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Important Principles and Documents for the U.S. Government
Beginning with the Story of American Freedom
Story of American Freedom
• Colonists defeat the British King and his powerful army.
• 13 colonies become independent states
Declaration ofIndependence:
A document that announced the U.S. would no longer accept being under the control of Great Britain
Who said that we could overthrow our government if it did not give us our rights?
What does ________ say?
THAT’SWHATLOCKESAYS!!!
To understand government we must understand…
Popular Sovereignty
(Consent of the Governed)
Let’s apply the definition to the real world
Term DefinitionPopular Sovereignty
Government decisions depend on the consent (approval) of the governed (people)
**King George ignored popular sovereignty. His decisions did not
have the people’s consent (approval).
**They were based on his personal wants and
desires.
“Stop letting your soldiers stay in our homes! We want more rights now!”
Finally, popular sovereignty caused the colonists to rebel against him….
Declaration ofIndependence
A document thatformally broke offpolitical ties withGreat Britain
We won!
The concept of popular sovereignty was mentioned in the Declaration of IndependenceIt also led to the creation and approval of the U.S. Constitution, which begins with 3 simple words: “We The People…”
Story of American Freedom
• America is free, but now what?• What will our new government be?• Should we have a government for each
state?• Or one national government?
Our country’s first try….
Articles ofConfederation
A weak documentthat gave too muchpower to individual
stategovernments
Story of American Freedom
• Articles of Confederation were WEAK and did not work
• The national government could not tax the states or raise a national army
Story of American Freedom
• The Americans debate back and forth about what government will work
• They split into two different groups • The Federalists and Anti-Federalists
Federalists wanted…
A strong national government
The “power of the sword” = ability to mobilize a national army and navy
The “power of the purse” = ability to raise money through taxing
Alexander Hamilton
Anti-Federalists wanted…• States’ rights • States to be able
to decide their own laws
• Believed that a strong national government would lead to another brutal monarchy
Thomas Jefferson
Federalists/Anti-Federalists
• Federalists- wanted a strong national government– Supported Constitution
• Anti-Federalists- wanted each state to be in control of its own affairs– Supported the Bill of Rights
Before they agreed to the Constitution, the anti-Federalists wanted a guarantee…
Both sides agreed the Articles of Confederation were too weak
Anti-Federalists said they would agree to the Constitution only if…
A BILL OF RIGHTS was attached to make sure the federal government didn’t take too much power.
We’ll talk about the Bill of Rights later.
Federalists/Anti-Federalists Agree...
• They agree that a stronger national government is needed if America is to survive
• They agree that the Articles of Confederation are too weak
•
U.S. Constitution is Agreed Upon
U.S. ConstitutionA document thatoutlines thestructure, powers,
and limits of American
government
The Constitution sets up one of the most brilliant government systems ever made!
Using the ideas of Locke, Rousseau, Montesquieu, Madison, and many
more!!