A confederate system sits at the other extreme in terms of centralization. A confederacy is a loose relationship among a number of smaller political units. The vast majority of political power rests with the local governments; the central federal government has very little power. Local governments have a great deal of freedom to act as they wish, but this freedom often leads to conflicts between states and the federal government. In some cases, a confederacy is little more than an alliance between independent states.
Though no longer a series of colonies, the United States retains close ties to Britain as "<span>d. part of a “special relationship”" since trade between these two nations benefits both immensely.
Answer from "HistoryGuy" on another user's same question. Not from me.
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Answer:
The answers are:
A. Providing information to voters about party members running for
office.
B. Determining the party's position on controversial foreign policy
issues
Explanation:
Local parties deal only with local or regional issues. National parties may also deal with such issues sometimes, but they rather deal with national affairs, somethig local parties don´t usually do.
South carolina and north carolina
Answer:
roughly 330 years around that number