Kenneth Ulman and Presidency of Thomas Jefferson: Difference between pages

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article was full of unsupported accusations from both supporters and opponents. took much of the good and bad stuff out. tried to keep it to basic facts.
 
→‎Continuation of Federalist policies: Only the first sentence is about Federalist policies that were kept
 
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{{Infobox President
{{Unreferenced|date=December 2007}}
| name=Thomas Jefferson
{{for|other senses of this word}}
| nationality=American
{{selfref|For Wikipedia's policy on avoiding bias, see [[Wikipedia:Neutral point of view]].}}
| image=T Jefferson by Charles Willson Peale 1791 2.jpg

| order=3rd [[President of the United States]]
{{Infobox Officeholder
| term_start=[[March 4]], [[1801]]
| honorific-prefix =
| term_end=[[March 4]], [[1809]]
| name = Ken Ulman
| predecessor=[[John Adams]]
| honorific-suffix =
| successor=[[James Madison]]
| image =
| birth_date=[[April 13]], [[1743]]
| imagesize =
| birth_place=[[Shadwell (Virginia)|Shadwell]], [[Virginia]]
| smallimage =
| death_date={{death date and age|1826|07|4|1743|04|13}}
| caption =
| death_place=[[Charlottesville, Virginia]]
| order =
| spouse=[[Martha Wayles Skelton Jefferson]]
| office = County Executive of [[Howard County, Maryland|Howard County]], [[Maryland]]
| occupation=[[Lawyer]], [[Farmer]] ([[Plantation|Planter]])
| term_start = [[December 4]], [[2006]]
| party=[[Democratic-Republican Party (United States)|Democratic-Republican]]
| term_end =
| vicepresident=[[Aaron Burr]] (1801–1805),<br/>[[George Clinton (vice president)|George Clinton]] (1805–1809)
| predecessor = [[James N. Robey]]
| religion=Episcopalian
| party = [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic Party]]
| signature=ThomasJeffersonSignature.png
| birth_date = [[May 4]], [[1974]]
| order2=2nd [[Vice President of the United States]]
| birth_place = [[Columbia, Maryland]]
| term_start2=[[March 4]], [[1797]]
| profession = Attorney, Former Secretary of the Cabinet
| term_end2=[[March 4]], [[1801]]
| website = [http://www.co.ho.md.us/PortalServices/HC_CountyExecutive.htm Howard County Government]
| president2=[[John Adams]]
| predecessor2=[[John Adams]]
| successor2=[[Aaron Burr]]
| order3=1st [[United States Secretary of State]]
| term_start3=[[September 26]], [[1789]]
| term_end3=[[December 31]], [[1793]]
| president3=[[George Washington]]
| predecessor3=None
| successor3=[[Edmund Randolph]]
}}
}}


'''[[Thomas Jefferson]]''''s Presidency of the United States, from [[March 4]] [[1801]] to [[March 4]][[1809]], was the first to start and end in the [[White House]] (though at the time it was known as the Presidential Mansion).
'''Kenneth Ulman''' was sworn in on [[December 4]], [[2006]], as the [[County Executive]] of [[Howard County, Maryland]]. As a member of the [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic Party]], he previously served as a County Council member representing District 4 of Howard County. The son of prominent Democrat Lou Ulman, who served as Racing Commissioner in the Glendening administration, Ken Ulman is the youngest County Executive ever elected in Maryland.[http://www.co.ho.md.us/PortalServices/HC_CountyExecutive.htm]


== Early life and education ==
== Inauguration and beliefs ==
Ken was born in [[Columbia, Maryland]] on May 4, 1974, and attended [[Centennial High School (Ellicott City, Maryland)]].


The tumultuous nature of the [[United States presidential election, 1800|election of 1800]] cost Jefferson a great deal of political capital. He was now indebted to Hamilton and the High Federalists and left with a vice president who had no place in his administration. With [[George Washington]] dead and [[John Adams]] returning to Braintree after his defeat, Jefferson was free to try to implement his Republican vision for the republic. In what historians later call [[Jeffersonian democracy]], the new president set out an agenda that was marked by his belief in [[agrarianism]] and [[limited government]].In order to carry out his agenda, Jefferson turned to his loyal supporters [[James Madison]] who he named as [[Secretary of State]] and Swiss-born [[Albert Gallatin]] became [[Secretary of the Treasury]]. Jefferson also wielded significant power over the Republican leaders of Congress despite their independent nature. The split in the [[Federalist Party (United States)|Federalist Party]] between the Hamilton and Adams factions also helped Jefferson secure the support of Congress. In his entire administration, Jefferson never once had to use his [[veto]] power.
Ken received a B.A. in Government & Politics at the [[University of Maryland, College Park]], in 1997. Four years later, he graduated from the [[Georgetown University Law Center]], passed the Maryland Bar Exam and started his own law firm in Columbia.<ref> [http://www.co.ho.md.us/PortalServices/HC_CountyExecutive.htm Howard County Government: Your Government, County Executive<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


== Jefferson's domestic policies ==
He currently resides in Columbia with his wife and two daughters.<ref>[http://www.co.ho.md.us/PortalServices/HC_CountyExecutive.htm Howard County Government: Your Government, County Executive<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


===Continuation of Federalist policies===
== Term as County Councilman ==
In order to end the deadlock in the House of Representatives following the 1800 election, Jefferson was forced to make important concessions to Hamilton in order to gain his endorsement. As part of these concessions, Jefferson continued the basic [[Alexander Hamilton|Hamiltonian]] programs of the [[national bank]] and [[tariffs]]. While the [[Alien and Sedition Acts|Sedition Act]] expired on schedule in 1801, and one of the Alien acts was repealed, those who were imprisoned under the Sedition Act were released. The Federalists also allowed Jefferson to select his own cabinet members and other high level appointees.<!-- Only the first sentence is about Federalist policies that were kept, others expired, were repealed, or rendered inoperative-->
After winning the Democratic primary for the District 4 County Council seat against Mary Kay Sigaty, Ken won his first general election in 2002 against [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican Party]] opponent Joan Lancos. As a councilman, Ken focused on issues directly impacting his district, which includes the western half of Columbia. Perhaps the most prominent issue centered around the redevelopment of downtown Columbia. As a councilman, Ken pushed for the county to host a week-long charrette where over 300 government officials, consultants, planners and citizens provided input on the future of the city's center. He served a four-year tenure as councilman in Howard County.


===Addressing the national debt===
== First term as County Executive ==
Jefferson attempted to eliminate the [[national debt]] because of his wish for small government. Jefferson believed that the nation did not need to carry a line of debt in order to build foreign credit, a policy that Hamilton vigorously advocated while in the Washington cabinet. Gallatin repealed many Federalist taxes including the tax that prompted the [[Whiskey Rebellion]] which was made up of many Republican supporters. Gallatin believed that the federal government was able to operate exclusively on [[customs]] revenue and need no direct taxation. While initially successful, this policy would later prove disastrous when trade to the United States was interrupted by the [[Napoleonic Wars]] between [[Great Britain]] and [[France]].
In 2006, with 52% of the vote, Ken won election as County Executive, beating [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican Party]] opponent [[Christopher J. Merdon]], and independent candidate C. Stephen Wallis.<ref>[http://www.21stcenturydems.org/2007/8/31/ken-ulman 21st Century Democrats - Ken Ulman<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


Jefferson also decreased the size of the military, which he believed was an unnecessary drain on the resources of the republic. Much of the federalist navy that was created under the Adams administration was scrapped. When Federalists criticized this policy as leaving the nation vulnerable to foreign attack, Jefferson responded that he believed citizen soldiers would arise to defend the country in case of attack, much as they did during the [[American Revolution]]. Recognizing that military leadership would be more crucial when taking civilians into battle, Jefferson did create the [[Army Corps of Engineers]] and established the [[United States Military Academy]] at West Point in 1802.
== Notable positions and accomplishments ==
Ken is currently Chair of the Baltimore Regional Transportation Board and Chair of the Baltimore Metropolitan Council. He serves on the Maryland Association of Counties' Board of Directors and the Board of Directors of the County Executives of America. Ken was named one of the “15 Most Intriguing People of 2007,” according to Baltimore Magazine, and one of Baltimore Business Journal’s “40 under 40” outstanding business and community leaders.<ref>[http://www.co.ho.md.us/PortalServices/HC_CountyExecutive.htm Howard County Government: Your Government, County Executive<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref><ref>[http://baltimore.bizjournals.com/baltimore/event/2582 Baltimore Business Journal:<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> As County Executive, Ken has focused on environmental and public health issues.


===Patronage and the Federalists===
When John Adams took office in 1796, he carried many of Washington's supporters over into his new administration. As a result, there was little change in the federal government when the first national transition of power occurred. With Jefferson's election in 1800, there was a transfer of power between parties, not simply a transition. As president, Jefferson had the power of appointment to fill many government positions that had long been held by Federalists. It was widely anticipated that this use of [[patronage]] was the privilege of a new party when it assumed power. Jefferson resisted the call of his fellow Republicans to remove all Federalists from their appointed positions. Instead he felt that it was his right to replace the top government officials, such as the [[United States Cabinet|cabinet]] and the politically motivated [[midnight judges]] appointed by Adams. Feeling that most Adams Federalists, who were moderate in outlook than the High Federalists who followed Hamilton, could be turned to the Republican Party; Jefferson kept most in their existing positions. Jefferson's refusal to call for a complete replacement of federal appointees under the [[spoils system]] was followed by U.S. Presidents until the election of [[Andrew Jackson]] in [[1828]].


While Jefferson preferred to practice political moderation towards the Federalists, the party itself was torn apart by political in-fighting. Keeping with their high-minded roots, the Federalist refused to accept the political campaigning practiced by the Republicans and were aghast at populist appeals made by that party. Federalist leaders John Adams and [[John Jay]] retired from public life and Alexander Hamilton was killed in a [[Burr-Hamilton duel|duel]] with Vice-President [[Aaron Burr]] leaving the party without strong leadership. As the nation began to expand ([[Vermont]], [[Kentucky]] and [[Tennessee]] entered the Union under the Federalists and [[Ohio]] joined in 1803), the ideas of Jeffersonian democracy appealed more to the voters than the Federalist calls for stronger central government and higher taxation. By 1805, the Federalists remained strong only in the [[New England]] states and [[Delaware]] while moderate Federalists joined the Republican Party. Possibly the most damaging defection was [[John Quincy Adams]], son of Federalist President John Adams.
==Election history==

{| class="wikitable"
===Judiciary===
Jefferson was highly suspicious of the judges appointed by his predecessors; his opinion of good judges was much higher: one of his arguments for a bill of rights would be the power they would give the judiciary.<ref>[http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?ammem/mtj:@field(DOCID+@lit(tj050124)) Letter to Madison, March 15 1789]: "In the arguments in favor of a declaration of rights, you omit one which has great weight with me, the legal check which it puts into the hands of the judiciary. This is a body, which if rendered independent & kept strictly to their own department merits great confidence for their learning & integrity. In fact what degree of confidence would be too much for a body composed of such men as Wythe, Blair & Pendleton?." </ref> At his urging, Congress repealed the [[Judiciary Act of 1801]], abolishing the numerous district courts created at the end of the Adams presidency. The battle to abolish the Judiciary Act was not an easy one. Federalists argued that once the courts were created and judges were appointed, the Constitution directs that they serve for life unless [[impeached]] for "high crimes and misdemeanors". The Republican leadership, prompted by Jefferson, chose not to argue the political manipulation of the courts but instead chose to attack them based on the cost to the nation. Since many of the courts were created to pack the judiciary with lifetime Federalist judges, there were many circumstances in which there was no need for a court at all. The Republicans argued that the unwarranted nature of the courts combined with their excessive cost justified repeal for the Judiciary Act. Despite the fact that this argument required a "loose" interpretation of the Constitution, which Jefferson rallied against when he fought the creation of Hamilton's [[First Bank of the United States]], the Congress was successful in reversing the law.

