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Amendments XI - XXVII
Amendment XI: Suing States
“The judicial power of the United States shall not be
  construed to extend to any suit in law or equity,
  commenced or prosecuted against one of the United
  States, by citizens of another state, or by citizens or
  subjects of any foreign state.”
A citizen from one state (or a foreign country) cannot sue a
  different state in a federal court without that state's
  consent.
Was a result of Chisholm v. Georgia (1793) in which a
 citizen of South Carolina sued the state of Georgia.
Ratified in Jan. 1798
Amendment XII: Separate Ballots
  for President and Vice President
See p. 127 for the text of this amendment; ratified in 1804
This amendment replaced most of Article II, Section 1,
  Clause 2
Purpose: to eliminate the possibility of a tie between the
  President & VP as happened between Jefferson and John
  Adams in 1800 AND to make sure Prez & VP were not
  from different parties
Also set up a plan to break a deadlock in the electoral
  college. The House breaks a tie in the case of the
  President, the Senate in the case of the VP.
Finally, it ensures that the VP meets the same qualifications
  for office as those established for the president
Amendment XIII – XV: The Civil War
 or Reconstruction Amendments

All proposed and ratified as a direct result of the Civil War
  and the treatment of blacks
Given Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation in 1863 that set
  the slaves free, why was an amendment needed?
Amendment XIII – XV: The Civil War
 or Reconstruction Amendments

All proposed and ratified as a direct result of the Civil War
  and the treatment of blacks
Given Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation in 1863 that set
  the slaves free, why was an amendment needed?
1. The proclamation was declared by the president without
   Congress's approval or involvement during wartime
2. The proclamation only abolished slavery in the southern
   states that had seceded from the Union so the rest of the
   nation needed to be included.
Amendment XIII: Slavery Abolished
Section 1: “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except
  as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have
  been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or
  any place subject to their jurisdiction.
Section 2: “Congress shall have power to enforce this article
  by appropriate legislation.”
Ratified in Dec. 1865
What is the only condition under which slavery or involuntary
 servitude is now allowed?
Amendment XIII: Slavery Abolished
Section 1: “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except
  as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have
  been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or
  any place subject to their jurisdiction.
Section 2: “Congress shall have power to enforce this article
  by appropriate legislation.”
Ratified in Dec. 1865
What is the only condition under which slavery or involuntary
 servitude is now allowed?
- as a punishment for a crime
Why was involuntary servitude included?
Amendment XIII: Slavery Abolished
Section 1: “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except
  as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have
  been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or
  any place subject to their jurisdiction.
Section 2: “Congress shall have power to enforce this article
  by appropriate legislation.”
Ratified in Dec. 1865
What is the only condition under which slavery or involuntary
 servitude is now allowed?
- as a punishment for a crime
Why was involuntary servitude included?
- to protect poor blacks from becoming virtual slaves
Amendment XIV: Citizenship
             Defined
See p. 129-130 for the text of this amendment
Ratified in 1868; southern states had to ratify it in order to be
 readmitted to the Union
Section 1:
- All persons born or naturalized in the U.S. are citizens of
   the U.S. and the state where they live.
- The states cannot make a law that goes against the
   privileges and immunities of a U.S. Citizen
- The states cannot deprive any person of life, liberty, or
   property without due process (fair trial & legal procedures)
- The states cannot deny equal protection of the law to any
   person living within them.
Amendment XIV Sect. 2 – 5
Section 2: Prevented southern states from counting blacks
  for representation purposes while simultaneously
  preventing them from voting. This replaced the 3/5 clause
  of Article I.
- Note: It did allow a state to withhold the vote from some
   people as long as they were not included for
   representation purposes.
Section 3: Banned former Confederates from office although
  a 2/3 vote of Congress could overturn this. The ban was
  mostly lifted 4 years later, and abolished in 1898.
Section 4: Although the Union's war debts would be repaid,
  none of the debts incurred by the Confederacy would be
  assumed by the U.S.
Amendment XV: Black Voting Rights
Ratified 1870
The right of citizens to vote cannot be denied or abridged on
  account of race, color, or having been a slave.
