Constitution Top
Student Affairs Home Page
Questions & Answers Pertaining to the U.S. Constitution
Q. In what language was Magna Carta written, and to
whom was it addressed?
A. It was written in Latin and was addressed "To the
archbishops, bishops, abbots, earls, barons, justices,
foresters, sheriffs, reeves, ministers, and to all
bailiffs, and faithful subjects."
Q. What part of the world was first called America?
A. The name "America" was first applied to Central Brazil,
in honor of Amerigo Vespucci, who claimed its discovery.
It was first applied to the whole known western world by
Mercator, the geographer, in 1538.
Q. When did the phrase, "The United States of
America," originate?
A. The first known use of the formal term "United States
of America" was in the Declaration of Independence. Thomas
Paine, in February, 1776, had written of "Free and
independent States of America." The terms "United
Colonies," "United Colonies of America," "United Colonies
of North America," and also "States," were used in 1775
and 1776.
Q. How were deputies to the Constitutional
Convention chosen?
A. They were appointed by the legislatures of the
different States.
Q. Were there any restrictions as to the number of
deputies a State might send?
A. No.
Q. Which State did not send deputies to the
Constitutional Convention?
A. Rhode Island and Providence Plantations.
Q. Were the other twelve States represented
throughout the Constitutional Convention?
A. No. Two of the deputies from New York left on July 10,
1787, and after that Hamilton, the third deputy, when he
was in attendance did not attempt to cast the vote of his
State. The New Hampshire deputies did not arrive until
July 23, 1787; so that there never was a vote of more than
eleven States.
Q. Where and when did the deputies to the
Constitutional Convention assemble?
A. In Philadelphia, in the State House where the
Declaration of Independence was signed. The meeting was
called for May 14, 1787, but a quorum was not present
until May 25.
Q. About how large was the population of
Philadelphia?
A. The census of 1790 gave it 28,000; including its
suburbs, about 42,000.
Q. What was the average age of the deputies to the
Constitutional Convention?
A. About 44.
Q. Who were the oldest and youngest members of the
Constitutional Convention?
A. Benjamin Franklin, of Pennsylvania, then 81; and
Jonathan Dayton, of New Jersey, 26.
Q. How many lawyers were members of the
Constitutional Convention?
A. There were probably 34, out of 55, who had at least
made a study of the law.
Q. From what classes of society were the members of
the Constitutional Convention drawn?
A. In addition to the lawyers, there were soldiers,
planters, educators, ministers, physicians, financiers,
and merchants.
Q. How many members of the Constitutional Convention
had been members of the Continental Congress?
A. Forty, and two others were later members.
Q. Were there any members of the Constitutional
Convention who never attended any of its meetings?
A. There were nineteen who were never present. Some of
these declined, others merely neglected the duty.
Q. Were the members of the Constitutional Convention
called "delegates" or "deputies," and is there any
distinction between the terms?
A. Some of the States called their representatives
"delegates"; some, "deputies"; and some, "commissioners,"
the terms being often mixed. In the Convention itself they
were always referred to as "deputies." Washington, for
example, signed his name as "deputy from Virginia." The
point is simply that whatever they called themselves, they
were representatives of their States. The general practice
of historians is to describe them as "delegates."
Q. Who was called the "Sage of the Constitutional
Convention"?
A. Benjamin Franklin, of Pennsylvania.
Q. Who was called the "Father of the Constitution"?
A. James Madison, of Virginia, because in point of
erudition and actual contributions to the formation of the
Constitution he was preeminent.
Q. Was Thomas Jefferson a member of the
Constitutional Convention?
A. No. Jefferson was American Minister to France at the
time of the Constitutional Convention.
Q. What did Thomas Jefferson have to do with framing
the Constitution?
A. Although absent from the Constitutional Convention and
during the period of ratification, Jefferson rendered no
inconsiderable service to the cause of Constitutional
Government, for it was partly through his insistence that
the Bill of Rights, consisting of the first ten
amendments, was adopted.
Q. Who presided over the Constitutional Convention?
A. George Washington, chosen unanimously.
Q. How long did it take to frame the Constitution?
A. It was drafted in fewer than one hundred working days.
Q. How much was paid for the journal kept by Madison
during the Constitutional Convention?
A. President Jackson secured from Congress in 1837 an
appropriation of $30,000 with which to buy Madison's
journal and other papers left by him.
Q. Was there harmony in the Convention?
A. Serious conflicts arose at the outset, especially
between those representing the small and large States.
Q. Who presented the Virginia Plan?
A. Edmund Randolph.
Q. What was the Connecticut Compromise?
A. This was the first great compromise of the
Constitutional Convention, whereby it was agreed that in
the Senate each State should have two members, and that in
the House the number of Representatives was to be based
upon population. Thus the rights of the small States were
safeguarded, and the majority of the population was to be
fairly represented.
