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Constitutional Convention Philadelphia 1787. THE CONSTITUTIONAL TRADITION IMPORTANT ANTECEDENTS MAGNA CARTA, 1215 –FEDUAL RIGHTS AND LIMITING POWER MAYFLOWER.

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Presentation on theme: "Constitutional Convention Philadelphia 1787. THE CONSTITUTIONAL TRADITION IMPORTANT ANTECEDENTS MAGNA CARTA, 1215 –FEDUAL RIGHTS AND LIMITING POWER MAYFLOWER."— Presentation transcript:

1 Constitutional Convention Philadelphia 1787

2 THE CONSTITUTIONAL TRADITION IMPORTANT ANTECEDENTS MAGNA CARTA, 1215 –FEDUAL RIGHTS AND LIMITING POWER MAYFLOWER COMPACT, 1620 –CONTRACTUAL GOVERNMENT COLONIAL CHARTERS, 1630-1732 –CHARTERS AUTHORIZING THE COLONIES DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE, 1776 –CREATING THE FRAMEWORK FOR A NEW NATION AND ITS GOVERNMENT ARTICLES OF CONFEDERATION, 1781- 1789 –AN ALLIANCE OF INDEPENDENT NATIONS

3 The Articles of Confederation: Inability to tax resulting in a weakening of bonds Trade wars erupted between the states Inflation resulted from each state printing currency

4 PROBLEMS FOR A NEW NATION FINANCIAL DIFFICULTIES –NEED FOR TAXATION COMMERCIAL OBSTACLES –TARIFFS BETWEEN STATES CURRENCY PROBLEMS –STATES ISSUED THEIR OWN MONEY CIVIL DISORDER –OPEN REBELLIONS AGAINST THE NEW GOVERNMENT

5 Powers of the Congress Under the Articles of Confederation

6 THERE WAS MORE AGREEMENT THAN CONFLICT IN PHILIDELPHIA AT THE 1787 CONVENTION LIBERTY AND PROPERTY – INALIENABLE RIGHTS SOCIAL CONTRACT –CONSENT TO GOVERN AND THE PROMISE OF SECURITY REPRESENTATIVE GOVERNMENT –REPUBLICANISM LIMITED GOVERNMENT –A SYSTEM OF CHECKS AND BALANCES NATIONALISM –AGREEMENT OVER HAVING A STRONG NATIONAL GOVERNMENT

7 …AND THE CONFLICT REPRESENTATION –SERIOUS DISAGREEMENTS OVER HOW THE PEOPLE WOULD BE REPRESENTED THE VIRGINIA PLAN THE NEW JERSEY PLAN THE CONNECTICUT COMPROMISE SLAVERY –THE DESIRE OF SOME STATES TO COUNT SLAVES TO DETERMINE REPRESENTATION VOTER QUALIFICATION –PROPERTY QUALIFICATIONS –SOME STATES RESTRICTED VOTING TO “FREE, WHITE, MALE CITIZENS”

8 The Constitutional Convention: Conflict and Compromise The Virginia Plan- proposed 3 branches of govt., bicameral house, it favored states with large populations The New Jersey Plan- proposed 3 branches of govt., unicameral house and favored the smaller states. The Great Compromise reached a compromise over representation- 3 branches of govt., bicameral house with equal representation in Senate and House of Representatives based on state’s population.

9 The Constitutional Convention: The Question of Slavery Were the slaves to be counted for representation purposes? The slave population would count as 3/5 of a person for taxation and representation purposes.

10 The Constitution The Constitution embraces seven basic principles. 1) Republicanism- 2) Federalism 3) Separation of Powers 4) Checks and Balances 5) Popular Sovereignty 6) Limited Government 7) Individual Rights

11 3 Branches and Separation of Powers

12 The Constitution: Three Branches Article I- creates and outline qualifications and duties of the Legislature Branch Article II- creates and outline qualifications and duties of the Executive Branch Article III- creates and outlines qualifications and duties of the Judicial Branch

13 The Fight for Ratification Federalists v. Anti-Federalists The Federalists and the Anti- Federalists, each had viewpoints worth examining, as they both have sound reasoning. These two groups debated the necessity and design of the new and stronger central government on the following grounds

14 The Anti-Federalists did not want to ratify the Constitution. Basically, they argue that: It gave too much power to the national government at the expense of the state governments. There was no bill of rights. The national government could maintain an army in peacetime. Congress, because of the `necessary and proper clause,' wielded too much power. The executive branch held too much power.

15 The Federalists had answers to all of the Anti-Federalist complaints. The separation of powers into three independent branches protected the rights of the people. Each branch represents a different aspect of the people, and because all three branches are equal, no one group can assume control over another. A listing of rights can be a dangerous thing. If the national government were to protect specific listed rights, what would stop it from violating rights other than the listed ones? Since we can't list all the rights, the Federalists argued that it's better to list none at all.

16 The Bill of Rights The first 10 amendments of the Constitution #1 Religion, speech, and press #2 Right to bear arms? #3 Quartering troops #4 Security from unwarrantable search and seizure. #5 Rights of Accused Persons in Criminal Proceedings #6 Right to Speedy Trial, Witnesses, Etc. #7 Trial by jury #8 Limits of fines and punishments #9 Right of people #10 Powers Reserved to the States or People

17 Amendment Process


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