, and barred from further office, the Senate can do nothing more to that person; however, "the party convicted shall nevertheless be liable and subject to Indictment, Trial, Judgment and Punishment, according to Law" -- Article I, Section 3, last clause.House impeachment and Senate trial proceedings may also be applied to the "Vice President and all civil officers of the United States" -- Article II, Section 4.No majority fraction for the House to impeach is stated in the Constitution, so this would simply be at least 1/2; however, the House is permitted to modify this by voting its own rules for impeachment.3) Die in office.Eight Presidents of the U.S. have died in office: William Henry Harrison (pneumonia and pleurisy, 1841), Zachary Taylor (gastroenteritis, 1850), Abraham Lincoln (shot, 1865), James A. Garfield (shot, 1885), William McKinley, Jr. (shot, then by gangrene, 1901), Warren G. Harding (heart attack or stroke, unconfirmed, 1923), Franklin Delano Roosevelt (cerebral hemorrhage, 1945), and John F. Kennedy (shot, 1963). Each of these were succeeded by their Vice Presidents, as specifed by the Constitution.So four assassination attempts on sitting Presidents have succeeded: Lincoln, Garfield, McKinley, and Kennedy.Various assassination attempts and presumed plots against U.S. Presidents have occurred. There have been over 20 known attempts to kill sitting and former Presidents, as well as http://wiki.answers.com/wiki/President-elect.Two Presidents were shot, but survived the assassination attempts: Theodore Roosevelt (wounded, 1912, out of office; although shot, he insisted on giving his speech, also on not having doctors remove the bullet, as this had contributed to the death of McKinley) and Ronald Reagan (wounded, 1981).Seven Presidents have been shot at, but missed: Andrew Jackson (twice, 1835), Franklin D. Roosevelt (1933), Harry S Truman (1950), Gerald R. Ford (twice, 1973), Jimmy Carter (1979, out of office, foiled shooting plot), William J. Clinton (1994), and George W. Bush (2001).One Presidential nominee was the target of a shooting plot: Barack H. Obama (2008).Two Presidential candidates were shot: Robert F. Kennedy (1968, killed) and George Wallace (1972, wounded).Four Presidents were the targets of failed bombing attacks: Richard M. Nixon (1974), George H. W. Bush (1993), Bill Clinton (1994), and George W. Bush (2005).Two Presidents were the targets of failed plane attacks: Richard M. Nixon (1974) and Bill Clinton (1994).


What does it mean to amend the constitution?

Amendments are additions or clarifications. When a constitutional amendment is accepted and enacted, it effectively adds its contents to the constitution, or clarifies points set forth in either the constitution or another amendment. In the Constitution of the United States of America, numerous amendments have been accepted, some shortly after the document was drafted. Effectively, the Constitution served as the foundation, the framework for the ideals of the government. Amendments were proposed, and some added, to expand upon the Constitution's intent. The first ten constitutional amendments, collectively called the Bill of Rights, was completed roughly a decade after the Constituton was adopted. Amendments can be removed. The 18th Amendment was ratified in 1919, and banned alcohol in the United States. This period, called Prohibition, ended in 1933 when the 21st Amendment was passed. The sole purpose of the 21st Amendment was to repeal the 18th Amendment. In summary: to amend any document, constitutions included, means to modify, add, or clarify the document.


What was the proposed meeting of the delegates during the constitutional convention?

To modify the articles of confederation(see "Philadelphia Convention" Wikipedia) To modify the articles of confederation(see "Philadelphia Convention" Wikipedia)

Related questions

What phrase is known as the elastic clause in article 1 section 8 of the US constitution?

The elastic clause is the "Necessary and Proper Clause" that enables the Legislature to modify and change laws and regulation without the need for an amendment to the Constitution. This allows the gov. to be 'elastic' because they can slightly modify and expand upon the Constitution.


What may an adjective clause modify?

Adverb Clause


Does an adjective clause modify an adjective?

No, adjective clauses modify nouns. The only things adjectives modify are nouns and pronouns.


A clause that may modify a verb is?

advrb


What does an adjective modify?

An adjective modifies a noun or a pronoun. (it can also modify a noun phrase or clause)


What is Appositive noun clause?

a clause that modify or identify a noun or a noun phrase is called NC in apposition


What does an adverb clause modify?

It modifies a verb, adjective, or an adverb.


How do you spell amendment?

That is the correct spell of "amend" (modify).


What does an article modify?

a noun as in "a book" or "the book"


Why did labor party want to modify clause IV?

because he wanted to


How can you modify that an adverb modifies a verb adjective and adverb?

You could modify a phrasal verb (more than one word), or modify an entire clause with an adverb such as "fortunately."


What modify nouns pronouns?

A relative clause is used to modify nouns and pronouns.Examples:The cake that mother made is chocolate. (the relative clause 'that mother made' modifies the antecedent noun 'cake')They have a prize for you who had the most points. (the relative clause 'who had the most points' modifies the pronoun 'you')