1 / 10

Thomas Jefferson and His Presidency

Thomas Jefferson and His Presidency. Judiciary Act of 1801. Election of 1800. Thomas Jefferson wins The Democratic-Republicans took control of Congress The Twelfth Amendment was added to the Constitution Pres and VP run as a ticket. Election of 1800.

truda
Télécharger la présentation

Thomas Jefferson and His Presidency

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. Thomas Jefferson and His Presidency Judiciary Act of 1801

  2. Election of 1800 • Thomas Jefferson wins • The Democratic-Republicans took control of Congress • The Twelfth Amendment was added to the Constitution • Pres and VP run as a ticket

  3. Election of 1800 • Referred to as constituting “another revolution” • the party in power stepped down after losing • Changes made • military reduced • Federal employees increased • national debt reduced • Alien and Sedition Acts repealed

  4. Louisiana Purchase • Jefferson’s purchase of Louisiana had its origins in his desire to • Control the Mississippi River • offer an channel for western produce • preserve an agrarian society for future generations • to prevent war with France over control of the Louisiana Territory and secure American commerce

  5. Louisiana Purchase cont’ • Bought the land from Napoleon • $15 million • As a strict constructionist, the Constitution did not authorize the President to negotiate treaties incorporating huge new expanses of land into the union. • Lewis and Clark expedition

  6. Louisiana Yet Again • Jefferson reluctantly submitted the treaties to the Senate while privately admitting the purchase as unconstitutional. • Senate promptly ratified the treaty • Land-hungry Americans jubilantly supported the purchase

  7. Louisiana Still Again • Federalist opposition (typical of "loyal opposition" up to the present) • Ironically argued for strict construction: President did not have power to purchase LA. • Ironically claimed LA would cost too much especially when balancing budget was a goal • Real reason: worried that western lands would be loyal to Jefferson’s Republicans.

  8. Embargo Act 1807 (Peaceable Coercion) Forbade export of all goods from U.S. • Jefferson got Congress to hastily pass the act • Reasoned that a U.S. embargo would force Britain & France to respect its rights. • Loose construction of the Constitution • Congress' power to "regulate commerce" meant it could stop exports. • Undermined Jefferson’s states’ rights philosophy

  9. Embargo Act 1807 • Embargo Act disaster to U.S. economy • New England States (Shipbuilding) • Non Intercourse Act (ended Embargo Act) • Formally reopened trade with all nations except France and Britain • Protected maritime rights • These acts wanted to make Britain acknowledge America’s neutral rights • Maintain U.S. neutral rights without going to war

More Related