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US Constitution

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Title: US Constitution


1
US Constitution
  • The Miracle of Philadelphia

2
The Historical Background
  • The Treaty of Paris in 1783 had secured
    independence for the united States and the
    territories to the Mississippi.
  • The new nation was about to collapse by 1787.
  • The Articles of Confederation werent sufficient
    to govern the new country

3
Issues with the Articles
  • Financial problems since the gov. had no power
    to tax, it couldnt pay back its war debts.
  • Rebellion a group of farmers rallied about
    Captain Shays because of high taxes, inflation
    and debt foreclosure
  • Inability of gov. to manage western territories
  • Fear of foreign conquest by Britain or Spain

4
The Conflicting Beliefs
  • Younger members of the revolution now led a
    movement to change the Articles
  • They proposed a stronger central government.
  • This idea terrified lovers of liberty such as
    Patrick Henry who fought Britain to forever
    abolish a national sovereignty.

5
The Question
  • Could a government be formed which was strong
    enough to secure the general welfare yet weak
    enough to preserve the sovereignty of the states?
  • To answer this question, the Founders looked to
    the lessons of history.
  • The only real historical examples were Greece and
    Rome

6
The Lessons of History
  • Power Corrupts, therefore power must be limited
    by a series of checks
  • Excesses of democracy lead to tyranny (many at
    the constitutional convention believed the
    problems of the young country were due to an
    excess of democracy so the new constitution was
    to be a bulwark against democracy)

7
The Lessons of History
  • Rome (as a Republic) rather than Greece was the
    model for the founders
  • Rome set forth the balanced powers
  • Roman Monarchy the consuls gave us the
    executive, the president
  • Roman Assembly the broad base of support, the
    democracy, gave us the House of popularly elected
    Representatives
  • Roman Senate the aristocracy of very capable
    individuals gave us the Senate

8
The Lessons of History
  • England was also a model to the founders
  • The English constitution, from Magna Charta to
    the English Bill of Rights set a stage for
    personal liberty and balanced power
  • Montesquieus Spirit of the Laws argued that the
    best government is based on a balanced
    constitution and must have political liberty as
    its central goal.

9
The Lessons of History
  • The state constitutions being written after the
    war of revolution also served as a model for the
    new national constitution
  • Almost all states had bicameral legislatures
  • The states had separate judicial branches
  • In some states the supreme courts were already
    practicing judicial review

10
Constitutional Convention
  • 55 delegates were selected and sent to
    Philadelphia (Rhode Island didnt send anyone).
  • The delegates were more conservative than the
    signers of the Declaration
  • Only 6 people signed both the Declaration and the
    Constitution

11
Constitutional Convention
  • The delegates were men of property and frequently
    wealthy.
  • They were the middle class landowners which
    Aristotle had spoken of
  • Many were college educate (8 from Princeton)
  • More than half were lawyers or judges. 21 had
    fought in the Revolution. 46 had served in
    colonial or state legislatures.

12
Constitutional Convention
  • They kept the proceedings of the convention quiet
    no press releases or leaks
  • They exceeded their mandate of revising the
    Articles of Confederation
  • There was tension between the large and small
    states -gt the great compromise
  • Conflict over the issue of slavery
  • 39 of the 55 signed the finished Constitution

13
Constitutional Convention
  • South Carolinas Pierce Butler said We must
    follow the example of Salon, who gave the
    Athenians not the best government he could devise
    but the best they would receive.

