1 / 12

Chapter 7, Section 4

Chapter 7, Section 4. John Adams’s Presidency. The Election of 1796. New Era in United States Politics More than one candidate ran for president John Adams (Federalist) vs. Thomas Jefferson (Republican)

kueng
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 7, Section 4

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 7, Section 4 John Adams’s Presidency

  2. The Election of 1796 • New Era in United States Politics • More than one candidate ran for president • John Adams (Federalist) vs. • Thomas Jefferson (Republican) • What did each side stand for ?(Don’t write this part. You already did, didn’t you? It’s okay)

  3. A New President • John Adams would have to work hard to win the people’s trust • George Washington was adored by the people • Even those who opposed him respected him • Hard-working, honest, and intelligent

  4. The United States and France • John Adams wanted to improve foreign relations with France • Sent United States diplomats overseas • Upon arrival, diplomats were ignored by Foreign Minister Talleyrand and instead visited by 3 French secret agents • Agents said that a treaty would only be discussed in exchange for a $250,000 bribe and a loan of $12 million • The United States diplomats refused the demands

  5. The United States and France • In March of 1798, President John Adams told Congress that the peace-seeking mission had failed • Informed Congress of the French terms, substituting the letters X,Y, and Z for the names of the French Secret Agents • Federalists in Congress called for war with France • XYZ Affair • Americans were outraged at such disrespect

  6. Preparations for War • President John Adams asked Congress to expand the navy to a fleet of more than 30 ships and called for the United States to keep a peacetime army • Congress approved both measures • President Adams did not want to go to war with France • Worried about cost • Did not ask Congress for a declaration of war • Tried to reopen peace talks with France

  7. Peace Efforts • President John Adams’s decision not to declare war stunned Federalists • American and French ships engaged in fighting in the Caribbean • John Adams sent a representative to France and eventually, a treaty was signed • President Adams then forced two members of his cabinet to resign for trying to block his peace efforts

  8. The Alien and Sedition Acts • Democratic-Republicans continued to sympathize with France • Alien and Sedition Acts • Passed by Federalist controlled Congress • 4 laws said to protect the United States but really intended to crush opposition to war • Sedition Act • Controversial law which forbade anyone from publishing or voice criticism of the federal government • Violated freedom of speech and freedom of press

  9. The Alien and Sedition Acts • Thomas Jefferson and James Madison • Viewed acts as misuse of government power • Wrote resolutions passed by the Kentucky state legislature in 1798 and Virginia in 1799 (Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions) • Argued that the Alien and Sedition Acts were unconstitutional • Congress did not repeal the acts, but allowed them to expire within a few years • The Resolutions supported the idea that states could challenge the federal government

  10. John Adams and Thomas Jefferson • Longtime political rivals • Abigail Adams death helped the two men to reconcile • Close and personal correspondence for the remainder of their lives • Both died on July 4, 1826 • Both architects of the document (the Declaration of Independence) that gave birth to this new Nation dead, 50 years tothe day from the birth of the country they founded. • John Adams’s last words were “Thomas Jefferson survives” • Thomas Jefferson had died only a few hours earlier

More Related