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UNIT 1:
FOUNDATIONS OF AMERICAN
     GOVERNMENT




    Coach East’s Civics & Economics
                 4th block
               Jamie Libow
              Jenna McMains
              Amy Steigerwalt
THE PURPOSE OF
             GOVERNMENT




Section I
PURPOSE OF GOVERNMENT
A. Government-the ruling authority for a
    community/society that has the power to
    make/enforce laws

B. Functions:
   1. keep order
   2. provide security
   3. provide public services

C. Levels
  1. Federal/National
  2. State
  3. Local

D. Branches
  1. legislative-makes laws
  2. executive-enforces laws
  3. judicial-interprets laws
PURPOSE OF GOVERNMENT, CTD.
E. Types of Democracy (government by
   the citizens/people)
    1. Direct-all citizens have a chance to
       vote on every law/action
    2. Representative (Republic)-citizens
       elect officials to make decisions on
       their behalf                USA




F. Other Types of Governments
     1. Monarchy-ruled by a king or
     queen, usually inherited power
     2. Dictatorship/Autocracy/Totalitarian-
     ruled by one with the force of the
     military
     3. Theocracy-ruled by religious
     leaders
     4. Oligarchy-ruled a few
ENGLISH
              POLITICAL
             TRADITIONS


Section II




                     British Coat of Arms (current)
ENGLISH POLITICAL TRADITIONS
A. England’s government has historically
    been a monarchy (rule by king or
    queen)

B. King John I was forced to sign the
    Magna Carta “Great Charter” that
    established important rights that we still
    have today:
    1. accused are guaranteed a trial by
    jury
    2. accused are presumed innocent until
    proven guilty
    3. all citizens are guaranteed justice
                                                  Magna Carta
    4. regardless of class status, all citizens   created: 1215

    had to follow the same laws and will be
    punished the same for breaking those
    laws
ENGLISH POLITICAL TRADITIONS, CTD.
C. Parliament:
1. originally they were the king’s advisors
2. during the Glorious Revolution, Parliament
   force the king out of power and named
   William & Mary as rulers (first time
   Parliament had more power than the king)
3. Parliament passed the English Bill of
   Rights which required Parliament officials
   to be elected and that no citizen would be
   subjected to cruel & unusual punishment      British Coat of Arms
                                                     1215 -1707
4. Parliament used the system of common
   laws (based on customs and precedents)
   to make decisions
THE ENLIGHTENMENT
     PERIOD




              Section III
ENLIGHTENMENT PERIOD
A. This was the time that Europeans began to
    question traditional ideas about many
    areas, especially government and how it
    should be run

B.Philosopher John Locke helped pave the way
  for the American Revolution:
    1. purpose of the government was to protect
    the natural rights (life, liberty, and property) of
    the citizens
    2. believed in a social contract where citizens
    have to agree to give up some of their
    freedoms in exchange for the protection of
    their rights by the government
ENLIGHTENMENT PERIOD, CTD.

C. Other Important Philosophers:
  1. Baron de Montesquieu-power of
  government should be divided into 3
  branches
  2. Jean-Jacques Rousseau-believed “all
  men are created equal”
  3.Voltaire-believed government should
  not control religion and there should be a
  “separation of church & state”
THE ROAD TO AMERICAN
          INDEPENDENCE
Section IV
ROAD TO AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE
A. Early Forms of Government in the
    Colonies
    1. Mayflower Compact: established
    self government by written law in
    Plymouth Colony
    2. House of Burgesses: first form of
    representative democracy set up in
    VA colony

B. the king forced the colonies to trade
     only with England, allowing England
     to become richer and more powerful
     (this was called mercantilism);
     eventually colonies started to trade
     with other countries and weren’t
     punished by the crown
ROAD TO AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE, CTD.
C. The French & Indian War
    1. late 1750s to early 1760s
    2. Colonists & England fought France for
    ownership of land in America
    3. Proclamation of 1763 said colonists
    could not settle land west of the
    Appalachian Mountains to avoid conflict
    with the Native Americans (colonists did
    not like this law)

D. The Stamp Act
    1. all printed documents had to have a
    stamp (this was free before Stamp Act)
    2. colonists responded by boycotting
    British goods and eventually it was
    repealed
    3. Boston Massacre resulted as tension
    grew between the colonies & the crown;
    5 colonists killed.
ROAD TO AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE, CTD.
E. Boston Tea Party (1773)
    1. Britain passed the Tea Act, placing tax
    on British tea
    2. Sons of Liberty led revolt, dressing up
    as Mohawk Indians, boarding the British
    tea ships and dumping the tea into
    Boston Harbor

