Constitution and New Republic, 1776-1800

Post on 24-Feb-2016

47 views 0 download

Tags:

description

Constitution and New Republic, 1776-1800. Philadelphia Convention 1787. Washington agrees to preside only after Shays’ Rebellion Complete overhaul of federal gov’t on the agenda Weaknesses of Articles of Confederation obvious Fear of centralized gov’t still strong. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

transcript

Constitution and New Republic,1776-1800

Philadelphia Convention 1787¨ Washington agrees to preside only

after Shays’ Rebellion¨ Complete overhaul of federal gov’t

on the agenda¨ Weaknesses of Articles of

Confederation obvious¨ Fear of centralized gov’t still

strong

Madison and the Virginia Plan¨ Madison, Randolph and other

Virginians dominate early proceedings

¨ Executive, legislative, and judicial branches called for by Randolph–Bicameral Congress (2 houses)

•Lower house by population•Lower chooses upper house

Small States Respond (New Jersey Plan)¨ Patterson calls for unicameral

Congress (one house)–Equal representation for all states–Increased taxing/interstate power

¨ VA Plan supporters knew they had to compromise with the small states to ensure ratification

The Great Compromise

¨ Bicameral Congress created–House of Reps. (Lower House)

•elected based on population•3/5 compromise

–Senate (Upper House) •equal representation for all states

Dodging the Issue¨ Southern delegates worry about the

legality of slavery and the fed. gov’t interfering with it

¨ Slave trade allowed to continue until 1808

¨ No heavy taxing on imported slaves

Federalists¨ Hamilton, Madison, and Jay

publish The Federalist Papers¨ Thought a stronger, more

centralized gov’t was needed¨ Abandoned the ideas of the

Articles of Confederation¨ Feared chaos and the power of the people

Anti-Federalists

¨ Jefferson led this group¨ Feared concentrated power¨ Trusted the will of the people¨ Thought Constitution was too

removed from the people¨ Demanded a bill of rights

Bill of Rights¨ Appeased the Anti-Federalists¨ #1-9 stop Congress from

impinging on rights¨ #10 Powers not mentioned

reserved to the state gov’ts

Washington takes the oath of office

Washington’s Presidency

¨ Received all electoral votes ¨ Adams (Federalist) becomes Vice

President¨ Remained “neutral” in politics

(actually, supported Federalists)

Forming the First Cabinet¨ Hamilton

–Sec. of Treasury¨ Knox

–Sec. of War¨ Randolph

–Attorney General¨ Jefferson

–Sec. of State

¨ Tried to balance regions and viewpoints

¨ Rift develops between Hamilton and Jefferson

Hamilton’s Financial Program¨ Washington supported¨ Tried to gain support of the elite¨ Gov’t should assume public debt

and state debt¨ Taxes raised by whiskey tax¨ Create a National Bank to stabilize

financial structure

Opposition to Federalist Program¨ VA protests assuming state debts

–Future capital is moved to Washington DC as compromise

¨ Small farmers protest taxes¨ National Bank

–“Loose” interpretation of Constitution troubled Jefferson, Madison, and others

–Passed over protests

Beginnings of Political Parties

¨ Constitution does not mention parties

¨ Washington opposed them¨ These early squabbles created

allies and enemies•Federalists•Republicans (Anti-Federalist)

Securing the Frontier¨ Northwest Ordinance was not

enough¨ Land claims sorted out¨ Whiskey Rebellion in

Pennsylvania put down by federal gov’t. when President Washington sent federal troops to stop it

Whiskey Rebellion Flag

Foreign Difficulties¨ Britain and France engaged in war¨ American neutrality declared

–“Citizen Genet”–British impressment–Jay’s Treaty w/ Britain

(Federalist influenced)–Pinckney’s Treaty w/ Spain (US

can use the Mississippi)

Pinckney’s Treaty

John Adams’ Presidency

¨ Washington’s Farewell Address¨ One-term Federalist, elected in

1796 over Jefferson (became VP)¨ Federalists were splintering

The Quasi War with France

¨ XYZ Affair outrages Americans¨ Undeclared naval warfare¨ Eventually tensions cool

Alien and Sedition Acts¨ Federalists attempt to quiet

Republican Opposition¨ Alien Act

–Harder for foreigners (tended to be Republican) to become citizens

¨ Sedition Act–Punished anti-gov’t activities

(writings and otherwise)

The “Revolution” of 1800¨ Rematch from 1796¨ Bitter campaigns¨ Jefferson elected after 36 counts¨ Republicans now control executive

and legislative branches of gov’t.¨ Federalists control judicial branch

–Adams appoints “midnight” judges