How Shall We Govern Ourselves?staff.katyisd.org/sites/thsworldhistory/Documents... · How Shall We...
Transcript of How Shall We Govern Ourselves?staff.katyisd.org/sites/thsworldhistory/Documents... · How Shall We...
How Shall We Govern
Ourselves?
The Articles of Confederation
America’s First Constitution
• What kind of government would the FREEDOM loving Americans create to balance LIBERTY with enough AUTHORITY to get things done for the common good?
Shifting The Balance of Power
Monarchy- 1607 – 1776
British Constitution is unwritten.
Monarchy
Colonies
Shifting The Balance of PowerConfederation Government 1781-1788
Articles of Confederation
States
Congress
No Federal (National) Government
• The new Americans said “NO WAY”
• Afraid that it would limit their liberties
• Keep the power with the states
• The closer the power is to the people the less of a chance it can be abused.
• Each State decided to keep its sovereignty (supreme power), freedom and independence, while cooperating with the other states in a CONFEDERATION.
The Great Achievement
• The American
Revolution
succeeded where all
others were to fail…
• Established a stable
government in the 13
colonies as well as
one for all 13 states.
Confederation
“A perpetual
league of
friendship”
The Confederation Government
• Document in charge is the Articles of Confederation
• Single-House Congress (Missing an Executive and a Judicial Branch)
• Each state could send from 2 to 7 delegates who would vote as a unit.
• One vote only per state
• Votes of two-thirds of states were required to pass laws, and amendments to the Articles required a unanimous votes.
The Articles of Confederation
• At the same time the Declaration committee was meeting another committee was formed to write a new constitution.
• Constitution-plan or blue print of the government.
• John Dickinson wrote the Articles of Confederation and it was amended and approved by 1777.
Weak Confederation Congress• Powers(Can do…)
• Declare War
• Make Treaties
• Manage Indian Affairs
• Maintain an Army and Navy
• Coin and Borrow Money
• Regulate Weights and Measures
• Instead of using pounds and pence, Americans use dollars and cents.
• Establish a Postal Service
What two powers
did Congress
lack?
Raise TAXES
Regulate COMMERCE
(trade)
Other Powers Denied
• No Executive Branch
• Could not stop a state from issuing its own
money
• No Judicial (Courts) Branch
States Under the Articles of
Confederation
• The 13 States followed the GOLDEN RULE!
• “He who has the gold makes the rules.”
• Controlled their own purse strings….
• Tax
• Regulate Trade
America’s Western Lands
• Two Important Laws
• The Confederation Congress passed two laws
stating how the lands would be divided and
governed.
Western Lands
• The western lands consist of the area west of the
Appalachians Mountains to the Mississippi
River.
• The 13 states gave up all rights to their western
land claims.
• Congress is going to sell the land to pay off
Revolutionary war debt.
• Indians on the western land?
• Move them west or north to Canada to make room
for the settlers.
Northwest Territory
Land Ordinance
of 1785This gave the government a way
to divide the land for sale.
• Survey the land
• Divided into townships
• Six miles square
• Subdivided into 36 sections-1 mile square (640 acres)
• Sections would be sold at public auction for a minimum of $1.00 per acre.
• Section 16 of each town would be used to support education
The Northwest Ordinance of 1787
• Forbade slavery
• Divided the Northwest Territory into not less than three, not more than five territories.
Development of Territorial
Governments• Provided a way for territories to become
states.
• Three Stage Process to Become a State
• A Congressionally appointed governor and three judges at the first stage.
• An elected legislature and a non-voting delegate to Congress when the population reached 5,000 free, white males.
• A state constitution and admission to statehood when the above population reached 60,000.
Problems of the Confederation
• No TAXING Power- No $$$$
Problems of the Confederation
• Inflation-
• Continental Congress issued $40,000,000 in paper
money to pay war debt.
• They had no silver or gold to back the 40 million
continentals. Their value was inflated. 40
continentals to 1 silver dollar
• Worthless $-Creditors would not take them!
Problems With the Confederation
• Trade
• Unfavorable Balance of Trade
• America imported goods valued at over 7,500,000
pounds sterling from Great Britain, while exporting
products valued at 2,500,000 pounds sterling.
– Drained America of nearly every ounce of gold and
silver.
• Wrecked hopes of stabilizing the currency
• Depressed prices
• Caused Bankruptcies
• Sent the US into a major commercial depression
Problems With the Confederation
• Foreign Affairs
• The Confederation Congress could not enforce the
terms of its own peace treaty.
• Promised to pay our debts to British before the war.
• States promised to pay the Loyalists for property seized.
– Slow pays, and legislation to prevent payment
– Britain refused to remove troops from the Northwest Territory
• Spain refused to accept the southern boundary of the United
States.
– Spain closes the Mississippi River and the port of New Orleans to
the United States.
Daniel Shays’ Rebellion• Who is involved?
• Daniel Shays (leader), State of Massachusetts, Farmers from Massachusetts (former Rev. soldiers or veterans) Banks and Militia in Mass.
• What happened?
