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Country Party (Rhode Island) : ウィキペディア英語版
Country Party (Rhode Island)

The Country Party, Rhode Island's anti-federalist political party, controlled the Rhode Island General Assembly from 1786 to 1790 and opposed the Federalist Party, which supported the U.S. Constitution. The Federalists were largely from the "town" of Providence, Rhode Island, while the Country Party members were from the surrounding rural areas.
The Country Party opposed the U.S. Constitution largely because of civil liberties concerns (leading to support for the Bill of Rights), distrust of distant government, opposition to slavery in the Constitution, and disagreements about monetary policy, specifically Rhode Island's desire to honor state-issued paper currency as legal tender.
==Control of the General Assembly==
Rhode Island's movement for state independence lasted long after the passage of the Constitution in 1788. Rhode Island was an early supporter of independence from Great Britain, passing legislation asserting its independence prior to the United States Declaration of Independence, and it was the last of the thirteen colonies to ratify the U.S. Constitution. The Constitution replaced the Articles of Confederation and it created a stronger national government than had existed under the Articles.
Scituate's William West and South Kingstown's Jonathan Hazard were leaders of the rural Country Party which opposed the Constitution. The party "was suspicious of the power and the cost of a government too far removed from the grass-roots level, and so it declined to dispatch delegates to the Philadelphia Convention of 1787, which drafted the United States Constitution. Then, when that document was presented to the states for ratification, Hazard's faction delayed (and nearly prevented) Rhode Island's approval."〔
Among those in Rhode Island who opposed the Constitution were Quakers, who were opposed to the Constitution largely because of its sanctioning of slavery,〔(【引用サイトリンク】publisher=Rhode Island General Assembly )〕 and Baptists, one of the largest denominations in Rhode Island, who had historically been persecuted by various governments. Many were also concerned about the government created by the Constitution would violate natural rights and wanted a Bill of Rights to protect individual liberties. In the rural areas of Rhode Island, citizens wanted to ensure that their paper currency was redeemable as legal tender in the future.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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