Read the book
D
There are no states that are prohibited from taxing by the U. S. Constitution. Such a prohibition may or may not be placed in the State's Constitution or Charter or such.
Residual power under the constitution is typically vested in the states or provinces, allowing them to legislate on matters not explicitly enumerated in the national Constitution. This principle is particularly evident in federal systems, like that of the United States, where powers not granted to the federal government nor prohibited to the states are reserved for the states. In some countries, the distribution of residual powers may vary based on specific constitutional provisions.
No state established law may superceed the rights granted by the Constitution and Bill of Rights.
The tenth amendment gives the state authority that the federal government does not have. This amendment goes into great detail about the amount of power that the federal government has and what the state has control over.
An "enumerated power" is one that is directly or specifically written out and granted.In the US Constitution there are enumerated powers that are listed for each of the branches of the government, such as the Congress and the President (Executive Branch). These are also called the "express (expressed) powers" as opposed to the "implied powers" that may be required to perform the duties of each branch.The enumerated powers are a list of items found in Article I, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution that set forth the authoritative capacity of Congress.[1] In summary, Congress may exercise the powers that the Constitution grants it, subject to explicit restrictions in the Bill of Rights and other protections in the Constitution. The Tenth Amendment states that "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the peopleit means that you get more money that the power is worth and an example is" you ask for 60k and the power is worth 30k and you get 80k.
article 5
An "enumerated power" is one that is directly or specifically written out and granted.In the US Constitution there are enumerated powers that are listed for each of the branches of the government, such as the Congress and the President (Executive Branch). These are also called the "express (expressed) powers" as opposed to the "implied powers" that may be required to perform the duties of each branch.The enumerated powers are a list of items found in Article I, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution that set forth the authoritative capacity of Congress.[1] In summary, Congress may exercise the powers that the Constitution grants it, subject to explicit restrictions in the Bill of Rights and other protections in the Constitution. The Tenth Amendment states that "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the peopleit means that you get more money that the power is worth and an example is" you ask for 60k and the power is worth 30k and you get 80k.
18. The US constitution says that nobody 18 or older may be denied suffrage on basis of age, but states could technically set it lower but none do.
The 9th and 10th Amendment refer to power reserved for the states the 9th says that a citizen of another state may not sue a state. While the 10th amendment states that powers not granted to the federal government are reserved to the states or people.
Florida ratified the United States Constitution on May 3, 1788.
Probably not. The 10th Amendment says that the Constitution is the final word,and if the Constitution has taken an official position on an issue, the states must accept it. But the 10th Amendment also protects states' rights: it goes on to say that if the Constitution has taken no official position on an issue, then the states are free to make their own laws about it. For example, states may decide on the legal age for a driver's license-- the U.S. Constitution has not said anything about what age one may drive; similarly, states may set the legal age for marriage, since the Constitution doesn't say anything about that either. But the constitution DID say something about the voting age-- the 26th amendment lowered it from 21 to 18 years of age. Thus, the states are not allowed to change what the Constitution has decided. Of course, at some future time, legislation may be proposed in the U.S. Congress to lower the voting age even further, but there is a long and involved procedure for adding an amendment to the Constitution, so it is doubtful that young teens or children will be voting at any time in the near future.