American Government: Power and Purpose, Full Fourteenth Edition Test Bank
Preview Extract
CHAPTER 2: Constructing a Government: The Founding and the Constitution
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. Prior to the Revolutionary War, British policies harmed the economic interests of which two large
sectors of colonial society that previously supported British rule?
a. royalists and small farmers
b. Southern planters and New England merchants
c. laborers and small farmers
d. New England merchants and shopkeepers
e. Southern planters and royalists
ANS: B
DIF: Moderate
Conflicts
MSC: Understanding
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
2. Among the sectors of society that were important in colonial politics prior to the American
Revolution, the more radical forces were represented by
a. New England merchants.
b. holders of lands, offices, and patents.
c. Southern planters and shipbuilders.
d. shopkeepers, laborers, and small farmers.
e. well-organized labor unions.
ANS: D
DIF: Difficult
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
3. Which of the following was NOT one of the sectors of society that was particularly influential in
colonial politics?
a. New England merchants
d. small farmers
b. Southern planters
e. shopkeepers
c. suffragettes
ANS: C
DIF: Moderate
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
4. According to the rationality principle, all political actions have a purpose. When the British
government attempted to raise taxes on American colonists, what services were they trying to force
the colonists to pay for?
a. universal health care
b. moving new colonists to Quebec
c. pensions and disability for retired sailors
d. an invasion of Russia
e. defense of the colonies and its shipping
ANS: E
DIF: Difficult
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
5. In the chain of events leading up to the American Revolution, the radical forces were permitted to
expand their political influence because the colonial elites were split by
a. disagreement over slavery.
b.
c.
d.
e.
western boundary disputes.
a lack of common currency.
British tax and trade policies, especially the Tea Act of 1773.
an inability to bridge their language barriers.
ANS: D
DIF: Difficult
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
6. Prior to the Revolutionary War, the British government suffered from high debt and a variety of
financial problems. How does its solution to raise revenue through increasing taxes on the colonies
illustrate the policy principle?
a. Members of the British Parliament were running for reelection, and it was popular in
Britain to campaign on raising taxes in the colonies instead of at home.
b. The British were interested in raising revenue to cover the costs of defending the colonies,
while Parliament and the colonial government made it possible to tax colonial commerce.
c. Colonial administrators were weary of the economic and political power of the merchants
and Southern planters and therefore sought to punish them by raising taxes on their
commodities.
d. Colonial administrators wanted more independence from the British Parliament. In
exchange for raising taxes, colonial administrators were granted more leeway in local
matters.
e. The British thought that the colonists would see paying taxes as a duty of upstanding
English citizens and, as such, would comply.
ANS: B
DIF: Difficult
Conflicts
MSC: Understanding
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
7. Why did the British government impose taxes such as the Stamp Act specifically on the American
colonies instead of in England only?
a. Influential interest groups supported the colonial taxes.
b. Increased taxes were politically unpopular in England, so the government chose to raise
taxes on the colonists instead.
c. The British government had spent large sums of money on defending the colonies and
sought to recapture that revenue from the colonists.
d. Money raised from the taxes was intended to be used to pacify revolutionary citizens in
the colonies.
e. It was especially costly to mail to and from the colonies.
ANS: C
DIF: Moderate
Conflicts
MSC: Understanding
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
8. In the mid-eighteenth century, the revenues that governments relied on came mostly from
a. a flat tax.
b. an income tax.
c. tariffs and duties.
d. voluntary citizen donationsโusually from elite property owners.
e. seizing the property of wealthy traitors.
ANS: C
DIF: Moderate
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
9. After years of relatively little interference in the local affairs of its American colonies, the English
government passed a tax on all printed and legal documents, including newspapers, pamphlets,
advertisements, notes and bonds, leases, deeds, and licenses. Mass protests declaring โno taxation
without representationโ erupted throughout the colonies against the
a. Tea Act.
d. Colonial Tariff.
b. Stamp Act.
e. Document Tax.
c. Royalist Tariff.
ANS: B
DIF: Moderate
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
10. The radicals led by Samuel Adams hoped that the Boston Tea Party would goad the British into
strong reprisals. Which principle does this strategy illustrate?
a. rationality principle
d. policy principle
b. institution principle
e. history principle
c. collective action principle
ANS: A
DIF: Moderate
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
11. To show their displeasure with the Stamp Act of 1765, colonists in Boston
a. stormed Bunker Hill and took over its fort.
b. organized demonstrations, parades, and mass meetings.
c. dumped tea into the harbor in what became known as the Boston Tea Party.
d. killed 12 British soldiers in what became known as the Boston Massacre.
e. marched to Lexington and seized a cache of British weapons.
ANS: B
DIF: Difficult
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
12. The Stamp Act of 1765 and the Sugar Act of 1764 created incentives for which two groups to
engage in collective action?
a. small farmers and recent immigrants
b. artisans and laborers
c. holders of royal land offices and patents and shopkeepers
d. New England merchants and Southern planters
e. Southern planters and royalists
ANS: D
DIF: Difficult
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
13. On March 5, 1770, nervous British soldiers opened fire on the mob surrounding them, killing five
colonists and wounding eight others. News of this event spread quickly throughout the colonies
and was used to fan anti-British sentiment by radicals who called the incident the
a. Boston Massacre.
d. tragedy of the commons.
b. Tuesday butchery.
e. Guy Fawkes event.
c. Boston Tea Party.
ANS: A
DIF: Easy
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
14. The British soldiers involved in the Boston Massacre were defended by __________, a pillar of
Boston society and future president of the United States.
a. John Adams
d. George Washington
b. James Madison
e. Ben Franklin
c. Thomas Jefferson
ANS: A
DIF: Difficult
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
15. Colonial society was made up of conflicting economic and political interests that made British rule
possible. The Stamp Act and the Tea Act altered the interests of certain key sectors of colonial
society, creating incentives to
a. engage in collective action based on common goals.
b. delegate authority to the radicals.
c. resolve jurisdictional conflicts in the Continental Congress committee system.
d. free ride.
e. form a coalition with the royalists.
ANS: A
Conflicts
MSC: Applying
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
16. Dramatic events like the Boston Massacre provide an issue for individuals to organize around
when putting together revolutionary activities. This provides a way to overcome the
a. collective action problem.
b. institution principle.
c. history principle.
d. revolutionary organization conundrum.
e. propaganda deficit.
ANS: A
Conflicts
MSC: Applying
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
17. The colonists organized and participated in the Boston Tea Party of 1773 as a direct response to
a. the unjustness of the Stamp Act.
b. military seizure of tea and other agricultural goods in Boston Harbor.
c. atrocities by British garrison troops.
d. the withdrawal of military protection from commercial ships sailing to the Americas.
e. the British granting the East India Company a monopoly on the export of tea from Britain.