Q. Who actually wrote the Constitution?
A. In none of the relatively meager records of the
Constitutional Convention is the literary authorship of
any part of the Constitution definitely established. The
deputies debated proposed plans until, on July 24, 1787,
substantial agreement having been reached, a Committee of
Detail was appointed, consisting of John Rutledge, of
South Carolina; Edmund Randolph, of Virginia; Nathaniel
Gorham, of Massachusetts; Oliver Ellsworth, of
Connecticut; and James Wilson, of Pennsylvania, who on
August 6 reported a draft which included a Preamble and
twenty-three articles, embodying fifty-seven sections.
Debate continued until September 8, when a new Committee
of Style was named to revise the draft. This committee
included William Samuel Johnson, of Connecticut; Alexander
Hamilton, of New York; Gouverneur Morris, of Pennsylvania;
James Madison, of Virginia; and Rufus King, of
Massachusetts, and they reported the draft in
approximately its final shape on September 12. The actual
literary form is believed to be largely that of Morris,
and the chief testimony for this is in the letters and
papers of Madison, and Morris's claim. However, the
document in reality was builded slowly and laboriously,
with not a piece of material included until it has been
shaped and approved. The preamble was written by the
Committee of Style.
Q. Who was the penman who, after the text of the
Constitution had been agreed on, engrossed it prior to the
signing?
A. Jacob Shallus who, at the time, was assistant clerk of
the Pennsylvania State Assembly, and whose office was in
the same building in which the Convention was held.
Q. Does his name appear on the document or in any of
the papers pertaining to its preparation?
A. No. In the financial memoranda there is an entry of $30
for "clerks employed to transcribe & engross."
Q. When and how was the identity of the engrosser
determined?
A. In 1937, on the occasion of the 150th anniversary of
the Constitution. His identity was determined after a long
and careful search of collateral public documents, and is
here disclosed for the first time.
Q. Where did Shallus do the engrossing?
A. There is no record of this, but probably in
Independence Hall.
Q. Did he realize the importance of the work he had
done?
A. Probably not; when he died, in 1796, the Constitution
had not yet come to be the firmly established set of
governmental principles it since has become.
Q. Did some of the deputies to the Constitutional
Convention refuse to sign the Constitution?
A. Only thirty-nine signed. Fourteen deputies had departed
for their homes, and three--Randolph and Mason, of
Virginia, and Gerry, of Massachusetts--refused to sign.
One of the signatures is that of an absent deputy, John
Dickinson, of Delaware, added at his request by George
Read, who also was from Delaware.
Q. How can it be said that the signing of the
Constitution was unanimous, when the deputies of only
twelve States signed and some delegates refused to sign?
A. The signatures attest the "Unanimous Consent of the
States present." The voting was by States, and the vote of
each State that of a majority of its deputies. Hamilton
signed this attestation for New York, though as he was the
only deputy of the State present he had not been able to
cast the vote of his State for the consent, only eleven
States voting on the final question. There is an even
greater discrepancy about the Signers of the Declaration
of Independence. Some seven or eight members present on
July 4 never signed; seven Signers, including Richard
Henry Lee, of Virginia, who proposed the resolution of
independence, were not present on the day; and eight other
Signers were not members of Congress until after July 4.
Q. Did George Washington sign the Declaration of
Independence?
A. No. He had been appointed Commander-in-Chief of the
Continental Army more than a year before and was at the
time with the army in New York City.
Q. What are the exact measurements of the originals
of the Declaration of Independence and of the Constitution
of the United States?
A. The Declaration of Independence: 29 7/8 in. by 24 7/16
in.; The Constitution: four sheets, approximately 28 3/4
in. by 23 5/8 in. each.
Q. How many words are there in the texts in the
present volume, and how long does it take to read them?
A. The Constitution has 4,543 words, including the
signatures but not the certificate on the interlineations;
and takes about half an hour to read. The Declaration of
Independence has 1,458 words, with the signatures, but is
slower reading, as it takes about ten minutes. The
Farewell Address has 7,641 words and requires forty-five
minutes to read.
Q. What party names were given to those who favored
ratification and to those who opposed it?
A. Those who favored ratification were called Federalists;
those who opposed, Antifederalists.
Q. In ratifying the Constitution, did the people
vote directly?
A. No. Ratification was by special State conventions (Art.
VII).
Q. The vote of how many States was necessary to
ratify the Constitution?
A. Nine (Art. VII).
Q. In what order did the States ratify the
Constitution?
A. In the following order: Delaware, Pennsylvania, New
Jersey, Georgia, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maryland,
South Carolina, New Hampshire, Virginia, and New York.
After Washington had been inaugurated, North Carolina and
Rhode Island ratified.
Q. After the Constitution was submitted for
ratification, where did the greatest contests occur?
