1 / 14

EOC Concept 2

EOC Concept 2. Describe the historical foundations of the U.S. governmental system. 1600s English system of government (principles). At the heart of the English system were two principles: Limited government Representative government

Download Presentation

EOC Concept 2

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. EOC Concept 2 Describe the historical foundations of the U.S. governmental system

  2. 1600s English system of government (principles) At the heart of the English system were two principles: • Limited government • Representative government Both greatly influenced the development of the United States

  3. Limited Government Idea: “Government is not all-powerful” Accepted as part of the English system First appeared in Magna Carta

  4. Limited Government Magna Carta, also know as the Great Charter 1. King John was forced to sign in 1215 2. established the principle of limited gov’t (power of monarch, or gov’t, was limited, NOT ABSOLUTE!!) 3. Provided protection against unjust punishment (and loss of life, liberty, property except according to law) IDEA: continued in the 5th Amendment 4. King agreed that certain taxes couldn’t be levied without popular consent

  5. Representative Government People elect delegates to make laws and conduct government. English parliament (representative gov’t) 1295-power to enact laws two-chamber (bicameral) structure Upper chamber- legislative body (House of Lords) appointed by monarch Lower chamber-included commoners (House of Commons) elected by the people Each house can check the work of the other The head of the British gov’t is the prime minister chosen from the political party that holds the most seats (Commons)

  6. Petition of Right While Parliament maintained influence, strong monarchs dominated England. 1625- Charles I dissolved Parliament 1628- Charles I called Parliament back into session Representatives forced the king to sign the Petition of Right

  7. Petition of Right Severely limited king’s power. The king couldn’t: 1. collect taxes without Parliament’s consent 2. imprison people without just cause 3. house troops in private homes without permission of owner 4. declare martial law unless country was at war

  8. English Bill of Rights 1688- Parliament removed James II from the throne and crowned William III and Mary II Transition of power known as the Glorious Revolution

  9. English Bill of Rights-1689 Set limits on what a ruler could and could not do Applied to the American colonists (English subjects)

  10. English Bill of Rights Key ideas: (1)Monarchs do not have a divine right to rule. They rule with the consent of the people’s representatives in Parliament (2) The monarch must have Parliament’s consent to suspend law, levy taxes, or maintain an army (3) The monarch cannot interfere with parliamentary elections and debates (4) The people have the right to petition the gov’t and have a fair and speedy trial by a jury of their peers (5) The people should not be subject to cruel and unusual punishments or to excessive fines and bail.

  11. English Bill of Rights A Major cause of the American revolution was that the colonists felt they were deprived of these rights. Created to strengthen the protections of the Magna Carta

  12. The Enlightenment Eighteenth-century philosophers influenced the framers of the Constitution. Ideas of John Locke Reasoned that all people were born free, equal, and independent. Believed that people possessed natural rights to life, liberty, and property Argued that if a government failed to protect their natural rights, the people could change that gov’t

  13. The Enlightenment Locke denied that people were born with an obligation to obey their rulers: “Freedom of [people] under government is to have a standing rule to live by…made by the legislative power vested in it; a liberty to follow [one’s] own will in all things, when the rule prescribes not, and not to be subject to the inconstant, uncertain, unknown, arbitrary will of another…” -John Locke, 1690

  14. The Enlightenment Meaning of the quote: Government was legitimate only as long as people continued to consent to it. Declaration of Independence and the Constitution reflect Locke’s ideas

More Related