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Chapter 8.1-8.4 Lecture Notes
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8.1Introduction James Madison wanted the states to unite and work together Colonists worried about strong central/national government First plan was called the Articles of Confederation, each state had 1 vote Power of national government was limited because they couldn’t tax, only the states could approve taxes They had ideas that couldn’t be funded so nothing got done
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8.2 Early Quarrels and Accomplishments Taxes were different between states Boundary issues Articles of Confederation couldn’t solve these problems…that’s a problem!
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8.2 Developing Western Lands Land Ordinance of 1785 6 square mile townships, divided into 36 sections, 640 acres each 1 school per township Used in Northwest Territory (see map on page 146 in text) How should they be governed? Should they be colonies or states?
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8.2 The Northwest Ordinance Solved the problem of how townships would be governed When a territory had 5,00 free adult males, they could have a legislature or governing body When the population reached 60,000, they could apply to become a state Slavery was banned in the NW Territory This system worked well
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8.3 Shays’s Rebellion and the Need for Change Money had no value because they had no gold or silver to back it up States could print their own money No common currency for the country
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8.3 Massachusetts Farms Rebel Shays, a farmer, couldn’t pay his taxes Government said he had to sell h is land in order to pay his taxes Shays and other farmers rebelled Massachusetts state militia ended the rebellion The federal government was fragile and had difficulty dealing with such uprisings
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8.3 A Call for Convention The Shays incident made leaders realize that the Articles of Confederation needed to be revised Delegates from each state met in Philadelphia James Madison had prepared for 1 year to redesign the Articles of Confederation
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8.4 Opening the Constitutional Convention George Washington elected President of the Convention He wanted to be a farmer in Virginia, but they wouldn’t let him. The country needed his leadership again
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8.4 The Delegates 55 delegates form 12 colonies met in Philadelphia Rhode Island did not send a delegate Many founding fathers weren’t there because they were out of the country or they didn’t want to support the idea of a strong national government They feared the states would lose their power and rights to a strong national government Delegates were wealthy and educated men
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8.4 The Father of the Constitution James Madison prepared in advance and made a draft for a new constitution
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8.4 The Rule of Secrecy Didn’t want to alarm the public unnecessarily Same policy was used when writing the Declaration of Independence
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8.4 Shared Beliefs and Clashing Views They had common goals but different views Agreed that power came from the people Felt the government didn’t protect natural rights from the DOI States already had states constitutions about voting and holding office Madison wanted a strong central/national government to protect liberty and property
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New Packet 8.5-8.8 Issue 1: How should states be represented in the new government? Issue 2: How should slaves be counted?
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8.5 Issue: How Should States be Represented in the New Government? Decided to throw out the Articles of Confederation Designed a new plan from scratch Where did the government’s power come from?
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8.5 Virginia Plan Called for a strong federal government 3 branches (2 houses in the legislative branch) Number of representatives based on state’s population Virginia had the highest population Madison and Randolph proposed it High populated states liked it
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8.5 New Jersey Plan Called for 3 branches (1 house in the legislative branch) States had equal representation Patterson proposed it Liked by smaller populated states
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8.6 Resolution: The Great Compromise New Jersey plan didn’t make enough changes
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8.6 Tempers Rise Smaller states didn’t trust larger states Foreign countries waited for the US to fail
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8.6 Compromise Reached 2 houses in the legislative branch 1 determined by a state’s population (HOR) 1 determined with 2 per state (Senate) Sherman of Connecticut proposed this Great Compromise
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8.7 Issue: How Should Slave be Counted? How should slave be used in determining a state’s population?
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8.7 People or Property? 9/10 of slaves lived in the South North thought slaves were property and shouldn’t count in a state’s population If slaves counted as people for population, then they should vote?
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8.7 New Thinking on Slavery Many reexamined their view of slavery Many northern states passed laws ending slavery South needed slaves for the farming- based economy Some southern states passed laws making it easier to free slaves
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8.8 Resolution: The Three-Fifths Compromise Madison proposed this compromise to keep the convention moving Slaves counted as 3/5 of a person when calculating a state’s population for representation in Congress
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8.8 Another Slavery Issue Southern states feared Congress would tax their cash crops and outlaw slave trade South Carolina and Georgia refused to sign a constitution that threatened slave trade
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8.8: More Compromises on Slavery Congress could control trade except: no tax on imports and no interference of the slave trade for 20 years (till 1808) Fugitive Slave clause Slavery vs. liberty and equality?!
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New Packet 8.9-8.12 Issue 1: How should be chief executive be elected? Convention ends
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8.9 Issue: How Should the Chief Executive be Elected? Nervous about having too much power in one person like King George III
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8.9 One Executive or Three? Randolph wanted 3 members in the executive branch Franklin did not want a 1 person executive branch Congress agree with Franklin, but limited the term to 4 years and added a vice president
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8.9 Choose the Chief Executive Should Congress pick? Should the people pick? Should electors from each state pick?
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8.10 Resolution: The Electoral College Neither Congress or the people picks the President The Electoral College elects for the people
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8.10 Electoral College System Each state has the same number of electors as the number of representatives it has in Congress (HOR + Senate) Top vote getter is President and runner up is Vice President Changed in 1800 Made to benefit uninformed people
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8.10 Political Parties and Elections The candidate who gets the majority of popular votes, gets all of the states’ electoral votes A person can win more popular votes and not win the electoral vote Gore vs. Bush 2000 Elections
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The 2000 Election Electoral Map
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8.11 The Convention Ends Approval needed next
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8.11 Signing the Constitution Franklin felt the Constitution was good, but need improvement 13 states didn’t sign and left the convention 1 state didn’t sign because it didn’t protect people’s rights
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8.12 The Constitution Goes to the States Constitution printed in newspapers Next the US debated the issue of the federal government’s and state’s government having more power
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8.12 The Federalists Wanted a big, strong, federal government Madison, Hamilton, and Jay were Federalists They wrote and printed their beliefs about a strong federal government in the Federalist Papers
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8.12 The Anti- Federalists Feared too much power at the federal level Feared Congress would tax too much Wanted more power at the state level
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