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    debate how far the exclusion crisis strengthened or undermined his position‚ some suggest that it increased his power by allowing a working relationship with the Tory Anglicans where he successfully implemented his prerogative powers and made the Whigs seem radical‚ whilst other argues that it showed how Charles could not

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    The Jacksonian Era

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    political rights to white males; the limited meaning of Jacksonian democracy for women and African Americans; the revival of evangelical Christianity with the Second Great Awakening; the growing debate over the issue of slavery; and the rise of the Whig Party. Learning Objectives (3 points each) DAY 11 (pgs 293-301) • Describe the emergence of universal white male suffrage. Since Americans were victorious in the American Revolutionary War‚ the ideology of becoming a democracy has become

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     chief obstacle to moral  reform in the United States between 1825 and 1877 was the limited government‚ strict  constructionism of the Democratic Party. To the extent that moral reforms were successful‚  they were generally guided by Federalists‚ Whigs or Republicans‚ against powerful opposition  by the  strict Jacksonian Democrats."    *Paraphrase question in own words  *List of obstacles for moral progress within the time period: think about the S’s ­slavery‚  sexism‚ sobriety‚ special peoples

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    Andrew Jackson began to pursue a laissez-faire policy after he revoked the second central bank of the United States.; This led to the rise of American barbarism in the Nineteenth Century. More brutal monetary power has exploited labor. Therefore‚ the American government and the central bank that betrayed the interests of the people were the main culprits for the decline of the Democratic Party. Most Americans are eager to move westward and explore new areas of life. Most of them are farmers. Because

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    ‘A failure of Charles II’s opponents rather than his own actions defeated the Exclusion movement’. How far do you accept this judgement of the years 1678-85? Exclusion was the policy pursued by what became known as the Whig faction within Parliament in an attempt to exclude Charles’s brother James‚ Duke of York from the succession because he was a Catholic. The view that Charles was becoming more absolutist‚ because of the actions of Danby‚ led to fears that James would be even more so‚ like the

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    Sdfg

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    Flow Chart of Presidential Elections & Political Parties Although George Washington and other founding fathers viewed political parties (factions) as dangerous‚ political parties out of power helps to strengthen democracy by being at times the "antithesis" of the party in power. Knowing what the issues were for each of the elections will serve as a good review as well as a good framework on viewing the American political tradition. Use the following flow chart to tell what were the issues that

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    Only because

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    politicians because it was a comfortable compromise between the abolitionists and the slaver-holders National Convention at Baltimore‚ Democrats chose General Lewis Cass as their candidate of presidency (pro-slavery) Political Triumphs for General Taylor Whigs met in Philadelphia and chose Zachary Taylor as their candidate for presidency‚ Henry Clay was not chose because he had many enemies The Free Soil Party emerged from antislavery men on the North who didn’t trust Cass or Taylor. (supported internal

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    experience and accept the fact that they no longer remained in control of their own lives. Whether the people held their stances of neutrality or if they remained repelled by politics‚ they were still forced to live under war’s calamitous conditions. The Whigs and other political parties hoped to politicize the people‚ but in reality the brutality of the war left them depoliticized and lessened the patriotic feelings that they possessed before. The lives of Westchester’s ordinary people had been changed

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    Colonial Patriot Party

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    At the time‚ revolutionaries were called ’Patriots’‚ ’Whigs’‚ ’Congress-men’‚ or ’Americans’. They included a full range of social and economic classes‚ but a unanimity regarding the need to defend the rights of Americans. After the war‚ Patriots such as George Washington‚ James Madison‚ John Adams‚ Alexander Hamilton‚ and John Jay were deeply devoted to republicanism while also eager to build a rich and powerful nation‚ while Patriots such as Patrick Henry‚ Benjamin Franklin‚ and Thomas Jefferson

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    pass the Act in 1829 and were offended by this. The Whigs were content on getting into office and knew that if they pushed the issue of parliamentary reform‚ the Tories would split even further. The Duke of Wellington claimed that that the system in place at the time was as near perfect as anyone in Britain could have hoped for. There was protest against this and his resignation followed. William IV‚ the new king‚ called upon Earl Grey and his Whig party to form a government and having made a Reform

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