They both had conflicts between America and Great Britain
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although there are no options attached, we can say the following.
The ways in that fears about tyranny and abuse of power led to the revolutionary war and impact debates in the first decades of the Republic were the following.
The American colonists were tired, upset, and infuriated by the many aggressions, injustices, and heavy taxation imposed by the English monarchy on the 13 colonies.
More and more, the Patriots were willing and able to demand the independence of the colonies from the government of England. They were mad at the taxation such as the Navigation Acts, the Stamp Act, or the Tea Act, and many more. The Boston Massacre was another incident in which British troops attacked the colonists in Boston.
And to make things worst, colonists did not have any voice or representation in the British Parliament.
Colonists were tired from the tyranny of the English king and that is why they started the Revolutionary War of independence against Britain.
Your question is rather vague by just giving dates ... but I think I know what you might be looking for here. During the "antebellum" (before the Civil War) years and again in the years after the Civil War, there were strong movements by social activists that went against how society wanted to keep women and African Americans in "their place." Social reformers thought that the place assigned to women or to blacks was not at all right. They put forward better ideas of how black Americans and female citizens should have equal status with whites and with men in regard to political, social, and economic rights.
The activist movements from 1820 to 1848 and again from 1865 to 1898 didn't achieve all their goals in that time period, but they began to advance the causes of civil rights for blacks and women -- both movements which would continue into the 20th century.
Determines the winner of the presidential election