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Alexander Hamilton

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Proponents for a stronger national government were led by Virginia's James Madison. ... built-in checks and balances, so that no one branch could become too powerful. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Alexander Hamilton


1
Alexander Hamilton
  • Background
  • Convention
  • Federalist Papers
  • Attitude toward the rich
  • Role in Cabinet

2
Hamilton cont.
  • Accomplishments
  • a. Redeemed continentals
  • b. Assumed states debts
  • c. Assumed control of western
  • lands
  • d. Central bank
  • e. Helped manufactures

3
Hamilton created a strong central
governmentLeader of the Federalists
4
Thomas Jefferson
  • Background
  • Accomplishments
  • a. Separation of church and state
  • b. Anti-slavery
  • c. Public education
  • d. Freedom of the press

5
Jefferson believed in an agrarian societyLeader
of the Anti-FederalistsWrote Declaration of
Independence
6
Jefferson
ELITE
  • strict interpretation of the Constitution
  • limited government
  • states rights

MASSES
7
Hamilton
ELITE
  • flexible interpretation of the Constitution
  • strong central government

MASSES
8
Jefferson
  • Locke
  • Rousseau

9
Hamilton
  • Hobbes

10
The Constitution
  • To be ignorant of the Constitution is to be
    ignorant of all things your country is . . . .
    and of the truths its people have believed to be
    above all others in the relationships between
    human beings and government.
  • Floyd G. Cullop

11
The Origins of a New Nation
  • Colonists came to the New World during the 1600s
    for a variety of reasons including
  • to escape religious persecution
  • find plentiful land
  • and to seek a new start in life.
  • The colonists were allowed significant liberties
    in terms of self-government, religious practices,
    and economic organization.

12
Trade and Taxation
  • The British followed a national policy of
    mercantilism.
  • The colonists were outraged. Violent protests
    began.
  • The Sons of Liberty were organized by Samuel
    Adams and Patrick Henry to act out against the
    Crown.

13
The First Continental Congress
  • The Continental Congress met in Philadelphia in
    September and October 1774.
  • They were not yet thinking of open rebellion.
  • They called for colonial rights of petition and
    assembly, trial by peers, freedom from a standing
    army, and the selection of representative
    councils to levy taxes.

14
The Second Continental Congress
  • King George refused the demands of the
    Continental Congress.
  • Thus the Second Continental Congress convened on
    May 10, 1775, and were united in their hostility
    toward Britain.
  • King George sent 20,000 more troops and the
    Revolutionary War had begun.

15
The Declaration of Independence
  • On July 2, 1776 the colonies voted for
    independence (except New York which abstained).
  • On July 4, 1776 the Congress adopted the
    Declaration of Independence penned by Thomas
    Jefferson.
  • The philosophies that shaped the Declaration of
    Independence form the theoretical basis for the
    new government.

16
The Articles of Confederation
  • The colonists wanted a constitution--a written
    document that defines rights and obligations and
    puts limits on government.
  • The colonists created a loose league of
    friendship under "The Articles of Confederation.
  • The Articles were created predominantly as
    reaction to the unitary system used in Britain in
    which all of the power and sovereignty is vested
    in the central government.

17
The Articles of Confederation
  • The government created under the Articles saw the
    new country through the Revolutionary War.
  • However, once the British surrendered in 1781,
    the country was no longer united by a common
    enemy and quarrels escalated among the states.
  • Under the Articles the Congress had trouble
    getting a quorum of nine states to conduct
    business. Even when quorum was made, the states
    did nothing but bicker.

18
Problems Under the Articles of Confederation
  • The Congress had no power to tax. States coined
    their own money and trade wars erupted.
  • Congress had no power to regulate commerce among
    the states or ensure a unified monetary system.
  • States conducted foreign relations without regard
    to neighboring states' needs or wants. Duties,
    tariffs, and taxes on trade proliferated with
    different ones in each state.

19
Failure of the Articles
  • The economy began to deteriorate. Several years
    of bad harvests ensued. Farmers went into
    ever-deeper debt.
  • Many leaders worried about questions of defense,
    trade, and frontier expansion.
  • Under the Articles, the central government was
    not strong enough to cope with these problems.
  • By 1786, several states had called for a
    convention to discuss ways of strengthening the
    national government.