A. In Massachusetts, Virginia, and New York.
Q. In each instance what was the vote?
A. New York ratified the Constitution by a majority of
three votes 30 to 27; Massachusetts by 187 to 168; and
Virginia by 89 to 79.
Q. In the course of ratification, how many
amendments were offered by the State conventions?
A. Seventy-eight; exclusive of Rhode Island's twenty-one,
and those demanded by the first convention in North
Carolina. There were many others offered which were
considered necessary as items of a Bill of Rights.
Professor Ames gives 124 as the whole number, inclusive of
those of Rhode Island and North Carolina and the Bills of
Rights. Various of these covered the same topics.
Q. When did the United States government go into
operation under the Constitution?
A. The Constitution became binding upon nine States by the
ratification of the ninth State, New Hampshire, June 21,
1788. Notice of this ratification was received by Congress
on July 2, 1788. On September 13, 1788, Congress adopted a
resolution declaring that electors should be appointed in
the ratifying States on the first Wednesday in January,
1789; that the electors vote for President on the first
Wednesday in February, 1789; and that "the first Wednesday
in March next [March 4, 1789] be the time and the present
seat of Congress the place for commencing proceedings
under the said constitution." The Convention had also
suggested "that after such Publication the Electors should
be appointed, and the Senators and Representatives
elected." The Constitution left with the States the
control over the election of congressmen, and Congress
said nothing about this in its resolution; but the States
proceeded to provide for it as well as for the appointment
of electors. On March 3, 1789, the old Confederation went
out of existence and on March 4 the new government of the
United States began legally to function, according to a
decision of the Supreme Court of the United States (wings
v. Speed, 5 Wheat. 420); however, it had no practical
existence until April 6, when first the presence of
quorums in both Houses permitted organization of Congress.
On April 30, 1789, George Washington was inaugurated as
President of the United States, so on that date the
executive branch of the government under the Constitution
became operative. But it was not until February 2, 1790,
that the Supreme Court, as head of the third branch of the
government, organized and, held its first session; so that
is the date when our government under the Constitution
became fully operative.
Q. Did Washington receive the unanimous vote of the
electors in his first election as President?
A. Yes, of all who voted. Four, two in Virginia and two in
Maryland, did not vote; and the eight votes to which New
York was entitled were not cast because the legislature
could come to no agreement upon how the electors should be
appointed. There should have been 81 votes; he received
69.
Q. How did the first inauguration proceed?
A. The Senate Journal narrates it as follows: "The House
of Representatives, preceded by their Speaker, came into
the Senate Chamber, and took the seats assigned them; and
the joint Committee, preceded by their Chairman, agreeably
to order, introduced the President of the United States to
the Senate Chamber, where he was received by the Vice
President, who conducted him to the Chair; when the Vice
President informed him, that 'The Senate and House of
Representatives were ready to attend him to take the oath
required by the Constitution, and that it would be
administered by the Chancellor of the State of
New-York'--To which the President replied, he was ready to
proceed:--and being attended to the gallery in front of
the Senate Chamber, by the Vice President and Senators,
the Speaker and Representatives, and the other public
characters present, the oath was administered.--After
which the Chancellor proclaimed, 'Long live George
Washington, President of the United States.' The President
having returned to his seat, after a short pause, arose
and addressed the Senate and House of Representatives . .
. The President, the Vice President, the Senate and House
of Representatives, &c. then proceeded to St. Paul's
Chapel, where divine service was performed by the Chaplain
of Congress, after which the President was conducted to
his house, by the Committee appointed for that purpose."
Q. Was Adams sworn in as Vice President before
Washington took the oath of office as President?
A. No. Neither the Vice President nor any Senators took
the oath of office until June 3. The first act of
Congress, June 1, provided for the oath. In the House the
Speaker and members present on April 8 had taken an oath
provided for by a resolve on April 6 of that House, and
the act of June 1 recognized that oath as sufficient for
those who had taken it.
Q. What cities have been capitals of the United
States government?
A. The Continental Congress sat at Philadelphia, 1774-76,
1777, 1778-83; Baltimore, 1776-77; Lancaster, 1777; York,
1777-78; Princeton, 1783; Annapolis, 1783-84; Trenton,
1784; and New York, 1785-89. The first capital under the
Constitution of the United States was in New York, but in
1790 it was moved to Philadelphia. Here it was continued
until 1800, when the permanent capital, Washington, in the
new District of Columbia, was occupied.
Q. How was the manner of address of the President of
the United States decided?
A. Both Houses of Congress appointed committees to
consider the proper title to give the President, but they
could not agree. The Senate wished it to be "His Highness
the President of the United States of America and
Protector of their Liberties." The House considered this
as too monarchical, and on May 5 addressed its reply to
the inaugural speech merely to "The President of the
United States." The Senate on May 14 agreed to this simple
form.