In response to a number of states that didn't allow blacks to
   vote
How did these states restrict the black vote after this
 amendment was passed?
Amendment XV: Black Voting Rights
Ratified 1870
The right of citizens to vote cannot be denied or abridged on
  account of race, color, or having been a slave.
In response to a number of states that didn't allow blacks to
   vote
How did these states restrict the black vote after this
 amendment was passed?
- By requiring literacy tests and poll taxes b/c many blacks
   could not read and were too poor to pay the tax.
- Through gerrymandering that diminished influence of the
   black vote
- White-only primaries
Civil Rights Movement
Began in the courts in the 1940's and 50's by overturning
  state laws that restricted the voting rights of blacks
Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka: declared all
  segregated schools to be in violation of 14th Amendment
Civil disobedience: non-violent mass demonstrations and
  boycotts led by Martin Luther King Jr
Civil Rights Act of 1964: businesses could no longer
  discriminate on the basis of race & EEOC looked for
  discrimination in hiring
Voting Rights Act of 1965: eliminated state poll taxes, literacy
  tests, and other ways that southern states tried to prevent
  black voting
Current Civil Rights Movement
How is it different than the Civil Rights movement of the
 1950's and 60's?
Current Civil Rights Movement
How is it different than the Civil Rights movement of the
 1950's and 60's?
- it attempts to give not only equality of opportunity but also
    equality of outcomes, which would require the govt to
    interfere in our private lives and institutions
- it uses the courts, which are more arbitrary and less
    answerable to the people rather than the legislatures to
    accomplish its goals
- it stresses acceptance of perversion: drugs, pornography,
    homosexuality, gender changes, abortion, etc.
Amendment XVI: Income Tax
Progressive amendment, Ratified Feb. 1913
Two previous attempts to establish a federal income tax were
  struck down by Supreme Court as unconstitutional
See I.8.1 and I.2.9: Taxes had to be uniform throughout the
  United States and such direct taxes had to be levied based
  on population with everyone paying the same amount.
This amendment nullified those clauses
What is the result of the federal income tax?
Amendment XVI: Income Tax
Progressive amendment, Ratified Feb. 1913
Two previous attempts to establish a federal income tax were
  struck down by Supreme Court as unconstitutional
See I.8.1 and I.2.9: Taxes had to be uniform throughout the
  United States and such direct taxes had to be levied based
  on population with everyone paying the same amount.
This amendment essentially nullified those clauses
What is the result of the federal income tax?
- a huge increase in federal revenue, leading to an ever-
   growing govt and an ever more complicated tax code
Amendment XVII: Direct Election of
          Senators
Progressive; ratified in May, 1913; see p. 131 for text
How were Senators originally chosen?
Amendment XVII: Direct Election of
          Senators
Progressive; ratified in May, 1913; see p. 131 for text
How were Senators originally chosen?
- By the state legislatures, who were accused of playing
   politics and/or delaying the election of senators
A result of the populist movement which worked to increase
 the influence of the people in politics & wanted senators to
 be more accountable to the people
By 1912, 29 states had already adopted a form of popular
  election of senators by holding primaries or referendums
  which were binding on the state legislatures
This made it possible for Congress to pass this amendment.
Amendment XVIII: National
            Prohibition
Progressive; ratified Jan. 1919
Forbid the manufacture, sale, or transportation of liquor as
  well as the importation or exportation of alcohol across the
  border; not illegal to consume it, just difficult
Result of influential Temperance Movement; alcohol had
 already been outlawed in several states
What happened?
Amendment XVIII: National
            Prohibition
Progressive; ratified Jan. 1919
Forbid the manufacture, sale, or transportation of liquor as
  well as the importation or exportation of alcohol across the
  border; not illegal to consume it, just difficult
Result of influential Temperance Movement; alcohol had
 already been outlawed in several states
What happened?
- an enforcement nightmare
- huge increase in organized crime as criminals bootlegged
   liquor & also a loss of tax income
- disregard for the law during the Roaring Twenties, esp. in
   the big cities
Amendment XIX: Women's Suffrage
Progressive; Ratified Aug. 1920
Gave women the right to vote
Suffrage = franchise = right to vote
Result of decades of campaigning
Some states had already given women this right; Wyoming
  was the first to do so.
