The United States Constitution always, always, always trumps any state constitutions. When there is a conflict, and that conflict comes into play in a court action, the court is bound to give force to the US Constitutional provision and invalidate the state constitutional provision.
After it goes through all the lower courts and federal courts, the supreme court gets it. for novanet its judicial
The constitution gives the framework for the government and courts.
The Supremacy Clause, found in Article VI, Clause 2 of the U.S. Constitution, resolves conflicts between state laws and federal laws enacted by Congress. It establishes that the Constitution, and federal laws made pursuant to it, are the supreme law of the land, meaning they take precedence over state laws. This provision ensures that when state and federal laws conflict, federal law will prevail, maintaining a consistent legal framework across the country.
Yes, federal law can override a state constitution if there is a conflict between the two. Federal law, as established by the U.S. Constitution, is considered the supreme law of the land and takes precedence over state laws or constitutions.
The constitution gives this to both. It is the framework for government.
The constitution gives this to both. It is the framework for government.
The United States government is a federal government with a constitution as the framework.
It states that the U.S Constitution is the supreme law of the land. It also states that judges are bound to follow federal law when a conflict arises between state law and federal law.
Federal. The dual government is set up in such a way that if federal and state are in conflict, federal trumps. The order is as follows: Federal constitution Federal statute Federal case law Federal regulations and administrative law State constitution State statute State case law State regulations and administrative law
it provided the framework for popular sovereignty
Federal law prevails.
A state can create laws that are stricter than federal law, as long as there is no conflict, or the Constitution specifically reserves the right to the Federal government.