Q. What is meant by the term "constitution"?
A. A constitution embodies the fundamental principles of a
government. Our constitution, adopted by the sovereign
power, is amendable by that power only. To the
constitution all laws, executive actions, and, judicial
decisions must conform, as it is the creator of the powers
exercised by the departments of government.
Q. Why has our Constitution been classed as "rigid"?
A. The term "rigid" is used in opposition to "flexible"
because the provisions are in a written document which
cannot be legally changed with the same ease and in the
same manner as ordinary laws. The British Constitution,
which is unwritten, can, on the other hand, be changed
overnight by act of Parliament.
Q. What was W. E. Gladstone's famous remark about
the Constitution?
A. It was as follows: "As the British Constitution is the
most subtle organism which has proceeded from the womb and
long gestation of progressive history, so the American
Constitution is, so far as I can see, the most wonderful
work ever struck off at a given time by the brain and
purpose of man."
Q. What is the source of the philosophy found in the
Constitution?
A. The book which had the greatest influence upon the
members of the Constitutional Convention was Montesquieu's
Spirit of Laws, which first appeared in 1748. The great
French philosopher had, however, in turn borrowed much of
his doctrine from the Englishman John Locke, with whose
writings various members of the Convention were also
familiar.
Q. Are there original ideas of government in the
Constitution?
A. Yes; but its main origins lie in centuries of
experience in government, the lessons of which were
brought over from England and further developed through
the practices of over a century and a half in the colonies
and early State governments, and in the struggles of the
Continental Congress. Its roots are deep in the past; and
its endurance and the obedience and respect it has won are
mainly the result of the slow growth of its principles
from before the days of Magna Carta.
Q. What state papers should be considered in
connecting the Constitution of the United States with
Magna Carta?
A. The Great Charter was confirmed several times by later
medieval monarchs, and there were various statutes, such
as those of Westminster, which also helped to develop the
germs of popular government. The Petition of Right, 1628,
against the abuse of the royal prerogative, the Habeas
Corpus Act, 1679, and the Bill of Rights, 1689, to
establish the claims of the Petition, are the great
English documents of more modern times on popular freedom.
Meanwhile, the colonial charters became the foundation of
the Americans' claim to the "rights of Englishmen," and
were the predecessors of the State Constitutions, which
owed their origin to the American Revolution. The
Declaration of Independence established the principles
which the Constitution made practical. Plans for colonial
union were proposed from time to time, the most important
of them being the Albany Plan of 1754, of which Benjamin
Franklin was the author. The united efforts to establish
independence gave birth to the Articles of Confederation,
which though inadequate, were a real step toward the "more
perfect Union" of the Constitution.
Q. In what respect had the Confederation failed?
A. It had three great weaknesses. It had no means of
revenue independent of that received through its
requisitions on the States, which were nothing more than
requests, which the States could and did disregard; and it
had no control over foreign or interstate commerce. Behind
these lacks was its inability to compel the States to
honor the national obligations. It could make treaties but
had no means to compel obedience to them; or to provide
for the payment of the foreign debt. It had responsibility
but no power as a national government; no means of
coercing the States to obedience even to the very
inadequate grant given to the "League of Friendship" by
the Articles of Confederation. But its greatest weakness
was that it had no direct origin in, or action on, the
people themselves; but, unlike both the Declaration of
Independence and the later Constitution, knew only the
States and was known only to them, calling them sovereign.
Q. How extensively has the Constitution been copied?
A. All later Constitutions show its influence; it has been
copied extensively throughout the world.
Q. The United States government is frequently
described as one of limited powers. Is this true?
A. Yes. The United States government possesses only such
powers as are specifically granted to it by the
Constitution.
Q. Then how does it happen that the government
constantly exercises powers not mentioned by the
Constitution?
A. Those powers simply flow from general provisions. To
take a simple example, the Constitution gives to the
United States the right to coin money. It would certainly
follow, therefore, that the government had the right to
make the design for the coinage. This is what the Supreme
Court calls "reasonable construction" of the Constitution
(Art. I, sec. 8, cl. 18).
Q. Where, in the Constitution, is there mention of
education?
A. There is none; education is a matter reserved for the
States.
Q. Who was called the "Expounder of the
Constitution"?
A. Daniel Webster, of Massachusetts, because of his
forceful and eloquent orations interpreting the document.
Q. Must a member of the House of Representatives be
a resident of the district which he represents?
A. The Constitution provides only that no person shall be
a representative "who shall not, when elected, be an
Inhabitant of that State in which he shall be chosen"; but
makes no requirement as to residence within the district
(Art. I, sec. 2, cl. 2).
Q. Is it possible to impeach a justice of the
Supreme Court?
A. It is possible to impeach a Justice of the Supreme
Court or any other official. The Constitution makes
provision for impeachment by the House and trial of the
accused by the Senate sitting as a court of "all civil
Officers," which includes the Justices (Art. I, sec. 2, cl.
