Ratifying the Republic: Antifederalists and Federalists in Constitutional Time

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Stanford University Press, 2004 M08 1 - 292 páginas
Ratifying the Republic explains how the United States Constitution made the transition from a very divisive proposal to a consensually legitimate framework for governing. This story has never been told in its entirety, mainly because the transition seemed so seamless. But the Federalists' proposal had been bitterly opposed, and constitutional legitimation required a major transformation. The story of that transformation is the substance of this book.

The progression of constitutional contexts triggered new responses from participants in the ratification debate which led to legitimation. Antifederalists had been loath to scrap the Articles of Confederation because of their conservative approach to the rule of law. After ratification, this same conservative predisposition led them to agree to abide by the newly legalized Constitution and instruct their followers to do the same.

Implementation of the Constitution yielded other responses which bolstered the document. For instance, this progression in "constitutional time" exposed incomplete views within the Federalist camp about how a constitution should be treated in practice. James Madison believed the Constitution fairly clearly distinguished federal powers from those retained by the states; successful constitutionalism dictated preserving that division. In contrast, Alexander Hamilton thought that a constitution that split sovereignty between the states and the nation was inherently unstable. His hope was to salvage the Union by extending national power, a project directly contrary to Madison's more static view.

Madison and these Federalists who agreed with him joined with the former Antifederalists to become the Republican party. This alliance held the remaining Federalists to their well-publicized ratification debate argument that the Constitution was a grant of limited, specific powers only. This new alliance had sufficient strength to contemplate taking the reins of government. With majority status a distinct possibility, incentives to replace the new regime were minimized, eclipsed by a state-centric interpretation of the Constitution.

The legislative process adopted by Congress was also satisfactory to the opposition, who were sticklers for proper procedures. Finally, the trying and financially unrewarding nature of service in the new government discouraged the best and the brightest from seeking national office, hindering institutional prestige and the growth of national power, developments which pleased those who favored dual sovereignty. Throughout, the author emphasizes the role fear, contingency, and happenstance played in the success and legitimation of the Constitution.
 

Contenido

Consensus Dissensus and Interpretation How the Antifederalists and Federalists Have Unwittingly Misled Us
1
It Is Natural to Care for the Crazy Machine The Antifederalists Postmtification Acquiescence
25
Refuge of the Resigned The Postratification Constitutional Thought of Congressional Antifederalists
47
Publius in Constitutional Time A Partnership in Search of Incompatible Equilibria
74
The Unbearable Transience of Federalist 10
105
Continuity and Change in the Transition to Partisanship 17891801
135
The Founding Generation and Political Process Structural Arrangements in the Early Congress
164
The Antifederalists Ironic Legitimators of the American Regime
193
Ratification Chronology
223
Members of the US Congress Who Voted in Ratification Conventions
225
Notes
239
Works Cited
276
Index
286
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David J. Siemers is Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh.

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