A republican form of government.
The 10th amendment to the United States Constitution applies the Bill of Rights to the states. The amendment is a guarantee to all US citizens.
The US Constitution protects the rights of the citizens of the US. The Constitution is limited to the federal government but is made applicable to the states by the Fourteenth Amendment's Equal Protection Clause.
Dude I really dont know but I love my boyfriend. :D
The constitution protects against xenophobia by guaranteeing equal rights to all people in the United States, regardless of country of origin.
In Article 2 Section 1 of the Philippines Constitution, it states that there is sovereignty in all people. The article also states that the country is a democratic and republican state.
Yes, all states in the US have a constitution. Writing a constitution is a first step in becoming a state.
The United States constitution was written for all the citizen of the United States.
No not all the states were eager to ratify the constitution, there had been a lot of compromise that went into it and not all of the states were happy and it took years before all of the states agreed to it.
To "insure" means to guarantee something. "Common" means all of the states, collectively. "Defence" is another spelling of our word, "defense"-- to defend. At the time that the U.S. Constitution was drafted, the colonies had no "national" army or navy. There was no guarantee that, should one state be attacked, the other states would come to their aid. Part of the purpose for writing the Constitution was to provide the states with security in the knowledge that they would be supported, militarily, should the need arise.
Nothing. The voting rights provisions of the Constitution (in the 14th, 15th, 19th, 24th, and 26th Amendments) all expressly guarantee voting rights for "citizens of the United States." Noncitizens therefore have no voting rights under the Constitution.
The United States Constitution consists several significant parts, one of which is the Bill of Rights. These were the ten original amendments that were ratified with the entire constitution. They guarantee specific rights of all citizens.The other major part of the US Constitution explains the three separate branches of the Federal government and how they interact with each other. The very important section of the Constitution states that all powers not given to the Federal government are issues left to the States to decide. One example of this concerns criminal acts within each state.
The first 13 states ratified the Constitution. As new states were added, they had to agree to be a part of the Constitution but did not ratify it.