setting foreign policy
Print money, regulate interstate (between states) and international trade, make treaties and conduct foreign policy, declare war, provide an army and navy, establish post offices, make laws necessary and proper to carry out the above powers
Print money, regulate interstate (between states) and international trade, make treaties and conduct foreign policy, declare war, provide an army and navy, establish post offices etc.
make treaties, coin money, and declair war
Powers reserved only for the states
setting foreign policy
No, the constitution does not give unlimited power, in fact it gives only limited powers to the government. There are 3 types of powers: Expressed, Implied, and Reserved. Expressed Powers - powers for the Federal government that are not specifically stated in the Constitution. Implied Powers - powers for the federal government that are actually written down in the constitution. Reserved Powers - powers given to state government (basically the left-over powers that the Federal government isn't in charge of.)
Powers belonging only to the federal government is enumerated powers. Dakari S.
Article 1 Section 8 of the Constitution gives the federal government 18 "enumerated powers" of the Congress. The 9th and 10th Amendments restrict the congress to ONLY those functions, and reserve all other powers to the states or to the People.
Reserved
Reserved Power
The constitution gives the federal government certain powers. The federal government can ONLY exercise a power which is explicitly granted to it in the constitution. The Constitution also lists a few specific things that states are not allowed to do, presumably because the founders didn't want ANY level of government (state or federal) to be able to do it, or because they wanted it to be reserved exclusively to the federal government. The 10th Amendment says that all powers not expressly granted to the federal government, and not expressly prohibited to the states, are reserved to the states or the people.
delegated power is when federal gov't can declare war reserved powers are only power kept to the states
False
The U.S. Constitution conferred only a very few and narrow powers upon the federal government, most generally relating to the military, borders, customs and diplomacy. All other powers are outside of the jurisdiction of the federal government. Article 10 of the U.S. Constitution states that all powers and legislative authority not expressly delegated to the federal government is reserved to the States and to the People.
The U.S. Constitution conferred only a very few and narrow powers upon the federal government, most generally relating to the military, borders, customs and diplomacy. All other powers are outside of the jurisdiction of the federal government. Article 10 of the U.S. Constitution states that all powers and legislative authority not expressly delegated to the federal government is reserved to the States and to the People.
They are powers only for state governments.
Delegated powers