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A New Government
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Constitutional Convention
From May 25 to September 17, 1787, delegates at the Constitutional Convention met to revise the Articles of Confederation. It became clear very quickly that a new constitution would have to be made.
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Federalism Powers would be shared between the state and central government
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Separation of Powers Create 3 branches of government and each branch would have its own powers
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Checks and Balances Some powers would overlap to make sure one branch did not become to powerful
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Government Set Up 3 Branches of government created
Executive Branch – president – enforce/execute laws Legislative Branch – Congress- make laws Judicial Branch – Supreme Court – interpret/judge laws
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Representation Equal representation and equal voting power
New Jersey Plan (small states) Virginia Plan (big states) Equal representation and equal voting power Base representation on population and each representative gets a vote
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House of Representatives
Great Compromise Senate House of Representatives Each state gets 2 Representatives Representation based on population
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Counting Slaves? Property vs People
3/5 Compromise – count slaves as 3/5 of a person for representation
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Slavery Slave Trade – continue for at least 20 more years
Slavery – nothing done
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Ratification Federalists Supported the Constitution
Typically the elite – older men Write Federalists Papers– illustrate the need for a strong national government
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Ratification Anti-Federalists
Only support Constitution if add a Bill of Rights Thought the new government was too strong Many were farmers
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Ratified Ratified by 9 of 13 states to go into effect
NC was one of the last to ratify document because feared it was too strong Do add a Bill of Rights First 10 Amendments to Constitution protecting the rights of individuals and the states
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