Amendment XX: Lame Duck
            Amendment
Ratified February, 1933
What is a lame duck?
Amendment XX: Lame Duck
            Amendment
Ratified February, 1933
What is a lame duck?
- officials who will not be returning to office (due to retirement
   or losing their election) and are serving out the end of their
   term after that election before the next term begins
Section 1: Terms of Prez & VP ends on Jan. 20 (originally
  March 4) and on Jan. 3 for Congress
Section 2: Congress must meet at least once every year on
  Jan. 3 unless they choose another day by law
- Congress meets before the President takes over in case a
   tie in the electoral college needs to be broken
Amendment XX cont.
Section 3: Provides for presidential selection in case the
  Prez and/or VP die or are unqualified before they take
  office
- Congress was given the authority to determine succession
   if both Prez & VP are absent, which they did in 1947 with
   the Presidential Succession Act. See p. 325
Section 4: Congress may decide what to do if a candidate
  dies before the election.
Section 5 & 6: Specified when the amendment would go into
  effect and how long the states had to ratify it (7 years).
Amendment XXI: Repeal of
             Prohibition
Ratified in Dec. 1933
Why was this passed?
Amendment XXI: Repeal of
             Prohibition
Ratified in Dec. 1933
Why was this passed?
- Prohibition had led to all kinds of enforcement and growing
   crime problems
Regulation of alcohol was left to the states.
Did you know that Fort Collins was dry (sale of alcohol
  prohibited) until 1969 when voters repealed it? Now we're
  one of the beer capitols of the country.
What do you think about illegal drugs? Should we allow them
 and therefore regulate and tax them? Are drugs similar to
 alcohol? Should we continue to outlaw them? What about
 marijuana?
Amendment XXII: Presidential Term
           Limits
Ratified February, 1951
What did this amendment do?
Amendment XXII: Presidential Term
           Limits
Ratified February, 1951
What did this amendment do?
- limited Presidents to only two elected terms
- VP's that have assumed the President's office can also run
   for two additional terms if they initially took office during the
   last two years of the previous president's term; Otherwise,
   they can only run for one more term.
Why was this change made?
Amendment XXII: Presidential Term
           Limits
Ratified February, 1951
What did this amendment do?
- limited Presidents to only two elected terms
- VP's that have assumed the President's office can also run
   for two additional terms if they initially took office during the
   last two years of the previous president's term; Otherwise,
   they can only run for one more term.
Why was this change made?
- b/c FDR ran for an unprecedented 4 terms, dying early in
   his fourth term. This broke the tradition set by Washington.
Amendment XXIII: Voting for
         Washington, D.C.
Ratified April 1961
Gave residents of Washington, D.C. the right to vote in
 presidential elections.
- the district has 3 electoral votes who follow the procedures
   outlined in Amendment XII.
They still do not have representation in Congress.
Amendment XXIV: Poll Tax
             Abolished
Part of the Civil Rights movement; Ratified February, 1964
No poll tax can be charged to anyone voting in U.S.
 Presidential or Congressional elections.
Why was this done?
Amendment XXIV: Poll Tax
             Abolished
Part of the Civil Rights movement; Ratified February, 1964
No poll tax can be charged to anyone voting in U.S.
 Presidential or Congressional elections.
Why was this done?
- Because some of the southern states kept blacks from
   voting b/c they could not afford to pay the poll tax
Poll taxes at state elections were still legal until the Supreme
  Court declared them unconstitutional in Harper v. Virginia
  Board of Electors.
Amendment XXV: Presidential
     Succession and Disability
Ratified February, 1967 as a response to Kennedy's
 assassination which left the nation without a VP for 14
 months
Section 1: VP becomes President when the President is
  removed from office due to death or resignation (wasn't
  clear in Article II
Section 2: If the vice-presidency becomes vacant, the
  President appoints a new VP who must be approved by a
  majority vote of both houses.
- This happened soon after when VP Agnew resigned, was
   replaced by Ford, who then became President when Nixon
   resigned, and then appointed Nelson Rockefeller to be his
   VP.
Amendment XXV cont.
