14
The Constitution (A Brief History)

The Constitution (A Brief History)

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

The Constitution (A Brief History). Colonial Policies. King controls the colonies, Parliament has little control 2,000 miles away- too hard to govern Colonies become used to self-governing Federal relationship More taxation. Colonial Unity. Albany Plan - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: The Constitution (A Brief History)

The Constitution(A Brief History)

Page 2: The Constitution (A Brief History)

Colonial Policies

•King controls the colonies, Parliament has little control

•2,000 miles away- too hard to govern▫Colonies become used to self-governing

•Federal relationship•More taxation

Page 3: The Constitution (A Brief History)

Colonial Unity

•Albany Plan▫Ben Franklin’s idea: yearly congress of

delegates Raise defense Trade Criminal matters

•Stamp Act Congress▫Act requires stamps on all paper products▫Delegates to New York- draft grievances

against King

Page 4: The Constitution (A Brief History)

First Continental Congress

•Intolerable Acts•Delegates to Philadelphia

▫Low turnout▫Urge boycott and creation of local

committees •Call for a second congress the following

May

Page 5: The Constitution (A Brief History)

The Second Continental Congress•1775- after Lexington and Concord•Representatives

▫All colonies send representatives▫George Washington attends and is elected

to lead the army•Becomes our first national government

▫Served for 5 years until Articles of Confederation

▫All powers in a unicameral legislature

Page 6: The Constitution (A Brief History)

The Articles of Confederation

•Approved in 1777 ratified in 1781•Government structure:

▫Unicameral congress▫One state-one vote▫One member to be the presiding officer

•This is a Confederate form of government▫Very weak central government

Page 7: The Constitution (A Brief History)

Critical Period

•States don’t support the federal government ▫Make agreements with other nations▫Form their own militaries

•Taxed each others goods•Printed own money•Shays’ Rebellion

▫Group of debtors lead a force to close the state courts

▫Attack federal arsenal

Page 8: The Constitution (A Brief History)

Independence

•Committee of 5 drafts Declaration of independence- largely the work of Jefferson

•First state Constitutions▫Common features:

___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________

Page 9: The Constitution (A Brief History)

The Constitutional Convention

•The Framers▫12 states send delegates: not ______________▫Average age: 42, most in their 30s

•Procedure▫George Washington elected

____________________________________________________________________

▫Worked in secrecy▫The decision:

________________________________________________________________________

Page 10: The Constitution (A Brief History)

The Virginia Plan

•Madison•_________________________________•_________________________________•Power of veto•_________________________________•Considered radical

Page 11: The Constitution (A Brief History)

The New Jersey Plan•Unicameral Congress•Each state

_________________________________•_________________________________•Limited powers for tax and trade

Page 12: The Constitution (A Brief History)

Compromises

•Connecticut▫Two house congress

__________________________________ __________________________________

•Three-Fifths▫____________________________________________

________________________•A bundle of compromises

Page 13: The Constitution (A Brief History)

Ratification•_________________ the Constitution is

signed•__________ ratify however they need a key

state such as ___________ or __________•__________- finally ratified and becomes

the new national government

Page 14: The Constitution (A Brief History)

              SEVEN BASIC PRINCIPLES OF THE CONSTITUTION        Popular Sovereignty- the governments right to rule comes from the people        Limited Government- the government has only the powers that the Constitution

gives to it        Separation of Power-the Constitution divides the government into three branches:           Congress-legislative branch makes laws           President-executive branch carries out the laws           Courts-judicial branch explains  and interprets the laws        Checks and Balances- each branch of government has the power to check or limit

the actions of the other two        Federalism-division of power between the federal government and the states.        Republicanism- citizens elect representatives  to carry out their will        Individual rights-The Constitution protects individual rights such as freedomof speech, freedom religion etc