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Notes for Test 1: Part B Government 12 A Nation Emerges I. The European Origins of Our Governmental System A. Limited Government 1. In 1215, King John of England signed the Magna Carta, which limited the king’s powers. 2. Provided for trial by jury of peers 3. Prohibited taking of a person’s life, liberty, or property except by the lawful judgment of that person’s peers. 4. Forced the king to obtain the nobles’ approval of any taxes he imposed on his royal subjects 5. In 1628, King Charles I was forced to sign the Petition of Rights which further limited government power. 6. This prohibited the king from imprisoning political critics without a jury trial. 7. Also stated that the monarch had to obey the law of the land. 8. In 1689, the English government passed the English Bill of Rights, which further limited government power a. Monarch could not interfere with parliamentary elections b. Monarch had to have Parliament’s approval to collect taxes or to maintain an army c. Monarch ruled with the consent of the people’s representatives in Parliament d. People could not be subject to cruel and unusual punishment or to excessive fines B. Representative Government 1. A representative government is one in which the people choose a limited number of individuals to make governmental decisions for all citizens. 2. Those chosen by the citizens are called representatives. 3. In England, this group is called Parliament. a. Upper house: House of Lords b. Lower house: House of Commons C. Early Philosophical Influences 1. Political philosophy, which involves ideas about how people should be governed, was changing in Europe in the 1600s and 1700s. 2. Philosophers questioned such traditional doctrines as the divine right theory of government. 3. Locke, Hobbes, Rousseau, and the Social Contract II. a. Locke said in Two Treatises of Government in 1689, “no one could be subjected to the political power of another, without his own consent.” b. Primary purpose of government was to protect natural rights. c. Government social contract between people and government. d. Locke theorized that before governments existed, people lived in a “state of nature” in which they had unlimited freedom and the right to do as they wished. e. This was in agreement with Thomas Hobbes who also discussed a “state of nature.” In contrast to Locke, Hobbes argued that this situation led to chaos and violence because the weak could not protect themselves against the strong. There were no natural rights. Rights could only be won by force. f. Life was “nasty, brutish, and short.” g. Published Leviathan in 1651 which stated that people had voluntarily agreed to create powerful government in order to gain security and safety. In exchange, they gave up the freedom to do as they chose in the state of nature. h. He believe in a government with a single ruler. i. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, a French political philosopher, believed that people once lived in a state of nature and freedom. j. In The Social Contract, published in 1762, he wrote, “Man is born free, yet everywhere he is found in chains.” 4. Montesquieu and the Separation of Powers a. French political philosopher Charles de Secondat, the Baron of Montesquieu was the first political writer to discuss dividing government into three separate branches with different duties and the ability to act as a check on each other’s power. b. In his book The Spirit of the Laws (1748) he pointed out that no one person in the English government was allowed to make the laws, enforce the laws, and interpret the laws. The Beginnings of Self-Government A. The First Settlements 1. In the 1580’s, Sir Walter Raleigh convinced Queen Elizabeth I to allow him to establish the first British outpost in North America 2. Sent a ship of settlers to Roanoke Island off coast of North Carolina but it failed 3. In 1607, the Virginia Company established Jamestown (Virginia), the first major settlement in North America 4. The king gave the Virginia Company a charter, a written grant of authority, to make laws “for the good and welfare” of the Jamestown settlement. 5. Jamestown chose a representative assembly. 6. The Plymouth Company established the first New England colony in 1620. 7. A group of English Protestants, the Pilgrims, sailed to North America on the Mayflower, landing in what is now Provincetown Harbor, at the tip of Cape Cod, Massachusetts. 8. Before going ashore, the adult males drew up the Mayflower Compact, an agreement in which they set up a government and promised to obey its laws. 9. It was a social contract of the type Locke had described. 10. "In the name of God, Amen. We, whose names are underwritten, the Loyal Subjects of our dread Sovereign Lord, King James, by the Grace of God, of England, France and Ireland, King, Defender of the Faith, e&. Having undertaken for the Glory of God, and Advancement of the Christian Faith, and the Honour of our King and Country, a voyage to plant the first colony in the northern parts of Virginia; do by these presents, solemnly and mutually in the Presence of God and one of another, covenant and combine ourselves together into a civil Body Politick, for our better Ordering and Preservation, and Furtherance of the Ends aforesaid; And by Virtue hereof to enact, constitute, and frame, such just and equal Laws, Ordinances, Acts, Constitutions and Offices, from time to time, as shall be thought most meet and convenient for the General good of the Colony; unto which we promise all due submission and obedience. In Witness whereof we have hereunto subscribed our names at Cape Cod the eleventh of November, in the Reign of our Sovereign Lord, King James of England, France and Ireland, the eighteenth, and of Scotland the fifty-fourth. Anno Domini, 1620." III. B. More Colonies Are Formed 1. By 1639, a number of Pilgrims who were being persecuted for their religious beliefs decided to leave the Massachusetts Bay Colony. 2. They colonized what is now Connecticut and they developed America’s first written constitution—the Fundamental Orders of Connecticut. 3. By 1732, all 13 colonies had been established. The Colonies Rebel A. The British first placed general restrictions on the colonists in 1651 when the Navigation Acts were passed by Parliament. 1. These acts required that only English ships be used for trade within the British empire. B. Taxation without Representation 1. In 1760, King George III was crowned king of England 2. In 1764, the British passed the Sugar Act—tax on sugar imports. 3. In 1765, the Stamp Act was passed—this was the first direct tax on the colonies. 4. In October 1765, 9 out of 13 colonies sent delegates were sent to the Stamp Act Congress held in New York City. 5. The delegates prepared a declaration of rights and grievances (complaints) against the new British actions and sent this to King George III. 6. More taxes were placed on glass, pain, and lead. 7. The colonists responded with a boycott, a refusal to purchase all English goods. 8. In 1773, the anger reached its peak at the Boston Tea Party. 9. The Parliament responded with the Coercive Acts (Intolerable Acts) in 1774. The acts closed Boston harbor and placed the government of Boston under direct British control. C. The First Continental Congress 1. All colonies (except Georgia) sent delegates to Philadelphia on September 5, 1774. 2. They sent a petition to the king to explain their grievances 3. The Parliament condemned this as rebellion. D. The Second Continental Congress 1. On April 19, 1775, British soldiers (Redcoats) fought with colonial citizen-soldiers, called Minutemen, in the towns of Lexington and Concord (Massachusetts). 2. The Battle of Concord was later described by poet Ralph Waldo Emerson as the “shot heard round the world.” 3. Less than a month later, the Second Continental Congress met. 4. It named George Washington as army commander-in-chief. 5. Paul Revere (read The Midnight Ride and Myths and Legends) and Samuel Adams E. Independence 1. One of the most famous arguments for independence came from Thomas Paine who wrote Common Sense. 2. Richard Henry Lee of Virginia introduced the Resolution of Independence to the Second Continental Congress. On July 2, the congress adopted the resolution: RESOLVED, That these United Colonies are, and of right ought to be free and independent States, that they are absolved from allegiance to the British Crown, and that all political connection between them and the state of Great Britain is, and ought to be, totally dissolved. 3. Thomas Jefferson began writing a draft of the Declaration of Independence. 4. He asked John Adams and Benjamin Franklin to look over his work. 5. After some changes, on July 4, 1776 the Declaration of Independence was adopted. 6. On July 19, the modified draft became the “unanimous declaration of the thirteen United States of America.” 7. The unalienable—or natural—rights referred to in the Declaration of Independence are the same rights that Locke discussed in his political philosophy. IV. 8. Natural rights were inherent rights—they cannot be taken away and they are beyond the power of government to grant or deny. 9. According to the Declaration, government exists to protect individuals’ natural rights. 10. In a democratic society, government derives its power from the consent of the governed—in other words, people give government the power to rule. F. From Colonies to States 1. In May 1776, the Second Continental Congress directed the colonies to form new governments. 