Unit 3 EQ: What events occurred during Jefferson’s Presidency?

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Unit 3 EQ: What events occurred during Jefferson’s Presidency?

Election of 1800 John Adams v. Thomas Jefferson

The Democratic-Republicans said that Adams served the rich and wanted to create a British-style monarchy

The Federalists said that Jefferson was a dangerous supporter of the French Revolution and an atheist who wanted to destroy organized religion

Election of 1800 Jefferson defeats Adams by 8 electoral votes

Electoral Deadlock However, Aaron Burr, Jefferson’s running mate, received the same number of votes in the Electoral College So, the House of Representatives had to vote to decide who would be the next president Aaron Burr

Electoral Deadlock The House was at a deadlock and cast 35 ballots before deciding on a winner Alexander Hamilton finally got enough federalists to support Jefferson and he wins Hamilton disagreed with Jefferson politically, but thought he was better suited for the presidency than Burr

12 th Amendment The Election of 1800 showed the flaws in how the Constitution defined election of the presidency Congress passed the 12 th Amendment, which established that electors cast separate ballots for president and vice- president

Burr and Hamilton Burr read insulting remarks Hamilton made about him and challenged him to a duel Hamilton fired his shot in the air, and Burr shot him in the stomach Hamilton died the next day

Jefferson’s Changes Jefferson wanted to wage a “peaceful revolution” to restore the republican ideals of 1776 He believed in decentralized power and tried to shrink the government and cut costs whenever possible

Jefferson also tried to rollback Hamilton’s economic program by decreasing the power of the Bank of the United States

Southern Political Dominance Jefferson was the first president to take office in the new capital, Washington, D.C. The location of the capital reflected the growing importance of the South in national politics Jefferson and the two presidents to follow him were all from Virginia

Decline of the Federalists The growing influence of the South showed the declining influence of New England and the Federalists Federalists would not campaign because they did not want to appeal to the common man for support

The expansion of the U.S. also hurt Federalists because settlers in the new states usually voted for Democratic- Republican, who represented farmers’ interests

John Marshall and the Supreme Court Federalists continued to exert control over the judicial branch Adams appointed John Marshall, a staunch Federalist, as chief justice of the Supreme Court Adams also pushed the Judiciary Act of 1801 through Congress, which increased the number of federal judges by 16

Marbury v. Madison Adams filled most of these positions with Federalists These judges were known as the midnight judges, because Adams signed their appointments late on his last day in office This made Jefferson and the Democratic- Republicans angry, and Jefferson argued that the appointments were invalid

This argument led to one of the most important supreme Court cases, Marbury v. Madison (1803) Marbury was one of the midnight judges who did not receive his papers because James Madison (Jefferson’s Secretary of State) did not deliver them James Madison

Marbury v. Madison Marbury sued based on the Judiciary Act of 1789 which required the Supreme Court to order that the papers be delivered Marshall decided that this was unconstitutional, that the Supreme Court was not given this power by the Constitution This decision was significant because it affirmed the principle of judicial review Judicial Review: the ability of the Supreme Court to declare an act of Congress unconstitutional

Louisiana Purchase Napoleon convinced Spain to return the Louisiana Territory to France in 1800 Americans became alarmed and Jefferson feared that the French presence in the West would lead to an alliance with Britain

Jefferson sent James Monroe to join the ambassador in Paris to negotiate to buy New Orleans and western Florida from the French By that time, Napoleon decided to abandon his empire in the Americas and sold the entire Louisiana Territory to the U.S. for $15 million in 1803 This more than doubled the size of the United States James Monroe

Lewis and Clark In 1803, Jefferson appointed Meriwether Lewis to lead expedition called the Corps of Discovery to explore the new territory

They recorded information about plants, animals, and Native Americans in the new territory Sacajawea, a Native American woman, served as interpreter and guide for the expedition