Development of the middle class, i hope that helped
Impeaching a president is a really big deal that has huge consequences for the nation. So the framers wanted to make sure that impeaching the president could only be done when there was an overwhelmingly convincing reason to do so. Your best answer is the last one: the framers wanted to ensure that presidents were not removed from office unfairly.
The answer really depends on whether the farmer is also the landlord or only a worker in the fields, and bearing in mind that the question refers only to Chavez’ reforms, not what is now called Chavismo, that is to say, the rule of President Maduro.
If the first, then there are chances that the landlord would feel threatened about the fact this his land could be —although not necessarily— appropriated by the State, but also, he might feel relieved to learn that his land could be more productive since there would be a lot more subsidies for farming since the oil revenues of the country would again be in the hands of the State.
If it is the second possibility, the farmer most likely would feel relieved altogether since subsidies to labor power and farming would mean greater income and better living conditions for him and his family.
Despite not posting a cartoon, there is an answer that would be an accurate interpretation of both Franklin Delano Roosevelt in the 1940s and of Lyndon B. Johnson's domestic policy during his term as president in the 1960s. The correct answer is D) Johnson became so consumed with international power that he ignored legislative policies on the homefront.
The main initiative durin Lyndon B. Johnson's presidency was the Vietnam War. While he focused on it as part of American international policy, fisures began to separate American society. His approval ratings dropped from 70% in mid-1965 to below 40% in 1967. Similar to Johnson's emphasis on war-based international politics, Franklin D. Roosevelt also went from crafting the New Deal to the war effort once The USA entered WWII.
Answer:
Henry the Navigator, prince of Portugal.
Explanation: