PPT012 - Securing the Republic
Download
Report
Transcript PPT012 - Securing the Republic
Securing
the
Republic
The Federalist Administrations
1788 - 1800
Hamilton’s Plan
(Funding & Assumption)
1. Establish nation’s credit-worthiness
Pay off, at full face value, debt inherited from Am.Rev.
Pay off state debts from war
2. Creation of a new national debt
3. Create Bank of the United States
4. Raise revenue by taxing whiskey
5. Establish protective tariff to protect fledgling
industries
The Famous “Dinner Deal”
Participants:
Alexander Hamilton
James Madison
Thomas Jefferson
Key Points:
Madison pledged to get enough votes to pass “funding &
assumption”
Hamilton agreed to move national capital south to the
Potomac River
States that had already retired war debt would receive
federal grants as compensation
American Reactions to the
French Revolution
French supporters (Jefferson)
Despite its excesses, saw the Fr. Rev as a triumph for
popular self- government
Argued it had to be defended & supported at all costs
Treaty of Alliance (1788)
French detractors (Washington, Hamilton)
Saw anarchy, not self-government
Felt US had to draw closer to Britain
Declared neutrality
Jay’s Treaty
(1794)
No British concessions on:
Impressments
Rights of American shipping
Britain agreed to abandon western outposts
As previously agreed to in 1783
US granted favored treatment to British imported
goods
In effect, cancelled 1788 Treaty of Alliance w/
France
Recognized British economic and naval supremacy
Emergence of the First Party
System
Federalists
Supported Washington
Favored close ties with Britain
Favored Hamilton’s economic program
Merchants, farmers, lawyers, established political leaders
Elitist in outlook
Favored a liberal interpretation of the Constitution meant to “energize” the
federal government
Republicans (no relation to present Republican Party)
Led by Madison & Jefferson
Favored close ties with France
Wealthy southern planters, yeoman farmers, urban artisans
Critical of social and economic inequality
Supported broad democratic participation
Favored a strict interpretation of the Constitution meant to limit the federal
government
The Election of 1796
Federalists
John Adams for President
Thomas Pinckney for Vice-President
Republicans
Thomas Jefferson for President
Aaron Burr for Vice-President
The Election of
1796
John Adams
Thomas Jefferson
Crisis: Domestic and Foreign
Domestic
Fries’ Rebellion
Alien & Sedition Acts
Foreign
British & French violations of US neutral rights
XYZ Affair
“Quasi-war” with France
First US Naval Ships
USS Constellation
USS President
USS Congress
USS United States
USS Constitution – Old Ironsides
USS Chesapeake
The Alien & Sedition Acts of
1798
Naturalization Act
two previous bills passed in 1790 & 1795
increased residency requirement for citizenship from 5 to 14 years
Alien Acts
John Marshall’s letters from Paris
Alien Enemies Act – did Congress have heightened powers in time of war
Allowed deportation of persons from abroad deemed “dangerous” by
federal Authorities
Republicans objected to the provisions for prosecuting citizens who
concealed aliens or inhibited the enforcement of the act
Sedition Act
Authorized prosecution of any public assembly or publication critical of
government
Virginia & Kentucky
Resolutions
Kentucky Resolutions
• Introduced by John Breckinridge though authored
by Thomas Jefferson the sitting Vice-President
• Adopted on 10 November 1798 by the House and
13 November 1798 by the Senate
Virginia Resolutions
• Introduced by John Taylor of Caroline though
authored by James Madison
Kentucky and Virginia
Resolutions
Described the Constitution as a Compact
The Constitution Enumerated the Powers of the
general government
Powers not enumerated were reserved by the
states
The Alien and Sedition Acts has assumed
undelegated powers that should be left to the
states
Declared the Alien and Sedition Acts void
Kentucky and Virginia
Resolutions
None of the states responded positively to the
resolutions
Seven of nine states north of the Potomac put their
objections in writing and forwarded them to
Kentucky and Virginia
Most – controlled by Federalists and in the High
Federalist Tradition – rebuked Kentucky and
Virginia
Most state legislatures feared the resolutions, if
accepted and approved would tear the union apart