ANS: E
DIF: Moderate
Conflicts
MSC: Understanding
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
18. In 1773, the British government granted a monopoly on the export of tea from Britain to the
politically powerful East India Company, which sought to bypass the colonial merchants and sell
the tea directly to the colonies. The merchants called on their radical adversaries for support, and
the most dramatic result was
a. the Boston Tea Party.
b. an attack on Fort Sill.
c. the Philadelphia Midnight Murders.
d. the ceremonial burning of the Union Jack flag in the Philadelphia town square.
e. increased pirate attacks on East India Company ships.
ANS: A
Conflicts
MSC: Applying
DIF: Easy
19. The Boston Tea Party was led by
a. Patrick Henry.
b. Thomas Payne.
c. Samuel Adams.
ANS: C
DIF: Difficult
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
d. Alexander Hamilton.
e. John Burgoyne.
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
20. What was the ultimate goal of the radical participants in the Boston Tea Party?
a. rescind the Tea Act
b. rescind the Stamp Act
c. close Boston Harbor to British commerce
d. alienate the British government from its colonial supporters
e. prevent the removal of British garrison troops
ANS: D
DIF: Moderate
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
21. By dumping the East India Companyโs tea into Boston Harbor, Samuel Adams and his followers
pressured the British into enacting a number of harsh reprisals that
a. radicalized Americans to resist British rule.
b. effectively ended the slave trade in the Northern states.
c. temporarily softened public support for revolutionary forces.
d. benefited Southern planters at the expense of New England merchants.
e. spurred the emigration of French Huguenots.
ANS: A
DIF: Moderate
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
22. The Boston Tea Party set into motion a cycle of provocation and retaliation that, in 1774, resulted
in the convening of an assembly of delegates from all parts of the colonies called the
a. First Colonial Convention.
b. Grand Conclave.
c. Boston Confederated Congress.
d. Philadelphia Constitutional Convention.
e. First Continental Congress.
ANS: E
DIF: Moderate
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
23. The Declaration of Independence was almost entirely written by
a. James Madison.
d. Alexander Hamilton.
b. Thomas Jefferson.
e. John Randolph.
c. George Washington.
ANS: B
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
24. The Declaration of Independence was remarkable for its assertion that there are certain unalienable
rights including
a. life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
b. due process and equal protection under the law.
c. justice, domestic tranquility, and general welfare.
d. freedom of religion, freedom of the press, and freedom of speech.
e. liberty, equality, and fraternity.
ANS: A
DIF: Easy
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
25. In November of 1777, the Continental Congress adopted the United Statesโ first written
constitution. It was known as the
a. Virginia Plan.
b. Annapolis Convention.
c. Declaration of Independence.
d. Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union.
e. Seneca Falls Declaration.
ANS: D
DIF: Easy
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
26. The result of the 1777 Continental Congress was a constitution concerned primarily with
a. preventing domestic insurrection.
b. limiting the powers of the central government.
c. generating new tax revenues to help pay for armed resistance.
d. regulating trade among the colonies as well as imports and exports.
e. centralizing currency and monetary policy.
ANS: B
DIF: Moderate
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
27. Under the Articles of Confederation, what power was Congress given?
a. the power to levy taxes
d. the power to build a standing army
b. the power to restrict slavery
e. the power to declare war
c. the power to regulate commerce
ANS: E
DIF: Difficult
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
28. An extension of the policy principle is that rational actors design institutions that help them bring
about the outcomes they desire. How did the Three-Fifths Compromise bias outcomes, compared
to the Northernersโ preference on the issue of slavery and representation?
a. Southern states were able to ensure that no more than three-fifths of all federal revenue
came from trade tariffs.
b. It ensured that three-fifths of all new territory acquired by the United States would allow
slavery.
c. States with relatively more slaves gained representation in Congress and thus were better
able to protect the interests of slave owners.
d. It ensured that a vote of three-fifths of the Senate would be required to shut off debate on
legislation to restrict slavery.
e. It guaranteed that enslaved persons would be able to cast votes that counted for 60 percent
of the weight of a free personโs vote in federal elections.
ANS: C
Conflicts
MSC: Applying
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
29. The Articles of Confederation provided a set of rules and procedures that provided incentives for
states to compete with each other for foreign commerce. This effect of the Articles best reflects
which principle of politics?
a. the institution principle
d. the history principle
b. the policy principle
e. the collective action principle
c. the rationality principle
ANS: A
Conflicts
MSC: Applying
DIF: Difficult
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
30. During the winter of 1786โ1787, John Adams of Massachusetts was sent to negotiate a new treaty
with the British to cover disputes left over from the war. The British government responded that it
would
a. set a blockade around Boston Harbor.
b. relinquish control over the lands to the west.
c. negotiate with each of the 13 states separately.
d. require war reparations before signing any new treaty.
e. need Franceโs approval before suspending war reparations.
ANS: C
DIF: Difficult
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Remembering
31. Early states had broad latitude to pursue their own policies, and the national government, under the
Articles of Confederation, had little recourse if it disliked those policies. For example, the Rhode
Island legislatureโdominated by representatives of small farmers, artisans, and
shopkeepersโfrightened businessmen and property owners throughout the country by instituting
a. free trade policies.
b. economic policies including drastic currency inflation.
c. generous agricultural subsidies and severely protective tariffs.
d. eminent domain activities for an extensive statewide park system.
e. abolition of minimum wage requirements.
ANS: B
DIF: Difficult
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Remembering
32. In hindsight, the decision of New England merchants and Southern planters to ally with small
farmers, shopkeepers, and other pro-independence radicals to defeat the British seems puzzling as
the balance of power in post-Revolutionary America shifted in favor of the radicals and threatened
the interests of the pre-Revolutionary elite. However, the decision of the merchants and planters to
join forces with the radicals may be considered __________ if each group considered the costs and
benefits of the decision and speculated about future effects.
a. smart
d. intelligent
b. irrational
c. rational
e. insane
ANS: C
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Applying
33. The one positive result of the Annapolis Convention was a resolution calling for
a. a declaration of independence from England.
b. a boycott of tea, linens, and other goods from England.
c. ratification of the new Constitution of the United States.
d. a national day of prayer.
e. a later meeting in Philadelphia to reform the Articles of Confederation.
ANS: E
DIF: Easy
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Remembering
34. It is possible that the Constitutional Convention of 1787 in Philadelphia would never have taken
place at all if not for a single event that occurred soon after the Annapolis Convention. This event
was
a. Shaysโs Rebellion.
b. the Boston Massacre.
c. the Boston Tea Party.
d. the Whiskey Rebellion.
e. the assassination of Elbridge Gerry, governor of Massachusetts.
ANS: A
DIF: Easy
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Remembering
35. Daniel Shays, a former army captain, led a mob in a rebellion against the Massachusetts
government in order to
a. open up western territories for expansion.
b. prevent foreclosures on debt-ridden farm lands.
c. release certain British loyalists from captivity as prisoners of war.
d. resist taxes on whiskey.
e. destroy excess supplies of wheat and corn, thereby increasing the market price for these
commodities.
