Federalist Arguments Against The Constitution

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Around the late 1780s, America realized that the government it was using did not work. The States were divided, not together since the Articles of Confederation only loosely bound them together. Each State had different foreign treaties, different laws, even different money. The Constitution was proposed, which would transform the states into a united nation with a single, republican government. Two parties arose who disagreed over whether it should be ratified or not; the federalists and the anti-federalists. The federalists were in favor of unifying the states into one government. The anti-federalists, on the other hand, wanted to fix the Articles of Confederation instead of throwing them out and creating a new government. The two sides had …show more content…

What prevents this government from being taken over by the agendas and interests of the bigger states, especially since the proposed federal government would be a republican one? Their concerns about power stem from three major aspects: taxation power, military power, and judicial power. The government proposed has no limits on how it can tax people. To have the ability to do this is a power beyond all others, since, as Brutus says “...it connects with almost all other powers, or at least in process of time draw all other after it; it is the great mean of protection, security, and defense, in a good government, and the great engine of oppression and tyranny in a bad one.” This power is also connected to the ability to raise a military. Having the power and loyalty of a military to enforce the laws could be extremely dangerous if the government decided to oppress the people or the States Their last concern is directed to the supreme court and its broad power which applies to all civil cases. This could allow the government to bypass any power of the states, and overrule their decisions. If the government can ignore the State Government’s authority, then what stops the government from removing them, since they would only get in the way? The antifederalists are worried that a single, federal government would be too

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