Anti-Federalist Papers

The other half of the argument

The Anti-Federalist Papers — the people who said “not yet.”

If the Federalist Papers are the brief for adopting the Constitution, the Anti-Federalist Papers are the brief for slowing down, looking closer, and asking what might break.

Long before the Constitution became law, Americans were already arguing about its dangers. Under names like Brutus, Cato, and the Federal Farmer, the Anti-Federalists warned that a powerful central government would not simply coordinate the states — it would eventually absorb them. They worried that ordinary citizens would be ruled by distant officials, that the new presidency looked uncomfortably like an elected monarch, and that a federal judiciary with life tenure would become a quiet, unaccountable sovereign. Where the Federalists saw stability, the Anti-Federalists saw the seeds of a new kind of empire.

They were not enemies of liberty or order. Most had fought the Revolution, served in state governments, or lived close to the people they represented. What they distrusted was distance — distance between rulers and the ruled, between law and lived experience, between the promises of a written Constitution and the temptations of power. Again and again they asked a simple question: What happens when these powers are in the hands of men who are less virtuous than the ones designing them?

The Anti-Federalists lost the ratification battle, but they won something enormous: the Bill of Rights. Their insistence on explicit protections for speech, religion, press, arms, juries, and due process forced the new government to start life already constrained by a list of “shall nots.” Many of the rights Americans now treat as obvious were, at the time, controversial demands made by people who did not trust structure alone to protect liberty.

This Anti-Federalist explorer exists to bring those dissenting voices back into the conversation. Not because they were always right, but because they were asking the questions we still have to ask: How far away is power from the people it governs? Who watches the courts? When does “energy in the executive” become something more like a crown? And what protections are we willing to put in writing before it is too late?

The Anti-Federalists are not the villains of the story; they are the warning lights on the dashboard. Reading them beside the Constitution and the Federalist Papers is a way of stress-testing the system we inherited.
Anti-Federalist Papers Explorer
The dissenting blueprint: warnings about power, liberty, and the new Constitution.
These are the letters of those who said “not so fast.” Explore the Anti-Federalist Papers by number, see what they feared, what they influenced (especially the Bill of Rights), and how their arguments still echo in modern constitutional fights.
Anti-Federalist index
These essays are the other half of the story — people who saw the same Constitution and expected disaster.
Selected essay
Pick an Anti-Federalist essay to explore.
Start with Nos. 1, 9, 17, 39, 55, 78–79, or 84 for the sharpest critiques: consolidation, representation, courts, and the missing Bill of Rights.
What they feared
!
This panel surfaces the core anxiety behind the essay — what the author thought could go wrong if the Constitution stood as written.
What it influenced
⚙︎
Here you’ll see how Anti-Federalist warnings helped shape the Bill of Rights, state-centered readings of the Constitution, and later dissenting traditions.
How the argument lives on
⚖︎
Modern arguments against centralized power, permanent emergencies, and distant elites trace directly back to these essays.
Frequently cited lines
§
  • Select an essay to see the sentences Anti-Federalists used to warn about consolidation and overreach.