• Veterans come back from the war. Most have built up a great amount of debt during the war to finance their farms. Banks took on the farmers debt. Banks call in the farmers debt. The farmers having been paid in Continentals try to pay off their debt, but the currency is refused. Banks foreclose on the farmers property. The banks go in and sell all farm equipment, homes, barns and livestock. The banks have to get approval from the courts.
• Daniel Shays leads a rebellion and causes the courts to close. The State of Massachusetts calls in the state militia to stop the rebellion.
Problems of the Confederation
• Tariff Wars
• Each state, exercising its sovereignty, charged
rival states a tariff.
Shifting The Balance of Power
Republic 1788-Present
United States Constitution
A More Perfect Union
National Sovereignty
& States Rights
States Rights
The Constitutional Convention• Delegates met with on May 25th, 1787
• Held all meetings in secret.
• Free discussion without the fear of reprisal
• Tempers would flare between the following:
• Sections
• Large and Small States (population)
• Agrarian and Commercial Interests
• Nationalists and Confederationalists (states rights)
• All delegates agreed that the Articles of Confederation needed to be revised(changed).
• Create a central government weak enough to please the states yet strong enough to handle national affairs.
Two Plans of Government
• The Virginia Plan
• Three Branch Government
• Legislative
– Bicameral
• Representation was based on the population of each state.
• Judicial
• Executive
• The New Jersey Plan
• One Branch Government
• Legislative
– Granted additional powers to the legislature.
• Levy taxes
• Regulate commerce
The Executive
Branch
• Elected by the Electoral College
• Group of people called electors, chosen by their state to meet and elect the President and Vice President
• Members of the House of Representatives + Members of the Senate = Total number of electors a state could send.
• Vote on a given day. The person with the highest number of votes would become President and the person with the second highest votes would become Vice-President.
Elections by the Electoral College
• Democrats are not in office – Sept. 2002-Jan.
2003 Some 8 to 9 people declare they want to be
the Democratic choice for President
• 2003-G.Bush (Rep.) incumbent-already in power
• A year before the election, the US will hold
Democratic primary elections in all the states.
• Start with 8-9, all but 1 or 2 will drop out of the race
by the Convention time.
• Conventions are held June and July of 2004.
• Nominate a Presidential hopeful, name their
running mate.
• Party Platform
– How they feel and plan take care of different
issues
• November 2004 (Second Tuesday)
• Election- The people vote
– The electoral college vote is determined by
how the state (people) votes.
• Texas has 35 Electoral College votes
(33 + 2 =35)
• Total Votes of the Electoral Votes
• 435 – House of Representatives (Texas has 33.)
• 100 – Senate (Texas has 2)
• One more than half of the total number of Electoral Votes
• Total Electoral Votes- 535 (Texas gets 35 votes)
• Half of that 267.5 We think– 269
• The people of Texas will determine what happens to those 35 votes.
• G. W. Bush won Texas - Texas will send 35 electors to Washington to vote for G.W. Bush in December of 2004.
The Executive Branch
• Term of Office
• Four year term
• No limit on the amount of terms a person could
serve
• Constitution is broken into Seven Articles
• Article One ? Legislative Branch
• Article Two? Executive Branch
• Article Three? Judicial Branch
• Amend means to
add or change.
• So Amendments
are changes or
additions to the
Constitution.
• The first 10
amendments are
called the Bill of
Rights.
George Mason
Powers
• Right to veto any
law passed by
Congress
• Right to nominate
Federal Judges
The Executive Branch
Slavery
• South vs. the North
• South wanted slaves counted for purposes of
proportional representation.
• Increase the South’s representation in House of
Representatives.
• The North wanted slaves counted for purposes of
taxation.
• Ben Franklin committee decided to use the “three-
fifths” rule.
• For purposes of taxation and representation all free persons
would be counted along with “three-fifth’s” of all other
persons.
Slave Trade & Runaways
• Slave Trade
• Northerners and
Southerners agreed that
Congress would wait for 20
years before interfering with
the importation of slaves.
• Runaway Slaves
• Northerners also agreed that
states could not stop a
fugitive slave from being
returned to the owner.
Signing the Constitution
• Signed on September 17th , 1787
• Each state would hold a
convention to approve or reject
the Constitution.
• Once nine states approved it, the
Constitution would go into effect.
• First State to sign was
Delaware in 1787.
• Ninth state to sign was New
Hampshire in 1788.
• Last State to sign was Rhode
Island in 1790.
RatificationTwo sides debated
• Federalists-Supporters of the Constitution
• The Federalist Papers -Series of essays written by Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, and James Madison
– Arguments for the Constitution
• Stronger National Government
• Better working government
• Anti-Federalists- People opposed to the Constitution
• Sam Adams (Sons of Liberty), Patrick Henry, George Mason
– Arguments against the Constitution
• Federal Govt. had too much power.
• No document of Civil Liberties (Rights)
Bill of Rights
• Even though the Anti-Federalists failed to stop
the Constitution from being ratified, they did
win approval for the addition of a Bill of Rights.
• James Madison submitted a list of rights to the new
Congress on June 8, 1789.
• Ten Amendments were approved on December 15,
1791 and they became known as the Bill of Rights.
• Remember that the Bill of Rights protects citizens
basic freedoms (Civil Liberties).