This also left numerous Federalist "[[midnight judges]]" without positions. Since the creation of these "midnight judge" positions was done to protect the courts from Republican appointees, Jefferson felt justified in not awarding the commissions creating the new federal judges. One commission that he was unable to prevent was the appointment of former [[Secretary of State]] [[John Marshall]] to the position of [[Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court]]. Although Marshall was a cousin of Jefferson, he was a strong Federalist in the tradition of John Adams. Marshall's influence on the Court would help to firmly entrench the supremacy of the federal government. One of the first cases Marshall was asked to decide was that of William Marbury, one of the "midnight judges" who was requesting that the Court issue a [[writ of mandamus]] to Secretary of State James Madison ordering the delivery of the judicial commissions. The resulting case, [[Marbury v Madison]] set the landmark [[precedent]] of [[judicial review]] for the Supreme Court.

The Republicans were not content with simply overturning the Judiciary Act of 1801 and removing the "midnight judges". The next planned to impeach existing federal judges to remove them from office. The first case was [[John Pickering]], a Federalist judge who exhibited signs of insanity and public drunkenness. At Jefferson's instigation, the [[United States House of Representatives|House of Representatives]] impeached Pickering in 1804 and the [[United States Senate|Senate]] removed him from the bench later that year. Jefferson next set his sights on the Supreme Court. Reading that Federalist Justice [[Samuel Chase]] told a grand jury that the Republicans threatened, "peace and order, freedom and property.", Jefferson urged Congressional leaders to begin impeachment hearings. Many Republicans felt that this accusation of [[sedition]] was too reminiscent of the Federalist [[Sedition Act]] that had been repealed early in Jefferson's presidency. Unwilling to remove a Supreme Court justice on purely political accusations, the Senate acquitted Chase of all charges in 1804. The case of Samuel Chase has been the only impeachment trial of a Supreme Court justice in United States history. By rebelling against Jefferson's wishes, the Republican Senators sent a message that the independence of the judiciary was not open to political manipulation.

===Reelection and a Republican split===
Jefferson easily defeated Federalist [[Charles Pinckney]] by an electoral vote of 162-14 and was re-elected in the [[U.S. presidential election, 1804|1804 election]]. With little opposition outside of New England, the Federalists had ceased to be a major source of opposition for the Jefferson administration. Seizing the opportunity to rail against the moderate Republicanism of Jefferson, Congressmen [[John Randolph of Roanoke]] and [[John Taylor of Caroline]] broke with the president called for a return to the "principles of '98," and a small weak national government. Known as the "Old Republicans" (or sometimes called [[Tertium quids|Quids]]), the men targeted Madison and Gallatain as the primary sources of Republican weakness. When Jefferson became embroiled in the [[Yazoo Land Fraud]] controversy, Randolph began to attack the president from the floor of the House. Randolph's actions had little effect other than to alienate the Quids from the rest of the Republican Party. In the end, the Marshall Court was forced to resolve the Yazoo issue in the case of [[Fletcher v. Peck]]. While Marshall reluctantly agreed to support Jefferson's interpretation of the controversy, he was also able to increase the power of the Court by giving it the right to review the constitutionality of state laws.

===Native American relations===
When Jefferson assumed power, the Shawnee leader [[Tecumseh]] and his brother [[Tenskwatawa]] were leading raids against the United States in the Ohio Valley. Attempting to form a confederation of Indian people in the [[Northwest Territory]], the two brothers would be a continual source of irritation to westward settlers. Jefferson, while not adverse to native people, felt that they should be assimilated into more "civilized" white culture or be removed to the west. Under Jefferson the first Indian relocation began from the southern states. Only the [[Five Civilized Tribes]] were allowed to retain their ancestral territory and this was because they adapted to white culture. When the [[Creek]] nation refused to relocate out of Alabama, Tennessee militia under the direction of Andrew Jackson launched a bloody campaign culminating at the [[battle of Horseshoe Bend]] to move them west.

===Banning the slave trade===
It was during Jefferson's second term that the constitutional ban on discussion of the slave trade in Congress expired. The ban, which was created by the [[Slave Trade Compromise and Fugitive Slave Clause|slave trade compromise]] at the [[Philadelphia Convention]], prohibited Congress from considering a ban on the slave trade until 1808. In 1807, northern representatives in Congress submitted a bill calling for the end of the slave trade. The bill, submitted with Jefferson's approval, divided the Congress along sectional lines. While Northern congressmen opposed the slave trade, there was no desire to release free black men and women into northern cities if they were captured being smuggled in to the country. Southern congressmen argued that the ban would largely be ignored and that it was up to the states, not Congress, to regulate slavery. The compromise bill ended the trade in 1808 but ordered the federal government to turn any smuggled slaves over to the states to deal with according to local custom. Many of these slaves were then auctioned by the state governments to the highest bidder. In reality, the ban on the slave trade only reduced the trade and did not eliminate it altogether.