5; sec. 3, cl. 6, 7; Art. II, sec. 4).
Q. Are Senators, Representatives, and justices of
the Supreme Court civil officials of the United. States?
A. Justices are, but the others are probably not. The
Constitution in several places seems to make a clear
distinction between legislators and officials, though this
has been contested. Members of Congress are not subject to
impeachment, but are liable to expulsion by the vote of
the House of which they are members (Art. I, sec. 5, cl.
2).
Q. What would be the proceeding in case of the
impeachment of a Cabinet officer?
A. An impeachment proceeding may be set in motion in the
House of Representatives by charges made on the floor on
the responsibility of a member or territorial delegate; by
charges preferred by a memorial, which is usually referred
to a committee for examination; by charges transmitted by
the legislature of a State or from a grand jury; or the
facts developed and reported by an investigating committee
of the House. After the impeachment has been voted by the
House, the case is heard by the Senate sitting as a court.
When the President of the United States is impeached and
tried, the proceedings are the same except that the Senate
is then presided over by the Chief Justice of the United
States (Art. I, sec. 2, cl. 5; sec. 3, cl. 6, 7; Art. II,
sec. 4).
Q. What is meant when it is said that Senators are
paired?
A. Sometimes a Senator belonging to one party agrees with
a Senator belonging to the other party that neither will
vote if the other is absent, the theory being that they
would always vote on opposite sides of the question. This
is called a pair. Sometimes pairs are secured on a
particular vote only. For example, if a Senator is in
favor of a certain piece of legislation and is ill or
unavoidably detained, his friends arrange for some one on
the opposite side not to vote. This insures for each a
record as to his views. While many are opposed to general
pairs, as the first is called, all are glad to arrange a
pair for a specific measure if a Senator is unavoidably
prevented from being present (Art. I, sec. 5, cl. 2).
Q. What is the mace of the House of Representatives
and what purpose does it serve?
A. The mace consists of thirteen ebony rods, about three
feet long, representing the thirteen original States. It
is bound together with silver in imitation of the thongs
which bound the fasces of ancient Rome. The shaft is
surmounted by a globe of solid silver about five inches in
diameter upon which rests a massive silver eagle. The mace
is the symbol of the paramount authority of the House
within its own sphere. In times of riot or disorder upon
the floor the Speaker may direct the Sergeant-at-Arms, the
executive officer of the House, to bear the mace up and
down the aisles as a reminder that the dignity and decorum
of the House must not be overthrown. Defiance to such
warning is the ultimate disrespect to the House and may
lead to expulsion. When the House is sitting as a body the
mace rests upright on a pedestal at the right of the
Speaker's dais; when the House is sitting in committee of
the whole, the mace stands upon the floor at the foot of
its pedestal. Thus, when the House wishes to "rise" from
committee of the whole and resume business as a
legislative body, lifting the mace to its pedestal
automatically effects the transition. The origin of the
idea of the mace is based upon a similar emblem in the
British House of Commons (Art. I, sec. 5, cl. 2).
Q. Who administers the oath of office to the Speaker
of the House of Representatives?
A. It is usually administered by the oldest member in
point of service (Art. I, sec. 5, cl. 2).
Q. What is meant by the "Father" of the House of
Representatives?
A. It is a colloquial title informally bestowed upon the
oldest member in point of service (Art. I, sec. 5, cl. 2).
It was borrowed originally from the House of Commons.
Q. Why is a member of the House of Representatives
referred to on the floor as "the gentleman from New York,"
for example, instead of by name?
A. It is a custom in all large deliberative bodies to
avoid the use of the personal name in debate or procedure.
The original purpose of this was to avoid any possible
breach of decorum and to separate the political from the
personal character of each member (Art. I, sec. 6, cl. 1).
Q. Do members of Congress get extra compensation for
their work on committees?
A. No. (Art. I, sec. 6, cl. 1).
Q. Could members of the President's Cabinet be
permitted to sit in Congress without amending the
Constitution?
A. No. A national officeholder cannot at the same time be
a member of either House of Congress (Art. 1, sec. 6, cl.
2).
Q. Must all revenue and appropriation bills
originate in the House of Representatives?
A. The Constitution provides that all bills for raising
revenue shall originate in the House of Representatives.
It is customary for appropriation bills to originate there
also (Art. I, sec. 7, cl. 1).
Q. What is meant by the word veto, in the
President's powers?
A. The word is from the Latin and means "I forbid." The
President is authorized by the Constitution to refuse his
assent to a bill presented by Congress if for any reason
he disapproves of it. Congress may, however, pass the act
over his veto but it must be by a two-thirds majority in
both houses. If Congress adjourns before the end of the 10
days, the President can prevent the enactment of the bill
by merely not signing it. This is called a pocket veto.
