1. cannot make treaties with other countries
2. cannot coin there own money
No place in the constitution is that addressed. There is no need. Even in the 1700's people went where they wanted. This is called the "United States " not the separate states.
I think the senate has to agree with the proposed treaty. Also, the Presiden't cannot make a treaty that alters or goes against the U.S. Constitution. Other than that, I don't know. Hope this helps! :)
They had to dissolve their Confederate state governments, and re-apply for their place in the United States under the US Constitution.
Formal amendments are changes or additional test that become part of the Constitution. There are four methods that can place an amendment in the U.S. Constitution.1.Executive action2.legislation3. Court decisions4. Party practices5. Custom
To ratify an amendment to the U.S. Constitution, three-fourths of the states must approve it. This means that 38 out of 50 states are required for ratification. The process ensures a significant consensus among the states before any constitutional change can take place.
The United States of Africa is the proposed federation of Africa that is to be launched in 2017. A constitutional referundum will take place in 2015, after which the implementation of the African Constitution will start and culminate in a full-fledged union government two year thereafter. Additional resources are available on AfricanConstitution.org.
I'm not sure 'saved' is the best word. The form of government was changed by instituting the Constitution in place of the Articles of Confederation. Under the AoC, the states were more free to govern themselves; under the Constitution, states were now expected to obey certain national laws.
There are two matters that the Article 5 of the Constitution of 1787 singles out. These matters include the commerce that takes place between the states and the representation each states receives within the senate.
Formal amendments are changes or additional test that become part of the Constitution. There are four methods that can place an amendment in the U.S. Constitution.1.Executive action2.legislation3. Court decisions4. Party practices5. Custom
The US Constitution places many obligations on the national government for the benefit of the states. These obligations include protection for invasion on homeland, government representation, enforcement of orders, and recognized boundaries.
Article V requires that for an Amendment to the Constitution to be effective, it must be approved by either three-quarters of the legislatures or Constitutional conventions of all the states. This fraction was chosen because the framers of the Constituton agreed that the Constitution itself had to be approved by the 3/4 of the states. Since approval of 3/4 of the states was needed to approve the Constitution in the first place, it made sense to require the same percentage of states to agree to amend it.
None of the branches of government as they now exist were in place at the time the Constitution was signed. When it was "signed", if that means approved by the Constitutional Convention and sent to the states for ratification. Until the Constitution was actually ratified by the requisite number of states, they continued to operate under the prior Articles of Confederation. Congress was a single house body. There was no President and no federal judiciary.