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The Constitution: The Foundation of a Nation

By:  |  September 19, 2021  |    446 Words
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(Photo by Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images)

Before there was the United States, colonists lived in America but were still ruled by their home countries. After a while, the British colonies of England felt the king was treating them badly, so they decided to stop following their old government and start their own. They worried the new government might end up just as bad as the one they were used to, so they wrote a set of laws that created the United States and limited its power in order to protect the rights of the people. We call this the Constitution and we call the men who created it the Framers.

Creating the Government

These Framers wanted to make sure the new leaders would make the best decisions for the people and not take advantage of the power to make laws. So, they created a three-branch government. Each branch has its own powers. This creates what we call checks and balances, which are supposed to keep any one branch from becoming too powerful.

The Legislative Branch is Congress, which is split into two parts: The House of Representatives and the Senate. Congress is where laws begin. The members of Congress write what they want to become laws, which are called bills, and then vote on them.

The Executive Branch is run by the president, with the vice president as second in command. Once Congress passes a bill, the president must sign it before it becomes law. This branch also includes government agencies and departments, which carry out and enforce laws.

The Judiciary Branch is the courts, including the Supreme Court. When someone thinks a law goes against the Constitution, the judges of this branch study the law and the situation that resulted in the dispute, and decide whether the law breaches the rights of the people.

The Rights of the People

The colonists who fought to be free from the king’s control believed that each person had certain rights, and that no government or other person should be able to interfere with those rights – at least not without a very good reason.

They were so worried that the government might find a way to get around the Constitution that some of them wanted more rights specifically protected. The Constitution can be changed, but it isn’t easy. The first ten amendments, which we call the Bill of Rights, added a list of people’s rights, as well as limits on the power of the government to get involved in people’s lives. Most of the amendments to the Constitution are meant to expand freedom and protect rights – and that’s what the Framers hoped for all those years ago.

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