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the Federalists’ idea of an American national state. It starts by pointing out that the ratification of the US Constitution did not mean the end of politics, nor the end of the debate  of the American.

for now the Federalists faced the next step of state building: creating the institutions of government that would realize their ideas about a national state in America. The mainstream interpretation of the Federalist argument presents it as a call for limited government and protection of minority rights, but this study has offered a different interpretation. The idea of an American national state was developed by the Federalists during the ratification debate as an effort to persuade the American public about the necessity of creating a powerful state and to explain how this state would work. This idea was the result of innovative thinking in the face of significant obstacles. The challenge the Federalists faced and the concept of the state they developed are both explained in this conclusion, but the fundamental problem can be summed up as follows: the Federalists had to create a conceptual framework that could accommodate the establishment of a strong national government to the strong anti-statist current in American political tradition.

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