== Jefferson's foreign policies ==

===The Louisiana Purchase===
In his first Inaugural Address Jefferson outlined a vision of the United States eventually expanding out into the Louisiana Territory<ref>The Revolution of 1803. Annual Editions: United Sates History vol. 1 </ref> At the time that he assumed the presidency, the territory was the property of Spain which had acquired it from the [[Treaty of Paris (1783)]]. However, when [[Napoleon Bonaparte]] annexed Spain into his French Empire in 1801, the territory secretly reverted back to French ownership. When the port of [[New Orleans]] was closed to U.S. commercial trade in 1802, Jefferson realized that he must take action in order to protect the economy of the western states and territories. The president sent [[James Monroe]] and [[Robert Livingston]] to Paris to inquire about purchasing New Orleans from the French. At the same time, Napoleon was fighting a brutal war in [[Haiti]] against General [[Touissant L'Overture]] that was depleting the French treasury. Desperate for money, Napoleon made Monroe and Livingston though his representative [[Talleyrand]] to purchase the territory for $15 million. Jefferson was pleased at the offer but felt that he lacked the constitutional power to purchase the land. Following his doctrine for "strict" interpretation of the Constitution, Jefferson prepared to draft an [[amendment]] to the Constitution giving Congress the express power to purchase land. Hearing of the delay in the United States and rapidly running out of money, Napoleon ordered Talleyrand to leak information that hinted he would offer the territory to Great Britain if the U.S. did not act quickly. At the urging of Monroe and Livingston, Jefferson relented and sent the annexation treaty to the Senate for approval without the benefit of an amendment. With only a small group of Federalists resisting, the territory of Louisiana was annexed to the United States as the [[Louisiana Purchase]]. Suddenly faced with the prospect of not only doubling the size of the United States, Jefferson also had to decide how to govern the new French, Spanish, Mexican, and Native Americans who lived in the territory. To this end Jefferson proposed the [[Louisiana Government Bill]] which created an appointed government for the territory and established a system for collection of taxes. In effect, Jefferson had authorized taxation without representation, they very thing that he had opposed in the [[American Revolution]].

As soon as the purchase was complete, Jefferson ordered the [[Lewis and Clark expedition]] to survey the new territory. [[Merriweather Lewis]] and [[William Clark]] were sent out by Jefferson to collect scientific data on the new territory, write an [[ethnography]] of native people, establish a trade network between native nations and the United States, and to discover the extent of the purchased land.

Popular discontent in the Louisiana Territory later led to the [[Burr conspiracy]] in which former Vice President [[Aaron Burr]] was approached by Napoleon to make an attempt to break off the Louisiana Territory into an independent state with ties to France. Burr, chafing at his rejection from Washington and later his home state of New York, agreed and began to organize a militia force in the territory. Calling himself the "Emperor of Mexico", Burr was pursued by the army across the territory and back into the United States proper. Once Burr was arrested, Jefferson ordered a trial on the grounds of treason. When the case came before the Supreme Court, Chief Justice John Marshall found that there was not sufficient evidence to show that Burr was at the locations where the conspiracy was discussed. To the dismay of Jefferson, Marshall and the Supreme Court acquitted Burr of all charges.

===The Barbary War===
Under George Washington, the United States had agreed to pay [[tribute]] to the [[Barbary States]] of North Africa in order to protect American shipping in the Mediterranean Sea. Jefferson fearing that the increased cost of tribute may financially devastate the federal treasury decided to send in both naval and [[United States Marine Corps]] forces into [[Tripoli]]. The [[First Barbary War]] saw a victory for the U.S. Marines who "marched to the shores of Tripoli". Despite the losses of some U.S. ships, the United States was considered a victor when peace was signed in 1805.

===Relations with Europe===
In Jefferson's second term, the [[Napoleonic Wars]] broke out in Europe as Great Britain and France battled for international supremacy. Initially following Washington's [[Neutrality Act]], Jefferson did not commit the United States to either side and continued to trade with both nations. Wanting to weaken Napoleon, the British government began to seize American ships and [[impressment|impress]] American sailors by the thousands despite American neutrality. The British Parliament also passed the [[Orders in Council]] which barred any trade with the European continent. Napoleon responded with the [[Berlin Decree]] in 1806 and the [[Milan Decree]] in 1807, both of which effectively cut Europe from British trade and threaten seizure of neutral ships. Jefferson became increasingly agitated with both nations as American neutrality was ignored. Tensions flared when the the [[Chesapeake-Leopard Incident]] took place off the coast of Virginia. A British warship, ''The Leopard'' ordered the American ship ''The Chesapeake'' to submit to a search. The American captain refused and shots were exchanged leaving three men dead and eighteen wounded. Public outrage demanded that Jefferson take action.

In response, Jefferson and Congress passed the [[Embargo Act]] in 1807. The act was designed to force Britain and France into respecting US neutrality by cutting off all American shipping to either nation. Almost immediately the Americans began to turn to smuggling in order to ship goods to Europe. Jefferson was forced to call out the military and expand the power of the federal government by patrolling the American coast, cutting off trade routes to Canada, seizing the ships of suspected smugglers, and ordering that no ship could be loaded without the approval of a customs officer and the military. The effects of the Embargo Act backfired on the Republicans. New England, which depended on trade for economic survival, turned again to the Federalist Party. Jefferson lost many supporters who resented the intrusion into their personal lives by the national government. Even Britain and France scoffed at the Act as neither economy was severely damaged due to smuggling. By the time Jefferson surrendered the presidency to [[James Madison]] in 1808, his reputation was severely damaged by his support of the Embargo Act.

===Speeches===
====Inaugural addresses====
*[[s:Thomas Jefferson's First Inaugural Address|First Inaugural Address]] (March 4, 1801)
*[[s:Thomas Jefferson's Second Inaugural Address|Second Inaugural Address]] (March 4, 1805)

====State of the Union Address====

Jefferson ended the tradition of delivering a State of the Union speech and instead just had it published. Woodrow Wilson later ended this policy.

