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Alexander Hamilton was regarded as a founding father of the United States. Hamilton and his group supported a Strong Central Government
The British had a Strong National government. Alexander Hamilton want a strong National government. Hamilton and Jefferson were fighting all the time over that. That might be why. Federlists.
They did not want a strong and dominant federal government.
No, Hamilton supported a loose interpretation of the Constitution.He believed in a very limited Government. You can get many of his views and writings from Gutenberg press. The vast majority of our founding fathers wanted a very weak central Government. They viewed the Federal Government as a needed evil.
Hamilton wanted to keep close ties with England, Hamilton advocated the English Monarchy, Strong Government and a Centralized Bank.
One of the Republican party's platforms is limited federal government. Whether they truly want that is up for debate.
Alexander Hamilton wanted Congress to pass three key bills: the establishment of a national bank, a federal excise tax on whiskey, and the assumption of state debts by the federal government. The national bank would stabilize the economy and provide a uniform currency, while the excise tax aimed to generate revenue. Assumption of state debts would help unify the states under a strong federal government and establish national credit. These measures were central to Hamilton's vision for a strong financial foundation for the United States.
Alexander Hamilton advocated for a strong central government to ensure national stability, economic growth, and effective governance. He believed that a powerful federal authority was necessary to unify the states, manage debts, and regulate commerce, which would foster a favorable environment for trade and industry. Hamilton also feared that too much power in individual states could lead to chaos and weaken the nation’s ability to respond to internal and external threats. Ultimately, he envisioned a strong government as essential for the prosperity and security of the fledgling nation.
Because they did not want to repeat the mistakes of the British.
Alexander Hamilton wanted a strong national government because he did not want mainly the power to be in the hands of the state or the people. He did not want to relive the past of when they were under control of the British.
Hamiltonians were people who followed and supported the policies that Alexander Hamilton espoused on the fiscal affairs of the new union. Hamilton wanted a strong federal government relative to the states. Most importantly, though, Hamilton wanted the federal government to assume the debts that the various states had incurred in paying for the Revolutionary War. Some states had paid down much of their debts themselves and did not want the federal government to assume them. If it did, it would spread the cost of repayment of the entire debt among all of the states. This would have the effect of making some states pay for other states' debts. Hamilton had other fiscal ideas like having a national bank, which many states and people opposed. As it turned out, Hamilton's followers were diametrically opposed by Jefferson and Madison, sometimes referred to as Jeffersonians or Republicans.
the states wanted more power over the federal government.