ANS: B
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Remembering
36. Why did Shaysโs Rebellion enable collective action among those who wanted to revise the Articles
of Confederation?
a. Shays was a charismatic political entrepreneur who was able to bring together several key
opponents of the Articles.
b. Shays demonstrated a new strategy to provide selective incentives to institutional
reformers.
c. The rebellion showed that the federal government was already strong enough to quell an
uprising, which demonstrated that taking further steps toward a stronger central
government was an attainable goal.
d. Shays introduced key figures in western Massachusetts to the concept of civil
disobedience, which in turn caught on with opponents of the Articles across the country.
e. The rebellion provided politicians who were already convinced of the inadequacy of the
Articles with the ammunition they needed to convince a broader public of their
inadequacy.
ANS: E
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Understanding
37. Which state did NOT send delegates to the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia?
a. Vermont
d. Massachusetts
b. Delaware
e. Georgia
c. Rhode Island
ANS: C
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Remembering
38. According to historian Charles Beard, the framers of the Constitution were motivated primarily by
a. revenge.
d. personal enrichment.
b. moral principles.
e. religious fervor.
c. the quest for justice.
ANS: D
DIF: Easy
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Remembering
39. Charles Beardโs interpretation of the framing of the Constitution was primarily
a. legal.
d. philosophical.
b. ethical.
e. economic.
c. ontological.
ANS: E
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Remembering
40. In contrast to Charles Beardโs approach, some view the framers of the Constitution as being
motivated by
a. a desire to redistribute economic benefits to the working class.
b. economic self-interest.
c. the dominant philosophical and moral values of the day.
d. political party identification.
e. the obligation to expand the sphere of religious dominance across the continent.
ANS: C
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Remembering
41. In 2016, the five smallest states held roughly 0.5 percent of the seats in the U.S. House of
Representatives and 10 percent of the seats in the U.S. Senate. These differing levels of
representation of the five small states were the result of which decision during the Constitutional
Convention?
a. the New Jersey Plan
d. the Great Compromise
b. the Virginia Plan
e. the Separation of Powers
c. the Three-Fifths Compromise
ANS: D
DIF: Difficult
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Applying
42. The founder who probably had the most influence on the Virginia Plan (which served as the
framework for the eventual Constitution) was
a. John Adams.
d. Alexander Hamilton.
b. James Madison.
e. George Washington.
c. Thomas Jefferson.
ANS: B
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Remembering
43. The proposal to alter the Articles of Confederation by providing for a system of representation in
the national legislature based on the population of each state or the proportion of each stateโs
revenue contribution, or both, was known as the
a. Virginia Plan.
d. Massachusetts Plan.
b. New Jersey Plan.
e. Rousseau solution.
c. Connecticut Plan.
ANS: A
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Remembering
44. Why did the smaller states object to the Virginia Plan?
a. Roger Sherman and other small state delegates disliked Madison and Randolph and did
not want them to receive recognition for advancing the Virginia Plan.
b. In accordance with the institution principle, small states wanted to maintain the existing
institutions (the Articles of Confederation), but the institution principle does not apply to
large states.
c. In accordance with the rationality principle, the Virginia Plan provided greater
representation in the national legislature for larger and/or wealthier states, which
disadvantaged the small states.
d. The small states tended to be from the North and objected to the strong proslavery content
in the Virginia Plan.
e. The smaller states feared that the national government would force them to pay equal
shares of the national budget.
ANS: C
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Understanding
45. The proposal offered by the smaller states during the Constitutional Convention that argued each
state should be equally represented in the new regime regardless of its population was known as
the
a. Virginia Plan.
d. Massachusetts Plan.
b. Brunswick Plan.
e. New Jersey Plan.
c. Connecticut Plan.
ANS: E
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Remembering
46. The agreement reached during the Constitutional Convention to give each state an equal number of
senators regardless of population but link representation in the House of Representatives to
population became known as the
a. Boston Plan.
d. Three-Fifths Compromise.
b. Philadelphia Plan.
e. Jefferson Compromise.
c. Great Compromise.
ANS: C
DIF: Easy
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Remembering
47. What was the most difficult issue faced by the framers of the Constitution?
a. taxes
d. the status of the Native American tribes
b. slavery
e. religion
c. foreign trade
ANS: B
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Remembering
48. The question of counting slaves for purposes of representation was ultimately resolved by counting
a. slaves as nonslaves just for purposes of representation.
b. every five slaves as three people for purposes of representation.
c. every four slaves as three people for purposes of representation.
d. every two slaves as one person for purposes of representation.
e. every slave as one person for allocation of block grants but prohibiting voting by slaves.
ANS: B
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Remembering
49. The issue of counting slaves for purposes of representation was settled by the
a. Great Compromise.
d. Seventh Amendment.
b. Virginia Plan.
e. Franklin Proviso.
c. Three-Fifths Compromise.
ANS: C
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Remembering
50. The framers of the American Constitution sought to prevent the perceived threat of excessive
democracy through a number of institutional innovations. Which of these constitutional provisions
MOST prevents the threat of excessive democracy?
a. requiring each state to have a โrepublican form of governmentโ
b. requiring all tax and spending bills to originate in the U.S. House of Representatives
c. tying citizensโ eligibility to vote with that of state legislative bodies
d. providing for a judicial branch selected indirectly with judges serving life terms
e. prohibiting Congress, through Article I, from granting titles of nobility
ANS: D
DIF: Difficult
MSC: Understanding
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
51. Article I of the U.S. Constitution provides for the
a. judicial branch.
b. executive branch.
c. legislative branch.
d. role of state governments.
e. freedom of speech, religion, and press.
ANS: C
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
52. Under the unamended Constitution of 1787, how were U.S. senators selected?
a. direct elections
b. state legislatures
c. the Electoral College
d. the state delegation to the House of Representatives
e. random selection from the major landowners of each state
ANS: B
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
53. The terms of appointments for senators are staggered so that the terms of one-third of the senators
expire every
a. year.
d. six years.
b. two years.
e. eight years.
c. four years.
ANS: B
DIF: Easy
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
54. Under the American Constitution, the part of elected government designed to be directly
responsible to the people was the
a. Senate.
d. House of Representatives.
b. judiciary.
e. state militias.
c. bureaucracy.
ANS: D
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
55. A legislative assembly such as the Congress that is divided into two chambers (or houses) is best
described as
a. bipolar.
d. bicameral.
b. dual-bodied.
e. bilateral.
c. bipartisan.
ANS: D
DIF: Easy
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
56. The Georgia General Assembly, with its upper chamber (the Georgia Senate) and lower chamber
(the Georgia House of Representatives), is an institution that exemplifies the principle of
a. bicameralism.
d. bifurcated representation.
b. bilateralism.
e. institutional dualism.
c. binary legislativism.