*[[s:Thomas Jefferson's First State of the Union Address|First State of the Union Address]] (December 8, 1801)
*[[s:Thomas Jefferson's Second State of the Union Address|Second State of the Union Address]] (December 15, 1802)
*[[s:Thomas Jefferson's Third State of the Union Address|Third State of the Union Address]] (October 17, 1803)
*[[s:Thomas Jefferson's Fourth State of the Union Address|Fourth State of the Union Address]] (November 8, 1804)
*[[s:Thomas Jefferson's Fifth State of the Union Address|Fifth State of the Union Address]] (December 3, 1805)
*[[s:Thomas Jefferson's Sixth State of the Union Address|Sixth State of the Union Address]] (December 2, 1806)
*[[s:Thomas Jefferson's Seventh State of the Union Address|Seventh State of the Union Address]] (October 27, 1807)
*[[s:Thomas Jefferson's Eighth State of the Union Address|Eighth State of the Union Address]] (November 8, 1808)

===Administration and Cabinet===

{| cellpadding="1" cellspacing="4" style="margin:3px; border:3px solid #000000;" align="left"
!bgcolor="#000000" colspan="3"|
|-
|-
|align="left"|'''OFFICE'''||align="left"|'''NAME'''||align="left"|'''TERM'''
! Year
! Office
! Election
!
! Subject
! Party
! Votes
! %
!
! Opponent
! Party
! Votes
! %
!
! Opponent
! Party
! Votes
! %
|-
|-
!bgcolor="#000000" colspan="3"|
| 2002
| Howard County Council, District 4
| General
|
| {{party shading/Democratic}} |Kenneth Ulman
| {{party shading/Democratic}} |[[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]
| {{party shading/Democratic}} |11,602
| {{party shading/Democratic}} |58%
|
| {{party shading/Republican}}|Joan C. Lancos
| {{party shading/Republican}}|[[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]
| {{party shading/Republican}}|8,260
| {{party shading/Republican}}|42%
|-
|-
|align="left"|[[President of the United States|President]]||align="left" |'''Thomas Jefferson'''||align="left"|1801&ndash;1809
| 2006
|-
| Howard County Executive
|align="left"|[[Vice President of the United States|Vice President]]||align="left"|'''[[Aaron Burr]]'''||align="left"|1801&ndash;1805
| General
|
|-
|align="left"|&nbsp;||align="left"|'''[[George Clinton (vice president)|George Clinton]]'''||align="left"|1805&ndash;1809
| {{party shading/Democratic}} |Kenneth Ulman
|-
| {{party shading/Democratic}} |[[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]
!bgcolor="#000000" colspan="3"|
| {{party shading/Democratic}} |54,022
|-
| {{party shading/Democratic}} |52.1%
|align="left"|[[United States Secretary of State|Secretary of State]]||align="left"|'''[[James Madison]]'''||align="left"|1801&ndash;1809
|
|-
| {{party shading/Republican}}|[[Christopher J. Merdon]]
|align="left"|[[United States Secretary of the Treasury|Secretary of the Treasury]]||align="left"|'''[[Samuel Dexter]]'''||align="left"|1801
| {{party shading/Republican}}|[[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]
|-
| {{party shading/Republican}}|44,910
|align="left"|&nbsp;||align="left"|'''[[Albert Gallatin]]'''||align="left"|1801&ndash;1809
| {{party shading/Republican}}|43.3%
|
|-
|align="left"|[[United States Secretary of War|Secretary of War]]||align="left"|'''[[Henry Dearborn]]'''||align="left"|1801&ndash;1809
| {{party shading/Independent}}|[[C. Stephen Wallis]]
|-
| {{party shading/Independent}}|[[Independent (politician)|Independent]]
|align="left"|[[Attorney General of the United States|Attorney General]]||align="left"|'''[[Levi Lincoln]]'''||align="left"|1801&ndash;1804
| {{party shading/Independent}}|4,701
|-
| {{party shading/Independent}}|4.6%
|align="left"|&nbsp;||align="left"|'''[[John Breckinridge (1760-1806)|John Breckinridge]]'''||align="left"|1805&ndash;1806

|-
|align="left"|&nbsp;||align="left"|'''[[Caesar A. Rodney]]'''||align="left"|1807&ndash;1809
|-
|align="left"|[[Postmaster General of the United States|Postmaster General]]||align="left"|'''[[Joseph Habersham]]'''||align="left"|1801
|-
|align="left"|&nbsp;||align="left"|'''[[Percy Grainger]]'''||align="left"|1801&ndash;1809
|-
|align="left"|[[United States Secretary of the Navy|Secretary of the Navy]]||align="left"|'''[[Benjamin Stoddert]]'''||align="left"|1801
|-
|align="left"|&nbsp;||align="left"|'''[[Robert Smith (U.S. politician)|Robert Smith]]'''||align="left"|1801&ndash;1809
|}
|}
<br clear="all">


===Supreme Court appointments===
<ref>[http://www.elections.state.md.us/elections/2006/results/general/local_office_Howard_County.html Maryland State Board of Elections<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
Jefferson appointed the following Justices to the [[Supreme Court of the United States]]:
<ref>[http://www.msa.md.gov/msa/mdmanual/36loc/how/elect/general/00list.html Howard County, Maryland - Election Returns<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


*'''[[William Johnson (judge)|William Johnson]]''' &ndash; 1804
== References ==
*'''[[Henry Brockholst Livingston]]''' &ndash; 1807
*'''[[Thomas Todd]]''' &ndash; 1807

===States admitted to the Union===
*'''[[Ohio]]''' &ndash; March 1, 1803

==Notes==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


== External links ==
==External links==
{{Wikisource|History of the United States 1801-09/The First Administration of Thomas Jefferson}}
* [http://www.co.ho.md.us/ Howard County Government] Official Website

* [http://www.co.ho.md.us/PortalServices/HC_CountyExecutive.htm Howard County Executive] Official Website

* [http://www.21stcenturydems.org/2007/8/31/ken-ulman 21st Century Democrats] Featuring Ken Ulman
{{USPresidencies}}
* [http://www.co.ho.md.us/CES/CES_HomePage.htm Commission on the Environment and Sustainability] Official Website

* [http://www.usmayors.org/climateprotection/ U.S. Mayors Climate Protection Agreement] Official Website
[[Category:United States Presidential administrations]]
* [http://www.howardcountymd.gov/Health/HealthMain/Health_HHAccessPlan.htm Healthy Howard Access Plan] Official Website
[[Category:Thomas Jefferson]]
* [http://www.elections.state.md.us/elections/2006/results/general/local_office_Howard_County.html


<!--Thomas Jefferson also had many other accomplishments in his presidency. He gave us separation of church and state, while Adams and Hamilton pushed for a state government. He also expanded trial by jury. The Jeffersonian democracy helped give the states their rights, while still keeping a strong central government, and kept close tabs on the South, who was growing in oppression, and needed to be mandated because of crimes, slavery, and other bad politics and injustices.-->
{{DEFAULTSORT:Ulman, Kenneth}}
[[Category:Maryland Democrats]]
[[Category:People from Howard County, Maryland]]
[[Category:Maryland politicians]]
[[Category:People from Maryland]]

Revision as of 16:15, 10 October 2008

Thomas Jefferson
3rd President of the United States
In office
March 4, 1801 – March 4, 1809
Vice PresidentAaron Burr (1801–1805),
George Clinton (1805–1809)
Preceded byJohn Adams
Succeeded byJames Madison
2nd Vice President of the United States
In office
March 4, 1797 – March 4, 1801
PresidentJohn Adams
Preceded byJohn Adams
Succeeded byAaron Burr
1st United States Secretary of State
In office
September 26, 1789 – December 31, 1793
PresidentGeorge Washington
Preceded byNone
Succeeded byEdmund Randolph
Personal details
BornApril 13, 1743
Shadwell, Virginia
DiedJuly 4, 1826(1826-07-04) (aged 83)
Charlottesville, Virginia
NationalityAmerican
Political partyDemocratic-Republican
SpouseMartha Wayles Skelton Jefferson
OccupationLawyer, Farmer (Planter)
Signature

Thomas Jefferson's Presidency of the United States, from March 4 1801 to March 41809, was the first to start and end in the White House (though at the time it was known as the Presidential Mansion).

Inauguration and beliefs

The tumultuous nature of the election of 1800 cost Jefferson a great deal of political capital. He was now indebted to Hamilton and the High Federalists and left with a vice president who had no place in his administration. With George Washington dead and John Adams returning to Braintree after his defeat, Jefferson was free to try to implement his Republican vision for the republic. In what historians later call Jeffersonian democracy, the new president set out an agenda that was marked by his belief in agrarianism and limited government.In order to carry out his agenda, Jefferson turned to his loyal supporters James Madison who he named as Secretary of State and Swiss-born Albert Gallatin became Secretary of the Treasury. Jefferson also wielded significant power over the Republican leaders of Congress despite their independent nature. The split in the Federalist Party between the Hamilton and Adams factions also helped Jefferson secure the support of Congress. In his entire administration, Jefferson never once had to use his veto power.

Jefferson's domestic policies

Continuation of Federalist policies

In order to end the deadlock in the House of Representatives following the 1800 election, Jefferson was forced to make important concessions to Hamilton in order to gain his endorsement. As part of these concessions, Jefferson continued the basic Hamiltonian programs of the national bank and tariffs. While the Sedition Act expired on schedule in 1801, and one of the Alien acts was repealed, those who were imprisoned under the Sedition Act were released. The Federalists also allowed Jefferson to select his own cabinet members and other high level appointees.

Addressing the national debt

Jefferson attempted to eliminate the national debt because of his wish for small government. Jefferson believed that the nation did not need to carry a line of debt in order to build foreign credit, a policy that Hamilton vigorously advocated while in the Washington cabinet. Gallatin repealed many Federalist taxes including the tax that prompted the Whiskey Rebellion which was made up of many Republican supporters. Gallatin believed that the federal government was able to operate exclusively on customs revenue and need no direct taxation. While initially successful, this policy would later prove disastrous when trade to the United States was interrupted by the Napoleonic Wars between Great Britain and France.

Jefferson also decreased the size of the military, which he believed was an unnecessary drain on the resources of the republic. Much of the federalist navy that was created under the Adams administration was scrapped. When Federalists criticized this policy as leaving the nation vulnerable to foreign attack, Jefferson responded that he believed citizen soldiers would arise to defend the country in case of attack, much as they did during the American Revolution. Recognizing that military leadership would be more crucial when taking civilians into battle, Jefferson did create the Army Corps of Engineers and established the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1802.

Patronage and the Federalists

When John Adams took office in 1796, he carried many of Washington's supporters over into his new administration. As a result, there was little change in the federal government when the first national transition of power occurred. With Jefferson's election in 1800, there was a transfer of power between parties, not simply a transition. As president, Jefferson had the power of appointment to fill many government positions that had long been held by Federalists. It was widely anticipated that this use of patronage was the privilege of a new party when it assumed power. Jefferson resisted the call of his fellow Republicans to remove all Federalists from their appointed positions. Instead he felt that it was his right to replace the top government officials, such as the cabinet and the politically motivated midnight judges appointed by Adams. Feeling that most Adams Federalists, who were moderate in outlook than the High Federalists who followed Hamilton, could be turned to the Republican Party; Jefferson kept most in their existing positions. Jefferson's refusal to call for a complete replacement of federal appointees under the spoils system was followed by U.S. Presidents until the election of Andrew Jackson in 1828.

While Jefferson preferred to practice political moderation towards the Federalists, the party itself was torn apart by political in-fighting. Keeping with their high-minded roots, the Federalist refused to accept the political campaigning practiced by the Republicans and were aghast at populist appeals made by that party. Federalist leaders John Adams and John Jay retired from public life and Alexander Hamilton was killed in a duel with Vice-President Aaron Burr leaving the party without strong leadership. As the nation began to expand (Vermont, Kentucky and Tennessee entered the Union under the Federalists and Ohio joined in 1803), the ideas of Jeffersonian democracy appealed more to the voters than the Federalist calls for stronger central government and higher taxation. By 1805, the Federalists remained strong only in the New England states and Delaware while moderate Federalists joined the Republican Party. Possibly the most damaging defection was John Quincy Adams, son of Federalist President John Adams.

Judiciary

Jefferson was highly suspicious of the judges appointed by his predecessors; his opinion of good judges was much higher: one of his arguments for a bill of rights would be the power they would give the judiciary.[1] At his urging, Congress repealed the Judiciary Act of 1801, abolishing the numerous district courts created at the end of the Adams presidency. The battle to abolish the Judiciary Act was not an easy one. Federalists argued that once the courts were created and judges were appointed, the Constitution directs that they serve for life unless impeached for "high crimes and misdemeanors". The Republican leadership, prompted by Jefferson, chose not to argue the political manipulation of the courts but instead chose to attack them based on the cost to the nation. Since many of the courts were created to pack the judiciary with lifetime Federalist judges, there were many circumstances in which there was no need for a court at all. The Republicans argued that the unwarranted nature of the courts combined with their excessive cost justified repeal for the Judiciary Act. Despite the fact that this argument required a "loose" interpretation of the Constitution, which Jefferson rallied against when he fought the creation of Hamilton's First Bank of the United States, the Congress was successful in reversing the law.

This also left numerous Federalist "midnight judges" without positions. Since the creation of these "midnight judge" positions was done to protect the courts from Republican appointees, Jefferson felt justified in not awarding the commissions creating the new federal judges. One commission that he was unable to prevent was the appointment of former Secretary of State John Marshall to the position of Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court. Although Marshall was a cousin of Jefferson, he was a strong Federalist in the tradition of John Adams. Marshall's influence on the Court would help to firmly entrench the supremacy of the federal government. One of the first cases Marshall was asked to decide was that of William Marbury, one of the "midnight judges" who was requesting that the Court issue a writ of mandamus to Secretary of State James Madison ordering the delivery of the judicial commissions. The resulting case, Marbury v Madison set the landmark precedent of judicial review for the Supreme Court.

The Republicans were not content with simply overturning the Judiciary Act of 1801 and removing the "midnight judges". The next planned to impeach existing federal judges to remove them from office. The first case was John Pickering, a Federalist judge who exhibited signs of insanity and public drunkenness. At Jefferson's instigation, the House of Representatives impeached Pickering in 1804 and the Senate removed him from the bench later that year. Jefferson next set his sights on the Supreme Court. Reading that Federalist Justice Samuel Chase told a grand jury that the Republicans threatened, "peace and order, freedom and property.", Jefferson urged Congressional leaders to begin impeachment hearings. Many Republicans felt that this accusation of sedition was too reminiscent of the Federalist Sedition Act that had been repealed early in Jefferson's presidency. Unwilling to remove a Supreme Court justice on purely political accusations, the Senate acquitted Chase of all charges in 1804. The case of Samuel Chase has been the only impeachment trial of a Supreme Court justice in United States history. By rebelling against Jefferson's wishes, the Republican Senators sent a message that the independence of the judiciary was not open to political manipulation.

Reelection and a Republican split

Jefferson easily defeated Federalist Charles Pinckney by an electoral vote of 162-14 and was re-elected in the 1804 election. With little opposition outside of New England, the Federalists had ceased to be a major source of opposition for the Jefferson administration. Seizing the opportunity to rail against the moderate Republicanism of Jefferson, Congressmen John Randolph of Roanoke and John Taylor of Caroline broke with the president called for a return to the "principles of '98," and a small weak national government. Known as the "Old Republicans" (or sometimes called Quids), the men targeted Madison and Gallatain as the primary sources of Republican weakness. When Jefferson became embroiled in the Yazoo Land Fraud controversy, Randolph began to attack the president from the floor of the House. Randolph's actions had little effect other than to alienate the Quids from the rest of the Republican Party. In the end, the Marshall Court was forced to resolve the Yazoo issue in the case of Fletcher v. Peck. While Marshall reluctantly agreed to support Jefferson's interpretation of the controversy, he was also able to increase the power of the Court by giving it the right to review the constitutionality of state laws.

Native American relations

When Jefferson assumed power, the Shawnee leader Tecumseh and his brother Tenskwatawa were leading raids against the United States in the Ohio Valley. Attempting to form a confederation of Indian people in the Northwest Territory, the two brothers would be a continual source of irritation to westward settlers. Jefferson, while not adverse to native people, felt that they should be assimilated into more "civilized" white culture or be removed to the west. Under Jefferson the first Indian relocation began from the southern states. Only the Five Civilized Tribes were allowed to retain their ancestral territory and this was because they adapted to white culture. When the Creek nation refused to relocate out of Alabama, Tennessee militia under the direction of Andrew Jackson launched a bloody campaign culminating at the battle of Horseshoe Bend to move them west.

Banning the slave trade

It was during Jefferson's second term that the constitutional ban on discussion of the slave trade in Congress expired. The ban, which was created by the slave trade compromise at the Philadelphia Convention, prohibited Congress from considering a ban on the slave trade until 1808. In 1807, northern representatives in Congress submitted a bill calling for the end of the slave trade. The bill, submitted with Jefferson's approval, divided the Congress along sectional lines. While Northern congressmen opposed the slave trade, there was no desire to release free black men and women into northern cities if they were captured being smuggled in to the country. Southern congressmen argued that the ban would largely be ignored and that it was up to the states, not Congress, to regulate slavery. The compromise bill ended the trade in 1808 but ordered the federal government to turn any smuggled slaves over to the states to deal with according to local custom. Many of these slaves were then auctioned by the state governments to the highest bidder. In reality, the ban on the slave trade only reduced the trade and did not eliminate it altogether.

Jefferson's foreign policies

The Louisiana Purchase

In his first Inaugural Address Jefferson outlined a vision of the United States eventually expanding out into the Louisiana Territory[2] At the time that he assumed the presidency, the territory was the property of Spain which had acquired it from the Treaty of Paris (1783). However, when Napoleon Bonaparte annexed Spain into his French Empire in 1801, the territory secretly reverted back to French ownership. When the port of New Orleans was closed to U.S. commercial trade in 1802, Jefferson realized that he must take action in order to protect the economy of the western states and territories. The president sent James Monroe and Robert Livingston to Paris to inquire about purchasing New Orleans from the French. At the same time, Napoleon was fighting a brutal war in Haiti against General Touissant L'Overture that was depleting the French treasury. Desperate for money, Napoleon made Monroe and Livingston though his representative Talleyrand to purchase the territory for $15 million. Jefferson was pleased at the offer but felt that he lacked the constitutional power to purchase the land. Following his doctrine for "strict" interpretation of the Constitution, Jefferson prepared to draft an amendment to the Constitution giving Congress the express power to purchase land. Hearing of the delay in the United States and rapidly running out of money, Napoleon ordered Talleyrand to leak information that hinted he would offer the territory to Great Britain if the U.S. did not act quickly. At the urging of Monroe and Livingston, Jefferson relented and sent the annexation treaty to the Senate for approval without the benefit of an amendment. With only a small group of Federalists resisting, the territory of Louisiana was annexed to the United States as the Louisiana Purchase. Suddenly faced with the prospect of not only doubling the size of the United States, Jefferson also had to decide how to govern the new French, Spanish, Mexican, and Native Americans who lived in the territory. To this end Jefferson proposed the Louisiana Government Bill which created an appointed government for the territory and established a system for collection of taxes. In effect, Jefferson had authorized taxation without representation, they very thing that he had opposed in the American Revolution.

As soon as the purchase was complete, Jefferson ordered the Lewis and Clark expedition to survey the new territory. Merriweather Lewis and William Clark were sent out by Jefferson to collect scientific data on the new territory, write an ethnography of native people, establish a trade network between native nations and the United States, and to discover the extent of the purchased land.

Popular discontent in the Louisiana Territory later led to the Burr conspiracy in which former Vice President Aaron Burr was approached by Napoleon to make an attempt to break off the Louisiana Territory into an independent state with ties to France. Burr, chafing at his rejection from Washington and later his home state of New York, agreed and began to organize a militia force in the territory. Calling himself the "Emperor of Mexico", Burr was pursued by the army across the territory and back into the United States proper. Once Burr was arrested, Jefferson ordered a trial on the grounds of treason. When the case came before the Supreme Court, Chief Justice John Marshall found that there was not sufficient evidence to show that Burr was at the locations where the conspiracy was discussed. To the dismay of Jefferson, Marshall and the Supreme Court acquitted Burr of all charges.

The Barbary War

Under George Washington, the United States had agreed to pay tribute to the Barbary States of North Africa in order to protect American shipping in the Mediterranean Sea. Jefferson fearing that the increased cost of tribute may financially devastate the federal treasury decided to send in both naval and United States Marine Corps forces into Tripoli. The First Barbary War saw a victory for the U.S. Marines who "marched to the shores of Tripoli". Despite the losses of some U.S. ships, the United States was considered a victor when peace was signed in 1805.

Relations with Europe

In Jefferson's second term, the Napoleonic Wars broke out in Europe as Great Britain and France battled for international supremacy. Initially following Washington's Neutrality Act, Jefferson did not commit the United States to either side and continued to trade with both nations. Wanting to weaken Napoleon, the British government began to seize American ships and impress American sailors by the thousands despite American neutrality. The British Parliament also passed the Orders in Council which barred any trade with the European continent. Napoleon responded with the Berlin Decree in 1806 and the Milan Decree in 1807, both of which effectively cut Europe from British trade and threaten seizure of neutral ships. Jefferson became increasingly agitated with both nations as American neutrality was ignored. Tensions flared when the the Chesapeake-Leopard Incident took place off the coast of Virginia. A British warship, The Leopard ordered the American ship The Chesapeake to submit to a search. The American captain refused and shots were exchanged leaving three men dead and eighteen wounded. Public outrage demanded that Jefferson take action.

In response, Jefferson and Congress passed the Embargo Act in 1807. The act was designed to force Britain and France into respecting US neutrality by cutting off all American shipping to either nation. Almost immediately the Americans began to turn to smuggling in order to ship goods to Europe. Jefferson was forced to call out the military and expand the power of the federal government by patrolling the American coast, cutting off trade routes to Canada, seizing the ships of suspected smugglers, and ordering that no ship could be loaded without the approval of a customs officer and the military. The effects of the Embargo Act backfired on the Republicans. New England, which depended on trade for economic survival, turned again to the Federalist Party. Jefferson lost many supporters who resented the intrusion into their personal lives by the national government. Even Britain and France scoffed at the Act as neither economy was severely damaged due to smuggling. By the time Jefferson surrendered the presidency to James Madison in 1808, his reputation was severely damaged by his support of the Embargo Act.

Speeches

Inaugural addresses

State of the Union Address

Jefferson ended the tradition of delivering a State of the Union speech and instead just had it published. Woodrow Wilson later ended this policy.

Administration and Cabinet

OFFICE NAME TERM
President Thomas Jefferson 1801–1809
Vice President Aaron Burr 1801–1805
  George Clinton 1805–1809
Secretary of State James Madison 1801–1809
Secretary of the Treasury Samuel Dexter 1801
  Albert Gallatin 1801–1809
Secretary of War Henry Dearborn 1801–1809
Attorney General Levi Lincoln 1801–1804
  John Breckinridge 1805–1806
  Caesar A. Rodney 1807–1809
Postmaster General Joseph Habersham 1801
  Percy Grainger 1801–1809
Secretary of the Navy Benjamin Stoddert 1801
  Robert Smith 1801–1809


Supreme Court appointments

Jefferson appointed the following Justices to the Supreme Court of the United States:

States admitted to the Union

  • Ohio – March 1, 1803

Notes

  1. ^ Letter to Madison, March 15 1789: "In the arguments in favor of a declaration of rights, you omit one which has great weight with me, the legal check which it puts into the hands of the judiciary. This is a body, which if rendered independent & kept strictly to their own department merits great confidence for their learning & integrity. In fact what degree of confidence would be too much for a body composed of such men as Wythe, Blair & Pendleton?."
  2. ^ The Revolution of 1803. Annual Editions: United Sates History vol. 1

External links