AP - C7 Notes _3 - Gatesville High School
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Transcript AP - C7 Notes _3 - Gatesville High School
Chapter 7:
Democracy in Distress
Popular Political Culture
• partisan – partial to a specific party or purpose
• even though members of Congress were voting
as Republicans or Federalists they condemned
the partisan spirit as a threat to the stability of
the United States
– viewed a “party” with “faction” and “faction” with
“conspiracy to overthrow legitimate authority”
• created an atmosphere that bred suspicion
Partisan Newspapers and Political Clubs
• more than any other element,
newspapers transformed the
political culture
• Americans were voracious
readers
• John Fenno – Gazette of the
United States
• Philip Freneau – National Gazette
– tone of the two publications was
quite different, they were fiercely
partisan journals presenting rumor
and opinion as fact
• some of the precursor to ‘yellow
journalism’
• Noah Webster
– spent the 1790s editing
a Federalist journal
called the American
Minerva
– would later publish An
American Dictionary of
the English Language
• during this time you
also had the birth of
political clubs
“Democratic” or
“Republican”
associations
Whiskey Rebellion Linked to
Republican Conspiracy
• the Federalists convinced themselves that the
Republicans were prepared to use violence against
the U.S. government
• farmers in Pennsylvania protested an excise tax on
distilled whiskey passed by Congress in 1791
– excise – an internal tax or duty on certain commodities,
levied on the manufacture, sale, or consumption of the
product
• were making good money distilling their grain into
whiskey and didn’t want the excise to put them
out of business
• the insurrection represented a direct political challenge
• President Washington called out 15,000 militiamen and
marched against the rebels
– expedition was an embarrassing fiasco resulting in minimum
violence as the distillers disappeared
• victory in the rebellion and the rebellion itself
intensified the split between the two parties
Washington’s Farewell
• in September 1796, Washington published his
Farewell Address declaring his intention to
retire from the presidency
– set the precedent for presidents to serve 2 terms
• in the address, Washington warned against all
political factions, counseled the US to avoid
any permanent alliances
– would become the basis for American neutrality
and isolationist sentiment for many years
The Adams Presidency
• Federalists agreed that John
Adams should stand against
the Republican Thomas
Jefferson
– Hamilton feared thought
that an independentminded Adams would be
difficult to manipulate
• each elector cast 2 ballots
and the person who gained
the most votes became
president
• runner-up, regardless of
party affiliation became
vice-president
The Election of 1796
Candidate
Party
Electoral Vote
J. Adams
Federalist
71
Jefferson
Republican
68
T. Pinckney
Federalist
59
Burr
Republican
30
• Hamilton secretly urged southern Federalists to
support only Pinckney, even if that meant throwing
away their second vote
• when New Englanders heard of Hamilton’s plan,
they dropped Pinckney and voted only for Adams
– this would heighten tensions within the Federalist party
• Adams was saddled with
the members of
Washington’s old cabinet
– a group that would
regularly consult Hamilton
behind Adams’s back
– but, if Adams had
dismissed them and
called his own cabinet he
would have called
Washington’s judgment
into question and Adams
would not take that highly
public risk
John Adams – Second President
• Adams also had to work
with a Republican vicepresident
The XYZ Affair and Domestic Politics
• French government regarded Jay’s Treaty (with
Great Britain) as an affront
– allowing Great Britain to define the conditions for
neutrality, the US had sided with them against France
• in 1797, French privateers began seizing
American ships
– neither the US or France officially declared war, and
this became known as the Quasi-War
• Adams did not want to escalate the conflict
– he dispatched a special commission in a final attempt
to solve the problem
• negotiating team was made up of Charles
Pinckney, John Marshall, and Elbridge Gerry
– were instructed to obtain compensation for the ships
seized as well as release from the treaties of 1778
– the group would also offer France the same
commercial privileges as Great Britain
• while the diplomats negotiated in France, Adams
talked of strengthening American defenses to
placate the more militant members of his own
party
• when the commission arrived in
France, instead of dealing with
Talleyrand (the minister of foreign
relations), they met with obscure
intermediaries who demanded
huge bribes
– Talleyrand would not open
negotiations unless he was given
$250,000
– the French government also
expected a “loan” of millions of
dollars
• the American negotiators refused
to play along
– “Millions for defense, not one cent
for tribute.”
