The answer would be the first one because during the Nullification Crisis, he sided with the south and agreed with them that they shouldn't have to follow a law they believed to be unconstitutional.
The first answer is right
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although there are no options attached we can say the following.
The President presents an award to the artist who created a statue in
honor of the 500th anniversary of Christopher Columbus' voyage to
America. The president's role is the Chief Executive.
As the leader of the executive branch, the President of the United States has many roles.
He is the Chief of the State. He is the commander-in-chief of the US armed forces(Army, Navy, Air Force, and Coastal Guard). He is the Chief of State. He has the power to appoint the members of his cabinet. And he is the Chief Diplomat.
B i think bc A is one of the branches
Answer:Cartoon depicting the European great powers — Britain, France, Russia, Germany, and Austria-Hungary — struggling to stop the conflict in the Balkans from boiling over into something much bigger and much worse, 1912-1913. Crises over the Balkans were not new — they had been a semi-regular occurrence in European diplomacy since the Greek War of Independence in the 1820s began the slow process of eroding Ottoman control over the region.
The resulting power vacuum encouraged Russia, Austria and other great powers to try to move in to fill it either by supporting the creation of new states like Serbia, Romania and Bulgaria or taking territory directly (such as Bosnia-Herzogovina, annexed by Austria-Hungary in 1908). But equally important was the need of the European great powers to try and stop each other from gaining too much influence or power in the region as the Ottomans withdrew. Balancing these two often conflicting goals required very delicate diplomacy and was not helped by the emergence of the new Balkan states, like Serbia and Bulgaria, which were quite capable of turning the tables on those powers who sought to manipulate them as regional clients.
By the first decade of the new century many European leaders and diplomats were convinced that the next major European war would begin in the Balkans. The outbreak of the Balkan wars seemed to many observers in the press to be the much-predicted spark that would cause a wider war.