14
Constitutional Convention
  • At first the group started to revise the Articles
    of Confederation but realized that a new
    government needed to be created
  • Many plans were discussed but a central principle
    was becoming clear three co-equal branches which
    balanced each other

15
Constitutional Convention
  • The New Jersey plan preserved the sovereignty
    of the individual states
  • He declared it not safe for Virginia to have 16
    times as many legislators as Delaware.
  • Two of the New York delegates supported the New
    Jersey plan

16
Constitutional Convention
  • The Virginia Plan called for a strong central
    government
  • was written largely by James Madison
  • proposed two houses of legislature, both of
    proportional representation
  • proposed a strong executive

17
Constitutional Convention
  • Alexander Hamilton presented a radical plan
  • State sovereignty would deny necessary power from
    the federal government.
  • Only a strong federal government could address
    the emergencies that faced the nation no state
    or federation of sovereign states could address
    the emergencies

18
Constitutional Convention
  • Alexander Hamiltons Plan
  • No state or federation could repel a determined
    foreign invasion
  • A federal government can take many forms and thus
    meet needs over time
  • Failing to build a central government would end
    the mark the end of the union

19
Constitutional Convention
  • Alexander Hamilton Proposed a government such
    that
  • The executive served for life with absolute veto
    power
  • The executive should be so strong that he will
    not desire more power
  • People tire of popular government and will not
    maintain the effort needed for self governance
    and informed debate

20
Constitutional Convention
  • James Madison then stood and talked about the
    lessons of Greece and the degeneration of the
    confederation of independent sovereign cities
    states into a competition and faction.
  • He pointed out the issues with the New Jersey
    plan and said that the concern for state
    sovereignty was making the assembly fail in its
    task

21
Constitutional Convention
  • Madison presented a plan in between Hamiltons
    quasi-monarchy and New Jerseys ensemble of
    independent states.
  • His plan was plausible and led to adoption by the
    majority
  • There were still many arguments over how things
    would work.

22
Constitutional Convention
  • Things deadlocked to the point that Dr. Franklin
    proposed a prayer meeting
  • 60 votes were taken to work out the electoral
    system
  • Gouverneur Morris wrote the preamble and located
    the sovereignty in the we the people.

23
Constitutional Convention
  • At the final day of the convention, Dr. Franklin
    offered his own reflection on the document now
    before them On the whole, Sir, I can not help
    expressing a wish that every member who may still
    have objections to it, would with me, on this
    occasion doubt a little of his own infallibility,
    and to make manifest our unanimity, put his name
    to this instrument.

24
Principles of the Constitution
  • The consent of the governed
  • We the people
  • to promote the general welfare
  • representative government
  • direct election of the Representatives
  • Ratification required by the states

25
Principles of the Constitution
  • The rule of law
  • No one is above the law, not the President nor a
    Senator nor a Representative nor a Judge, nor any
    other person.
  • The constitution is the supreme law of the land
  • The Judiciary has power in all matters of law

26
Principles of the Constitution
  • The tenets of Federalism the confederations of
    Greece had been to weak while those of the Holy
    Roman empire were an obstacle to unity.
  • States gave up essential aspects of sovereignty,
    such as army and coining money
  • States are given intrinsic role in selecting
    electors and Senators
  • National government is superior to state ones

27
Principles of the Constitution
  • Separation of Powers legislative, executive,
    judicial
  • Some blending occurs
  • Vice President is tie breaker in Senate
  • Senate has power of impeachment
  • Executive selects judges

28
Principles of the Constitution
  • The principle of change
  • New states can be admitted on equal terms
  • The US would be a commonwealth rather than an
    empire
  • The Constitution can be amended allowing for
    adaptability in new times and circumstances

29
The Powerful Legislature
  • Congress holds tremendous power to make all laws
    necessary and proper for executing its stated
    powers.
  • Congress controls funding and can override a
    presidential veto
  • The only check on the legislature is the power of
    judicial review

30
The Powerful Judiciary
  • When it comes down to it, the core power of the
    Constitution is granted to a small group of
    people who serve for life an Aristocracy.
  • The judiciary can strike down any legislative act
    except an amendment to the Constitution itself.

31
Anti-Federalists
  • Argued that a powerful central government is a
    threat to the liberty won by the Revolution
  • Liberty is best protected in small republics
  • A strong Constitution will create a standing
    army, a national capital and an huge bureaucracy
    which will suck up taxes which Congress can
    require with no limits
  • There is no Bill of Rights
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