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Roots of American Democracy Chapter 3 Early Developments ● Ancient Greece: Athens, direct democracy – Philosophers: Plato, Aristotle ● ● ● Ancient Rome: representative democracy England: colonial charters, British tradition Native Americans: – Ohlone - direct democracy – Iroquois: confederation Enlightenment Thinkers ● ● ● ● Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679) Leviathan John Locke (1632 - 1704) Second Treatise of Government Baron de Montesquieu (1689 - 1755) The Spirit of the Laws Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712 1778) The Social Contract English Influence ● Early Tradition – Limited government – Representative government ● Important documents – Magna Carta 1215 - King John ● Rights to nobles - taxation, raise an army – Petition of Rights 1628 - King Charles I ● Extended rights to commoners – English Bill of Rights 1688 - William and Mary of Orange ● ● Gained joint monarchs Signed Bill of Rights: parliamentary elections, freedom from cruel and unusual punishment, fair and speedy trial Colonies and the Beginnings of Independence ● Charters – Royal Charter ● ● Bi-camerial legislature Government appointed by king – Proprietary charter ● ● Proprietor = executive Councils, judges, lower house of legislature elected – Charter Colonies ● ● Directly ruled by colonists Self governing Growing Resentment ● ● Issue: no taxation without representation Issue: Defense of colonies Action / Reaction ● ● ● ● Taxation: boycott First Continental Congress 1774: asked King and Parliament for US representation: denied Second Continental Congress 1775: war likely, set up Articles of Confederation; George Washington lead army: King called “den of traitors” Declaration of Independence: 1776 Declaration of Independence ● ● Thomas Jefferson Based on John Locke (1632 - 1704), The Second Treatise of Government – Natural rights – Consent of the governed First US Government ● Articles of Confederation – 13 colonies / states -- 1 state = 1 vote – Unanimous decisions – Powers ● ● Trade with other nations Make war and peace – No powers ● ● ● ● Tax Raise an army National courts Print currency Problems ● Liberty v. order – Thomas Jefferson ● Unity – George Washington, Alexander Hamilton ● Financial responsibility – – – – Tariffs Currency Debt to Europe Debt to soldiers Constitutional Convention 1787 ● ● ● ● Fix Articles of Confederation Philadelphia Rhode Island did not attend 55 delegates from 12 states Proposals ● Virginia Plan – Bicameral legislature ● ● Lower house: people Upper house: selected by lower house – Representation based on population / money contributed to national government – Executive chosen by legislative branch; veto – Judicial consist of judges chosen by leg. branch ● New Jersey Plan – Legislative branch unicameral by state legislatures – All states equal – Executive branch several persons, no veto power – Supreme Court appointed by executive; for life Compromises ● Great Compromise – House = population – Senate = state ● 3/5 compromise – Slaves: 3/5 of slave population count ● Slave trade compromise – Legislature regulate trade with other nations – No ban slave trade for 20 years Ratification ● Federalist – for – James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, John Jay – Federalist Papers – Urban, northern ● Anti-federalists – against – Thomas Jefferson – Feared strong central government – Demanded Bill of Rights (first 10 amendments) – Rural, southern Adoption ● ● ● ● ● 1787 Delaware became first state to ratify the US Constitution 1788 nine states approved Constitution became “Supreme Law of the Land” 1791 Bill of Rights added Eventually all 13 colonies approved