Section 3: When the president is unable to perform his duties
  (usually due to illness), he requests in writing to the
  Senate Pro Tempore and Speaker of the House that the
  VP take over as Acting President until he lets them know in
  writing that he is once again available.
Section 4: Allows VP to act as president even when the
  president hasn't given his written consent if an executive
  committee or other body designated by Congress request
  this. If the president disagrees with this panel, Congress
  must resolve this with a 2/3 vote in both houses.
When might this provision be needed?
Amendment XXV cont.
Section 3: When the president is unable to perform his duties
  (usually due to illness), he requests in writing to the
  Senate Pro Tempore and Speaker of the House that the
  VP take over as Acting President until he lets them know in
  writing that he is once again available.
Section 4: Allows VP to act as president even when the
  president hasn't given his written consent if an executive
  committee or other body designated by Congress request
  this. If the president disagrees with this panel, Congress
  must resolve this with a 2/3 vote in both houses.
When might this provision be needed?
- If the Prez has become insane or is incapacitated for a long
   time as Garfield (gunshot) and Wilson (stroke) were.
Amendment XXVI: Eighteen-Year-
           Old Vote
Ratified July, 1971, shortest period ever required to pass an
 amendment
Why was this done?
Amendment XXVI: Eighteen-Year-
           Old Vote
Ratified July, 1971, shortest period ever required to pass an
 amendment
Why was this done?
- During wartime (Vietnam in this case) pressure grew to
   expand the vote to 18-year-olds b/c they were old enough
   to be drafted & give their life for their country, so they
   should be old enough to vote.
Note: All voters have to register with their states to make
 sure they're qualified and so that voter fraud can be
 avoided.
Do you think changing the voting age was a good idea?
Amendment XXVII: Restriction on
   Congressional Pay Raises
Ratified May, 1992; originally proposed in 1789 – took over
 200 years to ratify!
States that a pay raise proposed by Congress cannot go into
  effect until a Congressional election has taken place
Why was this finally passed in 1992?
Amendment XXVII: Restriction on
   Congressional Pay Raises
Ratified May, 1992; originally proposed in 1789 – took over
 200 years to ratify!
States that a pay raise proposed by Congress cannot go into
  effect until a Congressional election has taken place
Why was this finally passed in 1992?
- B/c Congress voted for pay raises for themselves in the
   1980's
- allows voters to vote out members of Congress who voted
   a pay raise for themselves
- Automatic COLA's were ruled to not fall under this
   amendment b/c federal courts do not see them as new
   salary laws
What Do You Think?
What amendment(s) would you propose to our
 Constitution?
Are there any that you think are unnecessary or wrong-
  headed?

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Amendments XI - XXVII: A Concise Summary

  • 2. Amendment XI: Suing States “The judicial power of the United States shall not be construed to extend to any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted against one of the United States, by citizens of another state, or by citizens or subjects of any foreign state.” A citizen from one state (or a foreign country) cannot sue a different state in a federal court without that state's consent. Was a result of Chisholm v. Georgia (1793) in which a citizen of South Carolina sued the state of Georgia. Ratified in Jan. 1798
  • 3. Amendment XII: Separate Ballots for President and Vice President See p. 127 for the text of this amendment; ratified in 1804 This amendment replaced most of Article II, Section 1, Clause 2 Purpose: to eliminate the possibility of a tie between the President & VP as happened between Jefferson and John Adams in 1800 AND to make sure Prez & VP were not from different parties Also set up a plan to break a deadlock in the electoral college. The House breaks a tie in the case of the President, the Senate in the case of the VP. Finally, it ensures that the VP meets the same qualifications for office as those established for the president
  • 4. Amendment XIII – XV: The Civil War or Reconstruction Amendments All proposed and ratified as a direct result of the Civil War and the treatment of blacks Given Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation in 1863 that set the slaves free, why was an amendment needed?
  • 5. Amendment XIII – XV: The Civil War or Reconstruction Amendments All proposed and ratified as a direct result of the Civil War and the treatment of blacks Given Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation in 1863 that set the slaves free, why was an amendment needed? 1. The proclamation was declared by the president without Congress's approval or involvement during wartime 2. The proclamation only abolished slavery in the southern states that had seceded from the Union so the rest of the nation needed to be included.
