Federalists : Big Names: Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, John Jay (All writing under the name “Publius”), Supporters: Property owners, wealthy merchants in Northern states, people in urban areasAlexander Hamilton, The elites are best prepared to govern for the rest of the nation. We do not trust all people to make decisions, and envision a government at a distance from regular people., We favor the New Constitution: a powerful central government, two houses in Congress, three branches with checks and balances, less direct and more representative democracy., The Constitution creates a central government with limited powers. There is no threat to individual rights since each state constitution has its own bill of rights., States need to be organized under a larger, more powerful central government. The new Constitution shares power with the states. And you can’t have a federal government without the states., The executive branch is important, and a president is necessary to enforce laws and conduct foreign policy. The Constitution sets up many limits on this position’s level of power and influence., The Supreme Court is the weakest branch; it can’t pass laws or control the military. It’s an appropriate part of the three branches and the proposed system of checks and balances., Anti-Federalists: Big Names: Thomas Jefferson, George Mason, Patrick Henry, John Hancock, Supporters: Small farmers, shopkeepers, laborers, people in rural areasGeorge Mason, The elites are corrupt, and we want to include more people in the democratic process to balance it out. We feel that more frequent elections could address this concern., We prefer the Articles of Confederation: strong state governments, weak central government, frequent elections, and more direct democracy., A Bill of Rights is necessary to protect the rights of citizens. The proposed Constitution does not do enough to protect rights., States should maintain their power and not lose that power to a central government. The new Constitution will destroy the state governments., A president is basically an elected king. The Constitution gives this role too much power among the three branches. We doubt there will be a peaceful transfer of power from one president to the next., The Constitution creates a Supreme Court that is too strong—the justices don’t have to answer to anyone.,
0%
Federalists vs. Anti-Federalists
Chia sẻ
bởi
Angelazorn
Chỉnh sửa nội dung
Nhúng
Nhiều hơn
Tập
Bảng xếp hạng
Hiển thị thêm
Ẩn bớt
Bảng xếp hạng này hiện đang ở chế độ riêng tư. Nhấp
Chia sẻ
để công khai bảng xếp hạng này.
Chủ sở hữu tài nguyên đã vô hiệu hóa bảng xếp hạng này.
Bảng xếp hạng này bị vô hiệu hóa vì các lựa chọn của bạn khác với của chủ sở hữu tài nguyên.
Đưa các lựa chọn trở về trạng thái ban đầu
Sắp xếp nhóm
là một mẫu kết thúc mở. Mẫu này không tạo điểm số cho bảng xếp hạng.
Yêu cầu đăng nhập
Phong cách trực quan
Phông chữ
Yêu cầu đăng ký
Tùy chọn
Chuyển đổi mẫu
Hiển thị tất cả
Nhiều định dạng khác sẽ xuất hiện khi bạn phát hoạt động.
Mở kết quả
Sao chép liên kết
Mã QR
Xóa
Bạn có muốn khôi phục tự động lưu:
không?