French Minister Talleyrand
• when Adams presented the official
correspondence from the
negotiations, the names of
Talleyrand’s lackeys was changed to
X, Y, and Z
A 1798 political cartoon, depicting America – the young maiden, being plundered by five
Frenchmen who represent the five directors of the French government.
Crushing Political Dissent
• Federalists assumed that Adams would be asking
Congress for a formal declaration of war
• began pushing for a general rearmament
– new fighting ships
– additional harbor fortifications
– greatly expanded U.S. Army
• Adams remained skeptical and saw no likelihood
of French invasion
• the army was not necessarily
to stop French aggression,
but to stop internal
opposition
• in the summer of 1798, a
provisional army was
created under the leadership
of George Washington
Alexander Hamilton
– who agreed to take the
position if Hamilton was
appointed his second in
command
– Hamilton wanted military
glory for himself, but
continued to treat the
president with contempt
• Hamilton could make no move without
presidential cooperation – Adams was in fact the
Commander in Chief
– whenever questions about the army came up, Adams
was nowhere to be found
• he supported the navy and pushed Congress to
establish the Navy Department
– selecting Benjamin Stoddert for this new cabinet
position – a person who did not take orders from
Hamilton
• Adams refused to ask Congress for a formal
declaration of war
• the American people increasingly regarded the
idle army as an expensive extravagance
Silencing Political Opposition:
the Alien and Sedition Acts
• group of bills known as the
Alien and Sedition Acts
authorized the use of federal
courts and the powers of the
presidency to silence the
Republicans
• were born of fear and
vindictiveness and would
become the nation’s first
major crisis over civil liberties
Alien Acts
• 1. Alien Enemies Law – gave the
president extraordinary wartime powers
– could detain or deport citizens of nations
which the US was at war and who behaved
in a suspicious manner
• 2. Alien Law – empowered the president
to expel any foreigner from the US simply
by executive decree
– was limited to two years, but the mere
threat of arrest caused some Frenchmen to
flee the country
• 3. Naturalization Law – established a
fourteen year probationary period before
foreigners could apply for full US
citizenship
– designed to keep “hordes of wild Irishmen”
away from the polls as long as possible
Sedition Act
Cutout of a newspaper broadside on
the trial of Thomas Cooper, a lawyer
and newspaper editor who was
indicted, prosecuted, and convicted
of violating the Sedition Act.
• defined criticism of the U.S.
government as criminal
libel and citizens found
guilty by a jury were subject
to fines and imprisonment
– many Republicans were
concerned that the Sedition
Law undermined rights
guaranteed in the First
Amendment
– were also worried about the
federal judiciary’s expanded
role in punishing sedition
• believed such matters were
best left to state officials
• Matthew Lyon
– Republican congressman who publicly accused Adams
and his administration of mishandling the Quasi-War
• was known as the “Spitting Lyon” after who spat in
the eye of a Federalist congressman
– also took part in a fistfight on the floor of Congress
• Federalist court was happy to have the opportunity
to convict him of libel
– but while he sat in jail, his constituents re-elected him
• federal courts had
become political tools
• the efforts at enforcing
the Sedition Law did not
silence opposition – they
actually sparked more
criticism and created
martyrs
• Republicans feared that
the survival of free
government was at stake
Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions
James Madison
• Thomas Jefferson and James
Madison were convinced
that the Federalists wanted
the creation of a police state
• some extreme republicans
like John Taylor of Virginia
recommended secession
from the Union
• others supported armed
resistance
• Jefferson counseled against
extreme measures
• Jefferson and Madison would draft separate protests
known as the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions
– vigorously defended the right of individual state assemblies
to interpret the constitutionality of federal law
– Jefferson would flirt with the doctrine of nullification
• a concept as dangerous to the survival of the U.S. as anything
advanced by Hamilton or the High Federalists
• Kentucky Resolution (Thomas Jefferson)
– described the federal union as a compact
– states did give the national government explicit
powers, but rights not specifically mentioned in
the Constitution belonged to the states
– the “general welfare” clause
– Kentucky legislators believed that the Alien and
Sedition Acts were unconstitutional and ought to
be repealed
• Virginia Resolution (James Madison)
– took a more temperate stand
– urged the states to defend the rights of the American
people
– resisted the notion that a single state legislature
could or should have the authority to overthrow
federal law
15 Star 15 Stripe Flag used after
Vermont and Kentucky joined the
Union in 1791 and 1792.