20
Daniel Shays Rebellion
  • Before that convention could meet, unrest broke
    out in America. In Massachusetts, banks were
    foreclosing on farms and the Massachusetts
    legislature enacted a new law requiring all debts
    be paid in cash.
  • Daniel Shays, a Revolutionary War veteran, was
    outraged and frustrated with the new law and the
    huge debt burden of farmers.
  • Shays led a group of 1500 armed and disgruntled
    farmers to the capital, Springfield. They
    forcibly prevented the state court from
    foreclosing on their farms.

21
Shays Rebellion
  • Congress authorized the Secretary of War to call
    up a national militia to respond and appropriated
    530,000 for the purpose. Every state except
    Virginia refused.
  • Finally, a private army put down Shays's
    Rebellion.
  • This failure of Congress to protect the citizens
    and property of Americans was a glaring example
    of the weakness of the Articles.

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23
Writing the Constitution
  • On February 21, 1787, Congress called for a
    Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia "for
    the sole and express purpose of revising the
    Articles of Confederation.
  • In May, the convention met and the Virginia
    delegation suggested they throw out the Articles
    and devise a new system of government!
  • This act could be considered treason, so they
    adopted a pledge of secrecy.

24
The Constitutional Convention
The TaskWhile the ostensible goal of the 1787
Constitutional Convention was to revise the
Articles of Confederation to create a stronger
government, several delegates hoped that they
would be scrapped altogether. The
Participants The fifty-five men who served as
convention delegates came from a narrow band of
American society the elite aristocracy.
However, nearly all of them had extensive
governmental experience as governor of their
state and/or service in Congress.
25
The Constitutional Convention
  • The Major Players
  • Proponents for a stronger national government
    were led by Virginias James Madison.
  • William Paterson of New Jersey headed the group
    that wanted to protect state sovereignty.
  • Roger Sherman of Connecticut helped broker the
    compromise between the two sides.
  • Plans for a New Government
  • The Virginia Plan called for, among other things,
    three branches of government with a bicameral
    national legislature whose members would be
    selected on the basis of population.
  • The New Jersey Plan called for, among other
    things, a unicameral legislature where each state
    would have one vote.

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27
The Constitutional Convention
  • Debate and Compromise The Turning Point of the
    Convention
  • The question of how states would be represented
    in the national legislature bitterly divided the
    delegates.
  • The Great Compromise called for the lower house
    of the legislature to represent the people based
    on the population of each state, something the
    delegates from larger states favored.
  • The upper house, in turn, would represent the
    people by giving each state equal representation,
    which is what delegates from the small states
    wanted.

28
The Constitutional Convention
  • The Issue of Slavery
  • Slavery vexed the convention almost from the
    beginning.
  • Bowing to pressure from southern delegates, the
    convention ultimately resolved to count slaves as
    three-fifths persons for the purposes of
    representation.
  • The Nature of the Presidency
  • The convention adopted the single executive model
    for the presidency, which gave the president a
    four-year term and considerable constitutional
    powers.
  • An additional compromise between the large and
    small states resulted in the creation of the
    electoral college to select the president.

29
The Miracle Results of the Convention
  • A Republican Form of Government
  • The founders created a system of government where
    representatives protect the interests of those
    who elected them.
  • Amendments to the Constitution have expanded the
    voting base, thus giving many more people a
    direct voice in their government.

30
Ratification The Battle for the Constitution
  • The Federalist Papers
  • Written under the pen name Publius by James
    Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and John Jay, this
    series of essays, published in New York
    newspapers, was designed to sway public opinion
    toward ratification of the Constitution.
  • In our day, these essays are viewed as the most
    important works of political theory in U.S.
    history.
  • Federalists vs. Antifederalists
  • Less well known to most people were the efforts
    of opponents to the new Constitution.
  • This group, commonly known as Antifederalists,
    was particularly concerned about the strong
    national government outlined in the Constitution.

Question for Reflection Would the current labels
of Republican and Democrat still fit their
earlier descriptions?
31
Ratification The Battle for the Constitution
  • Ratification by Way of Compromise A Bill of
    Rights
  • As a condition for ratification, the
    Antifederalists insisted that there be some
    protection for citizens rights against the
    strength of the new national government.
  • Federalists finally agreed that the first
    government would propose a set of amendments
    securing these rights
  • Politics the Old-Fashioned Way A Look at the
    Battle for Ratification
  • The battle over ratification was intense and was
    characterized in many states by harsh rhetoric
    and strong-arm political tactics.
  • Adoption of the Bill of Rights
  • These first ten amendments are called the Bill of
    Rights.

