Characteristics Of The Founding Documents

1034 Words3 Pages

The United States was built on 4 founding documents: The Constitution, The Articles of Confederation, The Declaration of Independence, and The Bill of Rights. These documents were not written by one man’s bias, they were written from many different points of view that were debated extensively. The founding documents illustrate the compromises that were reached by our founding fathers. The different viewpoints of federalists and antifederalists were very important in the creation of the founding documents. Federalists believed in a strong central government with little input from the people in order to maintain a stable society.They believed that the rich should be in charge because they were more fit to rule a nation. Documents such as …show more content…

It did not give enough rights to the federal government. It provided no method of gaining income for the government, a weak national government, no currency, no executive or judicial branch. Congress literally had no way to act out the laws that were passed because of the lack of executive branch. The only thing the Articles of Confederation were really good for was binding the states together so they can be called a country. The Articles of Confederation did not gain much support from federalists and it was proof that a more defined central government was necessary in order to maintain a proper country where a federal government was actually …show more content…

At the convention, George Washington was elected to run the convention. After the leader was elected, the Virginia Plan, drafted by James Madison, was proposed. The Virginia Plan scrapped the Articles of Confederation and called for a strong central government with three branches of government. These branches included the executive, judicial, and legislative. The plan called for a bicameral legislature with both houses being decided by a state’s population. The Virginia Plan was not liked by the smaller states. The smaller states were in fear that they would not receive enough representation if the legislature was decided by a state 's population. This opposition led to the creation of the New Jersey Plan. The New Jersey Plan proposed a unicameral legislature where every state only gets one representative. This plan would have gone without scrapping the Articles of Confederation and it would have recognized more states’ rights. The debate between the Virginia Plan and the New Jersey Plan ended in a

Open Document