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7 Principles of Government

The 7 principles of government are popular sovereignty, republicanism, federalism, separation of powers, checks and balances, limited government, and individual rights. Popular sovereignty means that the people are the source of political power. Republicanism establishes that citizens elect representatives to govern on their behalf. Federalism shares powers between the national and state governments. Separation of powers divides government among executive, legislative and judicial branches. Checks and balances allows each branch to limit the other branches' power. Limited government restricts governmental authority. Individual rights protect citizens from governmental overreach through guarantees like those in the Bill of Rights.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
260 views

7 Principles of Government

The 7 principles of government are popular sovereignty, republicanism, federalism, separation of powers, checks and balances, limited government, and individual rights. Popular sovereignty means that the people are the source of political power. Republicanism establishes that citizens elect representatives to govern on their behalf. Federalism shares powers between the national and state governments. Separation of powers divides government among executive, legislative and judicial branches. Checks and balances allows each branch to limit the other branches' power. Limited government restricts governmental authority. Individual rights protect citizens from governmental overreach through guarantees like those in the Bill of Rights.
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7 Principles of

Government
Popular Sovereignty
 The power to rule comes
from the people.
 “Consent of the
Governed”
 The Constitution
established popular
sovereignty in the
preamble,
“We the People. . . establish
this Constitution for the
United States of America.“
Republicanism
 Republicanism is based the
belief that people exercise their
power by voting for their
political representatives.
 Article 4, Section 4, of the
Constitution also calls for every
state to have a "republican form
of government."
 A republic is a form of
government in which the
supreme power rests in the body
of citizens entitled to vote and is
exercised by representatives
chosen directly or indirectly by
them.
 In a republic, people elect others
to represent them in the
government.
Federalism
 Federalism is a system of
government in which the states
and national government share
powers.
The Framers used federalism to
structure the Constitution.
 The Constitution assigns certain
powers to the national
government. These are
delegated powers.
 Powers kept by the states are
reserved powers.
 Powers shared or exercised by
national and state governments
are known as concurrent
powers.
Separation of Powers
 Established in order to
avoid having too much
power might fall into the
hands of a single group
 This principle creates the
division of basic
government roles into 3
branches. No one branch
is given all the power.
 Articles 1,2, and 3 of the
Constitution detail how
powers are split among the
three branches
Checks and Balances
 Based on the philosophy
of Baron de
Montesquieu, an 18th-
century French thinker,
"Power should be a check
to power.“
 Each branch of
government can exercise
checks, or controls, over
the other branches.
Though the branches of
government are separate,
they rely on one another
to perform the work of
government.
 This ensures that the
branches work together
fairly.
Limited Government
 In the American government
everyone, citizens and
powerful leaders alike, must
obey the law. Individuals or
groups cannot twist or bypass
the law to serve their own
interests.
 Article 1, Section 9, of the
Constitution lists the powers
denied to the Congress. Article
1, Section 10, forbids the states
to take certain actions.
 The 10th Amendment reserves
for the states and people all
powers not given to the national
government nor denied to the
state governments .
Individual Rights
 The first ten amendments
to the Constitution shield
people from an overly
powerful government.
These amendments are
called the Bill of Rights.

The Bill of Rights


guarantees certain
individual rights, or
personal liberties and
privileges.

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