History, asked by sreevasist4695, 1 year ago

What does the Supremacy Clause do?

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Answered by mahakincsem
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It is a clause in the US constitution.

In this clause, numbered ( 2 )

Its article 6 states that state constitution is subordinate to the laws of the federation. This means that the federal law is the supreme and in authority in this nature under this section.

The federal laws made pursuant to it, and treaties made under its authority, constitute the supreme law of the land as well.

I hope this helps.

Answered by topanswers
0

Supremacy Clause: The Article VI of the U.S. Constitution states that the federal law is the supreme law of the land.

Federal law takes precedence over the state law.

A federal court may stop a state court from certain behavior that is in conflict with the federal law.

Based on the Supremacy clause, if there are conflicts over the state law and federal law, the judge should support the federal law.

Reason: Federal law is the supreme law.

Read more on Brainly.in - https://brainly.in/question/6479018

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