Answer:
1. Access
Federalism has the advantage of giving people access to the government because the division of government to local level means that people get the chance to have a say in their local governance.
2. ''shall be the supreme Law of the Land''
In saying that the US Constitution and any laws of treaties made from it are the Supreme law of the land, the Constitution puts federal law over state law as it is supreme to state law.
3. The correct order is;
- Case on Affordable Care Act provisions heard in state court.
- Petitions filed at federal level.
- Supreme Court decision effects similar laws in all 50 states.
The rift valleys. its the continental plates moving apart
Answer:
1. The freedom of religion, speech, and to peacefully assemble together.
2. The right to own a gun.
3. The right to not house a solider.
4. The right to not be searched or have something taken away within reason.
5. The right to life, liberty, property, and no double jeopardy or self-incrimination.
6. The right to a speedy trial, public trial, and with a jury of your peers.
7. The right to an jury trial in a civil case.
8. Protection from excessive bail, and cruel and unusual punishments.
9. Any rights not given to the federal government are given to the states.
10. Protects the states from law suits.
11. There are separate ballets for the President and Vice President.
12. The abolishment of slavery.
13. Equal protection under the Constitution for all United States citizens.
14. No voting discrimination of race.
Bias. their actions were bias.
As the world has gotten more complex, the Federal government has undertaken efforts to take power away from the State governments and bring it to the Federal government for the purpose of centralized planning and to ensure that States are not abusing their power at the expense of minorities. They have done this by expanding commerce clause power (allow Congress to get involved in more than they once were) and by passing Civil Rights laws that let the Federal government get involved in state issues.
In recent memory, the States have utilized lobbying and lawsuits to push back against the Federal government. A number of States have filed lawsuits against the Federal government on issues like the Voting Rights Act and the Affordable Care Act.
For most of the 20th Century, this push has been led by Conservatives but since Donald Trump's election, liberal states are embracing the role of the State in a federalist system.