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BEGINNINGS OF AMERICAN GOVERNMENT. From Colonies to Constitution. English Influence. Limited Government: the power of the monarch was limited, not absolute Representative Government: Parliament is divided into two houses: House of Lords and House of Commons
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BEGINNINGS OF AMERICAN GOVERNMENT From Colonies to Constitution
English Influence • Limited Government: the power of the monarch was limited, not absolute • Representative Government: Parliament is divided into two houses: House of Lords and House of Commons • Documents: Magna Carta (1215); Petition of Right (1628); English Bill of Rights (1689)
The Thirteen Colonies • Colonial gov’t: most colonies got a charter from the king which allowed them to exist • Royal Colonies: under direct control of the king (GA, MA,NH,NJ,NY,NC,SC,VA) • Proprietary Colonies: controlled by a proprietor (owner), not the king (PA, DE, MD) • Charter Colonies: almost self-governing (CT, RI)
Colonial Discontent • After 1763, many colonists upset by stricter laws passed by Parliament • Stamp Act 1765 • Townshend Acts 1767 • First Continental Congress 1774 • Second Continental Congress 1775-1776 Colonists BOYCOTTED British goods as a form of protest!!!
Colonial Discontent • Declaration of Independence (1776): • Listed the many grievances (complaints) the colonists had against Britain • Called themselves “The United States” • “…all men are created equal….with inalienable rights…life, liberty, pursuit of happiness…” • Revolutionary War fought until 1781
Ideas in the Declaration of Independence • Many ideas Jefferson included were from the writings of Englishman John Locke • 1. Natural Rights: life, liberty, property • 2. Consent of the Governed: people must agree on who their rulers will be • Jefferson also included the idea that all men are “equal”
Articles of Confederation • 1781-1789: first written plan of gov’t in the United States • Confederation: weak or loose union of more powerful states • The Confederation gov’t only had one branch (legislative) and no successful way to either raise money or enforce laws • A special convention was held in 1787 to fix these weaknesses …………
Why do you suppose the Americans who created the Articles of Confederation made them so weak??????????
Constitutional Convention • Philadelphia, 1787: Secret meetings of 55 delegates from 12 of the 13 states • Delegates argued over many topics and soon they decided to scrap the AOC and write a new plan of gov’t
Issues and Compromises • Virginia Plan vs. New Jersey Plan: big states favored the Virginia Plan, which said that the number of representatives in Congress should be determined by a state’s population -- -- -- small states favored the New Jersey Plan, which said each state should have an equal number of reps. in Congress
Issues and Compromises • “The Great Compromise” offered by Roger Sherman of Connecticut: • A bi-cameral (two-house) Congress • House of Representatives: number of reps. according to state population • Senate: each state would have the same number of reps. (2)
Issues and Compromises • Three-Fifths Compromise: Southern states wanted to count their slaves as people to get more reps. in the House; the Northern states disagreed • The compromise: three-fifths of the slaves would count as people
THE CONSTITUTION • The Constitution was finally drafted and it included a very strong central (federal) gov’t • It also included THREE branches of gov’t: • Legislative: to make the laws • Executive: to enforce the laws • Judicial: to interpret the laws
R A T I F I C A T I O N • After the Constitution was written, each state had to ratify it • As soon as 9 out of 13 states ratified the document, it could take effect • Arguments erupted in some states between those who favored the Constitution (Federalists) and those who opposed it (Anti-Federalists)
A strong central (federal) gov’t is necessary The new gov’t will not abuse individual rights and liberties The states would lose too much power under the new gov’t A Bill of Rights MUST be added to insure people’s rights are protected Federalists Anti-Federalists
Constitution Takes Effect • The Constitution was finally ratified by the 9th state (NH) in 1788 • George Washington was inaugurated (sworn in) as the nation’s first President in 1790 • A Bill of Rights was added (first ten amendments) in 1791 in order to satisfy the Anti-Federalists
S U M M A R Y • The United States government evolved from its English colonial heritage • Colonial governments: practicing self-government • Declaration of Independence stated the birth of the USA • The Articles of Confederation: our first government • The Constitution: a strong federal gov’t with three branches