Want this question answered?
Well Of course. They were models for making the Constitution
It cosnsists of the law making bodies- the House and Senate.
In article one of the constitution, the powers were about the legislative branch and basically, they were the ones making the laws.Marline Lucie Agenor
Legislative Assembly
1. The Congress. The House of Representatives and the Senate; together they write the laws. 2. The Executive. The president and vice president; they enforce the law. 3. The Judicial. The supreme court judges; the interpret the law.
The non-legislative power of Constitution-making and the Constitutional Amendment process.
They wanted the President to be elected by the people of the United States. In a compromise (Remember, the Constitution is a bundle of compromises), they Founding Fathers decided to have an "Electoral College," a group of common civilians who's sole purpose for being elected is to go and elect the President. Of course, in this day and age, with technology making a popular vote of the President much more practical, many people advocate the abolishment of the Electoral College. They argue that the popular vote should elect the President, rather than the people who elect the President.
There is no such amendment. The Constitution itself says this. (Article I, section 7... it's located, somewhat confusingly, in the Article dealing primarily with the Legislative, rather than the Executive, branch, because it has to do with the procedure for making laws.)
Congress has the legislative (law-making) powers. :)
Congress has the legislative (law-making) powers. :)
Congress has the legislative (law-making) powers. :)
Article 1, section 1 of the United States constitution states who has the power to make laws. In the United States, laws are made in the legislative branch of government.