Chief Justice of the United States: John Roberts (John G. Roberts, Jr.)
Governor of Wisconsin: Tony Evers
Speaker of the House of Representatives: Mike Johnson
Capital of Wisconsin: Madison
One of the two longest rivers in the United States: Missouri River, Mississippi River
Supreme law of the land: the Constitution
One Branch or Part of the Government: Congress/Legislative, President/Executive, The Courts/Judicial
Who is in charge of the executive branch?: the President
Who makes federal laws?: Congress (Senate and House of Representatives)
How many U.S. Senators are there?: 100
What does the Constitution do?: sets up the government
Voting members in the House of Representatives: 435
Length of a U.S. Representative's term: 2 years
Who does a U.S. Senator represent?: all people of the state
First three words of the Constitution (self-government): We the People
Next in line if both President and Vice President can no longer serve: Speaker of the House
Commander in Chief of the military: the President
Who signs bills to become laws?: the President
Who vetoes bills?: the President
What does the President’s Cabinet do?: advises the President
Two Cabinet-level positions: Vice President, Attorney General, Secretaries of various departments (Agriculture, Commerce, Defense, Education, Energy, Health and Human Services)
Number of Justices on the Supreme Court: 9
What is an amendment?: a change (to the Constitution)
One power of the federal government: print money, declare war, create an army, make treaties
One power of the states: provide schooling and education, provide protection (police)
Chief Justice of the United States: John Roberts (John G. Roberts, Jr.)
Governor of Wisconsin: Tony Evers
Speaker of the House of Representatives: Mike Johnson
Capital of Wisconsin: Madison
One of the two longest rivers in the United States: Missouri River, Mississippi River
Supreme law of the land: the Constitution
One Branch or Part of the Government: Congress/Legislative, President/Executive, The Courts/Judicial
Who is in charge of the executive branch?: the President
Who makes federal laws?: Congress (Senate and House of Representatives)
How many U.S. Senators are there?: 100
What does the Constitution do?: sets up the government
Voting members in the House of Representatives: 435
Length of a U.S. Representative's term: 2 years
Who does a U.S. Senator represent?: all people of the state
First three words of the Constitution (self-government): We the People
Next in line if both President and Vice President can no longer serve: Speaker of the House
Commander in Chief of the military: the President
Who signs bills to become laws?: the President
Who vetoes bills?: the President
What does the President’s Cabinet do?: advises the President
Two Cabinet-level positions: Vice President, Attorney General, Secretaries of various departments (Agriculture, Commerce, Defense, Education, Energy, Health and Human Services)
Number of Justices on the Supreme Court: 9
What is an amendment?: a change (to the Constitution)
One power of the federal government: print money, declare war, create an army, make treaties
One power of the states: provide schooling and education, provide protection (police)
Last day to send in federal income tax forms: April 15th
Reason Colonists fought the British: high taxes (taxation without representation)
Author of the Declaration of Independence: Thomas Jefferson
Declaration of Independence adopted on: July 4th, 1776
Three of the 13 original states: New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey
What happened at the Constitutional Convention: The Constitution was written.
When was the Constitution written: 1787
Writers of the Federalist Papers: James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, Publius
One thing Benjamin Franklin is famous for: U.S. diplomat, oldest member of the Constitutional Convention
“Father of Our Country”: George Washington
Territory bought from France in 1803: the Louisiana Territory
One war fought by the U.S. in the 1800s: War of 1812, Mexican-American War
U.S. war between the North and the South: the Civil War
Problem leading to the Civil War: slavery, economic reasons, states' rights
One important thing Abraham Lincoln did: freed the slaves (Emancipation Proclamation)
What did the Emancipation Proclamation do?: freed the slaves in the Confederacy
What did Susan B. Anthony do?: fought for women’s rights
One war fought by the U.S. in the 1900s: WWI, WWII, Korean War, Vietnam War, (Persian) Gulf War
President during World War I: Woodrow Wilson
President during the Great Depression and World War II: Franklin Roosevelt
Eisenhower's background before presidency: general in World War II
Main concern during the Cold War: Communism
Movement to end racial discrimination: civil rights movement
What did Martin Luther King, Jr. do?: fought for civil rights
Major event on September 11, 2001: Terrorists attacked the United States.
One American Indian tribe in the United States: Bad River Band of Lake Superior Ojibwe, Ho-Chunk Nation, etc.
Name of the national anthem: The Star-Spangled Banner