ANS: A
MSC: Applying
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
57. The Constitution grants the power to ratify treaties to the
a. Supreme Court.
d. House of Representatives.
b. president.
e. Senate.
c. State Department.
ANS: E
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
58. Under the American Constitution, the sole power to originate revenue bills is vested in the
a. Senate.
d. House of Representatives.
b. vice president.
e. Treasury Department.
c. state legislatures.
ANS: D
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
59. Which branch of government has the power to create inferior (lower) courts, change the
jurisdiction of federal courts, add or subtract federal judges, and even change the size of the
Supreme Court?
a. judiciary
d. bureaucracy
b. Congress
e. attorney general
c. executive
ANS: B
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
60. The idea that the federal government can exercise only the powers specifically articulated in the
Constitution is known as the doctrine of
a. implied powers.
d. necessary and proper powers.
b. expressed powers.
e. original limits.
c. separation of powers.
ANS: B
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
61. The framers intended an active and powerful government, so they included language to ensure that
Congress could take any step to achieve its enumerated responsibilities. This elastic clause is most
commonly known as the
a. necessary and proper clause.
d. privileges and immunities clause.
b. separation of powers clause.
e. federal caveat.
c. national supremacy clause.
ANS: A
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
62. The framers of the Constitution sought to insulate the president from excessively democratic
pressures through
a. a lifetime appointment.
b. direct oversight by independent departments.
c. an indirect election through the Electoral College.
d. a limitation of only two consecutive terms in office.
e. the power to grant pardons.
ANS: C
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
63. Why did the framers decide against a plural executive (two or more presidents) or executive
council (presidency-by-committee)?
a. They were familiar with the instability caused by ancient Romeโs dual-consul system and
how it led to over-representation of the poor plebeian castes.
b. They feared that a plural executive would increase regional conflicts and lead to civil war.
c. They did not want the new government to have to pay salaries for multiple executives and
their staffs.
d. They preferred a single executive who could act quickly without waiting to consult with
co-executives.
e. They thought it would be easier for Congress to impeach and remove a single executive.
ANS: D
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
64. Which branch of government was designed to make the federal government capable of timely and
decisive action to deal with public issues and problems?
a. executive
d. state governments
b. legislative
e. Federal Reserve
c. judicial
ANS: A
DIF: Easy
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
65. In order to protect federal judges from political influence from citizens and other branches, the
framers
a. ordered that federal judges be selected in democratic elections.
b. prohibited the selection of federal judges that share the sitting presidentโs party
identification.
c. ruled that judges cannot run for reelection at the end of their terms.
d. prohibited Congress from impeaching federal judges.
e. granted federal judges lifetime appointments to their offices.
ANS: E
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
66. In 1996, the Defense of Marriage Act was enacted after passing both houses of Congress and being
signed into law by President Bill Clinton. The Defense of Marriage Act defines marriage as a
union between a man and a woman and bans recognition of same-sex marriages. The decision of
the Supreme Court to take a case that challenged the constitutionality of the Act is a reflection of
which power?
a. reserved power
d. judicial review
b. expressed power
e. the supremacy clause
c. veto power
ANS: D
MSC: Applying
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
67. The power of the courts to render the final decision in cases involving a conflict of interpretation
of the Constitution or of laws between the courts and Congress, the courts and the executive
branch, or the courts and the states is referred to as
a. judicial review.
d. contra bonos mores.
b. ceteris paribus.
e. lex suprema.
c. juridic oversight.
ANS: A
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
68. Since 1960, the United States has maintained an embargo against Iran to prevent individuals or
businesses from engaging in economic activities with this nation. If the state of New York decided
to sign a free trade agreement with Iran, New York would be violating which part of the
Constitution?
a. the commerce clause
d. the necessary and proper clause
b. the Bill of Rights
e. the supremacy clause
c. judicial review
ANS: E
MSC: Applying
DIF: Difficult
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
69. Article VI of the Constitution states that all laws passed by the national government and all treaties
are superior to laws adopted by any state. This has come to be known as the
a. supremacy clause.
d. necessary and proper clause.
b. judicial review clause.
e. popular mandate.
c. full faith and credit clause.
ANS: A
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
70. In the United States, no set of institutional procedures is more important than the
a. Constitution.
b. Bill of Rights
c. Articles of Confederation.
d. Declaration of Independence.
e. Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen.
ANS: A
DIF: Easy
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
71. In 2010, the Republican Party was able to retake majority control of the U.S. House of
Representatives due to anger toward President Barack Obama and the recent passage of the
Affordable Care Act. With majority control of the House, Republicans were able to pass a repeal
of the Affordable Care Act, yet the Act remains law due to continued support in the Senate and the
Executive branch. The failure to overturn the Affordable Care Act reflects which component of the
Constitution?
a. separation of powers
d. necessary and proper clause
b. Bill of Rights
e. judicial review
c. federalism
ANS: A
MSC: Applying
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
72. No principle was more widely shared among the framers of the American Constitution than the
principle espoused by Baron de Montesquieu that
a. the citizen must serve the state.
b. power must be divided among different actors.
c. the accused are innocent until proven guilty.
d. national powers must be delegated to the states.
e. absolute power corrupts absolutely.
ANS: B
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
73. The presidential veto power over legislation, the power of the Senate to approve presidential
appointments, and judicial review over acts of Congress and presidential actions are examples of
the principle in the American political system of
a. federalism.
d. communal powers.
b. checks and balances.
e. gridlock intervals.
c. marble cake constitutionalism.
ANS: B
MSC: Applying
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
74. James Madison wrote in Federalist 51, โThe power surrendered by the people is first divided
between two distinct governments, and then the portion allotted to each subdivided among distinct
and separate departments. Hence a double security arises to the rights of the people. The different
governments will control each other, at the same time that each will be controlled by itself.โ Which
constitutional principle is best reflected by this statement?
a. republicanism
d. judicial review
b. enumerated powers
e. representative government
c. checks and balances
ANS: C
DIF: Difficult
MSC: Understanding
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
75. The framers of the Constitution crafted a system in which each branch of government had a
distinctly different constituency to ensure different perspectives on public interests. Montesquieu
and others called it a
a. democracy.
d. Confederation.
b. multiple principals system.
e. separated system.
c. mixed regime.
ANS: C
DIF: Difficult
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
76. Compared to the confederation principle of the Articles of Confederation, the Constitutionโs
balance of federal and state power represented
a. greater centralization of power.
b. eliminating the power of state governments.
c. increasing the sovereignty of state governments.
d. weakening the power of the national government.
e. increasing the separation of federal and state duties.
ANS: A
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
77. Why is the process for amending the Constitution a source of path dependency?
a. All the good ideas were incorporated into the original Constitution.
b. After the Constitution was amended once, adding new amendments became easier and
easier.
c. The amending process requires supermajority support from multiple institutions and levels
of government.
d. Politicians learned how to amend the Constitution over time, so it became easier.
e. Congress often prefers to incorporate its policies into the Constitution instead of enacting
public laws.
