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kiruha [24]
3 years ago
15

Republicans argued that high tariffs would

History
2 answers:
Murrr4er [49]3 years ago
5 0

<u>Republicans argued that high tariff would increase the cost of the product and increase the burden on the consumer. </u>

Further Explanation:

Republican party:

The Republican party is an American political party. It is one of the two most prominent parties of the USA; another party is a democratic party. It a  in 1874. The symbol of this party is an elephant.

The ideology of the Republican Party:

• It favors the decentralization of the government authority and reduction in the power of the government.

• It supported economic reforms of society and favors the idea of classical liberalism.

• Republican party states that government intervention in domestic affairs should be minimal, and it should focus more on foreign affairs.

• They support the Bill of Right and advocates the rights and independence to the citizens of the country.

• This party supports business, religion, and freedom of the citizens.

• Republicans favor the tax-cutting because it would decrease the burden from the citizens.

Ideology on the high tariff:

The Republican party is against the high tariff. This party is in favor of the economic reform and advocates the independence of the citizens. The increase in the tax would increase the net cost of the product, and it would increase the burden of the citizen.

<u>Thus, republicans argued that high tariff would increase the cost of the product and increase the burden on the consumer. </u>

Learn more:

1. Learn more about the Eighteenth amendment

brainly.com/question/1674842

1. Learn more about the creation of the government  

brainly.com/question/9835311

2. Learn more about article II

brainly.com/question/6943726

Answer details:

Grade: Middle School

Subject: Political Science

Chapter: USA legislature

Keyword: Republicans, argued, high tariffs, would, party, the USA, political.

Naddik [55]3 years ago
3 0
<span>Republicans argued that high tariffs would increase the cost of Consumer Goods In the end, every businesses are exist to gain a profit. Imposing a high tariffs will increase the cost of goods sold to the public and in order to obtain a same profit range, the only method left for the producer is by increasing the price on the market
I hope that my answer is helpful! Let me know if you need something more :)</span>
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During the British General Election of 2017, a leading politician caused a brief media stir (and a dash to consult reference books on 19tth century American history) by dismissing an opponent as a 'mutton-headed old Mugwump'. Could he, perhaps, have been thinking of the prominent Irish Mugwump, Edwin Lawrence Godkin?

It was some years ago while I was researching an article on Irish-born journalist, William Howard Russell's newspaper reports from the Crimean War (‘Men at War: 19th century Irish war correspondents from the Crimea to China' in History Ireland Vol. 15, No. 2, March/April 2007) that I came across E. L. Godkin, who was born in Moyne, Co. Wicklow in 1831 and studied at Queens University, Belfast. He was the son of a Congregationalist Minister who was dismissed from his post on account of his support for the repeal of the Act of Union and his association with the Young Ireland movement of the 1840s. Rev. James Godkin was a significant figure in his own right, who advocated agrarian and church reform, two hotly contested political issues in 19th century Ireland. During his career as a journalist, he became editor of the Dublin Daily Express and Irish correspondent of the London Times.

Edwin Godkin evidently inherited his father's literary bent. He was still in his 20s when he published a sympathetic and well-regarded history of Hungary in which he eloquently described the influential conservative Austrian statesman, Prince Metternich, as 'one of the ablest high priests that ever ministered at the altar of absolutism."

Godkin made a name for himself reporting on the Crimean War for the London Daily News. His reports from the battlefront contain more gore than glory. Here's how vividly he described the aftermath of the fighting at Eupatoria in February 1855.

"Men lay on every side gashed and torn by those frightful wounds which round-shot invariably inflict. Here a gory trunk, looking as if the head had

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After his return from the Crimea, Godkin worked in Belfast for the liberal newspaper, the Northern Whig and then left for the United States in 1856. In the period before the Civil War, he paid a visit to the American South which he viewed unsympathetically. On the issue of slavery, although he had little feeling for its victims, he was unequivocal. It was, he said, a "foul and monstrous" wrong.

At the end of the Civil War, Godkin turned his hand to the newspaper business and became the co-founder and editor of The Nation (whose title recalls the Young Ireland movement's journal that Godkin would have remembered from his youth), a weekly publication based in New York which has been described as "the most influential liberal weekly" during America's gilded age. Godkin edited the Nation until 1881 when it merged with the New York Evening Post which he went on to edit from 1883 until 1899 when he retired from journalism.

During his years in journalism, Godkin was a combative, controversial figure much given to polemical forays. Although the Nation's original backers were individuals with radical views, Godkin and the paper he edited took an increasingly conservative stance. The paper's motto was: 'to govern well, govern little.' He argued that Government "must let trade, and commerce, and manufacturers, and steamboats, and railroads, and telegraphs alone". Government's job as he saw it was simply to maintain order and administer justice. As an influential editor, he campaigned for low tariffs, a hard currency, civil service reform, independence in politics and international peace while battling against his prime political phobias: imperialism, profligate spending and corruption in government.

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