Portrait of the USA
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Chapter
Four
A RESPONSIVE GOVERNMENT
Separation of powers and the democratic process
The early American way of life encouraged democracy. The
colonists were inhabiting a land of forest and wilderness. They had to work together to build shelter, provide food, and clear the land for farms and dwellings. This need for cooperation
strengthened the belief that, in the New World, people should be on an equal footing, with nobody having special privileges.
The urge for equality affected the original 13 colonies'
relations with the mother country, England. The Declaration of
Independence in 1776 proclaimed that all men are created equal,
that all have the right to "Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of
Happiness."
The Declaration of Independence, and the Constitution after
it, combined America's colonial experience with the political
thought of such philosophers as England's John Locke to produce
the concept of a democratic republic. The government would draw
its power from the people themselves and exercise it through
their elected representatives. During the Revolutionary War, the
colonies had formed a national congress to present England with a
united front. Under an agreement known as the Articles of
Confederation, a postwar congress was allowed to handle only
problems that were beyond the capabilities of individual states.
THE CONSTITUTION
The Articles of Confederation failed as a governing document
for the United States because the states did not cooperate as
expected. When it came time to pay wages to the national army or
the war debt to France, some states refused to contribute. To
cure this weakness, the congress asked each state to send a
delegate to a convention. The so-called Constitutional Convention
met in Philadelphia in May of 1787, with George Washington
presiding.
The delegates struck a balance between those who wanted a
strong central government and those who did not. The resulting
master plan, or Constitution, set up a system in which some
powers were given to the national, or federal, government, while
others were reserved for the states. The Constitution divided the
national government into three parts, or branches: the
legislative (the Congress, which consists of a House of
Representatives and a Senate), the executive (headed by the
president), and the judicial (the federal courts). Called
"separation of powers," this division gives each branch certain
duties and substantial independence from the others. It also
gives each branch some authority over the others through a system
of "checks and balances."
Here are a few examples of how checks and balances work in
practice.
- If Congress passes a proposed law, or "bill," that the
president considers unwise, he can veto it. That means that the
bill is dead unless two-thirds of the members of both the House
and the Senate vote to enact it despite the president's veto.
- If Congress passes, and the president signs, a law that
is challenged in the federal courts as contrary to the
Constitution, the courts can nullify that law. (The federal
courts cannot issue advisory or theoretical opinions, however;
their jurisdiction is limited to actual disputes.)
- The president has the power to make treaties with other
nations and to make appointments to federal positions, including
judgeships. The Senate, however, must approve all treaties and
confirm the appointments before they can go into effect.
Recently some observers
have discerned what they see as a weakness in the tripartite system of government:
a tendency
toward too much checking and balancing that results in
governmental stasis, or "gridlock."
BILL OF RIGHTS
The Constitution written in Philadelphia in 1787 could not
go into effect until it was ratified by a majority of citizens in
at least 9 of the then 13 U.S. states. During this ratification
process, misgivings arose. Many citizens felt uneasy because the
document failed to explicitly guarantee the rights of
individuals. The desired language was added in 10 amendments to
the Constitution, collectively known as the Bill of Rights.
The Bill of Rights guarantees Americans freedom of speech,
of religion, and of the press. They have the right to assemble in
public places, to protest government actions, and to demand
change. There is a right to own firearms. Because of the Bill of
Rights, neither police officers nor soldiers can stop and search
a person without good reason. Nor can they search a person's home
without permission from a court to do so. The Bill of Rights
guarantees a speedy trial to anyone accused of a crime. The trial
must be by jury if requested, and the accused person must be
allowed representation by a lawyer and to call witnesses to speak
for him or her. Cruel and unusual punishment is forbidden. With
the addition of the Bill of Rights, the Constitution was ratified
by all 13 states and went into effect in 1789.
Since then 17 other amendments have been added to the
Constitution. Perhaps the most important of these are the
Thirteenth and Fourteenth, which outlaw slavery and guarantee all
citizens equal protection of the laws, and the Nineteenth, which
gives women the right to vote.