2. All 13 adopted new constitutions which limited government 3. Most citizens feared a strong central government or having anything close to a monarchy, like a strong executive. The Articles of Confederation A. A confederation is a voluntary association of independent states. B. The Articles were signed March 1, 1781 and served as the nation’s first national constitution. C. The Government Under the Confederation 1. The Congress was the central governing body 2. Each state could only send 2 to 7 ambassadors to the congress but each state would only have one vote. 3. Sovereignty was an important issue. Each state was sovereign. D. The Powers of Congress under the Articles 1. Enter into treaties and alliances 2. Establish and control armed forces 3. Declare war and make peace 4. Regulate coinage 5. Borrow money 6. Create postal system 7. Regulate Indian affairs 8. Set standards of weights and measures 9. Guarantee that citizens had same rights no matte where they went E. The United States under the Articles won the Revolutionary War. The Treaty of Paris signed in 1783 ended the war. F. Weaknesses of the Articles 1. The confederation was just a “league of friendship” and there was permanent stability. 2. When General Charles Cornwallis surrendered in Yorktown on October 18, 1781 the war basically ended. But there were disputes among the states regarding the new government. 3. Shay’s Rebellion a. Daniel Shays along with two thousand farmers seized country courthouses and disrupted debtors’ trials. b. Shays attacked an arsenal in Springfield, MA. c. This was given as a reason to form a central government V. 4. Annapolis Convention a. The Virginia legislature called for a meeting or convention of all the states at Annapolis, Maryland on September 11, 1786. b. Five of thirteen states sent delegates, two of whom were Alexander Hamilton of New York and James Madison of Virginia. c. Both wanted a strong central government—they were called nationalists. d. They persuaded the other delegates to issue a report calling on the states to hold a convention in Philadelphia in May of the following year. e. The reason was for “the sole and expressed purpose of revising the Articles of Confederation.” f. This meeting became the Constitutional Convention. Creating the Constitution A. The convention formally opened in the East Room of the Pennsylvania State House (later named Independence Hall) on May 25, 1787. B. Only Rhode Island did not send delegates. C. Who Were the Delegates? 1. The 55 were relatively young James Madison, 36; Alexander Hamilton, 32; Benjamin Franklin was the oldest at 81. 2. George Washington stood out as a leader from the beginning. He served as president of the convention. 3. Madison’s notes are our primary source of information; he is known as the Father of the Constitution. 4. 33 were lawyers and half were college graduates. D. Facts 1. Each state had one vote 2. At least 7 states had to be present for business to be done (quorum). E. Revolutionary Plans and Compromises 1. Edmund Randolph of Virginia presented the Virginia Plan a. Bicameral legislature: the lower house was to be chosen by the people and the upper house members would be chosen by the elected members of the lower house. b. The number of representatives would be based on population. c. National legislature could void any state laws. d. An executive branch elected by the legislature e. A national court system created by the legislature. 2. William Paterson of New Jersey offered the New Jersey Plan a. Each state only had one vote 3. The Great Compromise a. Roger Sherman of Connecticut created the Great Compromise (Connecticut Compromise) VI. b. One house would be based on population (House of Representatives) and the other would consist of two members from each state elected by the state legislatures (Senate) 4. The Slavery Question a. Slavery was legal in every state except Massachusetts b. The southern states wanted slaves to be counted equally in determining representation while the northern states opposed that. c. The Three-Fifths Compromise stated the 3/5 of the slaves were to be counted for purposes of representation. 5. Other Issues a. The South’s economic health depended on its exports of agricultural products. b. The South feared that Congress might pass taxes on these exports. c. The South agreed to let Congress have the power to regulate interstate commerce as well as international commerce but only if the Congress would guarantee no export taxes would ever be imposed (this is in the Constitution) F. The Final Document 1. Approved on September 17, 1787 Ratifying the Constitution A. Nine states had to approve the Constitution B. Federalists versus Anti-Federalists 1. Federalists: wanted a strong central government (James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and John Jay) 2. Anti-Federalists: wanted a weak central government (Patrick Henry, George Mason, Samuel Adams) 3. Federalist Papers: Madison, Jay, and Hamilton wrote a series of 85 essays defending the Constitution (#10 is a classic) 4. The Anti-Federalists argued that the Constitution would create an overly powerful central government that would limit personal freedom. They also argued that it lacked a Bill of Rights. C. The Constitution is Ratified 1. To gain support, a Bill of Rights was added. 2. Rhode Island was the last state to ratify D. The New Government Begins 1. New York City was the temporary capital. 2. On March 4, 1789, the new Congress met at Federal Hall on Wall Street. 3. April 6, George Washington was elected the first President and John Adams Vice President.