Friday, August 23, 2013

Ratification of the Constitution

Once the Constitution is presented to the people, they break into two camps; Federalists & Antifederalists

Federalists
   - want strong national government
   - supported by merchants, artisans, large farmers
   - believed large republic could best protect individual liberty

Antifederalists
   - feared a strong national government
   - supported by small farmers
   - believed only a small republic could protect individual liberty

How do you convince enough people to support the Constitution in order for it to be ratified?
The Federalist Papers
A series of essays penned and published widely in order to explain the virtue of the Constitution

Publius
Alexander Hamilton

James Madison

John Jay



Federalist Paper No.10


Federalist Paper No.51

Effective push for ratification, but they are still short Virginia & New York. Strong Antifederalist feelings demand guarantees that their liberties will not be usurped by an oppressive national government.
Madison's promise: A Bill of Rights