United States Constitution: Difference between revisions

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The '''United States Constitution''' is the fundamental [[constitution|constitutional]] [[law]] of the [[United States of America]], drafted by the [[Constitutional Convention]] in [[Philadelphia]], [[Pennsylvania]]. Written over six months in 1787 in order to establish a framework of government for the United States, replacing the 1777 [[Articles of Confederation]], the Constitution was effectively [[ratification|ratified]] by 21 June 1788 and commenced operation on 4 March 1789. The United States Constitution was first significantly amended in 1791, as a result of the first ten amendments adopted as the [[United States Bill of Rights|Bill of Rights]]. The process of amendment has continued into the modern era, the Constitution achieving its current form with the ratification of the [[Twenty-seventh Amendment]] on 5 May 1992.
#redirect[[U.S. Constitution]]
 
The United States Constitution enjoys a central place in United States law, [[government]] and [[politics]]. The U.S. Constitution has also been closely emulated in other countries on several occasions since its adoption, while exerting significant influence in political and legal thought worldwide. Aside that of the small European nation of San Marino, it remains the oldest codified state constitution still in operation anywhere in the world.
 
==Constitutional Convention==
 
:''Main Article: [[Constitutional Convention]]''
 
The constitutional convention opened on May 25, 1787, in the city of [[Philadelphia]], [[Pennsylvania]]. It was convened under the authority of the [[United States Congress]], then meeting in [[New York City]]. The convention was called following another, smaller convention held in [[Annapolis]], [[Maryland]] (known as the [[Annapolis Conference]]) in 1786. Delegates to the Annapolis Conference, which convened to discuss issues of trade and commerce among the states, quickly realized that the problems that faced the fledgling nation were not merely confined to trade and commerce, but involved the need for a stronger central government than the [[confederation]] allowed.
 
The delegates to the Philadelphia convention only expected to discuss the deficiencies in the Articles of Confederation, but several key members, especially [[James Madison]], decided to use the convention to try to fundamentally change the structure of the government. Twelves of the states sent delegates to the convention. Only [[Rhode Island]] failed to send delegates.
 
The delegates to the convention included some of the most distinguished members of American society, including [[Benjamin Franklin]], [[George Washington]], [[George Mason]], and [[James Wilson]]. In all, 55 men attended the convention over the course of the summer of 1787.
 
The document the delegates produced was hand-written on three broadside sheets of parchment paper, signed on the last sheet by 39 of the delegates. Copies of the final draft were sent to the Congress and to each of the states.
 
The delegates to the convention are generally referred to as the Framers of the Constitution.
 
==The Preamble==
The Preamble of the Constitution states the reason the document was written and the general goals of the framers:
 
<blockquote>We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.</blockquote>
 
==Article 1==
:''Main Article: [[Article 1 of the United States Constitution]]''
 
The first article of the Constitution, referred to as Article 1, lays out the basic structure of the [[legislative branch]] of the U.S. government.  It establishes a [[bicameral]] legislature, called [[Congress]], consisting of two houses. The [[lower house]] is called the [[House of Representatives]] and the [[upper house]] is called the [[Senate]].
 
Members of the House of Representatives, known as [[Representative]]s (or colloquially as Congressmen and Congresswomen), are apportioned to each state in accordance to its population. Article 1 requires that a [[census]] by taken of the actual population of each state on a [[decennial]] basis. Representatives are elected every two years. Representatives must be residents of the state they represent, must have been [[citizen]]s for at least seven years, and must be at least 25 years old. Each state must have at least one representative, regardless of its population.
 
Members of the Senate, known as [[Senator]]s, are elected for six year terms. Senators must be residents of the state they represent, must have been citizens for at least nine years, and must be at least 30 years old. The Senate is divided into three classes, such that every two years, one third of the Senate seats are up for election.  Every state, regardless of size, is granted two Senators.
 
Also included in Article 1 are a list of powers specifically granted to the Congress and a list of powers specifically denied of the states.  Powers granted to the Congress, known as enumerated powers, include the power to declare war, the power to coin money, and the power to man and arm an army and navy.  Powers denied of the states include the power to tax imports and exports, sign treaties, or grant titles of nobility.
 
==Article 2==
:''Main Article: [[Article 2 of the United States Constitution]]''
 
The second article of the Constitution, referred to as Article 2, lays out the basic structure of the [[executive branch]] of the U.S. government. The executive is comprised of the [[President of the United States|President]] and the [[Vice President of the United States|Vice President]]. The executive also includes all departments of the government (such as the [[Department of Defense]] and the [[Department of State]]).
 
The President must be a native-born citizen, must have lived in the United States for at least 14 years, and must be at least 35 years old. The Constitution makes an exception for the native-born requirement for any person who was a citizen of the United States at the time of the adoption of the Constitution.  The requirements for Vice President are the same as those for the President.  The President and Vice President are elected every four years.
 
The President is elected by an institution called the [[Electoral College]]. States are granted a number of electoral votes equivalent to the number of Representatives and Senators it has. The state selects electors by whatever means it desires, and on an appointed day, all electors cast their votes for President and Vice President (originally, electors cast two votes for President, and the winner of the vote was President; the runner-up became Vice President).
 
