He was good for some Romans, but bad for others. The optimates who opposed him in the Civil Wars certainly held a negative view. The people generally loved him, but he made too many powerful enemies in the Senate. Caesar was a great general and an inspirational leader, but he proved to be a very naive politician.
<span>During the 19th century, Parliament made reforms to improve the lives of men, women and children in the poorer sections of society. They have developed conditions for industrial workers. The new reform established the involvement of the government in welfare provision, and in regulating conditions of work in factories, workshops and mines.</span>
I think the answer is B. Benjamin Franklin.
I looked it up, and from what i read it says
-executive powers
-powers related to legislation
-powers of appointment
*and the rest seemed irrelavent. thats all i figured out
Answer:
the point at which quantity demanded and quantity supplied are equal
Hope that helps.