Faction-Remote

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Stony Brook University *

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101

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Political Science

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Oct 30, 2023

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FACTION! A contentious issue from the start…
Review : What is a Faction? A faction is a group that pursues goals. Factions are usually smaller parts of larger groups. Political parties are factions within the U.S. electorate There are factions within political parties The Republican Study Committee The Congressional Black Caucus
Keep this straight! NOT ALL FACTIONS ARE POLITICAL PARTIES, BUT ALL POLITICAL PARTIES ARE FACTIONS. Political parties run candidates in elections, but not all factions do. Parties must take a position on multiple issues! Some factions just support causes (like gun rights or climate change).
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Do you see the influence of faction & the implication?
Do you see the influence of faction & the implication?
Madison & Factions Madison thought of factions as selfish and un-virtuous entities. But he believed they were unavoidable. To eradicate them would require the gov’t to eliminate freedom of expression & assembly.
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The First Parties The first parties grew in opposition to each other’s ideas and vision for a future America. Hamilton was the chief Federalist. Jefferson was the chief Democrat- Republican.
Let’s Explore the Intricacies of the Hamilton Financial Plan!
The Setting Federal government assumes responsibility for state debts. (called debt assumption) America owed $54 million dollars to U.S. bondholders and foreign nations states owed $25 million of that amount. The idea was to have citizens and foreign nations have a vested interest in the survival and prosperity of the United States. Hamilton, thus, wanted to service the debt without entirely paying it off.
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Components of the Plan, est. 1791 A tariff is placed on imports: (raises revenue and—to a lesser degree—protects U.S. industries from foreign competition) An excise tax is placed on whiskey A Bank of the United States (B.U.S.) is created with a 20-year charter to exist Congress authorizes its creation by using the elastic clause
Operations of the Plan The Bank pooled government revenue (from tariffs, the whiskey tax, and land sales in the West) with the deposits of citizens . The mission of the Bank was to Loan money to Manufacturers so that the Industrial base of the economy would grow. Fund the development of national projects and internal improvements : roads, bridges, canals
Major points of controversy The BUS president did not answer to ANY government official, including the president . He was hired and fired by the BUS’s board of supervisors. He could invest government money as he saw fit without any input from the government. The BUS was openly elitist : it primarily loaned money to established businessmen, many of whom knew BUS officials personally
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The opposition/ Jeffersonian Vision Jefferson knew that industrialization was unavoidable. He simply wanted to delay its development. He wanted the U.S. to house independent, small farmers for as long as possible. He thought scientific agriculture encouraged self-reliance, thoughtfulness, and hard work.
Differing Political Visions: the place of the people is primary-1 Federalists Hamilton & Adams wanted to create a commercial republic in which the gov’t focused on providing economic opportunity and social mobility . They wanted people to vote their representatives into office and then let leaders make important decisions for them.
Differing Political Visions: the place of the people is primary-2 Republicans Jefferson & Madison wanted the U.S. to be more than a commercial republic. They wanted the people to play a central role in government affairs by embracing civic activism via Electing proper leaders Running for office themselves Holding their leaders accountable by staying informed
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Partisan Points of Conflict! Republicans came to believe the Federalists were un-American counter-revolutionaries. To TJ & JM, Federalists were too focused on following the British model of development. Federalists downplayed civic activism. Federalists wanted a powerful central government with a strong executive (president). Hamilton’s bank was elitist & created via an unconstitutional use of gov’t power.
Factions & Trans- Atlantic Comparisons-1 Federalists on Republicans To Federalists, Republicans were deluded, naïve radicals with a “womanish attachment to France” and French ideas. Jefferson = “a howling Jacobin”
Factions & Trans- Atlantic Comparisons-2 Republicans on Federalists To Republicans, Federalists were corrupt, cynical elitists with a deranged attachment to British ideals. Hamilton = “a monarchist bottomed in corruption”
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Parting Question Is the party system in America working or have we become overly divided and uncompromising?
Do we value political compromise?
Guess who controls the Senate?
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