(Art. I, sec. 7, cl. 2).
Q. If, after a bill has passed both houses of
Congress and gone to the President, Congress desires to
recall it, can this be done?
A. A bill which has reached the President may be recalled
only by concurrent resolution. The form used is as
follows: Resolved, by the House of Representatives (the
Senate concurring), That the President be requested to
return to the House of Representatives the bill . . .
(title). After the concurrent resolution passes both
houses it is formally transmitted to the President. The
latter might, however, have already signed it, in which
case it would have become a law and would have to be
repealed in regular fashion (Art. I, sec. 7, cl. 2).
Q. What is the difference between a joint and a
concurrent resolution of Congress?
A. A joint resolution has the same force as an act, and
must be signed by the President or passed over his veto. A
concurrent resolution is not a law, but only a measure on
which the two Houses unite for a purpose concerned with
their organization and procedure, or expressions of facts,
principles, opinions, and purposes, "matters peculiarly
within the province of Congress alone," and not embracing
"legislative provisions proper" (Art. 1, sec. 7, cl. 3).
Q. Which is the longest term of office in the
government, aside from judges?
A. The Comptroller General of the United States and the
Assistant Comptroller General have the longest tenure.
They hold office for fifteen years (Art. I, sec. 8), cl.
18; sec. 9, cl. 7; Art. II, sec. 2, cl. 2).
Q. What is the term of office of Treasurer of the
United States?
A. The Treasurer is appointed by the President of the
United States, and no length of term of office is
specified (Art. I, sec. 8, cl. 18; sec. 9, cl. 7; Art. II,
sec. 2, cl. 2).
Q. Does the Constitution provide for the formation
of a Cabinet?
A. No. The Constitution vests the executive power in the
President. Executive departments were created by
successive acts of Congress under authority conferred by
the Constitution in Art. I, sec. 8, cl. 18. The
Departments of State, Treasury, and War were created by
the first session of the First Congress. The Secretaries
of these, together with the Attorney General, formed the
first President's Cabinet. The Cabinet, it should be
distinctly understood, is merely an advisory body whose
members hold office only during the pleasure of the
President. It has no constitutional function as a Cabinet,
and the word does not appear in an act of Congress until
February 26, 1907 (Art. I, sec. 8, cl. 18; Art. II, sec.
1, cl. 1, sec. 2, cl. 1).
Q. How many methods of electing the President of the
United States were considered by the Constitutional
Convention?
A. Five. These were by the Congress; by the people; by
State legislatures; by State executives; and by electors.
Various methods of appointing the electors were proposed:
by popular vote, by lottery from members of Congress, by
State legislatures, and by State executives; and the
matter was finally compromised by leaving the method to
each State legislature. The meeting of the electors in one
body was also proposed; and at first the final choice, in
case election by electors failed, was given to the Senate,
but later, after choice by Congress had been defeated, it
was transferred to the House, voting by States.
Q. Who appoints the Chief Justice of the United
States and for how long a term?
A. The Chief Justice of the United States and the
Associate Justices are appointed for life (during good
behavior) by the President of the United States, "by and
with the Advice and Consent of the Senate," (Art. II, sec.
2, cl. 2; Art. III, sec. 1).
Q. By what authority may the President of the United
States call an extra session of Congress?
A. The Constitution provides for this. Art. II, sec. 3,
says: ". . . he may, on extraordinary Occasions, convene
both Houses, or either of them, . . ."
Q. Can the Secretary of State take action with
respect to recognizing a government without the consent of
Congress?
A. The Secretary of State, on behalf of the President, may
accord recognition without recourse to Congress (Art. II,
sec. 3).
Q. Under the new government how was the national
judiciary organized?
A. The First Congress passed many notable acts which
endured many years as laws. One of the most worthy of
these was that organizing the national judiciary,
September 24, 1789. The bill was drawn up with
extraordinary ability by Senator Oliver Ellsworth, of
Connecticut, who had been a deputy to the Constitutional
Convention, and who was to become Chief Justice of the
United States. The Constitution prescribes a Supreme
Court, but left its make-up and provision for other courts
to Congress. The Supreme Court was organized with a Chief
Justice and five Associates; a district court was provided
for each State; and the Supreme Court Justices sat with
the district judges in circuit courts. The jurisdiction of
the three grades of the judiciary was fixed, and
officers--clerks, marshals, and district
attorneys--authorized. The Attorney General, also provided
for in the act, was for many years little more than the
President's legal adviser. Under this law President
Washington appointed John Jay, of New York, Chief Justice,
and the judiciary was organized on February 2, 1790.
Q. What are the correct style and titles of the
Supreme Court of the United States and its members?
