James Madison rejected two proposed amendments during the drafting of the Bill of Rights: one that would have prohibited Congress from altering the compensation of its members and another that aimed to protect the right of individuals to petition the government. He felt these amendments were either unnecessary or redundant, as they were already implied within the structure of the Constitution. Ultimately, Madison's focus was on ensuring the protection of fundamental rights rather than addressing specific legislative procedures.
James Madison Believed in two things , His wife and his slaves
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President James Madison established the Monroe Doctrine on December 2 in 1823.
James Madison held the post of Thomas Jefferson's Secretary of State. Holding the position between March 2 1801 and March 3 1809 James Madison was the 5th United States Secretary of State.
2 of the signers of the US Constitution became president. They are James Madison and George Washington. George Washington was the first President of the US and James Madison was the 4th President.
James Madison.
December 2, 1812
James Madison was 57 years of age when he was elected .he died when he was 65. he served 2 terms as president.
James Madison was the President of the United States in 1811.James Madison was the 4th President of the United States from 1809 March 4 to 1817 March 4, serving 2 terms. He was previously the Secretary of State in Thomas Jefferson's government.
He had to write a Bill of Rights to convince Anti-Federalists (later Jeffersonians) to ratify the Constitution. There was no set number on what was to be added, just that it had to be. His original draft consisted of 12 amendments, which he felt were worthy of the Bill of Rights. George Washington, however, either combined a couple of them to make it 10, or took 2 out entirely. Hope this helped.
Because both his 2 terms were up!
The first five presidents of the United States were:George Washington (1789-1797)John Adams (1797-1801)Thomas Jefferson (1801-1809)James Madison (1809-1817)James Monroe (1817-1825)