The Iriquois League was made for many reasons. The main one was to settle differences amongst the tirbes themselves.
        
             
        
        
        
Jefferson and Madison would create the Democratic-Republican political party to be a voice for the common man against the elite Federalist party. The two men fought laws and policies enacted by Washington and Adams when they believed they violated the Constitution and the rights established by the Bill of Rights.  
One example of this was Jefferson's writing of the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions in regard to the Whiskey Tax. Though written anonymously, he suggest the states (the people) were allowed to nullify, or ignore, federal laws that the people did not agree with. He suggest it was in the rights of the people to refuse to pay the whiskey tax.  
Jefferson and Madison were both outspoken about their disagreement with the passage of the Alien and Sedition Acts by John Adams. Jefferson would overturn the acts after becoming the third president of the US. Madison also stood against John Adams in regard to the "midnight-appointments" which was an expansion of the federal court system. Madison refused to issue the confirmations of the judges causing one to take Madison to court in the famous case, Marbury v. Madison. 
 
        
             
        
        
        
Trial by Jury. The right to a trial by jury, one of the most time-honored inheritances from Magna Carta in United States law, refers to the guarantee that courts will depend on a body of citizens to render judgments in most civil and criminal cases.
        
             
        
        
        
<span>They are eighteenth and nineteenth century American educators, Hannah Adams, Noah Webster, and Jedediah Morse, designed American curricula "as a tool for nation-building and citizenship development they wrote concerning the American language, geography, history, and social themes.</span>
        
                    
             
        
        
        
Answer:
b) divided the federal government among too many branches
Explanation: