The 20th amendment sets out the term limits for the president, which is important because even the president needs rules. It also describes who becomes president if something happens to him.
The federal government sets national speed limits by promising monetary incentives to states that cooperate with their legislature. The states can set their own limits but if they want aid from the federal government they must comply with their mandates.
If you're asking which amendment that is, then it's Amendment 8.
The 10th Amendment says that when powers not specifically defined by the Constitution, the states have the power to maked their own judgments. Examples would be: death penalty, speed limits, drinking age. This amendment gives the states more power.
It gave the powers not given to the federal government to the states themselves. That is a lot of things that the constitution gives the states. But in a dispute over federal and state laws, federal laws overrule state laws. As a practical matter, there has bee no successful challenge to a federal law based on the 10th Amendment since the 1930's (with the exception of the Lopez case). Therefore, when Tea Party activists and far right politicians argue that a law is unconstitutional because it is not the federal government's business, it is a meaningless protest. If the feds want to pass a law, it will virtually always be upheld as a reasonable exercise of the Commerce Clause of the Constitution, notwithstanding the seeming implications of the Tenth Amendment. Also, the feds can get their way by simply conditionally promising money. For example, when the feds said that speed limits should be 55 MPH, a plausible argument could have been made that setting speed limits by the feds was the state's business pursuant to the 10th Amendment (after all, there is nothing specific in the Constitution about regulating speed limits), but if a state had refused to lower the speed limits, the feds would not have provided that state any more highway funds.
There is no such amendment. US Senators and Representatives do not have term limits.
The 22nd Amendment sets the limit of presidential term to 10 years max.
It sets the speed at which Highway Safety Engineers determine can be driven safely on that stretch of roadway.
The Twenty-second Amendment (Amendment XXII) of the United States Constitution sets a term limit for the President of the United States.
The 20th amendment sets out the term limits for the president, which is important because even the president needs rules. It also describes who becomes president if something happens to him.
They mean if you drive over 50 MPH, you will get a speeding ticket.
The federal government sets national speed limits by promising monetary incentives to states that cooperate with their legislature. The states can set their own limits but if they want aid from the federal government they must comply with their mandates.
amendment 8th
If you're asking which amendment that is, then it's Amendment 8.
Yes. The Twenty-Second Amendment, ratified in 1951, limits the US President to two terms of office.
the 22nd amendment limits the president to two terms, or a maximum of ten years
the 27th amendment