Lecture 3: The American republic and Constitution - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Lecture 3: The American republic and Constitution

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Title: U.S. Constitution Author: Molly P. Colin Last modified by: smccd Created Date: 1/22/2004 5:44:44 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lecture 3: The American republic and Constitution


1
Lecture 3 The American republic and Constitution
2
Origins of Republicanism in the US
  • Republicanism Idea that the people (through
    their representatives) can rule themselves

3
I. Models from Antiquity
  • The rise of Greek city-states (800-500 BC)
  • Athens--small, turbulent, and democratic
  • The Roman Republic
  • creation of the Senate--indirectly
    representative govt.
  • large, powerful, lasted 100s of years
  • as American ideal--politics, art, architecture,
    legend

4
Washington in a toga
5
II. Experience of Self-rule
  • A history of administering their own affairs for
    almost 150 years

Virginia House of Burgesses
6
Creation of a Republican national govt
  • An experiment in republican govt--many expected
    to fail
  • Americans sense of state identity, and fear of
    centralization
  • First try The Articles of Confederation
    (drafted in 1777)

7
Article I. The Stile of this Confederacy shall be
"The United States of America." Article II. Each
state retains its sovereignty, freedom, and
independence. . .
8
Features/Weaknesses of the Articles of
Confederation
  • No U.S. judiciary to settle disputes between
    states
  • No real executive power to carry out or enforce
    federal (national) laws
  • 9 of 13 states needed to approve legislation
  • No power to collect taxes directly
  • No power to raise an army directly

9
Shays Rebellion 1786
10
Another attempt at a federal (national) govt
  • 1787 States agree to send reps to Philadelphia to
    amend Articles
  • Debates and compromises
  • Virginia Plan vs New Jersey Plan
  • Senate and House apportioned differently
  • Slavery and direct taxation/representation
  • the 3/5 compromise
  • Federalists vs Anti-federalists
  • Bill of Rights added

11
signing the Constitution
12
Madison and the Principles of the Constitution
  • 1 Republicanism--not quite democracy
  • democracy is the most vile form of government...
    democracies have ever been spectacles of
    turbulence and contention have ever been found
    incompatible with personal security or the rights
    of property
  • 2 Federalist Papers 10 51
  • ambition to counteract ambition in checks and
    balances
  • cross-cutting cleavages of a large republic

13
Review of U.S. Constitution (1789)
  • Preamble
  • People not States
  • Article 1 (Article, Section, Clause)
  • Congress
  • Sec 2--House of Representatives
  • Pg 3
  • 3/5 rule

14
Article I, contd
  • Sec 3--Senate
  • Pg 1
  • --representing state, elected by state
    legislature
  • Sec 8--Powers of Congress
  • raise taxes, raise army, regulate commerce among
    states, necessary and proper
  • Sec 9--Restraints on Congress
  • banning slave trade, suspend habeas corpus,
    create nobility

15
Review of U.S. Constitution
  • Article 2--Presidency and electoral college
  • Article 3--Federal Judiciary
  • Article 4--Full faith and credit, fugitive slave
  • Article 5--amendment formulas
  • Article 6, Pg 2--Supremacy Clause
  • Article 7--Ratification

16
Bill of Rights
  • Amend 1--religion and speech
  • Amend 2--guns
  • Amend 4--search and seizure
  • Amend 5--double jeopardy, self-incrim, due
    process
  • Amend 6, 7--trial procedure--jury trial, counsel
  • Amend 8--Cruel and unusual, excessive bail
  • Amend 9,10--non-specified rights remain with the
    states and people
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