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==Secretary of State== [[File:Clay-standing.jpg|thumb|right|Portrait of Henry Clay]] {{Further|Presidency of John Quincy Adams}} Clay served as secretary of state from 1825 to 1829. As secretary of state, he was the top foreign policy official in the Adams administration, but he also held several domestic duties, such as oversight of the patent office.{{sfn|Klotter|2018|pp=142β143}} Clay came to like Adams, a former rival, and to despise Jackson. They developed a strong working relationship.{{sfn|Heidler|Heidler|2010|pp=187, 191β192}} Adams and Clay were both wary of forming entangling alliances with the emerging states, and they continued to uphold the [[Monroe Doctrine]], which called for European non-intervention in former colonies.{{sfn|Heidler|Heidler|2010|pp=192β193}} Clay was rebuffed in his efforts to reach a commercial treaty and a settlement of the [[CanadaβUnited States border]] with Britain, and was also unsuccessful in his attempts to make the French pay for damages arising from attacks on American shipping during the [[Napoleonic Wars]].{{sfn|Heidler|Heidler|2010|pp=192β193}} He had more success in negotiating commercial treaties with Latin American republics, reaching "[[most favoured nation]]" trade agreements in an attempt to ensure that no European country had a trading advantage over the United States.{{sfn|Graebner|Herring|2009|pp=555β556}} Seeking deeper relations with Latin American countries, Clay strongly favored sending American delegates to the [[Congress of Panama]], but his efforts were defeated by opponents in the Senate.{{sfn|Klotter|2018|pp=145β147}} [[File:National road map.png|thumb|upright=1.5|Clay supported construction of the [[National Road]], which extended west from [[Cumberland, Maryland]].]] Adams proposed an ambitious domestic program based in large part on Clay's American System, but Clay warned the president that many of his proposals held little chance of passage in the [[19th United States Congress|19th Congress]].{{sfn|Hargreaves|1985|pp=165β166}} Adams's opponents defeated many of his proposals, including the establishment of a naval academy and a national observatory, but Adams did preside over the construction or initiation of major infrastructure projects like the [[National Road]] and the [[Chesapeake and Ohio Canal]].{{sfn|Hargreaves|1985|pp=166β177}} Followers of Adams began to call themselves [[National Republican Party|National Republicans]], and Jackson's followers became known as [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democrats]].{{sfn|Heidler|Heidler|2010|p=2207}} Both campaigns spread untrue stories about the opposing candidates.{{sfn|Remini|1981|p=134}} Adams' followers denounced Jackson as a [[demagogue]], and some Adams-aligned papers accused Jackson's wife [[Rachel Jackson|Rachel]] of [[bigamy]]. Though Clay was not directly involved in these attacks, his failure to denounce them earned him the lifelong enmity of Jackson.{{sfn|Heidler|Heidler|2010|pp=205β207}} Clay was one of Adams's most important political advisers, but because of his myriad responsibilities as secretary of state, he was often unable to take part in campaigning.{{sfn|Klotter|2018|pp=143β148}} As Adams was averse to the use of patronage for political purposes, Jackson's campaign enjoyed a marked advantage in organization, and Adams' allies such as Clay and [[Daniel Webster]] were unable to create an equally powerful organization headed by the president.{{sfn|Klotter|2018|pp=154β155}} In the 1828 election, Jackson took 56% of the popular vote and won almost every state outside of [[New England]]; Clay was especially distressed by Jackson's victory in Kentucky. The election result represented not only the victory of a man Clay viewed as unqualified and unprincipled but also a rejection of Clay's domestic policies.{{sfn|Heidler|Heidler|2010|pp=212β213}}
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