  • 6. Amendment XIII: Slavery Abolished Section 1: “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction. Section 2: “Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.” Ratified in Dec. 1865 What is the only condition under which slavery or involuntary servitude is now allowed?
  • 7. Amendment XIII: Slavery Abolished Section 1: “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction. Section 2: “Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.” Ratified in Dec. 1865 What is the only condition under which slavery or involuntary servitude is now allowed? - as a punishment for a crime Why was involuntary servitude included?
  • 8. Amendment XIII: Slavery Abolished Section 1: “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction. Section 2: “Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.” Ratified in Dec. 1865 What is the only condition under which slavery or involuntary servitude is now allowed? - as a punishment for a crime Why was involuntary servitude included? - to protect poor blacks from becoming virtual slaves
  • 9. Amendment XIV: Citizenship Defined See p. 129-130 for the text of this amendment Ratified in 1868; southern states had to ratify it in order to be readmitted to the Union Section 1: - All persons born or naturalized in the U.S. are citizens of the U.S. and the state where they live. - The states cannot make a law that goes against the privileges and immunities of a U.S. Citizen - The states cannot deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due process (fair trial & legal procedures) - The states cannot deny equal protection of the law to any person living within them.
  • 10. Amendment XIV Sect. 2 – 5 Section 2: Prevented southern states from counting blacks for representation purposes while simultaneously preventing them from voting. This replaced the 3/5 clause of Article I. - Note: It did allow a state to withhold the vote from some people as long as they were not included for representation purposes. Section 3: Banned former Confederates from office although a 2/3 vote of Congress could overturn this. The ban was mostly lifted 4 years later, and abolished in 1898. Section 4: Although the Union's war debts would be repaid, none of the debts incurred by the Confederacy would be assumed by the U.S.
  • 11. Amendment XV: Black Voting Rights Ratified 1870 The right of citizens to vote cannot be denied or abridged on account of race, color, or having been a slave. In response to a number of states that didn't allow blacks to vote How did these states restrict the black vote after this amendment was passed?
  • 12. Amendment XV: Black Voting Rights Ratified 1870 The right of citizens to vote cannot be denied or abridged on account of race, color, or having been a slave. In response to a number of states that didn't allow blacks to vote How did these states restrict the black vote after this amendment was passed? - By requiring literacy tests and poll taxes b/c many blacks could not read and were too poor to pay the tax. - Through gerrymandering that diminished influence of the black vote - White-only primaries
  • 13. Civil Rights Movement Began in the courts in the 1940's and 50's by overturning state laws that restricted the voting rights of blacks Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka: declared all segregated schools to be in violation of 14th Amendment Civil disobedience: non-violent mass demonstrations and boycotts led by Martin Luther King Jr Civil Rights Act of 1964: businesses could no longer discriminate on the basis of race & EEOC looked for discrimination in hiring Voting Rights Act of 1965: eliminated state poll taxes, literacy tests, and other ways that southern states tried to prevent black voting
  • 14. Current Civil Rights Movement How is it different than the Civil Rights movement of the 1950's and 60's?
  • 15. Current Civil Rights Movement How is it different than the Civil Rights movement of the 1950's and 60's? - it attempts to give not only equality of opportunity but also equality of outcomes, which would require the govt to interfere in our private lives and institutions - it uses the courts, which are more arbitrary and less answerable to the people rather than the legislatures to accomplish its goals - it stresses acceptance of perversion: drugs, pornography, homosexuality, gender changes, abortion, etc.
  • 16. Amendment XVI: Income Tax Progressive amendment, Ratified Feb. 1913 Two previous attempts to establish a federal income tax were struck down by Supreme Court as unconstitutional See I.8.1 and I.2.9: Taxes had to be uniform throughout the United States and such direct taxes had to be levied based on population with everyone paying the same amount. This amendment nullified those clauses What is the result of the federal income tax?
