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Who has the Power? States vs. the Federal Government The Two Sides of the Debate John C. Calhoun (top) believed that the 10th amendment gave States the ultimate authority Daniel Webster (bottom) believed that the Union should be preserved, meaning the country as a whole was more important than state rights John C. Calhoun 1782-1850 Senator and Vice President (under John Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson) from South Carolina Slave owner Supporter of States’ Rights and Nullification (a belief that States could deny a federal law that the state feels is unconstitutional) Daniel Webster 1782-1852 Senator from Massachusetts (Born in New Hampshire) Worked with Henry Clay on the Compromise of 1850 Tried to avoid conflict over slavery in order to preserve the union. Webster’s View secession would lead to Civil War, it could not be done peacefully. His main goal was to keep the country United Calhoun’s View It was each States’ right to leave the Union The Constitution was an agreement among the states, if you no longer agreed with the laws, you could leave the union