he thought that the articles of confederation were fine and were decently handled ^^ his view at first. then when he got to the constitutional convention, he saw the flaws/weaknesses in the articles and took on a more anti-fed view.
A+ TrueUnder the articles of confederation each state had only one cotes regardless of its population. Some states had 3 or 4 delegates but they still only got one vote.
first they got rid of george washington and the british they don,t want it no more
Actually no. I thought he did, but while researching for a school project I realized he was already dispatched to be an ambassador to France before the second continental congress accepted the plan. On the final document, I cannot find any mention of Ben Franklin signing it.
The power to tax. The power to enforce the laws that were enacted. A court system to resolve disputes among the states and interperet federal law. The power to force the states to abide by treaties negotiated in their name.
The Articles of Confederation had only 1 branch the legislative branch. Each state only got one vote in Congress, no matter how small the population. The Articles of Confederation was soon turned into the constitution.
discuss revising the Article of Confederation. (APEX)
I believe that was the Articles of Confederation. It gave the states to much power, so the government got together to make the Constitution.
got to bed
The Articles of Confederation were in effect; they weren't very good at keeping the peace, so they got rid of them and wrote the Constitution.
he thought that the Articles of Confederation were fine and were decently handled ^^ his view at first. then when he got to the constitutional convention, he saw the flaws/weaknesses in the articles and took on a more anti-fed view.
1777 NOVANET USER! i answered 1781 and got it wrong.
he thought that the articles of confederation were fine and were decently handled ^^ his view at first. then when he got to the constitutional convention, he saw the flaws/weaknesses in the articles and took on a more anti-fed view.
Benjamin Franklin, George Clymer, Roger Sherman and James Wilson signed both the United States Constitution and the Declaration of Independence. Not sure about the Articles of Confederation.
Yes. At the end of the revolution the colonies were not united and they saw themselves as separate places. They minted their own money, charged fees for commerce from other states, argued over borders, and we're afraid of a strong central government. They didn't want another king so the articles were a compromise. A poor one, but it got them through to the constitution.
A+ TrueUnder the articles of confederation each state had only one cotes regardless of its population. Some states had 3 or 4 delegates but they still only got one vote.
first they got rid of george washington and the british they don,t want it no more