The first attempt for the United States at a Constitution was the Articles of Confederation. The Articles of Confederation first came up for discussion on June 12, 17761. Knowing the inevitability that Independence would soon be a reality, a committee was formed to discuss and draft a Constitution for all the United States. It would not be until November 15, 17772 that they would be approved by the Congress, and not until March 1, 17813 that they were finally ratified by all 13 States. Just a few days over eight years later, the Articles of Confederation would be part of history, being replaced by the Constitution on March 4, 17894.
So why did the Articles of Confederation fail? Why did this first attempt at government not succeed? What in the Articles was wrong, or insufficient, or cumbersome that needed to be corrected? There were many reason the Articles of Confederation failed, many things happened in the United States and the government that exposed significant flaws. Perhaps you are one of the many that have heard it was because the Articles were not strong enough, that is part of the reason, but not the only reason. What the Articles of Confederation where is discussed here (The Articles of Confederation explained; What are they?).
The major problems of the Articles of confederation that will be addressed here are:
- Each State had One Vote in Congress.
- Nine States required to pass most Legislation
- Congress could not regulate Trade
- The United States could not raise its own revenue
- The Congress could not enforce its laws
- The Government of the United States was a Single body
- The Congress could not suppress insurrection or rebellion, or protect the Nation from foreign threat.
- Amendments required a Unanimous Vote