The Constitution can be amended in either of two ways.
Congress can propose an amendment, provided that two-thirds of
the members of both the House and the Senate vote in favor of it.
Or the legislatures of two-thirds of the states can call a
convention to propose amendments. (This second method has never
been used.) In either case a proposed amendment does not go into
effect until ratified by three-fourths of the states.
LEGISLATIVE BRANCH
The legislative branch -- the Congress -- is made up of
elected representatives from each of the 50 states. It is the
only branch of U.S. government that can make federal laws, levy
federal taxes, declare war, and put foreign treaties into effect.
Members of the House of Representatives are elected to two-year
terms. Each member represents a district in his or her home
state. The number of districts is determined by a census, which
is conducted every 10 years. The most populous states are allowed
more representatives than the smaller ones, some of which have
only one. In all, there are 435 representatives in the House.
Senators are elected to six-year terms. Each state has two
senators, regardless of population. Senators' terms are
staggered, so that one-third of the Senate stands for election
every two years. There are 100 senators.
To become a law, a bill must pass both the House and the
Senate. After the bill is introduced in either body, it is
studied by one or more committees, amended, voted out of
committee, and discussed in the chamber of the House or Senate.
If passed by one body, it goes to the other for consideration.
When a bill passes the House and the Senate in different forms,
members of both bodies meet in a "conference committee" to iron
out the differences. Groups that try to persuade members of
Congress to vote for or against a bill are called "lobbies." They
may try to exert their influence at almost any stage of the
legislative process. Once both bodies have passed the same
version of a bill, it goes to the president for approval.
EXECUTIVE BRANCH
The chief executive of the United States is the president,
who together with the vice president is elected to a four-year
term. As a result of a constitutional amendment that went into
effect in 1951, a president may be elected to only two terms.
Other than succeeding a president who dies or is disabled, the
vice president's only official duty is presiding over the Senate.
The vice president may vote in the Senate only to break a tie.
The president's powers are formidable but not unlimited. As
the chief formulator of national policy, the president proposes
legislation to Congress. As mentioned previously, the president
may veto any bill passed by Congress. The president is commander-in-chief of the armed forces. The president has the authority to appoint federal judges as vacancies occur, including justices of the Supreme Court. As head of his political party, with ready
access to the news media, the president can easily influence public opinion.
Within the executive branch, the president has broad powers
to issue regulations and directives carrying out the work of the
federal government's departments and agencies. The president
appoints the heads and senior officials of those departments and
agencies. Heads of the major departments, called "secretaries,"
are part of the president's cabinet. The majority of federal
workers, however, are selected on the basis of merit, not politics.
JUDICIAL BRANCH
The judicial branch is headed by the U.S. Supreme Court,
which is the only court specifically created by the Constitution.
In addition, Congress has established 13 federal courts of
appeals and, below them, about 95 federal district courts. The
Supreme Court meets in Washington, D.C., and the other federal
courts are located in cities throughout the United States.
Federal judges are appointed for life or until they retire
voluntarily; they can be removed from office only via a laborious
process of impeachment and trial in the Congress.
The federal courts hear cases arising out of the Constitution and federal laws and treaties, maritime cases, cases involving foreign citizens or governments, and cases in which the federal government is itself a party.
The Supreme Court consists of a chief justice and eight
associate justices. With minor exceptions, cases come to the
Supreme Court on appeal from lower federal or state courts. Most
of these cases involve disputes over the interpretation and
constitutionality of actions taken by the executive branch and of
laws passed by Congress or the states (like federal laws, state
laws must be consistent with the U.S. Constitution).
