Utilisateur
Money questions—debt, taxes, and tariffs.
From a national perspective rather than just a state perspective.
Massachusetts, New York, and Pennsylvania wanted to control their own tariffs, while southern states opposed tariffs.
Some southern leaders became nationalists, supporting stronger federal solutions.
Delegates from 5 states met to address economic problems under the Articles of Confederation.
Another convention with representatives from all states should be held in Philadelphia in 1787 to revise the Articles of Confederation.
Congress passed a resolution calling for a convention to revise the Articles of Confederation.
May 1787, in Philadelphia.
55 delegates from all states except Rhode Island; John Adams, Thomas Jefferson missed it; Samuel Adams was rejected.
James Madison and Alexander Hamilton; they demanded strong central government to protect the republic from imprudent democracy.
Drafted by James Madison; proposed a strong three-branch government with representation in both houses based on population, national laws overriding state laws, and a three-tier election system.
1. Opposition to national veto of state laws.
2. Representation based on population gave large states too much power over small states.
Drafted by William Paterson for small states; kept a single-house congress with one vote per state, enhanced congressional powers for revenue and commerce, preserved state control over laws.
Connecticut plan: Senate has two members per state, House of Representatives based on population; state legislatures elect senators, states choose electors for president.
No property requirement was set for voting in national elections.
Fugitive slave clause allowed owners to reclaim runaway slaves; slaves counted as 3/5 of a person for representation and taxation; slavery itself was not abolished.
Counting slaves increased their population, giving them more representation and helping southern planters dominate national politics until 1860.
Taxation, raising an army and navy, regulating foreign and interstate commerce, and making all “necessary and proper” laws.
Required the U.S. to honor the national debt, prohibited states from issuing paper money, or enacting laws impairing contracts.
When ratified by conventions in nine of the thirteen states.
Supporters of the Constitution and a strong central government; they coordinated pamphlets and newspaper campaigns to justify the Constitution.
Opponents of the Constitution; feared a distant, powerful central government run by wealthy men and the loss of state power; demanded a bill of rights.
Large districts would restrict officeholding to wealthy men, unlike smaller state districts which favored respectable yeomanry.
James Madison, John Jay, and Alexander Hamilton wrote 85 essays titled The Federalist (1787–1788), explaining and defending the Constitution.
Madison argued that a large republic could better protect liberty by controlling factions, rather than small polities.
Farmers, middling artisans, commercial farmers, and merchants.
Federalists won 187–168 votes after suggesting nine amendments to appease concerns; Boston artisans supported ratification for economic protection.
Through strong Federalist arguments and promises to consider amendments.
Most Americans accepted the Constitution; Congress and James Madison drafted amendments (Bill of Rights) to address concerns.
It created a national republic with broad popular support, marking the American Constitutional Revolution.