F. English Response to Tea Party: Intolerable
    Acts (1774)
    1. said there would no trial by jury in the
    colonies
    2. passed the Quartering Act which
    forced the colonists to feed & house
    British troops
    3. blockaded Boston Harbor, resulting in
    hardships for Boston residents
ROAD TO AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE, CTD.
G. 1st Continental Congress (1774) in Philadelphia:
  1. all colonies but GA represented
  2. colonists met to address Intolerable Acts
  3. sent King George III the Declaration of Rights &
  Grievances asking him to repeal acts, marking the first
  time colonists acted against the crown
  4. King George responded with more violence at the
  Battles of Lexington & Concord, defeating the colonials at
  both places


H. 2nd Continental Congress (1776) in Massachusetts:
  1. all colonies sent representatives
  2. colonists were split 50-50 on the issue of
  independence
  3. Thomas Paine wrote Common Sense, calling for
  independence from England
  4. after much debate, delegates decided to send a
  declaration for King George & England
ROAD TO AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE, CTD.
I. Declaration of Independence
   (1776)
   1. Thomas Jefferson was the
   main writer, basing ideas off of
   Enlightenment Philosophers
   2. delegates listed 27
   complaints against England
   3. Jefferson stated it was not
   only a right to become
   independent, but a responsibility
   to do so
   4. led to American Revolutionary
   War
THE
            CONSTITUTIONAL
             CONVENTION




Section V
CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION
A. Problems Facing the US
  1. heavy debt from Revolutionary War
  2. federal government had no power to
  tax, so states placed heavy taxes on
  citizens, causing many businesses to fail

B. Articles of Confederation (1st form of
  Government after Revolutionary War)
  1. created loose alliance of states
  2. had a unicameral (one house)
  Congress with each state getting one
  vote
  3. had no executive or judicial branch
CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION, CTD.
C. Problems with the Articles of
  Confederation:
  1. each state had 1 vote regardless of
  size or population
  2. no power to tax
  3. cannot regulate foreign or interstate
  trade
  4. no executive branch to enforce
  rules
  5. no judicial branch to settle disputes
  6. unanimous vote was need to
  amend the A of C
  7. 9/13 states were required to pass
  laws
CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION, CTD.
D.Shay’s Rebellion
  1. farmer who lost his land and organized an
  army to prevent other farmers from losing land
  2. government had a hard time stopping this
  rebellion
  3. this led the US to realize they needed a
  stronger centralized government, leading to the
  Constitutional Convention


E. Constitutional Convention (1787)
   1. delegates have decided to amend the Articles
   of Confederation or scrap it and start over
   2. George Washington (Commander of
   Continental Army) presided over Convention
   3. James Madison recorded notes on the
   proceedings
   4. needed to decide if they wanted to make one
   large state with a central government or set up a
   federal system (power divided between central
   government & states)
CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION, CTD.
                                                                Great Compromise
      1. Virginia Plan   +        2. New Jersey Plan     =
                                                                 (CT Compromise)
   Proposed by James            Proposed by William
    Madison                       Patterson                 Set up a bicameral
   Supported by states          Supported by smaller       legislature
    with larger populations       states                    Senate would have equal
   Thought representation  Thought there should            representation
    in government should     be equal
                                                            House of Representatives
    be based on population representation in
                             Congress                        would have
   Government should be                                     representation based on
    made up of 3 branches  Called for the Federal
                             Executive to be made            population
   Federal government       up of more than one            Most important
    should have expanded     person
    powers                                                   compromise of convention
                            Judicial branch should
                             have one court
                            Have a unicameral
                             legislature

                                                                               F&G
CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION, CTD.
H. Other Compromises:
   3/5: slave states wanted to count slaves as part of the population for
    representation in Congress; decided they could count 3/5 slaves as population as
    long as they agreed to pay 3/5 more in taxes and the slave trade could not be
    interfered w/ for 20 years
   Trade & Commerce: northern states wanted federal government to regulate
    trade, southern states did not for fear of taxing cash crops and fear of eliminating
    slavery; decided that federal government could regulate trade, but could not
   Electoral College: Constitution writers did not trust common citizens to elect the
    president; decided to create Electoral College where state legislatures chose
    electors to meet together and select a president
CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION, CTD.
I. Ratification (Approval) of the Constitution:
    1. 9/13 states (~3/4) had to ratify
    Constitution before it went into effect
    2. Anti-Federalists-did not support
    ratification (Patrick Henry, John
    Hancock, Sam Adams); said federal
    government will be too strong and took too
    much power from states (no guarantees of
    basic liberties of citizens)
    3. Federalists-supported ratification (James
    Madison, Alexander Hamilton); wrote
    Federalist Papers supporting stronger
    central government; promised to add a Bill
    of Rights if Anti-Federalists ratified
    Constitution
    4. Constitution went into effect when New
    Hampshire became the 9th state to ratify it
    (June 21, 1788). NC ratified it on November
    1, 1789, & Rhode Island was the last state
    to ratify it.
    5. Constitution could only be amended
    (changed) by a vote of the states

