- Red, White, and Blue.
- 50
- White
- One for each state in the union
- 13
- Red and White
- They represent the original 13 states
- 50
- Independence Day
- July 4th
- England
- England
- George Washington
- Barack Obama
- Joe Biden
- The electoral college
- Vice-President
- Four years
- The supreme law of the land
- Yes
- Amendments
- 27
- 3
- Legislative, Executive, and Judiciary
- Congress
- Congress
- The Senate and the House of Representatives
- To make laws
- The people
- 100
- John Ensign and Harry Reid
- 6 years
- 435
- 2 years
- The President, cabinet, and departments under the cabinet members
- The Supreme Court
- To interpret laws
- The Constitution
- The first 10 amendments of the Constitution
- Carson City
- Jim Gibbons
- Speaker of the House of Representatives
- John G. Roberts, Jr.
- Connecticut, New Hampshire, New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts,
Pennsylvania, Delaware, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia,
Rhode Island, and Maryland
- Patrick Henry
- Germany, Italy, and Japan
- Alaska and Hawaii
- 2
- A civil rights leader
- Your County Commissioners
- Must be a natural born citizen of the United States; Must be at least 35
years old by the time he/she will serve; Must have lived in the United States
for at least 14 years
- 2 from each state
- Appointed by the President
- 9
- For religious freedom
- Governor
- Mayor
- Thanksgiving
- Thomas Jefferson
- July 4, 1776
- That all men are created equal
- The Star-Spangled Banner
- Francis Scott Key
- The Bill of Rights
- 18
- The President
- The Supreme Court
- Abraham Lincoln
- Freed many slaves
- The Cabinet
- George Washington
- Form N-400, "Application to File Petition for Naturalization"
- The American Indians (Native Americans)
- The Mayflower
- Colonies
- Rights:
- The right of freedom of speech, press, religion, peaceable assembly and
requesting change of government.
- The right to bear arms (the right to have weapons or own a gun, though
subject to certain regulations).
- The government may not quarter, or house, soldiers in the people's homes
during peacetime without the people's consent.
- The government may not search or take a person's property without a
warrant.
- A person may not be tried twice for the same crime and does not have to
testify against him/herself.
- A person charged with a crime still has some rights, such as the right
to a trial and to have a lawyer.
- The right to trial by jury in most cases.
- Protects people against excessive or unreasonable fines or cruel and
unusual punishment.
- The people have rights other than those mentioned in the Constitution.
- Any power not given to the federal government by the Constitution is a
power of either the states or the people.
- The Congress
- Republic
- Abraham Lincoln
- 1787
- The Bill of Rights
- The Constitution.
- In the Capitol in Washington, D.C.
- Everyone (citizens and non-citizens living in the U.S.)
- The Preamble
- Obtain federal government jobs; travel with a U.S. passport; petition for
close relatives to come to the U.S. to live
- The right to vote
- The place where Congress meets
- The President's official home
- Washington, D.C., (1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.)
- The White House
- Freedom of: speech, press, religion, peaceable assembly, and, requesting
change of the government
- The President
- George Washington
- November
- January
- There is no limit
- There is no limit
- Democratic and Republican
- 50
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