United States Constitution Test

United States Constitution Test

11th Grade

•

22 Qs

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United States Constitution Test

United States Constitution Test

Assessment

Quiz

•

History

•

11th Grade

•

Practice Problem

•

Medium

Created by

Timothy Cunningham

Used 24+ times

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22 questions

Show all answers

1.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 2 pts

What is the primary power given to the Legislative Branch in the US Constitution?

Make Laws (items for the future)
Enforce Laws (items in the present)
Interpret Laws (Items from the past)
All of the Above.

2.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 2 pts

If a bill passes one of the houses of Congress, what is the next step?

The bill goes to the Supreme Court for review.
The bill then goes to the other house of Congress for review and vote
The bill is dead.
The bill becomes law.

3.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 2 pts

When the bill reaches the President, what are his options?

The President signs the bill and it becomes a law.
The President can veto the bill, and sends it back to the house where it originated.
The President can pocket veto, he does not act on the bill.
All of the Above.

4.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 2 pts

Why did the writers of the US Constitution make it so hard so difficult to pass a bill to become a law?

The writers felt laws were unnecessary.
The writers wanted to be certain that a law that was passed and created would only benefit the country.
The writers wanted the President to have the power to make laws.
All of the above.

5.

MULTIPLE SELECT QUESTION

30 sec • 5 pts

Which of the following are powers given directly to Congress by the US Constitution.

Power to introduce bills and make laws
The power to make any law that is "necessary and proper" for the United States - Elastic Clause.
Declare War
Impeach the President
Collect Taxes

6.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 2 pts

Why is the Electoral College used to elect the President?

It allows for all states to be a part of the election process, regardless of size, location, or population.
The Electoral College allows for only the states with largest populations to elect the president.
The writers did not want the people to vote for the President directly.
None of the Above - there are no benefits to the Electoral College.

7.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 2 pts

How are the number of electoral votes for each state determined?

The electoral votes are equal to the number of representatives each state has in Congress.
The electoral votes are determined by the population of the states - states with larger populations have more electoral votes.
The number of electoral votes can change from election to election depending on a states population.
All of the above.

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