chapter 3 section 4 and 5 the articles of confederation and the constitution of the united states

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Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

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Page 1: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5

•The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Page 2: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Section 4-5

New Political Ideas• By declaring its independence, America

had established a republic, or a form of government where power resides with a body of citizens with the right to vote. ⇓

• In an ideal republic, all citizens are equal under the law and the government gets its authority from the people.

• Wartime debts and the trade imbalance with Britain plunged the new United States into a severe economic slowdown called a recession

Page 3: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Section 4-6

• Adams argued that government needed checks and balances to stop any group from getting too strong and taking away minority rights. ⇓

• Adams wanted a mixed government with a separation of powers with separate executive, legislative, and judicial branches.

New Political Ideas (cont.)

Page 4: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Section 4-7

• Adams said that the legislature should have two houses. ⇓

• His ideas influenced many state constitutions. ⇓

• Many states attached a bill of rightsto their constitutions.

New Political Ideas (cont.)

Page 5: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Section 4-9

• The Revolution led to an expansion of voting rights. ⇓

• Many states allowed any white male who paid taxes to vote regardless of property ownership.

• Opposition to slavery had been growing steadily even before the Revolution, especially in the Northern and Middle Colonies

New Political Ideas (cont.)

Page 6: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Section 4-10

• In 1786 Virginian Governor Thomas Jefferson asked Congress to pass the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom. ⇓

• It declared that Virginia no longer had an official church and the state could no longer collect taxes for the church.

• Many states attached a list of rights to their constitutions, which began in 1776 when George Mason drafted Virginia’s Declaration of Rights

New Political Ideas (cont.)

Page 7: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Section 4-21

The Achievements of theConfederation• In November 1777, the Continental

Congress adopted the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union. ⇓

• This was a plan for a loose union of the states under Congress.

Page 8: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Section 4-22

• The Articles of Confederation set up a weak central government. ⇓

• The Confederation Congress met just once a year. ⇓

• It had the power to declare war, raise armies, and sign treaties. ⇓

• It, however, did not have the power to impose taxes or regulate trade.

The Achievements of theConfederation (cont.)

Page 9: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Section 4-23

• The only way the Confederation Congress had to raise money to pay its debts wereto sell its land west of the Appalachian Mountains. ⇓

• Congress arranged this land into townships to make it easier to divide, sell, and govern. ⇓

• It set up the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 as a basis for governing much of this territory.

• Northwest Ordinance of 1787 provided the basis for governing western land and developing them into states

The Achievements of theConfederation (cont.)

Page 10: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Section 4-27

Weaknesses of the Congress

• American states set up customs posts on their borders and levied taxes on other states’ goods to raise money. ⇓

• The inability of the Confederation Congress to regulate commerce threatened the union of the states.

Page 11: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Section 4-28

• The Confederation Congress had other problems with foreign policy. ⇓

• Since the federal government had no powers over the states, it could not force the states to pay their debts to Britain or to return property to Loyalists as stated in the Treaty of Paris. ⇓

• Also, the Congress had no way to raise money to pay these debts. ⇓

• So the British retaliated by refusing to evacuate American soil as promised in the treaty.

Weaknesses of the Congress (cont.)

Page 12: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Section 4-30

• The end of the Revolutionary War and the slowdown of economic activity with Britain caused a severe recession in the United States. ⇓

• States did not have the gold and silver to back paper money, but many of them issued it anyway. ⇓

• The paper money greatly declined in value.

Weaknesses of the Congress (cont.)

Page 13: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Section 4-31

• Shays’s Rebellion broke out in Massachusetts in 1786. ⇓

• It started when the government of Massachusetts decided to raise taxes to pay off its debt instead of issuing paper money. ⇓

• The taxes were worst for farmers, especially those in the western part of the state. ⇓

• Those who could not pay their taxes and other debts lost their farms.

Weaknesses of the Congress (cont.)

Page 14: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Section 4-32

• So farmers in western Massachusetts rebelled by shutting down county courthouses. ⇓

• The rebellion, led by Daniel Shays, included about 1,200 followers. ⇓

• They went to a state arsenal to get weapons. ⇓

• A government militia defended the arsenal against the rebels.

