The government did little to nothing to disturb or regulate the rising power of the railroads and other big business monopolies in the south, which is the corner stone of lassiez-faire ideology. The unchecked growth of the industries' power created resentment toward this ideology as many people thought it trampled over the common citizen. Resulting in the creation of The Granger Movement, small groups of farmers mainly in the South and West, demanding the end of lassiez-faire policies and the intervention and regulation of the government in business affairs. The pressure created by these movements resulted in the increased regulation of railroads and firms controlling the storage and distribution of corn and wheat.
It would not include right by the state.
Answer:
A. Democrats lost political support in the South
Explanation:
Connexus US History & Constitution: Unit 13, Lesson 3
"Southern Democrats, who came to be called the Dixiecrats, continued to oppose the advances made by the civil rights movement. In the century before, starting with the formation of the Republican Party, the Democratic Party had tended to dominate the South. But when Democrats Kennedy and Johnson aligned themselves on the side of civil rights, party loyalties were challenged and broken.
In the 1968 presidential election, many Dixiecrats backed third-party candidate George Wallace. Wallace was the former governor of Alabama and a strong supporter of segregation. In future elections, the same people were pulled toward Republican candidates, such as Richard Nixon. Since 1960, no Democratic candidate for president, with the exception of Georgia governor Jimmy Carter in 1976, has been able to win the majority of southern states."
Answer:
The Creel Committee
Explanation:
to influence public opinion favorably toward American participation in World War I, President Woodrow Wilson established the Committee on Public Information (CPI) through Executive Order 2594 on April 13, 1917.
Answer:
B. The Kurdish people do not have an ethnic homeland