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Alien & Sedition acts The controversial foreign policy of the Federalists prompted domestic protest and governmental repression. President John Adams Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Source Content: America’s History Images as cited.
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As the U.S. fought an undeclared maritime war against France, immigrants from Ireland attacked Adams’s pro-British foreign policy. www.vallejogallery.com
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To silence the critics, the Federalists controlled Congress enacted three coercive laws that threatened individual rights and the fledgling party system. www.flickr.com
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The Naturalization Act lengthened the residency requirement for American citizenship – and so the right to vote – from five to fourteen years. www.keen.com
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The Alien Act authorized the deportation of foreigners. www.historycentral.com
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The Sedition Act prohibited the publication of insults or malicious attacks on the president or members of Congress. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gazette_of_the_United_States
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“He that is not for us is against us,” read the Federalist Gazette of the United States. pasleybrothers.com
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It was the Sedition Act that generated the most controversy. Prosecutors arrested more than twenty Republican newspaper editors and politicians, accused them of sedition, and convicted and jailed a number of them. www.encyclopedia.com Political cartoon of Congressman Lyon (holding tongs), and later arrested under the Sedition Acts,brawling with Congressman Roger Griswold.
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What developed was a constitutional crisis. With justification, Republicans charged that the Sedition Act violated the First Amendment’s prohibition against “abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press.” www.anh-usa.org
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Republicans did not appeal to the Supreme Court because the Court’s power to review congressional legislation was uncertain and because most of the justices were Federalists. etc.usf.edu
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Instead, Madison and Jefferson looked to state legislatures for a solution. At their urging, the Kentucky and Virginia legislatures issued resolutions in 1798 declaring the Alien and Seditions Acts to be “unauthoritative, void, and of no force.” www.nj.com
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The resolution set forth a states’ rights interpretation of the Constitution, asserting that the states had a “right to judge” the legitimacy of national laws. www.xtimeline.com
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The debate over the Sedition Act set the stage for the presidential election of 1800. www.encyclopedia.com
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With Republicans strongly supporting Jefferson’s bid for the presidency, President Adams reevaluated his foreign policy. youngnationproject-amber.bl
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Rejecting Hamilton’s advice to declare war against France, President Adams put country ahead of party and entered into diplomatic negotiations that ended the fighting. Alexander Hamilton
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Despite Adams’s statesmanship, the campaign of 1800 degenerated into name-calling. The Federalists attacked Jefferson’s values, branding him an “irresponsible pro- French radical....” Thomas Jefferson
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…. and because he opposed state support of religion in Virginia, “the arch-apostle of irreligion and free thought.” apush-wiki-marlborough-scho
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Thanks to a low Federalist turnout in Virginia and Pennsylvania and the three- fifths rule (which boosted electoral votes in the southern state), Jefferson won a narrow 73 to 65 victory over Adams in the Electoral College. bill.ballpaul.net
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However, the Republican electors also gave 73 votes to Aaron Burr of New York, who was Jefferson’s vice presidential running mate. voiceinverse.wordpress.com
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The Constitution specified that in the case of a tie vote, the House of Representatives would choose the president. t odaysdocument.com
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For thirty-five ballots, Federalists in the House blocked Jefferson’s election, prompting a new rumor that Virginia was raising a military force to put Jefferson in office. www.ushistory.org
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Ironically, it was arch-Federalist Alexander Hamilton who ushered in a more democratic era by supporting Jefferson. fearistyranny.wordpress.com
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Calling Burr an “embryo Caesar” and the “most unfit man in the United States for the office of president,” he persuaded key Federalists to allow Jefferson’s election. thehonestlyblog.wordpress
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Jefferson called the election the “Revolution of 1800.” The bloodless transfer of power demonstrated that governments elected by the people could be changed in an orderly way, even n times of bitter partisan conflict. etext.virginia.edu
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In his inaugural address in 1801, Jefferson praised this achievement, declaring, “We are all Republicans, we are all Federalists.” www.web-books.com
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Defying the predictions of European conservatives, the republican experiment of 1776 had survived a quarter-century of economic and political turmoil. americanlibertyriders.ning
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