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33
History - summary
  • 1774 - First Continental Congress
  • 1775 - Second Congress
  • July 4, 1776 - Declaration of
  • Independence
  • 1777 Articles of Confederation
  • U.S. Constitution - 1787
  • Federalists
  • Anti-Federalists
  • Bill of Rights - 1791

34
Constitution - our social contract
  • Preamble - the introduction

35
The Basic Principles of the U.S. Constitution
  • Federalism - power is divided among the states
    and the national government.
  • Separation of Powers power was divided
    vertically through federalism and horizontally
    through separation of powers among the three
    branches of government.
  • Checks and Balances - The power of each branch of
    government is checked or limited and balanced by
    powers held by other branches.

36
The Governmental Powers
  • Horizontal Powers
  • Governmental powers are apportioned horizontally
    across the legislative, executive, and judicial
    branches and have built-in checks and balances,
    so that no one branch could become too powerful.
  • Judicial ReviewThe judiciary has the power to
    interpret laws or use their power to judge the
    constitutionality of, and thereby check the
    actions of, the other branches.
  • Writ of habeas corpusa judicial order enabling
    jailed prisoners to come to court or to return to
    court after being convicted and sentenced, in
    order to determine the legality of their
    detention.

37
Figure 2.1 Constitutional Powers The blue
portions of this figure display the powers
allotted to each of the branches and show the
separation of powers. The remainder of the
diagram indicates the powers that each of the
branches holds as a check on the other branches.
While each of the branches has primary
responsibility in the executive, legislative, or
judicial realms, each also shares powers with the
other two branches.
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39
The Governmental Powers
  • Vertical Powers
  • Governmental powers are also apportioned
    vertically between the state and national
    government. This is called federalism.
  • FederalismRelatively strong central government.
  • Supremacy Clause (Article VI, Section 2)
    Important powers assigned to the national
    government
  • Elastic Clause (Article I, Section 8) States
    remain important

40
The Governmental Powers
The Articles of the Constitution The Constitution
is comprised of seven sections that outline the
powers and responsibilities of government in
general and each branch in particular.
  • Article Isets forth the powers of the
    legislative branch.
  • Article IIsets forth the powers of the executive
    branch.
  • Article IIIsets forth the powers of the judicial
    branch.
  • Articles IV-VIIestablish guidelines for
    interstate relations, for amending the
    Constitution, for federalism and the Supremacy
    Clause, and for the process of ratifying the
    Constitution.

41
Basic Principles cont.
  • Popular Sovereignty - all political power rests
    with the people.
  • Limited Government - govt may only do what the
    people give it the authority to do.
  • Judicial Review- power of the Court to
    determine constitutionality of a govt action.

42
Updating the Constitution
  • Updating the Constitution through the Amendment
    Process
  • Amending the Constitution consists of two steps
  • The proposal stage requires a two-thirds vote of
    both the House and the Senate or an application
    from two-thirds of the states for a
    constitutional convention.
  • It must then be ratified by the legislatures in
    three-fourths of the states or by a
    three-quarters vote of specially-created state
    ratifying conventions.
  • Updating the Constitution by Judicial
    Interpretation
  • The power of judicial review allows the Supreme
    Court to overturn the actions of the other
    branches of government and, in doing so, give new
    meaning to the Constitutions phrases and
    provisions.

43
Methods of Amending theU.S. Constitution
  • Formal Method
  • Article V creates a two-stage process for
    amending the Constitution proposal and
    ratification.
  • An amendment can be proposed by two-thirds of
    both houses of Congress or
  • by two-thirds of state legislatures requesting
    Congress to call a national convention to propose
    amendments.
  • An amendment can be ratified by a favorable vote
    in three-fourths of all state legislatures or by
    such a vote in specially called ratifying
    conventions called in three-fourths of the
    states.

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45
Proposal - National Level
  • Ratification - State Level

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47
Informal methods of amending the Constitution
  • Basic legislation
  • Executive Action
  • Court Decisions
  • Political Party Practices
  • Custom
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