• the resolutions were not
intended as statements
of abstract principles and
most certainly not a
justification for southern
secession
• showed American voters
that the Republicans
offered a clear
alternative to Federalist
rule
Adam’s Finest Hour
• President Adams declared
his independence from the
Hamiltonian wing of the
Federalist party, he had
little enthusiasm for war
• after the XYZ Affair, Adams
received reports that
Talleyrand had changed his
tune
– the bribery episode had been
an unfortunate
misunderstanding and if the
US sent new representatives,
he was prepared to negotiate
in good faith
• with peace in the future, American taxpayers
complained more and more about the cost of
maintaining an army
– the president was only too happy to dismantle
Hamilton’s dream
• William Vans Murray, Oliver Ellsworth, and
William Davie arrived in France November of
1799 and found a new government in power, led
by Napoleon Bonaparte
• Convention of Morfontaine
– French refused to compensate the Americans for vessels
taken during the Quasi War
– did declare the treaties of 1778 null and void
– removed annoying French restrictions on U.S. commerce
– Adams efforts would also create an atmosphere of mutual
trust that paved the way for the purchase of the Louisiana
Territory
The Peaceful Revolution:
The Election of 1800
• on the eve of election, the Federalists were
divided
– Adams enjoyed popularity among the everyday
Federalist
– party leaders like Hamilton wanted to punish him
for his betrayal of their militant policies
• Hamilton attempted to rig the election again
so that the Federalist party vice-presidential
candidate Charles Cotesworth Pinckney would
receive more ballots than Adams and save
America from Jefferson
The Election of 1800
Candidate
Party
Electoral Vote
Jefferson
Republican
73
Burr
Republican
73
J. Adams
Federalist
65
C. Pinckney
Federalist
64
• things did not go as Hamilton had planned
– Jefferson and his running mate Aaron Burr tied
• the election then went to the House of
Representatives, a lame-duck body still
controlled by members of the Federalist party
• each state delegation cast a single vote, with
nine votes needed for election
• after dozens of ballots the
House had still not selected a
president and the drama
dragged on for days
– Burr refused to withdraw
• leading Federalists decided
that Jefferson would make a
more responsible President
and James Bayard of Delaware
switched his vote giving
Jefferson the election
• Twelfth Amendment – ratified
in 1804, saved America from
repeating the election of 1800
– the electoral college would now
cast separate ballots for
president and vice-president
Aaron Burr
• in the final days of his
presidency, Adams
appointed as many
Federalists as possible
to the federal bench the “midnight judges”
– one of these, John
Marshall, would become
chief justice of the
United States
• Adams never forgave
Hamilton for his actions
during Adams term of
office
Chief Justice John Marshall
Danger of Political
Extremism
• the election of 1800
needs to be
remembered for what
did not occur:
– no riots in the streets
– no attempted military
coup
– no secession from the
Union
– nothing but the
peaceful transfer of
power from one
political party to an
opposition party