Noah Feldman: Hamilton vs. Madison and the birth of American partisanship
Noah Feldman studies the intersection of religion, politics and law. Full bio
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for the last year or so,
like the following three propositions:
has never been so bad before;
it's geographically spatialized --
which want to look outwards,
which wants to look inwards;
that all three of these propositions,
in almost eerily the same way
throughout US history.
an extraordinary mechanism
factional disagreement and partisanship.
supplely designed entity
factional disagreement
for overcoming that disagreement
to a pivotal moment in US history,
and partisanship was born.
when partisanship snapped into place.
of that story is James Madison.
of not only the US Constitution,
more globally,
designed, passed and gotten ratified
some sense of the enormity
couldn't have known it at the time,
that he invented is still in use
of contexts all over the world,
to manage governance.
having solved this problem,
the results of factions
he had designed a constitution
of his constitutional project
called Alexander Hamilton.
Madison was not.
where Madison was restrained.
to a woman expect for once
and lived happily ever after for 40 years.
a hip-hop musical --
a hip-hop musical.
the Federalist Papers,
and wildly successful.
and infrastructure
for constitutions.
of infrastructure.
the United States a national bank,
"immortal," his phrase --
that would enable trade and manufacturing
wealth had historically been.
that his old friend Hamilton was wrong
were unconstitutional --
of the Constitution
the way you would expect.
his "personal and political enemy" --
such close friends and such close allies
old-fashioned way.
the Democratic Republican Party --
called the Federalist Party.
positions on national politics
some manufacturing and some trade
to put in charge of the country.
Madison came to believe.
was to look inwards
of Republican virtue,
that had made American great,
by saying that Madison was naïve,
to turn the United States
on the global scale.
to each of their claims,
the views of the other
came entirely through the lens
or the Federalist party.
the Constitution did its work.
had not fully anticipated.
when he thought about anything --
that the press was so pro-Federalist
were all Federalists,
who got their capital from Britain,
criticism of the government --
the freedom of speech,
into the Bill of Rights,
Democratic-Republican Societies --
against Federalist-dominated hegemony.
to win a national election --
became president,
completely out of business.
of the Constitution
that actually managed faction
in the first place.
that the government was terrible.
private groups, individuals,
about fundamental change.
was the separation of powers --
of the Constitution.
in the United States
unless you bring on board the center.
that come incredibly fast
the president, in fact, does not rule
which other people have to agree with --
to drive presidents
will reveal to you
completely in operation.
follows the rules of the Constitution,
as indeed has sometimes occurred,
but in the past, in US history.
they need to win election
in order to pass laws.
then, is the following:
is greater than partisanship.
when that's possible,
to overcome partisan division
is a technology that worked
of the Civil War,
that you care about,
that matter to you,
and knowledge and confidence
can do the job that it is designed to do.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Noah Feldman - Constitutional law scholarNoah Feldman studies the intersection of religion, politics and law.
Why you should listen
Noah Feldman is a professor and writer who tries to figure out how to make the government follow the rules; what the rules are that the government has to follow; and what to do if the rules are being broken. In his work, he asks questions like: How can a 225-year-old constitutional blueprint still work? Can you design a new and better constitution from scratch in places like Iraq and Tunisia? What rights do we have, really?
Feldman is the Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law at Harvard Law School and a contributing writer for Bloomberg View. He served as senior constitutional advisor to the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq, and advised members of the Iraqi Governing Council on the drafting of the Transitional Administrative Law or interim constitution. He is writing a biography on James Madison, principal author of the Constitution and fourth president of the US; it's forthcoming in 2017.
Feldman is the author of six other books: Cool War: The Future of Global Competition (Random House, 2013); Scorpions: The Battles and Triumphs of FDR’s Great Supreme Court Justices (Twelve Publishing, 2010); The Fall and Rise of the Islamic State (Princeton University Press, 2008); Divided By God: America's Church-State Problem and What We Should Do About It (Farrar, Straus & Giroux 2005); What We Owe Iraq: War and the Ethics of Nation-building (Princeton University Press 2004) and After Jihad: America and the Struggle for Islamic Democracy (Farrar, Straus & Giroux 2003. He most recently co-authored two textbooks: Constitutional Law, Eighteenth Edition (Foundation Press, 2013) and First Amendment Law, Fifth Edition (Foundation Press, 2013).
Noah Feldman | Speaker | TED.com