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Constitutional Era Articles of Confederation. Potential problems facing the young nation Foreign Policy Economic Problems Domestic Policy.

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Presentation on theme: "Constitutional Era Articles of Confederation. Potential problems facing the young nation Foreign Policy Economic Problems Domestic Policy."— Presentation transcript:

1 Constitutional Era Articles of Confederation

2 Potential problems facing the young nation Foreign Policy Economic Problems Domestic Policy

3 Problems: Foreign policy England: controlled trade, and still maintained a presence in America Spain: controlled access to the Mississippi River, controlling the trade of Northwest farmers France: Demanded repayment of debt Pirates: Raiding American ships

4 $$ Economics $$ Huge debt from war: Individual states and the national congress owed great sums of money High inflation: American money was virtually worthless Farm foreclosures: Patriots could not afford to pay back loans

5 Problems: Domestic Policy Is the new nation 13 independent countries or is it one united country?

6 Source of the Problem

7 Struggles under the Articles of Confederation AreasWeaknessConsequences Executive No central authority No one to enforce the laws Judiciary No federal court system Inability to settle disputes among states Taxes Congress could not impose or collect taxes No money to run the country

8 Struggles (cont) Trade Congress could not regulate trade between states Each state had its own trading laws and taxes Representation Each state, regardless of population, had only one vote in Congress The large states had no power over the little states

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11 Conflicting Powers of the Articles of Confederation Congress could: – Raise armies – Declare War – Sign treaties Congress could not: – Raise revenue through taxes – Regulate trade or collect tariffs

12 The Constitutional Convention May 1787: Philadelphia Each state represented (except R.I.)

13 The Constitutional Convention Leaders were all appointed by the state legislatures, whose members had been elected by voters who could qualify as property owners. 55 delegates convened on May 25, 1787 in the Philadelphia statehouse, most all were men of high prestige and conservative Jefferson, in Paris, called the group a “convention of demigods”

14 Hot Topics Representation – Large States vs Small States

15 Stronger New Government National principle: – National government should be stronger than the states

16 Hot Topics (cont) Slavery – North vs South

17 How should slaves be counted? – People? – Property?

18 Virginia Plan 3 Branches of Government Bicameral legislature Population based

19 New Jersey Plan Small state plan Equal voting in legislature Group executive States Rights

20 Compromises Great Compromise (Connecticut) – Population and Equality based legislature – House of Representatives control taxation

21 Compromises Three-Fifths Compromise – North: Slaves should not count in population totals – South: Smaller population would lead to northern domination – Compromise: Slaves will count as 3/5 of a person for representation

22 Compromises Cont. Most northerners and many southerners believed slavery would eventually die out. Most northerners also believed blacks inferior and could work only as menial laborers.

23 Compromises Commerce Compromise – Agricultural vs Industrial states – Congress could tax imports, but not exports

24 Constitutional Principles Federalism Separation of Powers – Checks and Balances Individual Rights

25 Federalism Shared Power between the National government & State governments

26 Stronger New Government

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28 Legislative Branch

29 Checks on Judicial Branch Creates lower courts Can impeach and remove judges Can propose amendments to overrule judicial decisions Approves appointments of federal judges

30 Checks on Executive Branch Can override presidential veto Confirms executive appointments Ratifies treaties Declares war Appropriates money Impeachment

31 Executive Branch

32 Check on Legislative Branch Proposes Laws Veto Call special sessions of Congress Appointments to federal posts Negotiates treaties

33 Check on Judicial Branch Appointments of judges Pardons

34 Supreme Court

35 Checks on Legislative Branch Declare acts of Congress illegal

36 Checks on Executive Branch Can declare actions unconstitutional

37 Articles of Confederation In effect, U.S. government was peacefully overthrown

38 Approval The new constitution must be ratified by 9 of the 13 states Special state constitutional conventions were convened to vote on the new government Debate: Federalists vs Anti- Federalists

39 Federalists Supporters of the new Constitution Merchants, urban, upper-class, seacoast, commercial interests Washington, Madison, Jay, Marshall

40 Federalist Papers Series of articles by Madison, Jay, and Hamilton in support of Constitution (“Publius”) Madison’s “Federalist 10” considered to be one of the greatest political documents written

41 Anti-Federalist Opposed the new government Infringement of natural rights Agrarian, western, states rights supporters Patrick Henry, Sam Adams, Richard Henry Lee

42 Issues Who controls the country: the national government or the state governments Bill of Rights

43 The Winner If it would have been a popularity contest the Anti-Federalist would have won hands down……….. But, it wasn’t!!!!! By 1788, 9 states had ratified the Constitution Remaining states join because they don’t want to be left out

44 Conservative Victory New Government created to check the excesses of the Mob (common people) Federal judges appointed for life President elected indirectly by Electoral College Senators chosen indirectly by state legislatures

45 Bill of Rights Anti-Federalist victory… Guaranteed certain rights that the government could never infringe upon

46 Bill of Rights Guaranteed freedoms 1-9: Personal Freedoms 10: Reserved powers of the states

47 Federalist Era 1 st Constitutional elections: Mostly Federalist elected to Congress Goal: Finish what they started – Build a Strong central government


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