In one short, succinct statement Justice George Sutherland altered the relationship between Congress and the executive branch. “The President [operates] as the sole organ of the federal government in the field of international relations,” he wrote in the United States Supreme Court’s decision of U.S. v. Curtiss-Wright Export Corporation<span>. Whereas the Constitution lays out distinct, delegated powers to Congress, such as the power to declare war and the power to ratify treaties, and to the executive, primarily the role of the president as Commander-in-Chief, Justice Sutherland’s statement altered the relationship between the two aforementioned branches. Suddenly, the executive branch had a legal precedent with which to become the leading force in foreign policy and upon which it could fall back on if actions are legally challenged.</span>
i think the answer is the emergence of a artisan class
Hello there.
<span>How did the slave trade of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries aid the Industrial Revolution in Britain?
</span><span>Slaves helped to increase the demand for manufactured goods, making them more profitable.
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Answer:
The Court has often ruled that acts of government are violations of the Constitution. One of the most infamous was the 1819 case McCulloch v. Maryland, in which the Court ruled that a state had no right to tax a federal institution; in that case, a bank.
Explanation:
Answer:
primary is from the person themself. secondary is somebody else writing about an event or person they are not or were not in.