The Presidency of John Adams (Article) - Khan Academy
The Presidency of John Adams (Article) - Khan Academy
The Presidency of John Adams (Article) - Khan Academy
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Overview
John Adams, a Federalist, was the second president of the United States.
He served from 1797-1801.
The conflicts between the two political parties centered on foreign policy
and the balance of power between the federal government and the states'
governments.
Adams's presidency
The second person to take up the mantle of the presidency was John
Adams, who had served as Vice President under George Washington.
Adams was the nation’s first official Federalist president (although
Washington had been aligned with the ideas of the Federalists, as president
he had frowned on political parties and attempted to remain above partisan
squabbling).
Portrait of John Adams, painted by John Trumbull, c. 1793. Image credit: Wikimedia Commons
During Adams's one-term presidency, the first two American political parties
emerged and relations with France began to sour.
Rise of the Federalists and the Democratic-
Republicans
During the Constitutional Convention, factions emerged almost immediately.
These factions ended up forming the first two political parties in American
history: the Federalists and the Democratic-Republicans.
On one side, there were the Federalists. Generally, Federalists lived along
eastern seaboard and were wealthy merchants or well-educated people who
lived in the city. They supported a stronger central government and a loose
interpretation of the Constitution: the idea that what the Constitution didn't
explicitly forbid, it allowed. The Federalists also supported fixing the
relationship between the United States and Britain for trade reasons.
Check your understanding: Can you fill in the missing information in the
chart below?
Upon arrival, three French diplomats, nicknamed “X”, “Y”, and “Z”, proceeded
to ask for bribes in order to start negotiations. The story eventually made its
way to the American public, inciting many Americans to write letters to
Adams, pushing for an armed conflict with the French.
Over the next two years, the United States carried on an undeclared naval
war with France.
Under the Sedition Act, the government charged and prosecuted several
printers who spoke against the United States and the war. Even Matthew
Lyon, a Democratic-Republican Congress member, was jailed for criticizing
President Adams in a Republican newspaper.
A
The First Amendment, which protects freedom of speech and freedom
of the press.
B
The Second Amendment, which guarantees the right of citizens to bear
arms.
C
The Tenth Amendment, which states that any power not guaranteed to
the federal government are then guaranteed to the states.
Check
Explain
Debate about the balance between federal and state power would continue
until the Civil War, remerging in issues like the Nullification crisis.
Although Adams signed the judicial appointments, he failed to make sure they
were delivered on time. When Jefferson took office, he refused to arrange for
the delivery of the remaining appointments. One of the disappointed would-be
judges, William Marbury, sued for his appointment. The Supreme Court case
that followed, Marbury v. Madison, established the principle of judicial
review: that the Supreme Court has the power to strike down laws if it judges
that those laws violate the Constitution.