What does we the people mean in the constitution

"We the People" is the opening phrase of the Preamble to the United States Constitution and the Preamble to the Constitution of India.

We the People may also refer to:

Politics and government

  • We the People: The Citizen and the Constitution, an activity sponsored by the Center for Civic Education
  • We the People Act, a bill proposed in the US House of Representatives
  • We the People Foundation, a tax-protest organization
  • We the People Reform Movement, a political initiative in Belize
  • We the People (petitioning system), an online petitioning mechanism sponsored by the US federal government
  • "We the Peoples", the opening expression of the Preamble to the United Nations Charter

Film and television

  • We the People (Indian TV series), an Indian discussion programme
  • We the People (American TV series), a CBS Television program from 1948 to 1952
  • We the People, a film directed by Brent Huff
  • We the People (2021 TV series), a Netflix animated musical series produced by Barack and Michelle Obama
  • We the People (court show), a courtroom series first hosted by Gloria Allred and soon hosted by Lauren Lake

Books

  • We the People, a children's book about the writing of the United States Constitution by Lynne Cheney
  • We, the People the Drama of America, a 1932 Marxist history of the US by Leo Huberman

Music

  • We the People (band), an Orlando, Florida-based garage rock band from the 1960s

Albums

  • We the People (Adrenaline Mob album), 2017
  • We the People (Ellen McIlwaine album), 1973
  • We the People (Flipsyde album), 2005
  • We the People (Guitar Shorty album), 2006
  • We the People (The Soul Searchers album), 1972
  • We the People, Volume 1 by Colt Ford, 2019
  • We the People by Ray Stevens, 2010

Songs

  • "We the People...." (song), by A Tribe Called Quest
  • "We the People", by Mudvayne from The New Game
  • "We the People", by Megadeth from TH1RT3EN
  • "We the People", by Billy Ray Cyrus from his 2000 album Southern Rain
  • "We the People", by Colt Ford from his 2019 album We the People, Volume 1
  • "We the People", by Kid Rock from his 2022 album Bad Reputation

Other uses

  • We the People, a play by Eric Schlosser about the writing of the US Constitution
  • We the People (boardgame), a board wargame about the American Revolution
  • Wrestler Jake Hager used this as a slogan during his wrestling career in WWE

Topics referred to by the same term

What does we the people mean in the constitution

This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title We the People.
If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.

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Each week, The Spokesman-Review examines one question from the Naturalization Test immigrants must pass to become United States citizens.

Today’s question: The U.S. Constitution starts with the words “We the People.” What does “We the People” mean?

“We the People” is one of the best-known phrases in the American political lexicon. They are the first three words of the Preamble to the Constitution of the United States and propose that the “people” should be the driving force behind what government does or doesn’t do.

The phrase was written by Gouverneur Morris, one of the most active and vocal of the 55 delegates at the Constitutional Convention in 1787. He initially proposed that the preamble begin “We the States,” which was rejected in the final draft in favor of the idea that the Constitution should aim to form a unified nation rather than a treaty of separate, sovereign states like the failed “Articles of Confederation.”

But who are the “people?”

For the purpose of ratifying the Constitution, the “people” were defined as free white men who owned property. Over time, the franchise was expanded through a series of amendments to the Constitution to include African American men (15th Amendment; 1870), women (19th Amendment; 1920) and people 18 years of age (down from 21) and older (26th Amendment; 1971). Native Americans were granted the right to vote in 1924 with the passage of the Indian Citizenship Act. The Voting Rights Act of 1965 eliminated instruments of voter suppression such as literacy tests, expanding the group even further.

When the Supreme Court ruled in Citizens United vs. FEC (2010) that corporations have a First Amendment right to make independent expenditures in political campaigns, the definition of personhood for political purposes was expanded again. Not all changes to voting laws have been inclusive. For example, in 2013 the Supreme Court struck down some portions of the Voting Rights Act. As the U.S. Congress considers the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act of 2021 and a number of states debate the topic of voting rights, it is clear that the question of the meaning of “We the People” is far from settled.

On the civics test administered by the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, among the acceptable answers to this question are “Popular Sovereignty,” “Consent of the Governed,” and (as an example of a) Social Contract.

Popular Sovereignty is the principle that government gets its authority through the consent of the governed through their elected representatives. Thomas Jefferson proposed this idea in the Declaration of Independence in 1776 when he wrote, “We hold these truths to be self-evident (that) Governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.” The question of what “consent” means is, at best, ambiguous. Does consent connote simply the opportunity to participate in the political process even if that opportunity is not exercised (“implied consent”), or does it mean active participation through voting or other political activities? Is majority rule necessary for consent to be legitimate?

In pondering the idea of consent, it is instructive to remember that the Constitution enshrined several anti-majoritarian features into the Constitution such as the Electoral College for Presidential elections and the fact that each state, regardless of population, receives two seats in the U.S. Senate. These provisions mean that small, predominantly rural states receive disproportionate representation in federal elections and some of its institutions.

For instance, California’s population is roughly equal to that of the 22 smallest states. Since each state receives the same number of seats in the Senate, the result is that California has two Senators while the 22 smaller states send a total of 44 members to this congressional body. Further, what does consent of the governed mean in practice when Joe Biden received over 80 million votes in the presidential election of 2020 but that these votes represented only about 30% of the voting age population in that year?

A frequently overlooked meaning of “We the People” discussed at the Constitutional Convention was the creation of a Social Contract. This idea, popularized by political philosophers like John Locke and Jean-Jacques Rousseau during the “Age of Enlightenment,” is that democratic governments come into being because people are willing to give up some of their freedoms and agree to follow certain laws in exchange for the security and protections offered by the state.

Locke and others recognized that as individuals, people might naturally prefer absolute freedom to do what they wish. The idea of social contracts recognizes that human societies are greater than the sum of the parts. This is the idea behind James Madison’s famous sentiment in Federalist Paper No. 51 that “If men were angels, no government would be necessary.” Madison believed that people willingly exchange some freedoms in the name of the collective interest. Social contracts establish rules and norms that can be both explicit, as in laws, but also implicit, as in behaving in a civil manner in the public sphere.

Contemporary politics in the United States is obviously highly polarized and divisive. This is partially owing to disagreements related to “hot button” issues such as gun laws, abortion and immigration.

But to a greater extent, the discord gripping the nation is a result of a battle between different narratives regarding the future of America.

These are not policy differences, which might be open to bargaining and negotiation. Rather, it represents an existential divide in which each side sincerely believes that the other is trying to destroy America.

To what extent does the current state of American politics make the idea that “We the People” are engaging in a social contract quaint and outdated?

Steven Stehr is the Sam Reed Distinguished Professor in Civic Education and Public Civility at Washington State University in Pullman. This article is part of a Spokesman-Review partnership with the Foley Institute of Public Policy and Public Service at Washington State University.