Weaknesses of the Congress (cont.)

Page 15: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Section 5-5

The Constitutional Convention• People who supported a stronger central

government were called nationalists. ⇓

• George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, James Madison, and Alexander Hamilton were amongthe prominent nationalists.

• The system created as a way for each branch of government to monitor and limit the power of the others is called checks and balances.

Page 16: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Section 5-6

• Hamilton suggested that a convention of states be set up to revise the Articles of Confederation. ⇓

• All states except Rhode Island sent delegates to the Constitutional Convention held in Philadelphia in 1787.

The Constitutional Convention (cont.)

Page 17: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Section 5-7

• Most of the 55 delegates to the Constitutional Convention had experience in government. ⇓

• George Washington was presiding officer. ⇓

• James Madison kept records of the debates. ⇓

• The meetings were closed to the public.

The Constitutional Convention (cont.)

Page 18: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Section 5-8

• James Madison devised the Virginia Plan. ⇓

• This plan proposed throwing out the Articles of Confederation and creating a new national government with the power to make laws binding upon the states and to raise its own money through taxes. ⇓

• It also called for a national government made up of three branches of government–legislative, executive, and judicial.

The Constitutional Convention (cont.)

Page 19: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Section 5-9

• The legislature should be divided into two houses. ⇓

• Voters in each state would elect members of the first house. ⇓

• Members of the second house would be elected by the first house. ⇓

• The Virginia plan benefited states with large populations because in both houses, the number of representatives for each state would reflect the population of that state.

The Constitutional Convention (cont.)

Page 20: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Section 5-10

• The New Jersey Plan was offered as a counterproposal. ⇓

• This plan only revised the Articles of Confederation to make the central government stronger. ⇓

• Congress would have a single house in which each state would be equally represented. ⇓

• Congress would have the power to raise taxes and regulate trade.

The Constitutional Convention (cont.)

Page 21: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Section 5-14

• The convention appointed a special committee to resolve differences between the large and small states. ⇓

• The committee worked out the Great Compromise. ⇓

• It proposed that in the House of Representatives, the states would be represented according to the size of their populations. ⇓

• The Senate would have equal representation.

A Union Built on Compromise (cont.)

Page 22: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Section 5-16

• The Three-Fifths Compromise came up with a plan for counting enslaved people in a state. ⇓

• Every five enslaved people in a state would count as three free persons for determining both representation and taxes. ⇓

• Southern delegates insisted that the new constitution forbid interference with the slave trade and limit Congress’s power to regulate trade.

A Union Built on Compromise (cont.)

Page 23: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

A Framework for Limited Government• The Constitution was based on the

principle of popular sovereignty, orrule by the people. ⇓

• The Constitution created a system of government called federalism. ⇓

• This divided the government between the federal, or national, government and the state governments.

Page 24: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Section 5-20

• The Constitution provided for a separation of powers among the three branches of government. ⇓

• The legislative branch makes the laws.It is made up of the two houses of Congress. ⇓

• The executive branch enforces the laws. It is headed by a president. ⇓

• The judicial branch interprets federal laws. It is made up of a system of federal courts.

A Framework for Limited Government (cont.)

Page 25: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Section 5-24

• The Constitution has a system for making amendments, or changes to the Constitution. ⇓

• There is a two-step process for amending the Constitution–proposal and ratification.

A Framework for Limited Government (cont.)

Page 26: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Section 5-25

• New amendments can be proposed by a vote of two-thirds of the members of both houses of Congress, or two-thirds of the states could call a constitutional convention to propose new amendments. ⇓

• A proposed amendment must be ratified by three-fourths of the state legislatures or by conventions in three-fourths of the states.

A Framework for Limited Government (cont.)

Page 27: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

•Arguments for ratification of the Arguments for ratification of the Constitution were summarized in Constitution were summarized in The Federalist, a collection of 85 essays The Federalist, a collection of 85 essays written by Alexander Hamilton, John written by Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, and James MadisonJay, and James Madison

Page 28: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

M/C 3-1

Page 29: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

M/C 4-2

Page 30: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

M/C 4-3

Page 31: Chapter 3 Section 4 and 5 The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States

Daily Focus Skills Transparency 5

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