THE COURT OF LAST RESORT
Although the three branches are said to be equal, often the
Supreme Court has the last word on an issue. The courts can rule
a law unconstitutional, which makes it void. Most such rulings
are appealed to the Supreme Court, which is thus the final
arbiter of what the Constitution means. Newspapers commonly print
excerpts from the justices' opinions in important cases, and the
Court's decisions are often the subject of public debate. This is
as it should be: The decisions may settle longstanding
controversies and can have social effects far beyond the
immediate outcome. Two famous, related examples are Plessy v.
Ferguson (1896) and Brown v. Board of Education of
Topeka (1954).
In Plessy the issue was whether blacks could be required
to ride in separate railroad cars from whites. The Court articulated
a "separate but equal" doctrine as its basis for upholding the
practice. The case sent a signal that the Court was interpreting
the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments narrowly and that a
widespread network of laws and custom treating blacks and whites
differently would not be disturbed. One justice, John Marshall
Harlan, dissented from the decision, arguing that "the
Constitution is color-blind."
Almost 60 years later the Court changed its mind. In Brown
the court held that deliberately segregated public schools
violated the Fourteenth Amendment's equal protection clause.
Although the Court did not directly overrule its Plessy
decision, Justice Harlan's view of the Constitution was vindicated. The
1954 ruling applied directly only to schools in the city of
Topeka, Kansas, but the principle it articulated reached every
public school in the nation. More than that, the case undermined
segregation in all governmental endeavors and set the nation on a
new course of treating all citizens alike.
The Brown decision caused consternation among some
citizens, particularly in the South, but was eventually accepted as the law
of the land. Other controversial Supreme Court decisions have not
received the same degree of acceptance. In several cases between
1962 and 1985, for example, the Court decided that requiring
students to pray or listen to prayer in public schools violated
the Constitution's prohibition against establishing a religion.
Critics of these decisions believe that the absence of prayer in
public schools has contributed to a decline in American morals;
they have tried to find ways to restore prayer to the schools
without violating the Constitution. In Roe v. Wade (1973),
the Court guaranteed women the right to have abortions in certain
circumstances -- a decision that continues to offend those
Americans who consider abortion to be murder. Because the Roe
v. Wade decision was based on an interpretation of the
Constitution, opponents have been trying to amend the Constitution to overturn
it.
POLITICAL PARTIES AND ELECTIONS
Americans regularly exercise their democratic rights by
voting in elections and by participating in political parties and
election campaigns. Today, there are two major political parties
in the United States, the Democratic and the Republican. The
Democratic Party evolved from the party of Thomas Jefferson,
formed before 1800. The Republican Party was established in the
1850s by Abraham Lincoln and others who opposed the expansion of
slavery into new states then being admitted to the Union.
The Democratic Party is considered to be the more liberal
party, and the Republican, the more conservative. Democrats
generally believe that government has an obligation to provide
social and economic programs for those who need them.
Republicans are not necessarily opposed to such programs but
believe they are too costly to taxpayers. Republicans put more
emphasis on encouraging private enterprise in the belief that a
strong private sector makes citizens less dependent on government.
Both major parties have supporters among a wide variety of
Americans and embrace a wide range of political views. Members,
and even elected officials, of one party do not necessarily agree
with each other on every issue. Americans do not have to join a
political party to vote or to be a candidate for public office,
but running for office without the money and campaign workers a
party can provide is difficult.
Minor political parties -- generally referred to as "third
parties" -- occasionally form in the United States, but their
candidates are rarely elected to office. Minor parties often
serve, however, to call attention to an issue that is of concern
to voters, but has been neglected in the political dialogue. When
this happens, one or both of the major parties may address the
matter, and the third party disappears.
At the national level, elections are held every two years,
in even-numbered years, on the first Tuesday following the first
Monday in November. State and local elections often coincide with
national elections, but they also are held in other years and can
take place at other times of year.
Americans are free to determine how much or how little they
become involved in the political process. Many citizens actively
participate by working as volunteers for a candidate, by
promoting a particular cause, or by running for office
themselves. Others restrict their participation to voting on
election day, quietly letting their democratic system work,
confident that their freedoms are protected.