Sovi.AI - AI Math Tutor

Scan to solve math questions

QUESTION IMAGE

federalists, anti - federalists, & ratification directions: after the c…

Question

federalists, anti - federalists, & ratification
directions: after the constitution was completed, two groups developed: the federalists who pushed for immediate ratification and the anti - federalists, who were against it. after learning about each group, complete the chart below.

chart with columns federalists, key issues, anti - federalists and rows key beliefs, justifications for beliefs, regions of support, important leaders, foreign support

outcome
explain the outcome of the debate here...

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

This is a graphic organizer about the debate between Federalists and Anti-Federalists over US Constitution ratification. Below is the completed content for each section:

  1. Key Beliefs: Federalists supported a strong central government, a separation of powers, and believed the Constitution balanced authority. Anti-Federalists feared a strong central government would threaten states' rights and individual liberties, and argued the document lacked protections for personal freedoms.
  2. Justifications for Beliefs: Federalists argued the Articles of Confederation were too weak to unify the states and address national crises. Anti-Federalists pointed to the absence of a bill of rights, and claimed the central government would become tyrannical like British rule.
  3. Regions of Support: Federalists were backed by urban, commercial regions (e.g., New England, mid-Atlantic port cities). Anti-Federalists drew support from rural, agrarian areas (e.g., southern and western frontier regions).
  4. Important Leaders: Federalist leaders included Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay. Anti-Federalist leaders included Patrick Henry, George Mason, and Richard Henry Lee.
  5. Foreign Support: No major direct foreign support for either group; the debate was an internal US political conflict.
  6. Outcome: The Constitution was ratified in 1788 after Federalists agreed to add a Bill of Rights (the first 10 amendments to the Constitution) to address Anti-Federalist concerns. This compromise secured the necessary state approvals, and the new government began operations in 1789.

Answer:

Completed Chart:
CategoryFederalistsAnti-Federalists
Justifications for BeliefsArticles of Confederation were ineffectiveConstitution lacked a bill of rights
Regions of SupportUrban, commercial coastal areasRural, agrarian frontier regions
Important LeadersAlexander Hamilton, James Madison, John JayPatrick Henry, George Mason, Richard Henry Lee
Foreign SupportNo major direct foreign supportNo major direct foreign support
Outcome:

The U.S. Constitution was ratified in 1788. A compromise was reached where Federalists agreed to add a Bill of Rights (the first 10 amendments to the Constitution) to protect individual liberties, which satisfied key Anti-Federalist concerns. The new federal government officially began functioning in 1789.