Question
Powers explicitly granted to the federal government by the Constitution. Example: Coining money, declaring war
Response area: Powers not expressly stated but inferred from the Constitution's necessary and proper clause. Example: Creating a national bank, building interstate highways
Response area: Powers shared by both the federal and state governments. Example: Taxation, law enforcement
Response area: Powers not granted to the federal government and reserved for the states or the people. Example: Creating public schools, intrastate commerce
Response area: Powers explicitly prohibited to the federal government. Example: Conduct illegal search and seizure, prohibit freedom of speech
Denied PowersConcurrent PowersEnumerated PowersImplied PowersReserved Powers
Response area: Powers not expressly stated but inferred from the Constitution's necessary and proper clause. Example: Creating a national bank, building interstate highways
Response area: Powers shared by both the federal and state governments. Example: Taxation, law enforcement
Response area: Powers not granted to the federal government and reserved for the states or the people. Example: Creating public schools, intrastate commerce
Response area: Powers explicitly prohibited to the federal government. Example: Conduct illegal search and seizure, prohibit freedom of speech
Denied PowersConcurrent PowersEnumerated PowersImplied PowersReserved Powers
Answers
GPT-4o mini
Here is the organized response based on the categories you provided:
### Enumerated Powers
- Powers explicitly granted to the federal government by the Constitution.
- **Example**: Coining money, declaring war.
### Implied Powers
- Powers not expressly stated but inferred from the Constitution's necessary and proper clause.
- **Example**: Creating a national bank, building interstate highways.
### Concurrent Powers
- Powers shared by both the federal and state governments.
- **Example**: Taxation, law enforcement.
### Reserved Powers
- Powers not granted to the federal government and reserved for the states or the people.
- **Example**: Creating public schools, intrastate commerce.
### Denied Powers
- Powers explicitly prohibited to the federal government.
- **Example**: Conduct illegal search and seizure, prohibit freedom of speech.
### Enumerated Powers
- Powers explicitly granted to the federal government by the Constitution.
- **Example**: Coining money, declaring war.
### Implied Powers
- Powers not expressly stated but inferred from the Constitution's necessary and proper clause.
- **Example**: Creating a national bank, building interstate highways.
### Concurrent Powers
- Powers shared by both the federal and state governments.
- **Example**: Taxation, law enforcement.
### Reserved Powers
- Powers not granted to the federal government and reserved for the states or the people.
- **Example**: Creating public schools, intrastate commerce.
### Denied Powers
- Powers explicitly prohibited to the federal government.
- **Example**: Conduct illegal search and seizure, prohibit freedom of speech.