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American Government CLEP Exam | Questions & Answers (100 %Score) Latest Updated 2024/2025 Comprehensive Questions A+ Graded Answers | With Expert Solutions $13.48   Add to cart

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American Government CLEP Exam | Questions & Answers (100 %Score) Latest Updated 2024/2025 Comprehensive Questions A+ Graded Answers | With Expert Solutions

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American Government CLEP Exam | Questions & Answers (100 %Score) Latest Updated 2024/2025 Comprehensive Questions A+ Graded Answers | With Expert Solutions

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  • August 7, 2024
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American Government CLEP Exam | Questions & Answers (100 %Score) Latest Updated
2024/2025 Comprehensive Questions A+ Graded Answers | With Expert Solutions




First continental congress - Sept 1774. Tired to peacefully seperate from Britian

Second Continental Congress - May 1775. Established postal, Navy and marines,
Voted to leave Britian

Declaration of Independence - July 4th 1776.
Based on John Locke's two Treatises of Government.
People have unalienable rights
When gov. infringes on those rights, it is the duty of the people to overthrow that
government

Articles of Confederation - March 1st 1781
Government is Unicameral
Set up a government with 13 members (one from each state)
All powers not under congress where given to the states
Weaknesses - no power to tax
No power for and army

Why were the Articles of Confederation set up the way they were - The people were
scared of big government because they just got out of a war with Britian

Annapolis Convention - James Madison and Hamilton called for a stroger central
government

Shay's Rebellion - Proved the Articles were inadequate

Constitutional Convention - May 1787

Virginia Plan - Proposed by Madison to institute a bicameral legislation
Created two houses
Lower- chosen by the state
Upper- chosen by the lower
Representation was appointed based on population

New Jersey Plan - One house legislature

Great Compromise (Connecticut compromise) - Created a house and a senate

Slavery Compromise - 3/5th
Congress can't do anything until 1808

, Compromise over presidency - Electoral college to select president so the smaller
states can have more say

Federalism - Division of power from national and state governments

Article one - Legislation is set up and list delegated powers
Necessary and proper (Elastic) clause

Article two - President and election
List presidential powers

Article three - Supreme court

Article four - States rights

Article five - Process for amendments

Article six - Supremacy clause

Article seven - Ratification

Federalist - Hamilton, John Jay

Anti-federalist - Central government has too much power

Bill of rights passed - December 1791

Dual federalism - Layer cake- each layer of government does the actions that make
sense
Downside- where does one layer begin and end

Cooperative federalism - marble cake- gov. is a joint effort between states and the
federal

Courts - Settle disputes

Congress - Sets regulations for the court to rule on

Mandate - "this is what is going to happen"

Condition of aid - "if you don't follow the regulations, your funding gets cut"

Grant-in-aid - gov. gives money for a specific purpose

Categorical grant - Specific purpose

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