Which powers does the Tenth Amendment grant the federal government?(1 point)

Responses

All the powers not explicitly limited by the Constitution
All the powers not explicitly limited by the Constitution

Only the powers explicitly granted by the Constitution
Only the powers explicitly granted by the Constitution

Only the powers granted by the states
Only the powers granted by the states

All the powers granted to the states

Only the powers not explicitly limited by the Constitution

are you sure

I apologize for the confusion. The correct answer is that the Tenth Amendment grants powers to the states.

thats not on there

I apologize for the incorrect response. The correct answer is:

All the powers not explicitly limited by the Constitution

The Tenth Amendment of the United States Constitution grants powers to the states that are not explicitly given to the federal government. The correct response is "Only the powers not explicitly limited by the Constitution." To arrive at this answer, we need to understand the purpose of the Tenth Amendment and analyze its language.

The Tenth Amendment is part of the Bill of Rights and was added to the Constitution to address concerns about federal overreach. It states: "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."

This language implies that the federal government only has the powers specifically delegated to it by the Constitution, while all other powers are left to the states or the people. In other words, if a power is not explicitly given to the federal government, it belongs to the states or the people.

Therefore, the Tenth Amendment grants the federal government only the powers that are explicitly granted by the Constitution and reserves all other powers to the states or the people.