Answer:
C) He closed all banks for four days in order to check their health and restore consumer confidence, and he worked with Congress to pass legislation that protected deposits and gave the Fed greater regulatory power.
Explanation:
i looked in my civics book and found it, also im doing the quiz, ill comment if it said im correct ok!
also i have my own star scoring that you can use if yah want
book: Building Citizenship Civics & Economics
page in book: 582
Ω Entity001 And Project Omega Ω
My star scoring amount meaning:
1 star = links that aren't brainly question links and blank answers
2 stars = brainly question links without an answer with them
3 stars = wrong answer
4 stars = close or explained incorrectly but still correct in answer
5 stars = correct in all ways
Answer:
I don't think so because they say that the congress was more powerful in the 19th century than the 20th century
Explanation:
Its relations with the other branches of government have changed over time. Generally Congress was more powerful in the 19th century than in the 20th century, when the presidency (particularly during wartime) became a more dominant branch.
<span>Lincoln suspended the right of habeas corpus, or the right to be brought before a judge to tell what one is being charged with, in the border states during the beginning of the civil war in order to prevent them from seceding. He considered it necessary for the preservation of the union.</span>
Answer:
D. The public was protesting against British violations of their rights.
Explanation:
What prompted American colonists to convene the Continental Congress is that "the public was protesting against British violations of their rights."
The American colonists made their first continental congress when the British Parliament issued the Coercive Acts in 1774, which was known as the Intolerable Acts among the American colonists.
The American colonists felt that these Acts was a violation of some of their basic rights. Hence, the American colonists United through the continental congress to go against these Acts