The United States Congress, consisting of the Senate and the House of Representatives.
The US Constitution grants the power to draft and create laws to the legislative branch, which consists of the House of Representatives and the Senate.
The final clause in Section 8 of the Constitution is known as the Necessary and Proper Clause, or the Elastic Clause. It grants Congress the power to make all laws necessary and proper for carrying out its enumerated powers. This clause has been the basis for the expansion of federal powers over time and has been used to justify various laws and actions by the federal government.
The Legislative Assembly
The constitution was used by obeying they laws on it. Should people help make other people wanna use it today. Idk, do you?
The United States needed a constitution to abide by. They needed laws to make sure that they keep their promise for freedom.
Election of representatives who make laws
The US Constitution grants the power to draft and create laws to the legislative branch, which consists of the House of Representatives and the Senate.
no, because the constitution has federal laws, and federal government > State Governemnt
The legislative powers of the federal government are vested in Congress. They are empowered by the Constitution to make the laws.
The Constitution established three branches of the federal government: the legislative branch, to make laws; the executive branch, to carry out the laws; and the judicial branch, to make sure the laws were followed.
...shared by the state and federal governments.
they still have to follow the rules of the federal government. No state can make laws that go against federal laws.
No, the U.S. had an Articles of Confederation before the constitution was written and ratified. That made the states make their own laws without a federal government
Constitutional powers can be classified as federal powers only. The Constitution does not give the right to the federal government to make laws in individual states.
Congress is empowered through the U.S. Constitution, which grants it the authority to make laws, raise and allocate funds, regulate commerce, declare war, and oversee the executive branch. Congress is composed of the House of Representatives and the Senate, both of which have specific powers outlined in the Constitution. Additionally, Congress has the power to impeach and remove high-ranking officials, approve treaties, and confirm appointments to key government positions.
Federal laws
The constitution makes the president the chief administrator of the federal government