The correct answer is <span>The government couldn’t maintain order
The articles of confederation did not provide the government with any actual power. Its only purpose was to exist in cases that foreign forces try to invade the US, but when it came to domestic problems the articles were completely useless. That's why they understood that they needed to make a new document which would regulate both domestic and foreign problems and the constitution was born out of this.</span>
Catholics were granted representation in parliament.
In the mid-1840s Famine caused due to potato blight was the main cause of massive Irish immigration to the United States. Thousands of poor labors migrated to the United States due to poverty and hunger. In 17th and 18th century Penal laws restricted Irish Catholics for representation in parliament and also restricted their voting rights. However, the Roman Catholics relief act has given the demands of the Catholics who stayed in Ireland after the famine and granted the representation to sit in parliament.
The answer is c your welcome hunny
PROVINCIAL CONGRESSES.<span> Between 1775 and 1776, the term "provincial congress" (in some colonies "provincial convention") was used to describe the primary revolutionary body managing the transition of power from traditional colonial legislative assemblies to independent state legislatures. Inasmuch as the traditional assemblies had been perceived as the "people's house," from the early seventeenth century on, it was natural that the popularly elected provincial congresses saw themselves as transitory representatives meeting in lieu of legally considered lower houses of the colonial legislatures. In sum, the Americans were inventing government as they went along. In most emerging states the provincial congresses were curious blends of revolutionary agencies and traditional conservators of representative self-government characteristic of colonial America. The provincial congresses took legitimacy from the recognition accorded them by the First and Second Continental Congresses, themselves the embodiment of revolutionary transitional government based on American understanding of traditional English liberties.</span>
He proposed presenting a motion in the United Nations against the United States.