Title: Our U. S. Constitution
1Our U. S. Constitution
- Birth of our enduring nation
2Why did the Articles of Confederation fail?
- November 1777- March 1781 a Confederation
(partnership) of independent equal states was
formed - Because of the experience of the American
Revolution, Americans were frightened by a strong
central government and showed more loyalty to
their states - The new government contained only one branch-
unicameral legislature with no power to enforce
laws or settle disputes (Georgia modeled their
1777 Constitution on 3branches, but the
legislature had the real power )
3Why did the Articles of Confederation fail?
continued
- Congress had no money and could not levy taxes
it could only ask states for voluntary
contributions - Congress had no power to regulate trade between
states or with foreign nations - Congress failed to protect citizens from state
discrimination and economic difficulties after
the war
4Case Study Shays Rebellion
- 1786- America was in financial trouble
businesses failures, people in debt, trade
problems, war debt and soldiers salaries not paid - Massachusetts farmers blamed state taxes on their
financial problems - Daniel Shays led a revolt against the state
government, trying to capture arms at the state
militia arsenal - Neither state nor Confederation government had
the power to stop the rebellion - How could a country exist if it could not keep
law and order?
5Philadelphia Convention May- October 178755
delegates from 12 states Georgia sent 4, but
only William Few and Abraham Baldwin would sign
the final document.
- Six compromises were needed to form the
Constitution for a stronger national government - Separation of Powers
- Checks and Balances
- Federalism
- Representation
- Guarantees to the States
- Amending the Constitution
6Separation of Power
To prevent a national government from becoming a
dictatorship, the framers of the Constitution
laid out a plan for shared powers. The National
government would be divided into three branches,
all based on the voters. Both the leaders of the
Legislative Branch and the Executive Branch would
be voted on by the people, and the leaders of the
Judicial Branch would be selected by the
Executive Legislative Branch.
7Checks and Balances
- To further balance the power,
- each of the three branches could check the powers
of the others
Executive Branch
Confirm appointments Impeach, override veto
Determines if laws Are constitutional
Appoints vacancies
Power to veto
Impeach, propose amendments
Judicial Branch
Legislative Branch
Interpret laws, determine if they are
constitutional
8Federalism
- On the issue of a strong national government with
strong state powers, the compromise consisted of
distributing powers - National government is in charge of national
matters - ex. foreign policy money
- In matters of both national state government
concern, they share power - ex. highways taxes
- In some matters, states are free to govern
without national interference local governments
are arms of the state - ex. education programs traffic violations
9Representation in CongressThe Great Compromise
Congress created 2 houses- the House of
Representatives with numbers based on population
and the Senate with 2 representatives from each
state
Large states (ex. Virginia) wanted representation
based on population
Small states (ex. Delaware) wanted equal
representation
Heavy Slave states wanted to count slaves into
population totals, but not taxable
3/5 of the slave population would be counted for
population and taxes Congress could not regulate
the slave trade for 20 years (1808)
Non Slave states did not want to count slaves
into population totals wanted Congress to
regulate slave trade
Abraham Baldwin-GA-forced the compromise
10Guarantees to the States
How would the Constitution protect the states and
guide their relationships?
- The National government will protect the states
from foreign invasion or domestic violence - Moving from state to state will not deny a
citizen his rights - There will be an orderly process for a territory
to become a state, with equal rights and powers
as other states (no colonies) - Every state is guaranteed a republican form of
government, but lets the people of each state
shape that government
11Amending the Constitution
- How easy would it be to change this document on
which the government was built? - Not so easy as to be altered by changing,
temporary emotions - Must be flexible to grow with a changing nation
- 2/3 of both houses of Congress or 2/3 of state
legislatures must propose an amendment or call a
convention to propose one ¾ of the states would
have to approve the proposed amendment for it to
pass. In 200 years this has happened only 27
times.
12Compromise needed to get ratification of the
Constitution
- Fearing danger to individual liberties in the
new constitution, opponents got a promise to add
the - Bill of Rights (first 10 Amendments)
- Freedom of religion, expression, press,
assembly - Right to bear arms
- No quartering of soldiers
- No unreasonable searches or seizures
- Right to due process of law (rights of persons
accused of a crime) - Right to a fair trial
- Right to a trial by jury
- Fair bail and punishments
- Rights to be retained by the people
- Powers reserved to the states and people (powers
not listed by the constitution are reserved to
the people or the state.)
13And so through compromise, our Enduring
Constitutionwas formed