Also known as Bushi or Buke, was a <span> military nobility and officer caste of medieval and early-modern Japan. The various samurais were involved in a struggle for power during different shogunate.</span>
Answer:
They did drastically.
Explanation:
The Declaration of Independence wasn't really framework for a solid government. In fact, immediately after the declaration was penned, it was generally assumed that the colonies would function as sovereign states all tied to one another- similarly to the pre-Soviet Russian Empire. By the time the Constitution was being written, our plans had changed completely. We had made the choice to be one completely solid country, and so the goals changed from freeing individual colonies from British rule so they may self-govern to creating a solid government that was rigid, yet flexible enough to handle the constantly shifting and evolving political and social status of the young nation.
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The Tenure of Office Act restricted the president from suspending an officer while the Senate is not in session. In August 1867, President Johnson removed Secretary of War Stanton from office. When the Senate reconvened, it failed to ratify his removal. Johnson attempted to appoint a new Secretary of War. He hoped to create a case to challenge the act through the involvement of the Supreme Court.