A. The correct title for the Supreme Court is "The Supreme
Court of the United States"; for the members, one speaks
of a Justice, or Associate Justice, of the Supreme Court
of the United States, but always of the head of the court
as "The Chief Justice of the United States" (Art. III,
sec. I).
Q. What has been the number of Justices of the
Supreme Court of the United States?
A. The Chief Justice is mentioned in the Constitution but
the number of Justices is not specified. The act of
September 24, 1789, provided for a Chief Justice and five
Associates; that of February 24, 1807, made the Associates
six; that of March 3, 1837, eight; and that of March 3,
1863, nine. But on July 23, 1866, a law directed that no
appointments be made of Associate Justices until the
number of them should be only six. This was to prevent
President Johnson from making appointments; but the act of
April 10, 1869, restored the number to eight. There were
only six at the time that President Grant made the first
restorative appointments.
Q. It is frequently asserted that the Supreme Court
nullifies an act of Congress. Is this correct?
A. No. The Court has repeatedly declared that it claims no
such power. All it does--all it can do--is to examine a
law when a suit is brought before it. If the law in
question is in accordance with the Constitution, in the
opinion of the Supreme Court, the law stands. If the law
goes beyond powers granted by the Constitution, then it is
no law, and the Supreme Court merely states that fact
(Art. III, sec. 2, cl. 1; Art. VI, cl. 2).
Q. In which decision did the Supreme Court first
formally assert its authority contrary to an act of
Congress?
A. In the famous case of Marbury v. Madison
(1803). This was not the first case in which the authority
of an act of Congress was questioned in a case before the
court. In Hylton v. United States, 1796, the
court upheld the constitutionality of a national tax on
carriages as an excise that did not have to be
apportioned. Also Justices in the circuit court had, as
early as 1792, refused to act as commissioners under an
act of Congress, considering the law unconstitutional.
Q. What is treason against the United States?
A. Treason against the United States consists in levying
war against them, or in adhering to their enemies, giving
the latter aid and comfort. No person can be convicted of
treason except upon the testimony of two witnesses to the
same overt act or on confession in open court (Art. III,
sec. 3, cl. 1).
Q. What right has a Territorial Delegate in
Congress?
A. A Territorial Delegate sits in the House of
Representatives from each organized territory. Delegates
may be appointed to committees and have the right to speak
on any subject, but not to vote (Art. IV, sec. 3, cl. 2).
Q. Is a constitutional amendment submitted to the
President?
A. No. A resolution proposing an amendment to the
Constitution, after having passed both houses of Congress
by a two-thirds vote, does not go to the President for his
signature. It is sent to the States to be ratified either
by their legislatures or by conventions, as Congress shall
determine (Art. V). The Supreme Court as early as 1798
declared the approval was not requisite (Hollingsworth
v. Virginia, 3 Dallas 378).
Q. What constitutes the supreme law of the land?
A. Art. VI, cl. 2 of the Constitution says: "This
Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which
shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made,
or which shall be made, under the Authority of the United
States, shalt be the supreme Law of the Land; and the
Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in
the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary
notwithstanding."
Q. When referring to various States in the Union, is
the term "sovereign States" correct?
A. No. A sovereign is that person or State which
recognizes no superior. The States of the Union have a
superior--the Constitution of the United States, which is
"the supreme Law of the Land . . . any Thing in the
Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary
notwithstanding" (Art. VI, cl. 2).
Q. Is there a clause in the Constitution prohibiting
members of certain religious denominations from becoming
President of the United States?
A. No. Art. VI, cl. 3 of the Constitution provides that
"no religious Test shall ever be required as a
Qualification to any Office of public Trust under the
United States."
Q. Should the amendments be called articles?
A. The amendments proposed by the first Congress were sent
out as "Articles in addition to, and Amendment of the
Constitution of the United States of America," and the
term "article" is used in self-application in all the
amendments since the Twelfth, except the Seventeenth,
which uses the term "amendment." This would seem to give
official sanction to calling the amendments "articles,"
but as it causes some confusion, they are better placed by
the use of "amendment" only, with the proper number.
Q. In the first session of the First Congress how
many proposed amendments were considered?
A. All of the amendments proposed by the State conventions
were considered, but only approximately 90 separate
amendments were formally introduced. Professor Ames lists
312 through the First Congress, which includes the 124
proposed by the States and all reports and amendments to
those proposed, in Congress.
Q. Who proposed the creation of the first executive
departments and the first amendments to the Constitution?
A. James Madison, of Virginia, proposed the resolutions
for the formation of the first executive departments and
the series of twelve amendments to the Constitution of
which ten were finally ratified by the States.
Q. What constitutes the Bill of Rights?
A. The first ten amendments to the Constitution.
Q. It is said that when the first amendments to the
Constitution were submitted, there were twelve, of which
ten were adopted. What were the other two about?
A. The two amendments of the twelve submitted as the Bill
of Rights which were rejected were the one which related
to the apportionment of Representatives in Congress and
the one fixing the compensation of members of Congress.
