no there is no article 2
it establishes the legislature branch, also known as Congress
No, the state's rights deal are granted by the US Constitution. There are some rights of the Congress that they coul delegate to the states if they wished. Article I
I'm guessing it is because the Congress was considered the more important of the three branches of the Federal Government.
tatti
Article I of the US Constitution establishes the Legislative Branch, defining the structure of the two houses of Congress and the powers of each. The article also defines the qualifications for elections and the congressional terms. (For the text and links to amendments, see the related link.)
an article
relationships among states
Article Two deals with the executive branch, which includes the president. Article One deals with the legislative (ie Congress), and Three deals with the judicial. The remaining four articles deal with more mundane stuff like how treaties work, how to amend the constitution, and so on.
Congress does. It is not written in the constitution exactly how to deal with it.
It gives Congress the power to not do anything helpful at all.
It gives Congress the power to not do anything helpful at all.
Under Article II of the Constitution, the President is granted the power to deal with foreign affairs: this can be entering and discussing treaties, policy decisions, meetings with foreign heads of state, and executive agreements. However, treaties that the President enters into must be approved by Congress (2/3)--these are called congressional executive agreements, and they can be ex-ante or ex-post. Further, Congress can delegate certain elements of its own powers, such as law-making, if it is deemed to be closely connected with the President's goals of foreign policy.