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The Making of the Constitution: Ideological and Political Background

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Radical Whigs: power is by nature aggressive, corrosive, and corrupting ... naturally self-interested, society is factious, and government is a necessary ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Making of the Constitution: Ideological and Political Background


1
The Making of the ConstitutionIdeological and
Political Background
  • Teaching American History
  • Year II, Lecture 1

2
Whig Ideology Government is a Necessary Evil
  • Radical Whigs power is by nature aggressive,
    corrosive, and corrupting
  • Lockean individualism or liberalism people are
    naturally self-interested, society is factious,
    and government is a necessary evil to protect
    natural rights

3
Whig Ideology and the Perils of Republicanism
  • Republican government is not possible on a large
    scale because
  • Elected representatives must represent small
    numbers of people to keep them in touch and
    accountable
  • The more distant the seat of government, the more
    insular and remote it becomes, and the more
    difficult it is for the governed to control
  • The larger the nation, the more factions and
    parties you have, which tear government apart
  • Parties are bad because they represent interest
    groups and sections, are not concerned about the
    good of the whole
  • The republican ideal the virtuous,
    disinterested, public-spirited statesman who
    governs in the interest of the whole and is
    beholden to no party

4
Government is Force
  • Government is not reason, it is not eloquence
    it is a force! Like fire, it is a dangerous
    servant and a fearful master never for a moment
    should it be left to irresponsible action.
  • George Washington

5
The Framers Frame of Reference Models of
Government
  • The British Constitution
  • All classes represented in three branches (king,
    lords, and commons)
  • Mixture of three classic types of government
    (monarchy, aristocracy, democracy), checking and
    balancing one another
  • Colonial or provincial governments mirrored this
    British model
  • No estates or fixed classes in America, but
    mixed government still the norm
  • Governor appointed by crown, council appointed by
    governor, assembly elected by freeholders
  • System functioned nicely until 1760s, when it
    began to break down

6
The Framers Frame of Reference The
Revolutionary Experience
  • Colonial governments were compromised by the
    Townshend duties and finally collapsed after the
    Coercive Acts
  • Led American Whigs to distrust powerful governors
    and seek a new model of government that placed
    most power in the hands of the elected assembly
  • Given their assumptions and experiences, American
    Whigs sought to keep national government weak and
    power concentrated in the states

7
First Experiment The Confederation, 1777-1789
  • Articles of Confederation (1777, ratified 1781)
  • Loose confederation of states, weak central
    government
  • Government structure
  • Powers and limits
  • Most power rested with states

8
Achievements of the Confederation
  • Victory over British
  • Laws concerning territories
  • Land Ordinance of 1785
  • Northwest Ordinance of 1787

9
Functional Problems of the Confederation
  • The states were not cooperating
  • Revenue shortfalls after the war
  • Robert Morris, the revenue of 1783, and the
    Newburgh Conspiracy
  • States refusing to enforce Treaty of Paris
  • Payment of pre-war debts to British creditors
  • Return of confiscated property to Loyalists
  • Nationalists critical of Confederation
  • Advocates for strong national economy
  • Advocates for strong military
  • Critics of democracy in general
  • Politicians pander to the wishes of the people,
    pass irresponsible laws
  • The people are not really fit to govern

10
John Adams on Voting Qualifications
  • The Same Reasoning, which will induce you to
    admit all Men, who have no Property, to vote . .
    . will prove that you ought to admit Women and
    Children. It will tend to confound and destroy
    all Distinctions, and prostrate all Ranks, to one
    common Levell.
  • --- John Adams, 1776

11
Pretext for a New Constitution Securing Property
  • The Annapolis Convention (1786)
  • Shays Rebellion (1786-7)
  • Postwar economic crisis
  • Debt, foreclosures, imprisonment of debtors
  • Solution one print more money
  • Solution two revolt/Shays Rebellion

12
Toward a New Constitution
  • What astonishing changes a few years are capable
    of producing. I am told that even respectable
    characters speak of a monarchical form of
    government without horror. What a triumph for
    the advocates of despotism to find that we are
    incapable of governing ourselves, and that
    systems founded on the basis of equal liberty are
    merely ideal and fallacious! Would to God that
    wise measures may be taken in time to avert the
    consequences we have but too much reason to
    apprehend.
  • -- George Washington, 1786
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