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The Constitution

The Constitution . Wilson Ch 2. I. The Articles of Confederation. 1. The original constitution of the US 2. Governed the US through the Amer. Rev. Drafted 1777. didn’t go into effect until 1781 when Maryland ratified them. Weaknesses of the Articles

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The Constitution

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  1. The Constitution Wilson Ch 2

  2. I. The Articles of Confederation • 1. The original constitution of the US • 2. Governed the US through the Amer. Rev. Drafted 1777. didn’t go into effect until 1781 when Maryland ratified them

  3. Weaknesses of the Articles • Congress had no power to tax. Had to “request” money from the states. • Congress had no power to regulate commerce. Hindered efforts to create a national economy • No national court system to deal with disputes between states • Lacked resources to maintain the army and navy it was authorized to maintain

  4. II. The Constitutional Convention • States were aware of the weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation • Convention b/t Md and VA to settle disputes about Chesapeake (held at Mt Vernon) encouraged the calling of a regional conference in Annapolis • Annapolis convention led to the idea of a national convention

  5. Convention only supposed to “revise” the AC but that was quickly dropped in favor of a new document. • Issues: • Representation- how should each state be represented in the Congress • Slavery – How should the country treat the issue of slavery which was obviously inconsistent with the Declaration of Independence • Voting- Who’s allowed • Economic Issues- How do we promote a national economy • Individual rights – How are individual rights protected

  6. Representation- • Va Plan- supported by large states. Rep in congress determined by population • NJ Plan – supported by smaller states. Rep in congress equal • Solved by the Great Compromise (Connecticut Compromise) One house of congress determined by population. The other gives equal representation to the states

  7. Slavery • North/South division of states over slavery • Southern states wanted slaves to count as population. North said no. • 3/5 Compromise – 3/5 slave population counted towards representation in congress • Congress given power to ban importation of slaves in 20 years (this was done)

  8. Voting • Issue left up to the states

  9. Economic Issues • Congress given power to tax and borrow money • Congress given power to regulate foreign commerce and interstate commerce • Congress given the power to create currency • States prohibited from taxing interstate commerce

  10. Individual Rights • Drafters assumed state constitutions protected rights, so little was put in the original document • Prohibited suspension of the Writ of habeas corpus • Prohibited Bills of Attainder and Ex post facto laws • Prohibited religious tests for holding office • Right to jury trial guaranteed

  11. III. Major Principles • 1. Separation of Powers • The three branches of government, Executive, Legislative and Judicial are separated so no one branch could control the other • Purpose to keep any one branch from being too powerful

  12. 2. Checks and balances • Each branch of government was given some way to act to keep other branches from making a power grab • Presidential veto • Impeachment

  13. Limits on the Majority • Only the House of Representatives was directly elected. Indirect methods were chosen for the other branches • This allowed for control over the “Tyranny of the Majority” and the “ignorant voter.”

  14. Amending the Constitution • Formal Processs • Article V • Proposal – • 2/3 vote both Houses Congress • National convention called by 2/3 vote of state legislatures

  15. Ratification • ¾ of State Legislatures • ¾ of special ratifying conventions (only used once –Prohibition)

  16. Informal Processes to Amend • Judicial Interpretation (Marbury v Madison) through judicial review • Political Party development

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