William_T._Bianco,_David_T._Canon]_American_Polit

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48 Chapter 2Chapter 2 || The Constitution and the FoundingThe Constitution and the Founding

southern states’ support of the Constitution. Some southern
delegates were apologetic about slavery, even as they
argued for protecting their interests. Many constitutional
scholars view the convention’s treatment of slavery as its
central failure. In fairness to the delegates, the issue of
slavery could not be settled since the goal was to create
a document that all states would support. However, the
delegates’ inability to resolve this issue meant that it would
simmer below the surface for the next 70 years, finally
boiling over into the bloodiest of all American wars: the
Civ i l Wa r.
The convention ended on a relatively harmonious note
with Benjamin Franklin moving for adoption. Franklin’s
motion was worded ambiguously to allow those who
still had reservations to sign the Constitution anyway.
Franklin’s motion was in the “following convenient form”:
“Done in Convention by the unanimous consent of the
States present the 17th of September.... In Witness whereof we have hereunto
subscribed our names.” His clever wording meant that the signers were only
bearing witness to the approval by the states and therefore could still, in good
faith, oppose substantial parts of the document. Franklin’s motion passed with
10 ayes, no nays, and one delegation divided. All but three of the remaining
delegates signed.

Ratification


Article VII of the Constitution, which described the process for ratifying the document,
was also designed to maximize its chance of success. Only nine states were needed
to ratify, unlike under the unanimity rule that had applied to changing the Articles
of Confederation. Equally important, ratification votes would be taken in state
conventions set up specifically for that purpose, bypassing the state legislatures, which
would be more likely to resist some of the Constitution’s state–federal power-sharing
arrangements.
The near-unanimous approval at the Constitutional Convention’s end masked the
very strong opposition that remained. Many delegates simply left the convention when
it became clear that things were not going their way (overall, 74 delegates were elected
to go, 55 attended, and 39 signed the Constitution). Rhode Island sent no delegates and
refused to appoint a ratification convention. More ominously, New York seemed dead
set against the Constitution, and Pennsylvania, Virginia, and Massachusetts were
split. The ratifying conventions in each state subjected the Constitution to intense
scrutiny, as attendees examined every sentence for possible objections. A national
debate raged over the next nine months.

The Antifederalists’ Concerns


The Antifederalists were most worried about the role of the president, the transfer
of power from the states to the national government, and the lack of specific

CONTRAST THE ARGUMENTS
OF THE FEDERALISTS
WITH THOSE OF THE
ANTIFEDERALISTS

Union and Confederate troops clash in
close combat in the Battle of Cold Harbor,
Virginia, in June 1864. The inability of the
framers to resolve the issue of slavery
allowed tensions over the issue to grow
throughout the early nineteenth century,
culminating in the Civil War.

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