Federalism vs Separation of Power

This is a quick guide on "Federalism" and "Separation of Powers", story behind the two terms, what they are, and the difference.

Story of the Constitution

Separation of Powers
Difference between Federalism and Separation of Power, using a dessert as an example

The writers of the Constitution also wanted to avoid the government from becoming too strong, so they limited the government's power to only do those things people have given it the power to do. This was the principle of Consent of the Governed[1]. To give the Constitution legitmacy, the Preamble to the Constitution of the United States of America begins, We the People, which establishes that the power of government comes from the people, this principle became was known as the principle of Checks and Balances[2].

In addition to the idea that power of government comes from the people, they brought back the idea of electing people to make laws and conduct government on their behalf, which is the fundamental political principle of Representative Government[3]. After the states agreed to the Constitution, the Constitution became the Supreme Law of the land in America.

The writer's put a lot of thought into what they needed to do. This is when they decided they need three more principles to limit the power of the Central Government.

Constitutional Principles

Federalism Chart of the Levels of Government

Vocabulary

Consent of the Governed

People are the source of any and all governmental power

Checks and Balances

The delegates build a "checks and balances" system, so one branch doesn't have all the power.

Representative Government

In a representative system of government, people elect public officeholders to make laws and conduct government on the people's behalf.

Federalism

Divisions of power between levels of the government.

Separation of Powers

Divided the government into three BRANCHES (Legislative, Executive, Judicial).

Limited Government

Not all powerful, only follows what the people order them to do.

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