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This Sucks, Change It

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From the Articles of Confederation to the Constitution, 1783-1787. Articles of Confederation ... Once convened realize Articles a mess ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: This Sucks, Change It


1
This Sucks, Change It
  • From the Articles of Confederation to the
    Constitution, 1783-1787

2
Articles of Confederation
  • System of government that had arisen during
    Revolution and continued after
  • Ad hoc creation
  • Lots of problems
  • No executive
  • No judiciary
  • No taxing power
  • Change requires all thirteen to agree
  • Theres always Rhode Island

3
Practical Problems of Independence
  • Finances. There are none.
  • Robert Morris and Bank of North America
  • Killed by Rhode Island
  • Right Modern Rhode Island Population Density
    Map, Bureau of the Census, Department of Commerce

4
Practical Problems of Independence
  • The army. Still mobilized and waiting to be
    paid.
  • Morris and Alexander Hamilton
  • Newburgh Conspiracy
  • Right Alexander Hamilton, by Daniel Huntington
    from John Trumbull, 1865

5
Practical Problems of Independence
  • Debt is a problem. A growing problem.
  • 11 million to 28 million
  • States have their own debts
  • National government running a deficit each year

6
Practical Problems of Independence
  • Only tangible asset is land
  • Disagreement about how to use this asset
  • Disagreement about who should benefit
  • Right Thomas Cole, The Oxbow, 1836

7
Northwest Ordinance (1787)
  • Lands carved up into territories and opened to
    settlement
  • Colonial relationship with central government
  • 60,000 can petition for statehood
  • Slavery banned north of the Ohio

8
Practical Problems of Independence
  • Economic depression outside of the mercantilist
    system.
  • Little hard currency to facilitate trade and
    credit
  • British prices now higher
  • Thirteen different trading policies toward UK
  • States soon turn on one another

9
Practical Problems of the Revolution
  • What was this all about anyway?
  • Home rule and who rules at home.
  • Democratic promise of declaration.

10
Conservative Elites Increasingly Besieged
  • Massachusetts as an example
  • Conservatives dominate state legislature because
    of urban voting strength
  • Right Modern Photo of Old State House, Boston, MA

11
Massachusetts Troubles
  • Want balanced budget
  • Oppose paper currency and debt relief
  • Balance the budget with taxes
  • Land tax
  • Poll tax
  • Right State Seal of Massachusetts

12
Shayss Rebellion
  • Daniel Shays leads western Massachusetts in
    revolt
  • Attack Springfield arsenal, but dispersed in 1786
  • Scares elites in Boston and elsewhere

13
Bringing Order to Chaos
  • Early 1787, Congress calls for convention in
    Philadelphia to revise Articles
  • People happy with Articles are suspicious
  • Relief and enthusiasm from those who want change
  • Meeting convenes in July and is known as
    Constitutional Convention

14
Constitutional Convention
  • Slow to get started
  • States delay sending people OR
  • Decided not to send anyone at all
  • Once convened realize Articles a mess
  • Modern Photo of Independence Hall, Philadelphia,
    PA by Dan Smith

15
Constitutional Convention
  • Agreed to go beyond their mandate
  • Tight security and secrecy
  • No formal written record

16
Constitutional Convention
  • Main debates are over the question of
    representation
  • Founders not democrats, they favor a republic
  • Agreed with conventional wisdom about mixed
    government to prevent tyranny
  • Intellectual descendants of Locke and Hobbes

17
Two main ideas, one compromise
  • Virginia Plan
  • Bicameral
  • Based on population
  • New Jersey Plan
  • Unicameral
  • Based on equal representation per state
  • Connecticut Compromise
  • Upper house equal representation
  • Lower house by population
  • Right Flag of Connecticut

18
So what is representation anyhow?
  • White male government
  • Constitution leaves voting requirements to states
  • Landowning a common requirement
  • Desire to have people of property more powerful
    than common man
  • Slavery, though, an emerging wedge

19
Three-fifths Compromise
  • North cries foul
  • South threatens not to play ball
  • Compromise reached
  • Direct taxation of slave property
  • Slaves counted toward representation
  • Gives artificial power to the South

20
Creation of the Presidency
  • Intellectual and practical conundrum
  • Madison considerable pause
  • Created presidency, but worried about its power
  • Also limited power of people to choose Electoral
    College

21
Creation of the Courts
  • Almost an afterthought
  • Not spelled out, though likely that English
    conception of their role dominant among founders
  • Supreme Court, with Congress creating lesser ones
  • Right United States Supreme Court, Washington, DC

22
Separation of Powers
  • Mixed government again
  • Also, Hobbes again
  • Powers unique to branches and not exercised by
    others
  • Powers unique even to houses of Congress

23
Checks and Balances
  • Congress v. President
  • President v. Congress
  • Both against the courts
  • Courts against the other two?
  • Bill of Rights as a sticking/selling point
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