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lina2011 [118]
3 years ago
7

Thomas Jefferson believed that the federal government was limited to the powers explicitly listed in the Constitution. Which bes

t describes Alexander Hamilton’s view of this issue?
A.)Hamilton strongly supported Jefferson’s interpretation of the Constitution.

B.)Hamilton believed that the Constitution was unrelated to the nation’s political structure.

C.)Hamilton felt that the Constitution should be interpreted more strictly than Jefferson.

D.)Hamilton favored a looser interpretation of the Constitution than Jefferson.
History
2 answers:
marta [7]3 years ago
8 0

Answer:

answer is option or letter D

Explanation:

D.)Hamilton favored a looser interpretation of the Constitution than Jefferson.

Ludmilka [50]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

Answer is  ___<u>D</u>___

Explanation:

Hamilton favored a looser interpretation of the Constitution than Jefferson.

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The British government responded with outrage to actions of the assembly. The British demanded that the assembly either rescind the letter or the assembly would be disbanded. The British government knew this was a dangerous path to take, but went ahead anyway. The governor requested the presence of British troops in the colony of Massachusetts, which only further inflamed that colony. When the Massachusetts Assembly met again, it was even more-anti British. The only business the Assembly wished to conduct were protests against the Townshend Acts.

Massachusetts was not the only colony to object to the Townshend Acts. The part of the Acts entitled, "The New York Restraining Act:, attracted the most resentment from the New York Assembly, who over the objections of the governor passed a resolution stating that the parliament had no right to suspend a state assembly. The New York legislator further affirmed that the Assembly had the right to correspond with representatives of any other colony, if it wished.

South Carolina joined the ranks of legislatures protesting the Acts, and was soon the most vociferous of its opponents. Ultimately, it was not the political protest that had the most effect on the British, but it was the boycotts by the colonists. All of the colonies organized boycott committees. With the encouragement of the Sons of Liberty colonial merchants began boycotting British goods. This effectively cut the American purchases from England by half, seriously effecting British merchants. Between the economic and political boycotts the colonists had become united, as never before, in opposition to the British actions.

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