with Complete Solutions | Comprehensive
Practice Guide
Question 1 (Multiple Choice - Document Based):
Document: "Energy in the Executive is a leading character in the definition of good
government. It is essential to the protection of the community... not less essential to the
steady administration of the laws; to the protection of property... and to the security of
liberty against the enterprises and assaults of ambition, of faction, and of anarchy." –
Alexander Hamilton, Federalist No. 70
Question: Hamilton’s argument in this excerpt most directly reflects which foundational
principle of American constitutional design, and what constitutional provision serves as
the primary mechanism for achieving this "energy"?
A. Republicanism; the Guarantee Clause requiring states to maintain republican forms
of government.
B. Checks and Balances; the congressional power to impeach and remove the
executive.
C. Separation of Powers; the vesting of executive power in a single President rather than
a plural executive or council.
D. Federalism; the Supremacy Clause ensuring federal law preempts state interference.
Solution:
Core Competency: Analyzing constitutional theory and structure through foundational
documents.
,Document Analysis: Hamilton explicitly argues for a vigorous, energetic executive
capable of decisive action to protect against threats external (ambition/faction) and
internal (anarchy). He emphasizes unity and vigor in execution.
Conceptual Bridge: Federalist No. 70 is the seminal defense of the unitary executive. The
"energy" Hamilton describes derives from the President's singular authority (Article II
vesting clause), enabling swift, decisive action unimpeded by committee-style
deliberation.
Elimination Logic: Option A confuses the form of government with the internal structure
of the branches. Option B describes a check on executive energy, not the source of it.
Option D describes federal-state relations, not the intra-branch unity Hamilton
advocates. The "single President" provision (Article II, Section 1) creates the unity
necessary for energy.
Final Answer: C
Synthesis Insight: This connects the philosophical arguments of the Founding
(Constitutional Foundations) to the institutional design of Article II (Institutions of
National Government), distinguishing between the Separation of Powers (distinct
branches) and Federalism (distinct levels).
Question 2 (Multiple Select - Scenario Based):
Scenario: A state legislature passes a law requiring all public school teachers to lead
students in voluntary prayer at the start of each day. A group of parents sues, claiming
the law violates the Establishment Clause. The case reaches the Supreme Court.
Question: Which of the following precedents or constitutional provisions would provide
the STRONGEST support for striking down the state law? (Select TWO.)
A. Engel v. Vitale (1962)
,B. The Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment
C. McCulloch v. Maryland (1819)
D. The incorporation of the Establishment Clause against the states via the Fourteenth
Amendment
E. United States v. Lopez (1995)
F. The Tenth Amendment reservation of powers to the states
Solution:
Core Competency: Evaluating constitutional jurisprudence regarding civil liberties and
the incorporation doctrine.
Scenario Analysis: The issue involves government-sponsored religious activity
(teacher-led prayer) in public schools—a direct Establishment Clause concern applied to
state action via incorporation.
Conceptual Bridge: To strike down the law, precedent must establish (1) that the
Establishment Clause applies to states (incorporation) and (2) that organized school
prayer constitutes establishment.
Selection Logic:
● A. Engel v. Vitale (1962): Directly on point; held that state-sponsored prayer in
public schools violates the Establishment Clause, even if
voluntary/non-denominational.
● D. Incorporation via Fourteenth Amendment: The Bill of Rights originally applied
only to the federal government; the Due Process Clause of the 14th Amendment
(per Gitlow, Cantwell, Everson) incorporates the Establishment Clause, making it
applicable to state and local governments.
B supports religious practice rights, not the prohibition of state establishment. C
addresses implied powers/federal supremacy. E limits commerce power. F would
support state power (opposite of striking down).
Final Answers: A, D
, Synthesis Insight: Integrates the unit on Civil Liberties (First Amendment) with the unit
on Constitutional Foundations (federalism, incorporation doctrine), requiring students to
distinguish between the Establishment and Free Exercise Clauses and understand the
mechanism of incorporation.
Question 3 (Chart Analysis - Data Based):
Data Description: A line graph titled "Public Trust in Government, 1958-2024" displays
three trend lines:
● "Trust Government Always/Most of the Time" (declining from ~75% in 1960 to
~20% in 2024, with spikes during Gulf War I and post-9/11)
● "Trust Congress Does Right Thing" (consistently lowest, ~10-15% since 2010)
● "Trust Executive Branch" (fluctuating widely, generally 40-60%, with peaks during
presidential honeymoons/crises)
Question: Which factor provides the most comprehensive explanation for the persistent
gap between trust in the presidency and trust in Congress as depicted in the data?
A. The presidency benefits from unified, singular messaging while Congress suffers
from visible partisan gridlock and collective action problems.
B. The President is directly elected by popular vote, while members of Congress use the
Electoral College.
C. Congress controls the power of the purse, making them responsible for all tax
increases.
D. Term limits ensure fresh presidential leadership while congressional incumbency
breeds corruption.
Solution:
Core Competency: Interpreting longitudinal political behavior data and linking it to
institutional design.