However, J. C. A. Stagg states that, "...had the War 1812 been a successful military venture, the Madison administration would have been reluctant to have returned occupied Canadian territory to the enemy."
Otis thought the Madison administration was near collapse and that unless conservatives like himself and the other delegates took charge, the radical secessionists might take power.
Despite this, the Madison administration had reasons to be concerned about the consequences of the Hartford Convention.
After the Madison administration experienced serious trouble financing the War of 1812, and discovered the Army and militia were unable to make war effectively, a new generation of Republican nationalists emerged.
With little guidance from the Madison administration, Poinsett decided that something had to be done to halt violations of American neutral rights.
Ninian Edwards, having lost the confidence of the Madison administration, waited out the war in Kentucky.
Then out of nowhere we flit back to the Madison administration.
In 1811, Crawford declined to serve as Secretary of War in the Madison administration.
Was she "arguably the most famous and loved person in the United States" during the Madison administration, the equivalent of George Washington for an earlier age?
George F. Will is stuck in Reagan's first term (though he tries to convince us that he's stuck in the Madison administration).