1 / 12

Unit Two: The Constitution Basic concepts of American Government

Unit Two: The Constitution Basic concepts of American Government *Ordered Government--local governments based on English version *Limited Government--government is not all-powerful--3 English Documents *Representative Government--people should have a voice in government

orpah
Download Presentation

Unit Two: The Constitution Basic concepts of American Government

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Unit Two: The Constitution Basic concepts of American Government *Ordered Government--local governments based on English version *Limited Government--government is not all-powerful--3 English Documents *Representative Government--people should have a voice in government Types of English Colonies *Charter--granted permission to settle by the king *Royal--ruled directly by the king through a governor he chose *Proprietary--organized by a single individual (a proprietor) Heading Toward Independence *English policies following French and Indian War *Early efforts at colonial unity: New England Confederation (1643) Albany Plan of Union (1754) Stamp Act Congress (1765) *First Continental Congress (1774) *Second Continental Congress (1775)

  2. Importance of Second Continental Congress *Revolutionary War began April 1775 *Second CC convened May 10, 1775 in Philadelphia *All 13 colonies represented *John Hancock chosen to be president of the congress *2nd CC acted as the US's first governing body *June 7, 1776 Lee's Resolution called for writing a declaration of indepence and a constitution

  3. The Declaration of Independence *The Committee of Five, headed by Thomas Jefferson was set up to write it *Two parts: the philosophy and the complaints *Purpose: to justify the Revolution and gain support *Officially adopted July 4, 1776

  4. The Critical Period: the United States under the Articles of Confederation The AoC was written in accordance with Lee's Resolution at the 2nd CC *Into effect on November 15, 1777 *Established a "firm league of friendship" among states *Set up a unicameral (one house) congress *Each state had one vote in congress *Required 9 of 13 to pass an ordinary law *Required a unanimous vote to amend the AoC Weaknesses of the AoC *No power to tax; had to ask states for money *No power to raise an army; had to ask states for troops *No power to regulate interstate trade or commerce *No executive nor judicial branch

  5. The Road to the Constitutional Convention *Trade disputes between VA & MD over use of the Potomac River *Mt. Vernon Conference 1785 *Annapolis Convention 1786--5 States *SHAYS' REBELLION in Dec. 1786 *Feb. 1787 Congress gives permission for revising the AoC *Philadelphia meeting becomes the CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION May-September 1787

  6. The Framers: the guys who wrote the Constitution James Madison, the Father of the Constitution Characteristics of the Framers *relatively young *well-to-do *politically experienced *well educated *white *men Prominent People Not There *Thomas Jefferson *John Adams *Patrick Henry *John Hancock *Samuel Adams *Richard Henry Lee Agreed to Work in Secret & Were Disposed to Compromise

  7. Ratification Debate: Federalists v. Anti-Federalists *Anti-Feds' biggest problem with the Constitution was the lack of a bill of rights *Madison, Hamilton, and Jay wrote The Federalist Papers *The Federalist Papers were published in NY newspapers in an effort gain support *85 essays that explain the Constitution and the government it created *After Madison assured Anti-Feds the First Congress could add a bill of rights, the opponents were appeased and the Constitution was ratified *The Constitution went into effect March 4, 1789 *The Bill of Rights was written and ushered through Congress by Madison *The Bill of Rights were ratified and then took effect Dec. 15, 1791

  8. Amending the Constitution (Article V) *Formal Amendments become part of the written Constitution *There are 4 ways to formally amend the Constitution Ratification Stage: A. 3/4 of State legislatures B. 3/4 of State conventions Proposal Stage: 1. 2/3 of both Houses of Congress 2. A national convention called by Congress at the request of 2/3 of State legislatures Can be enacted by using 1A, 2A, 1B, or 2B. 26 of 27 used method 1A; the 21st used 1B

More Related