  • 17. Amendment XVI: Income Tax Progressive amendment, Ratified Feb. 1913 Two previous attempts to establish a federal income tax were struck down by Supreme Court as unconstitutional See I.8.1 and I.2.9: Taxes had to be uniform throughout the United States and such direct taxes had to be levied based on population with everyone paying the same amount. This amendment essentially nullified those clauses What is the result of the federal income tax? - a huge increase in federal revenue, leading to an ever- growing govt and an ever more complicated tax code
  • 18. Amendment XVII: Direct Election of Senators Progressive; ratified in May, 1913; see p. 131 for text How were Senators originally chosen?
  • 19. Amendment XVII: Direct Election of Senators Progressive; ratified in May, 1913; see p. 131 for text How were Senators originally chosen? - By the state legislatures, who were accused of playing politics and/or delaying the election of senators A result of the populist movement which worked to increase the influence of the people in politics & wanted senators to be more accountable to the people By 1912, 29 states had already adopted a form of popular election of senators by holding primaries or referendums which were binding on the state legislatures This made it possible for Congress to pass this amendment.
  • 20. Amendment XVIII: National Prohibition Progressive; ratified Jan. 1919 Forbid the manufacture, sale, or transportation of liquor as well as the importation or exportation of alcohol across the border; not illegal to consume it, just difficult Result of influential Temperance Movement; alcohol had already been outlawed in several states What happened?
  • 21. Amendment XVIII: National Prohibition Progressive; ratified Jan. 1919 Forbid the manufacture, sale, or transportation of liquor as well as the importation or exportation of alcohol across the border; not illegal to consume it, just difficult Result of influential Temperance Movement; alcohol had already been outlawed in several states What happened? - an enforcement nightmare - huge increase in organized crime as criminals bootlegged liquor & also a loss of tax income - disregard for the law during the Roaring Twenties, esp. in the big cities
  • 22. Amendment XIX: Women's Suffrage Progressive; Ratified Aug. 1920 Gave women the right to vote Suffrage = franchise = right to vote Result of decades of campaigning Some states had already given women this right; Wyoming was the first to do so.
  • 23. Amendment XX: Lame Duck Amendment Ratified February, 1933 What is a lame duck?
  • 24. Amendment XX: Lame Duck Amendment Ratified February, 1933 What is a lame duck? - officials who will not be returning to office (due to retirement or losing their election) and are serving out the end of their term after that election before the next term begins Section 1: Terms of Prez & VP ends on Jan. 20 (originally March 4) and on Jan. 3 for Congress Section 2: Congress must meet at least once every year on Jan. 3 unless they choose another day by law - Congress meets before the President takes over in case a tie in the electoral college needs to be broken
  • 25. Amendment XX cont. Section 3: Provides for presidential selection in case the Prez and/or VP die or are unqualified before they take office - Congress was given the authority to determine succession if both Prez & VP are absent, which they did in 1947 with the Presidential Succession Act. See p. 325 Section 4: Congress may decide what to do if a candidate dies before the election. Section 5 & 6: Specified when the amendment would go into effect and how long the states had to ratify it (7 years).
  • 26. Amendment XXI: Repeal of Prohibition Ratified in Dec. 1933 Why was this passed?
  • 27. Amendment XXI: Repeal of Prohibition Ratified in Dec. 1933 Why was this passed? - Prohibition had led to all kinds of enforcement and growing crime problems Regulation of alcohol was left to the states. Did you know that Fort Collins was dry (sale of alcohol prohibited) until 1969 when voters repealed it? Now we're one of the beer capitols of the country. What do you think about illegal drugs? Should we allow them and therefore regulate and tax them? Are drugs similar to alcohol? Should we continue to outlaw them? What about marijuana?
  • 28. Amendment XXII: Presidential Term Limits Ratified February, 1951 What did this amendment do?
  • 29. Amendment XXII: Presidential Term Limits Ratified February, 1951 What did this amendment do? - limited Presidents to only two elected terms - VP's that have assumed the President's office can also run for two additional terms if they initially took office during the last two years of the previous president's term; Otherwise, they can only run for one more term. Why was this change made?
