Civic Republicanism: The Constitutional Convention By Thomas Paine

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“A constitution is a thing antecedent to a government, and a government is only the creature of a constitution. The constitution of a country is not the act of its government, but of the people constituting its government” (Paine, Rights of Man). These words, spoken by Thomas Paine in his famous speech from 1791, highlight a fundamental issue with our government, and the Constitution under which it operates. Paine, as well as the Anti-Federalists argues that legitimate government subsists only at the approval of the citizens. Alexander Hamilton requested that the Constitution, “affords a genuine specimen of representative and republican government” and “that it will answer all the beneficial purposes of society” (Hamilton, The Debates). But …show more content…

Hofstadter reveals that a major concern expressed at the Constitutional Convention was the distrust of the common man and the democratic rule (4). Many of the founding father viewed democracy as dangerous; they wanted the people to have as little to do with the government as possible (4). This idea flies in the face of civic republicanism, a political theory to which Paine ascribed. Civic republicanism had a very short influential lifespan. In its height (1760’s-1780’s), civic republicanism concerned itself with the ideas of communitarianism, civic duty and virtue, and the common good. In an excerpt from The Creation of the American Republic 1776-1787, Gordon Wood says that civic republicanism “had no other end than the welfare of the people: res publica, the public affairs, or the public good (Wood 10). This is a reiteration of Paine’s ideas, which were far ahead of their time. A government that lacked proper representation of its people violated the common good. The people were restricted, and the government had free reign. Due to the assumptions the founders made about the American people, Paine ‘s revolutionary and democratic ideas were threatened before the Constitution had even been put into …show more content…

Liberalism, the school of thought opposite of civic republicanism) is a proponent of checks and balances system. Liberalism is everything Paine and the Anti-federalists rebelled against. Liberalists believed in individualism, autonomy, complex institutions, and no mutual obligations. Fragmentation of power goes against the democratic tradition that Paine advocated. In his speech given on June 21, 1788, Alexander Hamilton unknowingly made an ironic statement: The ancient democracies, in which people themselves deliberated, never possessed one feature of good government. Their very character was tyranny; their figure, deformity. When they assembled, the field of debate presented an ungovernable mob, not only incapable of deliberation, but prepared for every enormity (Hamilton The

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