==Article 3==
:''Main Article: [[Article 3 of the United States Constitution]]''
 
The third article of the Constitution, referred to as Article 3, lays out the basic structure of the [[judicial branch]] of the U.S. government. The judiciary is comprised of a Supreme Court and any inferior courts the Congress creates.
 
Federal judges and Supreme Court justices are selected by the President and confirmed by the Senate. Federal judges and justices enjoy a lifetime term, removable only by means of [[impeachment]] for bad behavior.
 
==Article 4==
:''Main Article: [[Article 4 of the United States Constitution]]''
 
The fourth article of the Constitution, referred to as Article 4, refers to the states, and was designed to correct perceived deficiencies in the Articles of Confederation.  For example, Article 4 requires "full faith and credit" be given to the acts, records, and judicial proceedings of each state by every other state. For example, a [[marriage]] granted in one state must be fully recognized in all other states.
 
Article 4 also includes the rules for the creation of new states. For example, a state may not created from parts of two other states unless the two states agree to the separation. New states are admitted on a majority vote of the Congress.
 
==Article 5==
:''Main Article: [[Article 5 of the United States Constitution]]''
 
The fifth article of the Constitution, referred to as Article 5, details how changes to the Constitution, known as amendments, are enacted. The amendment process in the Articles of Confederation was found to be unworkable, requiring unanimous consent of all states to any changes.  The Constitution instead requires assent of three quarters of all states.
 
Additionally, all amendments have to be agreed to by two thirds of both houses of Congress. Amendments may also be proposed by an amendment convention, if two thirds of all states petition for such a convention.
 
The Constitution currently has 27 amendments, all of which were proposed by Congress.  No amendment convention has ever held.
 
Though the Constitution does not specify how amendments are incorporated into the text of the Constitution, by tradition, amendments are added at the end of the Constitution.
 
==Article 6==
:''Main Article: [[Article 6 of the United States Constitution]]''
 
The sixth article of the Constitution, referred to as Article 6, notes a few technical details. For example, it assured that all debts of the United States under the Articles of Confederation will be honored by the Unites States under the Constitution.  It also notes that the Constitution is the Supreme Law of the land, and articles of state constitutions and treaties in contradiction of the Constitution are inapplicable.
 
Article 6 also ensures that no religious test should ever be required to hold an office in the USA.
 
==Article 7==
:''Main Article: [[Article 7 of the United States Constitution]]''
 
The seventh and final article of the Constitution, referred to as Article 7, notes the requirements for the ratification of the Constitution: nine of the thirteen states must ratify for the Constitution to take effect.
 
==Signatures==
 
Following the text of Article 7 are forty signatures: that of [[William Jackson]], secretary of the convention, and those of 39 delegates, listed below.
 
* [[Abraham Baldwin]]
* [[Richard Bassett]]
* [[Gunning Bedford Jr.]]
* [[John Blair]]
* [[William Blount]]
* [[David Brearly]]
* [[Jacob Broom]]
* [[Pierce Butler]]
* [[Daniel Carroll]]
* [[George Clymer]]
* [[Jonathan Dayton]]
* [[John Dickinson]]
* [[William Few]]
* [[Thomas Fitzsimons]]
* [[Benjamin Franklin]]
* [[Nicholas Gilman]]
* [[Nathaniel Gorham]]
* [[Alexander Hamilton]]
* [[Jared Ingersoll]]
* [[Daniel of St. Thomas Jenifer]]
* [[William S. Johnson]]
* [[Rufus King]]
* [[John Langdon]]
* [[William Livingston]]
* [[James Madison]]
* [[James McHenry]]
* [[Thomas Mifflin]]
* [[Gouverneur Morris]]
* [[Robert Morris]]
* [[William Paterson]]
* [[Charles Pinckney]]
* [[Charles Cotesworth Pinckney]]
* [[George Read]]
* [[John Rutledge]]
* [[Roger Sherman]]
* [[Richard D. Spaight]]
* [[George Washington]]
* [[Hugh Williamson]]
* [[James Wilson]]
 
==Amendments==
:''Main Article: [[Amendments to the United States Constitution]]''
 
The Constitution was quickly amended once it was ratified and the first Congress convened. One of the main arguments against the Constitution during the ratification process was the lack of a [[bill of rights]]. One of the main champions of the Constitution, during the Convention and the ratification process, was James Madison.  Madison was also elected to the House of Representatives in the first Congress, and he had promised his constituents that he would push through a bill of rights. Madison introduced several amendments in 1789. His list was trimmed and modified in Congress and eventually twelve articles of amendment were sent to the states. Two years later, in 1791, ten of these amendments were ratified.  These ten amendments are known collectively as the [[Bill of Rights (United States)|Bill of Rights]].
 
In total, the Constitution has been amended 27 times, most recently in 1992[http://www.archives.gov/national-archives-experience/charters/constitution_amendments_11-27.html].
 
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Latest revision as of 04:40, 26 April 2007

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