3. President: George Washington ( no party affiliation ) Main Opponent: John Adams ( no party affiliation ) Electoral Vote: Winner: 132 Main Opponent: 77 Total/Majority: 132/67 Popular Vote: no record Votes for Others: George Clinton (50), Thomas Jefferson (4), Aaron Burr (1) Vice President: John Adams For all intents and purposes, Washington was unopposed for election as President. Under the system then in place, votes for Vice President were not differentiated from votes for President.
8. George Washington – 1 st President (1789 – 1797) Secretary of Treasury: Alexander Hamilton Secretary of State: Thomas Jefferson [Finance] [Diplomacy] Secretary of War: Henry Knox Attorney General: Edmund Randolph [Defense] [Justice] Precedents Cabinet System: Group of department heads that advise the President Proclamation of Neutrality: Established U.S. neutrality in European affairs Whiskey Rebellion: Legitimacy of the power of the President to enforce laws Jay’s Treaty: Executive privilege was set when Washington refused a request by Congress Farewell Address: Final advice to the nation to maintain commercial, but not political ties to other nations (no alliances)
12. GW warned Americans regarding the dangers of sectional jealousy and excessive party spirit George Washington’s Farewell Address 1796
13. George Washington’s Farewell Address 1796 GW stressed the importance of maintaining a firm union of States, and a strong central gov’t
14. GW advised the U.S. to steer clear of permanent foreign alliances (political entanglements), but urged the development of commercial George Washington’s Farewell Address 1796 S.A.F.E STAY AWAY FOREIGN Entanglements
15. GW advised the U.S. to steer clear of permanent foreign alliances (political entanglements), but urged the development of commercial George Washington’s Farewell Address 1796 S.A.F.E STAY AWAY FOREIGN Entanglements
16. 1. lacked military and naval power 2. could lose independence in a war 3. internally divided on foreign policy issues 4. U.S. should devote energies to developing their economy and solving domestic issues George Washington’s Farewell Address 1796 We……
17. President: John Adams , ( Federalist ) Vice President Thomas Jefferson Main Opponent: Thomas Jefferson ( Democratic-Republican ) Electoral Vote: Winner: 71 Main Opponent: 68 Total/Majority: 138/69 Popular Vote: no record Votes for Others: Thomas Pinckney (59), Aaron Burr (30), Samuel Adams (15), Oliver Ellsworth (11), George Clinton (7), John Jay (5), James Iredell (3), Samuel Johnston (2), George Washington (2), John Henry (2), Charles C. Pinckney (1) Federalists: John Adams, Thomas Pinckney Republicans: Thomas Jefferson, Aaron Burr
18. #1 You are a Virginian, and a Virginian ought to appear at the head of this business. #2 I am obnoxious, suspected, and unpopular, you are very much otherwise. #3 You can write ten times better than I can. John Adams on why Thomas Jefferson should write the Declaration of Independence 1776
19. ELECTION of 1796 The Constitution in 1796 required presidential electors to place the names of two individuals on their ballots; the candidate with the highest vote count, if a majority, became the president and the runner up the vice president. The results were not anticipated by anyone. Adams won with 71 electoral votes, but was followed by Thomas Jefferson with 68 votes; Thomas Pinckney trailed the leaders with 59. The president was a Federalist, but the vice president was the leader of the Democratic Republicans opposition – an untidy situation.
20. John Adams 2 nd President Terms: 1797-1801 Party: Federalist State: Massachusetts
21. Sectionalism Placing the interests of one region over those of the nation as a whole. The Election of 1796 illustrated this > the North voted for Adams; the South voted for Jefferson. XYZ Affair (1797) Requests of bribes in exchange for negotiations by France. French ships were seizing U.S. vessels carrying British goods since the two countries were at war. Alien & Sedition Acts A series of 4 laws enacted in 1798 to reduce the political power of recent immigrants to the U.S., who tended to favor the anti-British Democratic Republican Party. Nullification Principle that states had the right to nullify, or consider void, any act of Congress that they deemed unconstitutional. A major factor in the march toward Civil War. Virginia & Kentucky Resolutions These states viewed the Alien & Sedition Acts as unconstitutional because they violated the 1 st Amendment and deprived citizens of their rights . Showed the balance of power between the states & the federal government remained a controversial issue. John Adams – 2 nd President (1797 – 1801) Foreign Problems + Federal & State Conflicts:
22. Sectionalism Placing the interests of one region over those of the nation as a whole. The Election of 1796 illustrated this > the North voted for Adams; the South voted for Jefferson. John Adams – 2 nd President (1797 – 1801) Foreign Problems + Federal & State Conflicts:
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24. Sectionalism Placing the interests of one region over those of the nation as a whole. The Election of 1796 illustrated this > the North voted for Adams; the South voted for Jefferson. XYZ Affair (1797) Requests of bribes in exchange for negotiations by France. French ships were seizing U.S. vessels carrying British goods since the two countries were at war. John Adams – 2 nd President (1797 – 1801) Foreign Problems + Federal & State Conflicts:
25. 1797 President Adams sent a delegation to Paris in 1797 (including John Marshall). The U.S. delegates secretly approached by three French agents- XYZ . They demanded a large loan and a bribe of $250.000 for the privilege of talking to French foreign minister Talleyrand. Negotiations broke down and Marshall came home—seen as a hero War hysteria swept the U.S.
