<span>The Great March on Washington</span>
Answer:
What is the time relationship between a President’s assumption of office and his taking the oath? Apparently, the former comes first, this answer appearing to be the assumption of the language of the clause. The Second Congress assumed that President Washington took office on March 4, 1789,1 although he did not take the oath until the following April 30.
That the oath the President is required to take might be considered to add anything to the powers of the President, because of his obligation to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution, might appear to be rather a fanciful idea. But in President Jackson’s message announcing his veto of the act renewing the Bank of the United States there is language which suggests that the President has the right to refuse to enforce both statutes and judicial decisions based on his own independent decision that they were unwarranted by the Constitution.2 The idea next turned up in a message by President Lincoln justifying his suspension of the writ of habeas corpus without obtaining congressional authorization.3 And counsel to President Johnson during his impeachment trial adverted to the theory, but only in passing.4 Beyond these isolated instances, it does not appear to be seriously contended that the oath adds anything to the President’s powers.
Topics
Elections and Voting Rights
Explanation:
Bleeding Kansas describes the period of repeated outbreaks of violent guerrilla warfare between pro-slavery and anti-slavery forces following the creation of the new territory of Kansas in 1854. In all, some 55 people were killed between 1855 and 1859
Answer:
plessy v. ferguson was a landmark 1896 u.s. supreme court decision that upheld the constitutionality of racial segregation under the separate but equal doctrine the case stemmed from an 1892 incident in which african american train passenger homer plessy refused to sit in a car for blacks
Explanation:
Date: May 18, 1896
Ruling court: Supreme Court of the United States
Dissent: Harlan
Majority: Brown, joined by Fuller, Field, Gray, Shiras, White, Peckham
Citations: 163 U.S. 537 (more)16 S. Ct. 1138; 41 L. Ed. 256; 1896 U.S. LEXIS 3390
p.s idk if that was te answer u were looking for
Consent of government, democracy, limited government, representative government, rule of law