Title: Lecture 3: The American republic and Constitution
1Lecture 3 The American republic and Constitution
2Origins of Republicanism in the US
- Republicanism Idea that the people (through
their representatives) can rule themselves
3I. Models from Antiquity
- The rise of Greek city-states (800-500 BC)
- Athens--small, turbulent, and democratic
- The Roman Republic
- creation of the Senate--indirectly
representative govt. - large, powerful, lasted 100s of years
- as American ideal--politics, art, architecture,
legend
4Washington in a toga
5II. Experience of Self-rule
- A history of administering their own affairs for
almost 150 years
Virginia House of Burgesses
6Creation of a Republican national govt
- An experiment in republican govt--many expected
to fail - Americans sense of state identity, and fear of
centralization - First try The Articles of Confederation
(drafted in 1777)
7Article I. The Stile of this Confederacy shall be
"The United States of America." Article II. Each
state retains its sovereignty, freedom, and
independence. . .
8Features/Weaknesses of the Articles of
Confederation
- No U.S. judiciary to settle disputes between
states - No real executive power to carry out or enforce
federal (national) laws - 9 of 13 states needed to approve legislation
- No power to collect taxes directly
- No power to raise an army directly
9Shays Rebellion 1786
10Another attempt at a federal (national) govt
- 1787 States agree to send reps to Philadelphia to
amend Articles - Debates and compromises
- Virginia Plan vs New Jersey Plan
- Senate and House apportioned differently
- Slavery and direct taxation/representation
- the 3/5 compromise
- Federalists vs Anti-federalists
- Bill of Rights added
11signing the Constitution
12Madison and the Principles of the Constitution
- 1 Republicanism--not quite democracy
- democracy is the most vile form of government...
democracies have ever been spectacles of
turbulence and contention have ever been found
incompatible with personal security or the rights
of property - 2 Federalist Papers 10 51
- ambition to counteract ambition in checks and
balances - cross-cutting cleavages of a large republic
13Review of U.S. Constitution (1789)
- Preamble
- People not States
- Article 1 (Article, Section, Clause)
- Congress
- Sec 2--House of Representatives
- Pg 3
- 3/5 rule
14Article I, contd
- Sec 3--Senate
- Pg 1
- --representing state, elected by state
legislature - Sec 8--Powers of Congress
- raise taxes, raise army, regulate commerce among
states, necessary and proper - Sec 9--Restraints on Congress
- banning slave trade, suspend habeas corpus,
create nobility
15Review of U.S. Constitution
- Article 2--Presidency and electoral college
- Article 3--Federal Judiciary
- Article 4--Full faith and credit, fugitive slave
- Article 5--amendment formulas
- Article 6, Pg 2--Supremacy Clause
- Article 7--Ratification
16Bill of Rights
- Amend 1--religion and speech
- Amend 2--guns
- Amend 4--search and seizure
- Amend 5--double jeopardy, self-incrim, due
process - Amend 6, 7--trial procedure--jury trial, counsel
- Amend 8--Cruel and unusual, excessive bail
- Amend 9,10--non-specified rights remain with the
states and people