ANS: C
DIF: Difficult
TOP: CH02 – Changing the Institutional Framework: Constitutional Amendment
MSC: Remembering
78. Why might the delegates to the Constitutional Convention reject a motion to include a bill of rights
in the Constitution?
a. The delegates thought rights should be guaranteed to the states, not to individual citizens.
b. The delegates felt a bill of rights was unnecessary because they thought that the federal
government was already limited to its expressed powers.
c. The rights of citizens were a secondary concern to the delegatesโ personal self-interest.
d. A bill of rights would have required granting equal rights to women, which the delegates
found to be politically unsavory.
e. They considered a bill of rights unnecessary in the U.S. Constitution because the United
Nationsโ โUniversal Declaration of Human Rightsโ already guaranteed a full set of
political rights.
ANS: B
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Understanding
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
79. During the Constitutional Convention, the motion to include a bill of rights was
a. tabled at the insistence of delegates from Rhode Island.
b. approved almost unanimously.
c. incorporated as part of the full faith and credit clause after lengthy debate.
d. included in the section enumerating the powers of the national government with little floor
debate.
e. overwhelmingly rejected.
ANS: E
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
80. The best-known arguments supporting ratification of the Constitution were the 85 essays written
by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay under the name of Publius. These essays are
collectively known today as
a. Common Sense.
d. The Democracy Dialogues.
b. A Modest Proposal.
e. The New Yorker.
c. the Federalist Papers.
ANS: C
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Fight for Ratification: Federalists versus Antifederalists
MSC: Remembering
81. Which of the following statements describes the attitudes of Federalists and Antifederalists toward
representation as it would likely be observed under the proposed Constitution?
a. Neither the Federalists nor the Antifederalists cared a great deal about representative
democracy.
b. Antifederalists thought that representation was critical and could best be achieved in small
republics, while Federalists thought representatives did not need to perfectly represent the
views of their constituents.
c. Federalists thought that representation was critical and could best be achieved in small
republics, while Antifederalists thought representatives did not need to perfectly represent
the views of their constituents.
d. Both the Federalists and Antifederalists thought that representation in the form of catering
to public sentiment was vitally important.
e. Antifederalists thought fair representation was best achieved by choosing officeholders
from the general population at random, while Federalists sought to ensure that legislators
would be free from electoral or political considerations.
ANS: B
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Fight for Ratification: Federalists versus Antifederalists
MSC: Applying
82. Imagine a scenario in which a large majority of people in your town wanted to eliminate all taxes
even if that meant the local government could no longer fund road repairs or the local police force.
A representative of this town would be acting as a ________ if he or she decided to eliminate all
taxes. In contrast, this representative would be acting as a(n) ________ if he or she refused to
eliminate all taxes, arguing that cutting all taxes was not in the best interest of the town.
a. Federalist; Antifederalist
d. Democrat; tyrant
b. trustee; delegate
e. Republican; Democrat
c. delegate; trustee
ANS: C
DIF: Difficult
TOP: CH02 – The Fight for Ratification: Federalists versus Antifederalists
MSC: Analyzing
83. Unjust rule by the group in power is called
a. tyranny.
b. supremacy.
c. domination.
d. enforcement.
e. teleology.
ANS: A
DIF: Easy
TOP: CH02 – The Fight for Ratification: Federalists versus Antifederalists
MSC: Remembering
84. The Federalists understood that temporary majorities could abuse their power in a democracy, but
Madison argued that such an outcome is less likely if the nation is
a. large with diverse interests.
d. small with common interests.
b. small with diverse interests.
e. trained to have the same interests.
c. large with common interests.
ANS: A
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Fight for Ratification: Federalists versus Antifederalists
MSC: Remembering
85. The Antifederalists perceived the danger of tyranny to be posed most severely by
a. small numbers of individuals in positions of authority.
b. majorities who wished to impose their will on minorities.
c. the House of Representatives.
d. direct democracy provisions like the initiative or referendum.
e. invasion by foreign autocracies.
ANS: A
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Fight for Ratification: Federalists versus Antifederalists
MSC: Remembering
86. In order for Congress to send a small amendment to the Constitution to state legislatures or
ratifying conventions for approval, it must pass
a. in either the House or Senate with a simple majority.
b. in both the House and Senate with a simple majority.
c. in either the House or Senate with a two-thirds majority.
d. in both the House and Senate with a two-thirds majority.
e. in the House by a simple majority and the Senate by a two-thirds majority.
ANS: D
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – Changing the Institutional Framework: Constitutional Amendment
MSC: Remembering
87. Except for one, all of the amendments that have been added to the Constitution have passed in
a. the House and Senate by two-thirds vote and then been ratified by a majority vote of the
legislatures of three-fourths of the states.
b. the House and Senate by two-thirds vote and then been ratified by conventions that called
for the purpose in three-fourths of the states.
c. a national convention called by Congress in response to petitions by two-thirds of the
states and ratified by a majority vote of the legislatures of three-fourths of the states.
d. a national convention called by Congress in response to petitions by two-thirds of the
states and ratified by conventions called for the purpose in three-fourths of the states.
e. a national popular vote on amendments proposed by Congress.
ANS: A
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – Changing the Institutional Framework: Constitutional Amendment
MSC: Remembering
88. The First Amendment to the Constitution was specifically concerned with limits on the
a. courts.
d. state governments.
b. Congress.
e. citizens.
c. president.
ANS: B
DIF: Difficult
TOP: CH02 – Changing the Institutional Framework: Constitutional Amendment
MSC: Remembering
89. The purpose of the ten amendments in the Bill of Rights was basically to give each of the three
branches of government
a. increased flexibility.
b. broader and more explicit powers.
c. clearer and more restricted boundaries.
d. fewer opportunities to come into conflict with each other.
e. a broader grant of power.
ANS: C
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – Changing the Institutional Framework: Constitutional Amendment
MSC: Remembering
90. Which of these amendments guarantees the right to vote to a significant portion of the U.S.
population?
a. Nineteenth
d. Third
b. Seventeenth
e. Twenty-Seventh
c. Twelfth
ANS: A
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – Changing the Institutional Framework: Constitutional Amendment
MSC: Remembering
91. Which amendment or set of amendments provides important safeguards against the arbitrary
exercise of governmental power, especially within the judicial branch?
a. First
d. Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, and Eighth
b. Ninth and Tenth
e. Second and Eleventh
c. Second, Third, and Fourth
ANS: D
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – Changing the Institutional Framework: Constitutional Amendment
MSC: Remembering
92. The Eighteenth Amendment, having the dubious distinction of being the only constitutional
amendment designed to deal directly with some substantive social problem and the only
amendment to have been repealed, addressed the issue of
a. slavery.
d. prohibition of alcohol.
b. the income tax.
e. poll taxes.
c. presidential disability.
ANS: D
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – Changing the Institutional Framework: Constitutional Amendment
MSC: Remembering
TRUE/FALSE
1. The income tax represented the single most important source of government revenue for the British
regime prior to the American Revolution.
ANS: F
DIF: Moderate
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
2. During the lead-up to the American Revolution, the New England merchants who cried โno
taxation without representationโ cared more about expanded representation in the British
Parliament than about lower taxes.
ANS: F
DIF: Moderate
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
3. During the 1750s, the British crownโs North American colonies on the whole paid remarkably little
in taxes to the mother country.
ANS: T
DIF: Moderate
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
4. The British soldiers involved in the Boston Massacre were defended by future president John
Adams.
ANS: T
DIF: Difficult
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
5. Radicals seeking independence were primarily disgruntled members of the colonial merchant elite.
ANS: F
DIF: Moderate
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
6. Collective action was sparked by the British governmentโs harsh response to the Boston Tea Party.
ANS: F
DIF: Difficult
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
7. The First Continental Congress called for a total boycott of British goods.
ANS: T
DIF: Moderate
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
8. Under the Articles of Confederation, the central government was based entirely in Congress.
ANS: T
DIF: Moderate
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
9. Under the Articles of Confederation, each state was represented in the Continental Congress in
proportion to its population.
ANS: F
DIF: Moderate
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
10. Under the Articles of Confederation, the presiding officer of the executive branch was appointed
through a nomination and voting process of the assembled delegates in the Electoral College.
ANS: F
DIF: Moderate
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
11. Under the Articles of Confederation, Congress was given power to declare war and make peace.
ANS: T
DIF: Moderate
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
12. Under the Articles of Confederation, the nationโs armed forces were financed by federal income
taxes.
ANS: F
DIF: Moderate
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
13. The principal advantage of the Articles of Confederation was that the central government could
prevent one state from discriminating against other states in the quest for foreign commerce.
ANS: F
DIF: Moderate
Conflicts
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The First Founding: Interests and
14. Delegates from all 13 colonies attended the Annapolis Convention.
ANS: F
DIF: Easy
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Remembering
15. Shaysโs Rebellion was forcefully ended by the quick and decisive actions by federal troops sent by
Congress under the Confederation.
ANS: F
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Remembering
16. The American colonists who led the revolution against England and worked to construct a
workable constitution were not very concerned about philosophical and ethical ideas.
ANS: F
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Remembering
17. The Constitutional Convention passed the New Jersey Plan with little compromise.
ANS: F
DIF: Easy
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Remembering
18. Delegates from large states, such as Pennsylvania, were able to manipulate the procedures at the
Constitutional Convention in order to achieve final adoption of the Virginia Plan with negligible
amendment.
ANS: F
DIF: Easy
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Remembering
19. The Three-Fifths Compromise established the principle, new in republican theory, that a man who
lives among slaves had a greater share in the election of representatives than the man who did not.
ANS: T
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Remembering
20. Members of the U.S. Supreme Court serve staggered six-year terms.
ANS: F
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Second Founding: From Compromise to Constitution
MSC: Remembering
21. In the United States, no set of institutional procedures is more important than the Declaration of
Independence.
ANS: F
DIF: Easy
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
22. Under the Constitution as originally passed, the members of the Senate were to be appointed by the
state legislatures.
ANS: T
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
MSC: Remembering
23. Staggered terms of service in the Senate were intended to make that body even more politically
responsive to popular opinion.
ANS: F
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
24. The Constitution implies that any power not explicitly granted to the federal government is not
granted at all.
ANS: F
DIF: Easy
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
25. In the absence of an amendment, any power not specifically enumerated in the Constitution is
conceived to be reserved to the national government.
ANS: F
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
26. The Constitution grants the president the unconditional power to accept ambassadors from other
countries.
ANS: T
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
27. The Constitution grants the Supreme Court the unconditional right to grant reprieves and pardons.
ANS: F
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
28. Federal judges are given lifetime appointments.
ANS: T
DIF: Easy
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
29. The Constitution makes no direct mention of judicial review.
ANS: T
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
30. In Section 8 of Article III, the U.S. Constitution discusses the important principle of judicial
review.
ANS: F
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
31. There were no checks and balances in the Constitution until passage of the Bill of Rights.
ANS: F
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
32. The Constitution does not explicitly mention the principle of the separation of powers.
ANS: T
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
33. Each branch of the government of the United States is responsible to a different constituency.
ANS: T
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Remembering
TOP: CH02 – The Constitution
34. Throughout the Constitution, the principle of majority rules prevails.
ANS: F
DIF: Moderate
TOP: CH02 – The Fight for Ratification: Federalists versus Antifederalists
MSC: Remembering
35. The most recent amendment added to the American Constitution is the balanced budget
amendment.
ANS: F
DIF: Difficult
TOP: CH02 – Changing the Institutional Framework: Constitutional Amendment
MSC: Remembering
ESSAY
1. The U.S. Constitution has been amended 27 times, and just 17 times since 1791. What institutional
factors help explain the (arguably) low number of amendments to the U.S. Constitution?
ANS:
The process for amending the Constitution is complex and difficult to satisfy.
There are four pathways to amending the Constitution.
1) Proposal by a two-thirds vote of both chambers of Congress, approval by three-fourths of
state legislatures (the most common path)
2) Proposal by a two-thirds vote of both chambers of Congress, approval by conventions in
three-fourths of states (used once)
3) Proposal by a constitutional convention called by two-thirds of state legislatures, approval
by three-fourths of state legislatures (never used)
4) Proposal by a constitutional convention called by two-thirds of state legislatures, approval
by conventions in three-fourths of states (never used)
Each pathway requires multiple supermajority thresholds. In practice, each constitutional
amendment has required both federal and state support, and the support of both major political
parties (note: the text for Chapter 2 does not mention political parties on this point). This makes it
difficult for most structural changes to gain approval. And, for most policy and legal issues,
advocates are more likely to pursue their goals by using the ordinary lawmaking process or to seek
favorable Supreme Court interpretations of existing constitutional provisions rather than to add
new provisions to the Constitution.
MSC: Analyzing
2. Were the British wrong to expect the American colonies to begin paying more in taxes during the
years leading up to the American Revolution? Why or why not?
ANS:
YES: The increase in taxation violated preexisting expectations of the colonists, who did not want
to be used to pay for the kingโs military adventures. One of the primary restraints on the British
monarchy was the kingโs reliance on Parliament for funding, so there was a strong link between
representation in Parliament and freedom from tyranny. American colonists were denied
parliamentary representation and thus exposed to unlimited abuse by the monarchy.
NO: Fundamentally, the American colonists expected the British government to provide military
security on the frontier and the high seas without contributing to the costs of these public goods.
That is, they preferred to free ride. It was fair for the British government to expect American
colonists to pay their fair share.
MSC: Evaluating
3. List and describe the various sectors of colonial society and explain the role of each during the
events leading up to the American Revolution and writing of the Constitution.
ANS:
1) New England merchants
2) Southern planters
3) royalistsโpersons directly or indirectly supported by the Crown or otherwise intensely
loyal
4) shopkeepers, artisans, and laborers
5) small farmers
Timeline
๏ท Before 1765, New England merchants, Southern planters, and royalists supported the
British government.
๏ท Beginning with the Stamp Act of 1765, the imposition of taxes drove New England
merchants and Southern planters out of the pro-Crown coalition and into the anti-Crown
coalition.
๏ท The harsh British response to the 1773 Boston Tea Party promoted the development of this
anti-Crown coalition.
๏ท After the outbreak of Revolutionary War hostilities, royalists either left the colonies,
converted to pro-independence, or dropped out of politics.
๏ท After the war was officially over, the New England merchants and Southern planters
became nervous about the excesses of state-level democracy and the weakness of the
central government. They supported the development and adoption of the new U.S.
Constitution.
MSC: Analyzing
4. Why did the framers feel a need to replace the Articles of Confederation?
ANS:
The Articles of Confederation established a weak central government with no executive branch or
independent judiciary. The Continental Congress lacked the ability to actually enforce its
mandates.
As a result, the Continental Congress could not enforce the treaties it made with other countries or
defend American merchant trade. State governments were often dominated by radical elements
that interfered with the economic status quo, including diluting the value of currency to aid
debtors.
Shaysโs Rebellion in Massachusetts in 1787 highlighted the fragility of internal security in the new
country. The state of Massachusetts struggled to put down the revolt by desperate farmers, and the
central government had little power to aid the state authorities or induce other states to assist.
MSC: Analyzing
5. Were the Founders motivated primarily by economic interests or moral principles?
ANS:
The economic interests argument was made first and most boldly by Charles Beard in 1913. Beard
argues that the Founders wrote the Constitution to protect and expand their fortunes. This is
consistent with some facts: Northern merchants did fear debtor riots, while Southern states feared
slave revolts; both preferred a strong central government to address these potential problems. The
new federal government also helped protect against currency inflation, limited credit markets, and
high public debts.
The moral principles argument holds that the Founders were primarily acting on the political ideas
current in their era. For example, they sought to protect commerce against state legislators seizing
property and to ensure the ability of all citizens to participate in government.
MSC: Evaluating
6. In what ways did the new Constitution represent an improvement over the Articles of
Confederation?
ANS:
1) The new Constitution delegated real power to the national government. Thus the federal
government was much better able to provide collective goods to states and citizens, such
as the following:
a) military security against potential invasions or internal revolt
b) defense of U.S. merchant ships at sea
c) effective and coordinated diplomacy with other countries
d) a national postal service
e) better-coordinated domestic trade with uniform rules and weights and measures
2) This new national government included independent executive and judicial branches. This
provided a new source of quick action (the president) and oversight over the legislative
branch.
3) More broadly, the new national government effectively paired a larger grant of power to
itself with multiple checks to prevent tyrannical use of this power. As a result, citizens
were more secure from the abuses of government; they had previously been subject to
potential abuse by state governments acting with little national oversight.
MSC: Evaluating
7. Why did the framers fear excessive democracy? Through what means were they able to limit its
influence on the structure of government?
ANS:
The text mentions that the framers feared excessive democracy at the state level and wanted to rein
it in. This includes state policies like diluting the value of currency, seizing property, canceling or
delaying debts, and refusing to pay off government debts. Such policies demonstrated the potential
for democratic tyranny.
More broadly, the framers were familiar with democracies and republics throughout history and
assumed that humans are ambitious and are prone to abuse power if they can. They worried, for
example, that the new independent president included in the Constitution might become a popular
demagogue and tyrant.
The limits they imposed include the following:
1) Direct limits on the use of power in the Constitution, especially the Bill of Rights and
Article I, Section 9
2) Checks and balances
a. bicameralism
b. separation of powers, with three branches able to block and influence each other
c. federalism, with independent state governments able to block federal actions
3) Regular elections for politicians serving fixed terms
MSC: Analyzing
8. How did the Founders ultimately balance the need for an effective national government with the
need to protect the rights of states and individuals?
ANS:
1) The new Constitution delegated real power to the national government. Thus the federal
government was much better able to provide collective goods to states and citizens, such as
the following:
a) military security against potential invasions or internal revolt
b) defense of U.S. merchant ships at sea
c) effective and coordinated diplomacy with other countries
d) a national postal service
e) better-coordinated domestic trade with uniform rules and weights and measures.
2) This new national government included independent executive and judicial branches. This
separation provided a new source of quick action (the president) and oversight over the
legislative branch.
3) More broadly, the new national government effectively paired a larger grant of power to
itself with multiple checks to prevent tyrannical use of this power. These include the
following:
a. Direct limits on the use of power in the Constitution, especially the Bill of Rights
and Article I, Section 9
b. Checks and balances
i. bicameralism
ii. separation of powers, with three branches able to block and influence
each other
iii. federalism, with independent state governments able to block federal
actions
c. Regular elections for politicians serving fixed terms
MSC: Analyzing
9. What compromises were made during the Constitutional Convention and why?
ANS:
The text highlights two compromises: The Great Compromise (also known as the Connecticut
Compromise) between large and small states and the Three-Fifths Compromise between slave and
nonslave states. The first pact established a bicameral legislature, with one chamber based on
representation and the other allowing states to have equal representation. The second settled the
question of whether slaves would go toward Congressional representation by allowing three-fifths
of a stateโs population of slaves to count.
In addition to these central compromises, student essays may mention any of several other
provisions as the result of a compromise based on other course materials or studentsโ own prior
knowledge of the Constitution.
MSC: Analyzing
10. What strategies are built into the Constitution to prevent the abuse of power?
ANS:
1) The new national government included independent executive and judicial branches. This
provided a new source of quick action (the president) and oversight over the legislative
branch.
2) More broadly, the new government effectively paired a larger grant of power to
government with multiple checks to prevent tyrannical use of this power. These include
the following:
a. Direct limits on the use of power in the Constitution, especially the Bill of Rights
and Article I, Section 9.
b. Checks and balances
i. bicameralism
ii. separation of powers, with three branches able to block and influence
each other
iii. federalism, with independent state governments able to block federal
actions
c. Regular elections for politicians serving fixed terms
MSC: Analyzing
11. During the fight for ratification, what major criticisms did the Antifederalists deliver against the
proposed Constitution, and how did the Federalists respond?
ANS:
1) The Antifederalists argued that citizens could not be truly and fairly represented in a large
republic. Genuine representation requires sympathy and similarity that can only be found
in small republicsโthat is, states. Absent a close representational bond, citizens will
ignore and violate federal laws.