(Note: The rejected second amendment was ratified on May
7,1992 as the 27th amendment.)
Q. Do the first ten amendments bind the States?
A. No. They restrict the powers of the national
government. They do not bind the States; but various of
their restrictions have been applied to the States by the
Fourteenth Amendment.
Q. Does not the Constitution give us our rights and
liberties?
A. No, it does not, it only guarantees them. The people
had all their rights and liberties before they made the
Constitution. The Constitution was formed, among other
purposes, to make the people's liberties secure--
secure not only as against foreign attack but against
oppression by their own government. They set specific
limits upon their national government and upon the States,
and reserved to themselves all powers that they did not
grant. The Ninth Amendment declares: "The enumeration in
the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be
construed to deny or disparage others retained by the
people."
Q. What protection is given to a person accused of
crime under the jurisdiction of the United States?
A. The Fifth Amendment declares that no person, except one
serving in the land or naval forces or the militia in time
of war or public danger, can be held to answer for a
capital or other infamous crime unless on a presentment or
indictment of a grand jury. No person can be twice put in
jeopardy of life or limb for the same offense. No one in a
criminal case can be compelled to be a witness against
himself, or be deprived of life, liberty, or property
without due process of law. Private property cannot be
taken for public use without just compensation. By the
Eighth Amendment excessive bail and fines and cruel and
unusual punishments are prohibited. The original
Constitution forbids ex post facto laws and bills of
attainder, limits the punishment for treason, protects the
right to a writ of habeas corpus, and secures trial by
jury.
Q. Is the right to speedy trial guaranteed?
A. Yes. The Sixth Amendment expressly states that in all
criminal prosecutions the accused shall enjoy the right to
a speedy and public trial by an impartial jury within the
district of the crime, and to be informed of the nature
and cause of the accusation. He is entitled to be
confronted with the witnesses against him, to be allowed
to compel the attendance of witnesses in his favor, and to
have the assistance of counsel for his defense.
Q. Is the right of trial by jury in civil cases also
assured?
A. Yes. Amendment Seven preserves the right of trial by
jury in suits of common law involving the value of more
than twenty dollars.
Q. What has been the longest period during which no
amendment has been added to the Constitution?
A. Sixty-one years, from 1804 to 1865. This period elapsed
between the Twelfth and Thirteenth Amendments.
Q. How long did it take the States to ratify the
income tax amendment?
A. The Sixteenth Amendment was proposed to the States on
July 12, 1909, deposited with the Secretary of State on
July 21, ratified by the thirty-sixth state on February 3,
1913, and, declared ratified on February 25, 1913.
Q. It has been stated that the Prohibition Amendment
was the first instance of incorporating a statute in the
Constitution. Is this so?
A. No. Those portions of the Constitution which
specifically dealt with slavery and the slave trade (Art.
I, sec. 9, cl. 1; Art. IV, sec. 2, cl. 3 ) were both of
this character. They were made obsolete by time limit in
one case and the Civil War in the other.
Q. How many amendments to the Constitution have been
repealed?
A. Only one -- the Eighteenth (Prohibition).
Q. How is an amendment repealed?
A. By adding another amendment.
Q. If the Eighteenth Amendment is repealed, why is
it necessary to call the new one repealing it the
Twenty-first?
A. The Eighteenth Amendment will indeed remain in the
Constitution, but a notation will be added to the effect
that it is repealed by the Twenty-first.
Q. What is the Twentieth Amendment and when was it
adopted?
A. This is the so-called "Lame Duck" Amendment, which
changes the time for the beginning of the terms of the
President, Vice President, and the members of Congress.
The term of the President and Vice President begins on
January 20, and that of members of Congress on January 3.
It was adopted upon the ratification by the thirty-sixth
State, January 23, 1933, and certified in effect on
February 6.
Q. Why was a constitutional amendment necessary to
change the date of the beginning of the terms of
President, Vice President, and members of Congress?
A. The Constitution fixes the terms of President and, Vice
President at four years, of Senators at six years, and of
Representatives at two years. Any change of date would
affect the terms of the incumbents. It was therefore
necessary to amend the Constitution to make the change.
Q. If the President-elect dies, who becomes
President at the beginning of the term for which he was
elected?
A. The Twentieth Amendment provides that in this case the
Vice President-elect shall become President.
Q. Does the Twentieth Amendment do away with the
Electoral College?
A. It does not.
Q. It takes how many States to block an amendment?
A. Thirteen, without respect to population or importance;
but while approval is considered final, rejection is not
while within the time limit, if one is prescribed by the
amendment.
Note: The
preceding was excerpted from The Story of the
Constitution by Sol Bloom, Washington, DC : National
Archives and Record Administration, 1986, c1937.
Information no longer current has been omitted
|