Политическая система США

Политическая система США

The political system of the USA.

The United States of America is the greatest capitalist country in the

world. The USA is the President republic. It means that the president is

the head of the country. The President is elected for four years, together

with the Vice-President, chosen for the same term. He cannot be younger

than 35 years old and he must have lived in the USA for at least 14 years,

and be a civilian. He must do his job according to the Constitution. The

President cannot serve more than two terms.

The legislative branch of the US Government, or the Congress,

represents all of the American states. The Congress was created by Article

I of the constitution, adopted in 1787. It consists of two parts: the House

of Representatives and the Senate.

The Senate made up of 100 members (2 from each state), elected for a

term of 6 years. One third of the Senate is elected every 2 years. To be

elected a Senator, a person must be a least 30 years old and have been a

citizen of the USA for at least 9 years.

The House of Representatives comprises representatives from each

state, elected for a two-years term. The number of representatives from

each state depends on its population, but every state is represented. To be

elected a representative, a person must be at least 25 years of age and

have been a citizen of the country for at least 7 years.

In general, Senators are better known than Representatives because

they are fewer in number and serve for a longer time. Many American

Presidents served in Congress before they became President. Presidents John

Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, and Richard Nixon were all Representatives and

then senators before becoming President of the United States.

The presiding officer of the Senate is the Vice-President of the USA.

The presiding officer of the House of Representatives, the Speaker, is

elected by the house. The work of preparing and considering laws is done by

the committees of both Houses. There are 15 standing committees in the

Senate and 19 in the House of Representatives.

The job of the Congress is to make laws. The President can veto a

bill. The Congress can pass the law anyway if it gets a two-thirds majority

vote. The Congress can also declare the war. The House of Representatives

can also impeach the President. This means that the House can charge the

President which a crime. In this case, the Senate will put the President on

trail. The Senate votes to approve the justices that the President appoints

to Supreme Court. The Congress assembles at least once a year.

The executive branch of the government puts the country’s laws into

effect. It consists of the president, the Vice-President and the Cabinet.

The President is the head of the executive branch of the government; he

appoints the members of the Cabinet. When the president receives a bill

from the Congress, he must sign it, and then the bill becomes a law. The

Cabinet advises the President on many matters and is composed of the heads

of ten executive departments: Secretary of Senate, Secretary of Treasury,

Secretary of Defence and others.

The judicial branch of the government is the system of courts in the

United States. Its job is to enforce laws. The Supreme Court is the highest

court in the country. It consists of 9 justices: one Chief Justice and 8

associate justices. The President appoints the justices, but the Senate

must approve them. The justices are appointed for life. The Supreme Court

makes sure people obey the laws. The Supreme Court can also decide if a law

is constitutional, that is, if it is in agreement with the Constitution.

The judicial branch works together with the legislative and executive

branches to protect the Constitution and the rights of people.

There are two main bourgeois political parties in the USA. They are

the Democratic Party (was organized in the 1820s) and the Republican Party

(was organized in the 1850s). They defend monopoly capital. The only party

that defends the interests of the working people is the Communist Party. It

was formed in 1919 in Chicago. The Communist Party struggles for better way

of life for the working people and it fights for the interests of Negroes

and coloured people, against all kinds of discrimination. The Communist

Party stands for peaceful coexistence with the socialist countries.

The basis of the American republic.

The Constitution of the United States is the central instrument of

American government and the supreme law of the land. For 200 years, it has

guided the evolution of governmental institutions freedom, economic growth

and social progress.

The American Constitution is the world’s oldest written constitution

in force, one that has served as the model for a number of other

constitutions around the world. The Constitution owes its staying power to

its simplicity and flexibility. Originally designed to provide a framework

for governing four million people in 13 very different colonies along the

Atlantic coast, its basic provisions were so soundly conceived that, with

only 26 amendments, it now serves the needs of more than 240 million people

in 50 even more diverse states that stretch from the Atlantic to the

Pacific Ocean.

The path of the Constitution was neither straight nor easy. A draft

document emerged in 1787, but only after intense debate and six years of

experience with an earlier federal union. The 13 British colonies, strung

out along the eastern seaboard of what is now the United States, declared

their independence from England in 1776. A year before, war had broken out

between the colonies and Great Britain, a war for independence that lasted

for six bitter years. While still at war, the colonies — now calling

themselves the United States of America — drafted a compact, which bound

them together as a nation. The compact, designated the “Articles of

Confederation and Perpetual Union”, was adopted by a Congress of the states

in 1777, and formally signed in July 1778. The Articles became binding when

they were ratified by the 13th state, Maryland, in March 1781.

It was under these inauspicious circumstances that the Constitution of

the United States was drawn up. In February 1787, the Continental Congress,

the legislative body of the republic, issued a call for the states to send

delegates to Philadelphia to revise the Articles. The Constitutional, or

Federal, Convention convened on May 25, 1787, in Independence Hall, where

the Declaration of Independence had been adopted 11 years earlier on July

4, 1776. Although the delegates had been authorized only to amend the

Articles of Confederation, they pushed the Articles aside and proceeded to

construct a charter for a wholly new, more centralized form of government.

The new document, the Constitution, was completed September 17, 1787, and

was officially adopted March 4, 1789.

The 55 delegates who drafted the Constitution included most of the

outstanding leaders, of Founding Fathers, of the new nation. They

represented a wide range of interests, backgrounds and stations in life.

All agreed, however, on the central objectives expressed in the preamble to

the Constitution:

We the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect

union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the

common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of

liberty to ourselves and our posterity, to ordain and establish this

Constitution for the United States of America.

The Bill of Rights.

The Constitution has been amended 26 times since 1789, and it is

likely to be further revised in the future. The most sweeping changes were

made within two years of its adoption. In that period, the first 10

amendments, known collectively as the Bill of Rights, were added. They were

approved as a block by the Congress in September 1789, and ratified by 11

states by the end of 1791.

Much of the initial resistance to the Constitution came not from those

opposed to strengthening the federal union, but from statesmen who felt

that the rights of individuals must be specifically spelled out. One of

these was George Mason, author of the Declaration of Rights of Virginia,

which was a forerunner of the Bill of Rights. As a delegate to the

Constitutional Convention, Mason refused to sign the document because he

felt individual rights were not sufficiently protected. Indeed, Mason’s

opposition nearly blocked ratification of Virginia. As noted earlier,

Massachusetts, because of similar feelings, conditioned its ratification on

the addition of specific guarantees of individual rights. By the time the

First Congress convened, sentiment for adoption of such amendments was

nearly unanimous, and the Congress lost little time in drafting them.

These amendments remain intact today, as they were written two

centuries ago. The first guaranties freedom of worship, speech and press,

the right of peaceful assembly, and the right of petition the government to

corrects wrongs. The second guarantees the right of citizens to bear arms.

The third provides that troops may not be quartered in private home without

the owner’s consent. The fourth guards against unreasonable searches,

arrests and seizures of property.

The next four amendments deal with the system of justice: The fifth

forbids trial for a major crime expect after indictment by a grand jury. It

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