  • 30. Amendment XXII: Presidential Term Limits Ratified February, 1951 What did this amendment do? - limited Presidents to only two elected terms - VP's that have assumed the President's office can also run for two additional terms if they initially took office during the last two years of the previous president's term; Otherwise, they can only run for one more term. Why was this change made? - b/c FDR ran for an unprecedented 4 terms, dying early in his fourth term. This broke the tradition set by Washington.
  • 31. Amendment XXIII: Voting for Washington, D.C. Ratified April 1961 Gave residents of Washington, D.C. the right to vote in presidential elections. - the district has 3 electoral votes who follow the procedures outlined in Amendment XII. They still do not have representation in Congress.
  • 32. Amendment XXIV: Poll Tax Abolished Part of the Civil Rights movement; Ratified February, 1964 No poll tax can be charged to anyone voting in U.S. Presidential or Congressional elections. Why was this done?
  • 33. Amendment XXIV: Poll Tax Abolished Part of the Civil Rights movement; Ratified February, 1964 No poll tax can be charged to anyone voting in U.S. Presidential or Congressional elections. Why was this done? - Because some of the southern states kept blacks from voting b/c they could not afford to pay the poll tax Poll taxes at state elections were still legal until the Supreme Court declared them unconstitutional in Harper v. Virginia Board of Electors.
  • 34. Amendment XXV: Presidential Succession and Disability Ratified February, 1967 as a response to Kennedy's assassination which left the nation without a VP for 14 months Section 1: VP becomes President when the President is removed from office due to death or resignation (wasn't clear in Article II Section 2: If the vice-presidency becomes vacant, the President appoints a new VP who must be approved by a majority vote of both houses. - This happened soon after when VP Agnew resigned, was replaced by Ford, who then became President when Nixon resigned, and then appointed Nelson Rockefeller to be his VP.
  • 35. Amendment XXV cont. Section 3: When the president is unable to perform his duties (usually due to illness), he requests in writing to the Senate Pro Tempore and Speaker of the House that the VP take over as Acting President until he lets them know in writing that he is once again available. Section 4: Allows VP to act as president even when the president hasn't given his written consent if an executive committee or other body designated by Congress request this. If the president disagrees with this panel, Congress must resolve this with a 2/3 vote in both houses. When might this provision be needed?
  • 36. Amendment XXV cont. Section 3: When the president is unable to perform his duties (usually due to illness), he requests in writing to the Senate Pro Tempore and Speaker of the House that the VP take over as Acting President until he lets them know in writing that he is once again available. Section 4: Allows VP to act as president even when the president hasn't given his written consent if an executive committee or other body designated by Congress request this. If the president disagrees with this panel, Congress must resolve this with a 2/3 vote in both houses. When might this provision be needed? - If the Prez has become insane or is incapacitated for a long time as Garfield (gunshot) and Wilson (stroke) were.
  • 37. Amendment XXVI: Eighteen-Year- Old Vote Ratified July, 1971, shortest period ever required to pass an amendment Why was this done?
  • 38. Amendment XXVI: Eighteen-Year- Old Vote Ratified July, 1971, shortest period ever required to pass an amendment Why was this done? - During wartime (Vietnam in this case) pressure grew to expand the vote to 18-year-olds b/c they were old enough to be drafted & give their life for their country, so they should be old enough to vote. Note: All voters have to register with their states to make sure they're qualified and so that voter fraud can be avoided. Do you think changing the voting age was a good idea?
  • 39. Amendment XXVII: Restriction on Congressional Pay Raises Ratified May, 1992; originally proposed in 1789 – took over 200 years to ratify! States that a pay raise proposed by Congress cannot go into effect until a Congressional election has taken place Why was this finally passed in 1992?
  • 40. Amendment XXVII: Restriction on Congressional Pay Raises Ratified May, 1992; originally proposed in 1789 – took over 200 years to ratify! States that a pay raise proposed by Congress cannot go into effect until a Congressional election has taken place Why was this finally passed in 1992? - B/c Congress voted for pay raises for themselves in the 1980's - allows voters to vote out members of Congress who voted a pay raise for themselves - Automatic COLA's were ruled to not fall under this amendment b/c federal courts do not see them as new salary laws
  • 41. What Do You Think? What amendment(s) would you propose to our Constitution? Are there any that you think are unnecessary or wrong- headed?