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Callum 11 months ago
* In a confederation, states remain fully sovereign and independent nations. The central body exists only at their discretion. In a federation, sovereignty is constitutionally divided between the central (federal) government and the constituent states/provinces. * A confederation's central body has only the powers *explicitly delegated* by the states. It typically cannot make laws directly applicable to individuals within the states; it deals with the state governments. A federation's central government has significant, independent powers (often enumerated in a constitution) and can make laws directly binding on individuals throughout the federation. The U.S. Constitution established all defining traits of a federation: - Divided Sovereignty : Power explicitly split between federal and state governments (Articles Iโ€“III, Tenth Amendment) - Supremacy Clause. : Federal law overrides state law (Article VI, Clause 2) - Direct Governance : Federal laws bind individuals directly (e.g., federal taxes, crimes) - No Right of Secession : Implied by the Constitution's permanence; explicitly affirmed in *Texas v. White* (1869) Disclaimer : The majority of the text in this reply generated by an LLM (to save me the effort)
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