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Overview of the George Washington PresidencyWashington’s Reputation and Integrity Critical to the New Nation
George Washington faced many problems as the first executive in the constitutional era. Survival of the nation was the biggest. Europe expected America to fail.
America had won its independence from Great Britain in the Revolutionary War. They had formed a government through the Articles of Confederation. And it had failed. The new Constitution would, it was hoped, keep the colonies from splintering into thirteen independent nations. Fear of Monarchy Would Hamper the New PresidentAmericans had just thrown off the burden of a remote monarchy and “taxation without representation.” This was the only type of government Americans knew. So the Articles of Confederation had gone too far in the other direction:
As the nation was about to implement a new government with a stronger executive and greater taxing power, the performance of the first president would be critical. Many saw it as the last chance for success. The nation unanimously turned to George Washington. Washington: A Reluctant President George Washington did not want to be president. His estate at Mount Vernon had suffered when he was away commanding the colonial army during the Revolution, and he had not come close to setting things right. He preferred to remain in Virginia. Yet he realized the struggling nation needed him. The American republic was a fragile experiment (once broken already), the first modern attempt at a people governing themselves. The five year disaster under the Articles had convince the European monarchies that America would fail as one nation, and European style hodge-podge of small kingships would result. Washington thought he could help, but was reluctant. Others felt he was the only one who could fill the executive office. The Electoral College chose him unanimously, and he agreed to serve. His war service had earned for him a great deal of good will, and his total lack of desire for power, frame, or financial reward proved to the nation he could be trusted with the highest office. Problems Unique to the First PresidentEvery president faces a basket of problems unique to the times. Washington faced his, but had to do so with no precedent. He had to feel his way, use his instincts and experience as an army commander, and expend political capital as needed. Some of his problems were:
George Washington’s administration faced problems successor administrations would never face. Yet Washington left office after eight years, with the nation at peace, with finances improving, with the west growing, with the North and South cooperating and partisanship delayed, with a national capitol under construction, with his integrity intact, and with his reputation enhanced. See also the following articles: Problems in Washington's Cabinet George Washington and the National Debt George Washington and the National Capitol Source: by Jack d. Warren, Jr.; Mount Vernon Ladies Association, 2000 [ISBN 0-931017-34-4] The Presidency of George Washington
The copyright of the article Overview of the George Washington Presidency in American History is owned by David Todd. Permission to republish Overview of the George Washington Presidency in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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