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27. Sectionalism Placing the interests of one region over those of the nation as a whole. The Election of 1796 illustrated this > the North voted for Adams; the South voted for Jefferson. XYZ Affair (1797) Requests of bribes in exchange for negotiations by France. French ships were seizing U.S. vessels carrying British goods since the two countries were at war. Alien & Sedition Acts A series of 4 laws enacted in 1798 to reduce the political power of recent immigrants to the U.S., who tended to favor the anti-British Democratic Republican Party. John Adams – 2 nd President (1797 – 1801) Foreign Problems + Federal & State Conflicts: Alien & Sedition Acts (2:30)
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29. The USA Patriot Act -- the nation's main anti-terrorism tool -- was enacted by Congress and signed into law by President Bush in October 2001. In July 2005, the House voted 257-171 to extend the act's key provisions, making permanent 14 of the 16 provisions that were to expire at the end of the year. Two other provisions -- on business records and "roving wiretaps" -- were renewed for 10 years. Here is an overview of the law.
30. Information sharing The Patriot Act allows information from criminal probes to be shared with intelligence agencies and other parts of the government. The act authorizes U.S. law enforcement and intelligence officers to share information about suspected terrorists with a broad range of federal agencies and governmental departments.
31. Roving wiretap Section 206 of the act authorizes "multi-point," also known as "roving," wiretaps to intercept wire, oral and electronic communications without separate court approvals for each instance. It allows law enforcement officials to get court orders to wiretap a suspect's phone conversations, seize electronic and voice messages, and intercept Internet traffic without limiting it to a specific phone or identifying the suspect.
32. Detention and jail The federal government is allowed to detain non-U.S. citizens suspected of terrorism for up to seven days without specific charges. The administration originally wanted to hold them indefinitely. One of the amendments sets a 20-year jail term for an attack against a rail or mass-transit vehicle; a 30-year sentence if the vehicle carries nuclear material; and life imprisonment -- with the possibility of the death penalty -- if anyone is killed in such an attack.
33. Records access Section 215 allows officials to demand access to business, medical, library and tax records without judicial approval In July 2005, the Senate Intelligence Committee approved giving the FBI expanded powers to subpoena records without the approval of a judge or grand jury, but the amendment requires the FBI director to approve any request for library or bookstore records.
34. "Sneak & Peek" Section 213 authorizes officials to search a home or business on a "delayed notice," meaning they don't have to notify the suspect immediately.
35. Money laundering Title III of the act expands measures against money laundering by requiring additional record keeping and reports for certain transactions and requiring identification of account holders.
36. Statute of limitations The Patriot Act eliminates the statute of limitations for prosecuting the most egregious terrorist acts, but maintains the statute of limitation on most crimes at five to eight years.
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38. Sectionalism Placing the interests of one region over those of the nation as a whole. The Election of 1796 illustrated this > the North voted for Adams; the South voted for Jefferson. XYZ Affair (1797) Requests of bribes in exchange for negotiations by France. French ships were seizing U.S. vessels carrying British goods since the two countries were at war. Alien & Sedition Acts A series of 4 laws enacted in 1798 to reduce the political power of recent immigrants to the U.S., who tended to favor the anti-British Democratic Republican Party. Nullification Principle that states had the right to nullify, or consider void, any act of Congress that they deemed unconstitutional. A major factor in the march toward Civil War. Virginia & Kentucky Resolutions These states viewed the Alien & Sedition Acts as unconstitutional because they violated the 1 st Amendment and deprived citizens of their rights . Showed the balance of power between the states & the federal government remained a controversial issue. John Adams – 2 nd President (1797 – 1801) Foreign Problems + Federal & State Conflicts: