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Stephen Harding wrote in message ...
Vince Brannigan wrote: Peter McLelland wrote: It is interesting that the constitution they adopted was merely an improved version of the UK one with and elected second house and an elected king. Actually no. The US federal system was a complex balance of powoer on both national and local levels that had no UK counterpart. States in fact were much closer to the UK model than the Federal government. I believe David McCulloch's book "John Adams" says that a committee was formed to study various forms of democratic government through history, in order to attempt to discover strengths and weaknesses of the various forms. I think John Adams was a member of this committee because of an earlier work he did on the subject. The prime mover was of course James Madison, who certainly borrowed ideas on democratic governance from others, but the form of the US government, as defined by its Constitution, was pretty well original in its sum. Certainly not a rip off ["mere improvement"] of the British system. From my view point, for what that is worth, I think the revolutionary constitutin was an excellent piece of work but you cannot deny that many aspects of it were very much driven by the UK model which was before the US developed their republican model one of the most democratic systems, with the possible exception of the Netherlands, about at the time. Peter |
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