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Unit 1 Foundations of American Gov't

  • 1. UNIT 1: FOUNDATIONS OF AMERICAN GOVERNMENT Coach East’s Civics & Economics 4th block Jamie Libow Jenna McMains Amy Steigerwalt
  • 2. THE PURPOSE OF GOVERNMENT Section I
  • 3. PURPOSE OF GOVERNMENT A. Government-the ruling authority for a community/society that has the power to make/enforce laws B. Functions: 1. keep order 2. provide security 3. provide public services C. Levels 1. Federal/National 2. State 3. Local D. Branches 1. legislative-makes laws 2. executive-enforces laws 3. judicial-interprets laws
  • 4. PURPOSE OF GOVERNMENT, CTD. E. Types of Democracy (government by the citizens/people) 1. Direct-all citizens have a chance to vote on every law/action 2. Representative (Republic)-citizens elect officials to make decisions on their behalf USA F. Other Types of Governments 1. Monarchy-ruled by a king or queen, usually inherited power 2. Dictatorship/Autocracy/Totalitarian- ruled by one with the force of the military 3. Theocracy-ruled by religious leaders 4. Oligarchy-ruled a few
  • 5. ENGLISH POLITICAL TRADITIONS Section II British Coat of Arms (current)
  • 6. ENGLISH POLITICAL TRADITIONS A. England’s government has historically been a monarchy (rule by king or queen) B. King John I was forced to sign the Magna Carta “Great Charter” that established important rights that we still have today: 1. accused are guaranteed a trial by jury 2. accused are presumed innocent until proven guilty 3. all citizens are guaranteed justice Magna Carta 4. regardless of class status, all citizens created: 1215 had to follow the same laws and will be punished the same for breaking those laws
  • 7. ENGLISH POLITICAL TRADITIONS, CTD. C. Parliament: 1. originally they were the king’s advisors 2. during the Glorious Revolution, Parliament force the king out of power and named William & Mary as rulers (first time Parliament had more power than the king) 3. Parliament passed the English Bill of Rights which required Parliament officials to be elected and that no citizen would be subjected to cruel & unusual punishment British Coat of Arms 1215 -1707 4. Parliament used the system of common laws (based on customs and precedents) to make decisions
  • 8. THE ENLIGHTENMENT PERIOD Section III
  • 9. ENLIGHTENMENT PERIOD A. This was the time that Europeans began to question traditional ideas about many areas, especially government and how it should be run B.Philosopher John Locke helped pave the way for the American Revolution: 1. purpose of the government was to protect the natural rights (life, liberty, and property) of the citizens 2. believed in a social contract where citizens have to agree to give up some of their freedoms in exchange for the protection of their rights by the government
  • 10. ENLIGHTENMENT PERIOD, CTD. C. Other Important Philosophers: 1. Baron de Montesquieu-power of government should be divided into 3 branches 2. Jean-Jacques Rousseau-believed “all men are created equal” 3.Voltaire-believed government should not control religion and there should be a “separation of church & state”
  • 11. THE ROAD TO AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE Section IV
  • 12. ROAD TO AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE A. Early Forms of Government in the Colonies 1. Mayflower Compact: established self government by written law in Plymouth Colony 2. House of Burgesses: first form of representative democracy set up in VA colony B. the king forced the colonies to trade only with England, allowing England to become richer and more powerful (this was called mercantilism); eventually colonies started to trade with other countries and weren’t punished by the crown
  • 13. ROAD TO AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE, CTD. C. The French & Indian War 1. late 1750s to early 1760s 2. Colonists & England fought France for ownership of land in America 3. Proclamation of 1763 said colonists could not settle land west of the Appalachian Mountains to avoid conflict with the Native Americans (colonists did not like this law) D. The Stamp Act 1. all printed documents had to have a stamp (this was free before Stamp Act) 2. colonists responded by boycotting British goods and eventually it was repealed 3. Boston Massacre resulted as tension grew between the colonies & the crown; 5 colonists killed.
  • 14. ROAD TO AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE, CTD. E. Boston Tea Party (1773) 1. Britain passed the Tea Act, placing tax on British tea 2. Sons of Liberty led revolt, dressing up as Mohawk Indians, boarding the British tea ships and dumping the tea into Boston Harbor F. English Response to Tea Party: Intolerable Acts (1774) 1. said there would no trial by jury in the colonies 2. passed the Quartering Act which forced the colonists to feed & house British troops 3. blockaded Boston Harbor, resulting in hardships for Boston residents