Federalists replied that the Constitution would allow representatives to have some
discretionโsome independence from the opinions of their constituentsโwhich would
allow them to govern well. Good governance, in turn, would promote obedience.
2) Antifederalists were fearful of tyranny by a small group of elites who gained control of
government and then gradually increased their hold on power. Federalists were concerned
by the threat of majority tyranny by state legislatures. Larger republics are more diverse
and hence less prone to abusive majorities, and the complex structure of the federal
government, including staggered elections, would help limit the threat of tyranny by the
new federal authorities.
3) The Antifederalists sought to limit the grant of power to the federal government by
strictly enumerating what it could (a list of enumerated powers) and could not (a Bill of
Rights) do.
Federalists believed the new government needed a broad mandate and some flexibility to
adapt to new situations.
MSC: Analyzing
12. Explain the process for amending the Constitution and use specific examples to discuss the types
of amendments that have actually been ratified.
ANS:
There are four pathways to amending the Constitution.
1) Proposal by a two-thirds vote of both chambers of Congress, approval by three-fourths of
state legislatures (used for all amendments except the Twenty-First)
2) Proposal by a two-thirds vote of both chambers of Congress, approval by conventions in
three-fourths of states (used once, to pass the Twenty-First Amendment repealing
Prohibition)
3) Proposal by a constitutional convention called by two-thirds of state legislatures, approval
by three-fourths of state legislatures (never used)
4) Proposal by a constitutional convention called by two-thirds of state legislatures, approval
by conventions in three-fourths of states (never used)
Each pathway requires multiple supermajority thresholds. In practice, each constitutional
amendment has required both federal and state support and the support of both major political
parties (note: the text for Chapter 2 does not mention political parties on this point).
MSC: Analyzing
13. In what ways do we see the rationality principle manifest in the creation of the Constitution?
ANS:
1) The actions of individuals and groups of people were based on their perceived self-interest.
Merchants and planters sought a stronger federal government to ensure security, domestic
and foreign trade, and some protection from state legislatures. State legislators resisted the
Constitution as a reduction in their power, while many delegates to the Constitutional
Convention advocated for the interests of their states based on size, industry, and
dependence on slavery.
2) The decision to cooperate at the Constitutional Convention by using negotiation and
compromise reflected a rational calculus that the new nation would make them all better
off if they could resolve their differences.
3) The Constitution is designed to accommodate and exploit the behavior of rational
self-interest. Self-interested politiciansโ desire for power would motivate them to monitor
and check the other branches of government, while elected representatives would seek to
do the best possible job so they could be reelected.
4) The process for ratification of the Constitution reflected a strategic decision to avoid the
process for amendment laid out in the Articles of Confederation: unanimous consent of
state legislatures. This would never work, because state legislatures would lose authority in
general and Rhode Island in particular was opposed to the new Constitution.
Note: There may be several other legitimate points.
MSC: Understanding
14. Compare and contrast the powers of Congress under the Articles of Confederation and the
Constitution. Was Congress more or less powerful under the Articles of Confederation?
ANS:
Congress was much less powerful under the Articles of Confederation. Structurally, Congress was
the only real branch under the Articles of Confederation, with no independent executive or judicial
branch.
Nominally, the Articles of Confederation Congress had the power to declare war and make peace,
to make treaties and alliances, to coin or borrow money, and to regulate trade with Native
Americans. It did not have the power to regulate commerce between states, levy taxes, or form a
national army. In practice, however, the Articles of Confederation Congress had little real power to
execute its own laws or compel states to conform to its mandates.
MSC: Analyzing
15. What types of collective dilemmas did the United States face under the Articles of Confederation?
ANS:
The Articles of Confederation established a weak central government with no executive branch or
independent judiciary. The Continental Congress lacked the ability to actually enforce its
mandates.
As a result, the Continental Congress could not enforce the treaties it made with other countries or
defend American merchant trade. State governments were often dominated by radical elements
that interfered with the economic status quo, including diluting the value of currency to aid
debtors.
Shaysโs Rebellion in Massachusetts in 1787 highlighted the fragility of internal security in the new
country. The state of Massachusetts struggled to put down the revolt by desperate farmers, and the
central government had little power to aid the state authorities or induce other states to assist.
See pages 37โ40.
MSC: Analyzing
16. Institutions shape politics. Why did the institutions designed by the Articles of Confederation lead
to pressures to draft a new Constitution?
ANS:
The Articles of Confederation established a weak central government with no executive branch or
independent judiciary. The Continental Congress lacked the ability to actually enforce its
mandates.
As a result, the Continental Congress could not enforce the treaties it made with other countries or
defend American merchant trade. State governments were often dominated by radical elements
that interfered with the economic status quo, including diluting the value of currency to aid
debtors.
Shaysโs Rebellion in Massachusetts in 1787 highlighted the fragility of internal security in the new
country. The state of Massachusetts struggled to put down the revolt by desperate farmers, and the
central government had little power to aid the state authorities or induce other states to assist.
See pages 37โ40.
MSC: Analyzing
17. The framers developed four constitutional principles that prevent the threat of excessive
democracy: bicameralism, checks and balances, staggered terms of office, and indirect election.
Describe these principles and how they prevent the federal government from directly reflecting the
will of the people.
ANS:
1) Bicameralism: The use of a legislature with two chambers. The framers adopted the
structure of the U.S. Congress, with two independently elected bodies, as the result of the
Connecticut Compromise or Great Compromise.
2) Checks and balances: The mechanisms through which each branch of government is able
to participate in and influence the activities of the other branches. Students may provide
specific examples, such as the executive veto.
3) Staggered terms: The Senate, House of Representatives, and president serve terms of
different lengths and thus their electoral terms are not synchronized. The Senate, in
addition, is elected on a staggered cycle, so one-third of its members are elected each time.
This approach helps diversify the electoral incentives of elected officials; they have
differing time horizons and were elected under different circumstances.
4) Indirect elections: The original Constitution provided for indirect election of senators.
They were selected by state legislatures as a way to limit popular influence on senators and
to ensure that the Senate was composed of more elite members. This changed with the
Seventeenth Amendment to the Constitution. Additionally, the president is elected
indirectly. Each state chooses an allotted number of presidential electors, who vote to
choose the president. In practice, however, these electors are elected by popular vote and
have nearly zero discretion.
MSC: Analyzing
18. How did the cleavages between small states and large states and between slave states and nonslave
states shape the institutional design of the Constitution?
ANS:
The text highlights two compromises (see pages 41โ46): The Great Compromise (also known as
the Connecticut Compromise) between large and small states and the Three-Fifths Compromise
between slave and nonslave states. The first pact established a bicameral legislature, with one
chamber based on representation and the other allowing states to have equal representation. The
second settled the question of whether slaves would go toward Congressional representation by
allowing three-fifths of a stateโs population of slaves to count.
MSC: Analyzing
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