  • 15. ROAD TO AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE, CTD. G. 1st Continental Congress (1774) in Philadelphia: 1. all colonies but GA represented 2. colonists met to address Intolerable Acts 3. sent King George III the Declaration of Rights & Grievances asking him to repeal acts, marking the first time colonists acted against the crown 4. King George responded with more violence at the Battles of Lexington & Concord, defeating the colonials at both places H. 2nd Continental Congress (1776) in Massachusetts: 1. all colonies sent representatives 2. colonists were split 50-50 on the issue of independence 3. Thomas Paine wrote Common Sense, calling for independence from England 4. after much debate, delegates decided to send a declaration for King George & England
  • 16. ROAD TO AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE, CTD. I. Declaration of Independence (1776) 1. Thomas Jefferson was the main writer, basing ideas off of Enlightenment Philosophers 2. delegates listed 27 complaints against England 3. Jefferson stated it was not only a right to become independent, but a responsibility to do so 4. led to American Revolutionary War
  • 17. THE CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION Section V
  • 18. CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION A. Problems Facing the US 1. heavy debt from Revolutionary War 2. federal government had no power to tax, so states placed heavy taxes on citizens, causing many businesses to fail B. Articles of Confederation (1st form of Government after Revolutionary War) 1. created loose alliance of states 2. had a unicameral (one house) Congress with each state getting one vote 3. had no executive or judicial branch
  • 19. CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION, CTD. C. Problems with the Articles of Confederation: 1. each state had 1 vote regardless of size or population 2. no power to tax 3. cannot regulate foreign or interstate trade 4. no executive branch to enforce rules 5. no judicial branch to settle disputes 6. unanimous vote was need to amend the A of C 7. 9/13 states were required to pass laws
  • 20. CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION, CTD. D.Shay’s Rebellion 1. farmer who lost his land and organized an army to prevent other farmers from losing land 2. government had a hard time stopping this rebellion 3. this led the US to realize they needed a stronger centralized government, leading to the Constitutional Convention E. Constitutional Convention (1787) 1. delegates have decided to amend the Articles of Confederation or scrap it and start over 2. George Washington (Commander of Continental Army) presided over Convention 3. James Madison recorded notes on the proceedings 4. needed to decide if they wanted to make one large state with a central government or set up a federal system (power divided between central government & states)
  • 21. CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION, CTD. Great Compromise 1. Virginia Plan + 2. New Jersey Plan = (CT Compromise)  Proposed by James  Proposed by William Madison Patterson  Set up a bicameral  Supported by states  Supported by smaller legislature with larger populations states  Senate would have equal  Thought representation  Thought there should representation in government should be equal  House of Representatives be based on population representation in Congress would have  Government should be representation based on made up of 3 branches  Called for the Federal Executive to be made population  Federal government up of more than one  Most important should have expanded person powers compromise of convention  Judicial branch should have one court  Have a unicameral legislature F&G
  • 22. CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION, CTD. H. Other Compromises:  3/5: slave states wanted to count slaves as part of the population for representation in Congress; decided they could count 3/5 slaves as population as long as they agreed to pay 3/5 more in taxes and the slave trade could not be interfered w/ for 20 years  Trade & Commerce: northern states wanted federal government to regulate trade, southern states did not for fear of taxing cash crops and fear of eliminating slavery; decided that federal government could regulate trade, but could not  Electoral College: Constitution writers did not trust common citizens to elect the president; decided to create Electoral College where state legislatures chose electors to meet together and select a president
  • 23. CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION, CTD. I. Ratification (Approval) of the Constitution: 1. 9/13 states (~3/4) had to ratify Constitution before it went into effect 2. Anti-Federalists-did not support ratification (Patrick Henry, John Hancock, Sam Adams); said federal government will be too strong and took too much power from states (no guarantees of basic liberties of citizens) 3. Federalists-supported ratification (James Madison, Alexander Hamilton); wrote Federalist Papers supporting stronger central government; promised to add a Bill of Rights if Anti-Federalists ratified Constitution 4. Constitution went into effect when New Hampshire became the 9th state to ratify it (June 21, 1788). NC ratified it on November 1, 1789, & Rhode Island was the last state to ratify it. 5. Constitution could only be amended (changed) by a vote of the states