What these people have in common is that they were all concerned with religious liberty. George Calvert was an Englishman who arrived to what is now modern day Canada (Newfoundland) and the United States (Maryland) in hopes of establishing a colony where Catholicism would prosper as it could not in his native land. Roger Williams was a Protestant theologian who was a proponent of religious liberty and of the separation of church and state. William Penn was also a proponent of religious freedom. Anne Hutchinson viewed Puritanism (a branch of Protestantism) in a more open view than her conservative counterparts.
I would think
<span>C. By the amount of people who moved to the south during reconstruction
</span>
John rovers
Through simple majority, the president nominates and then the senate votes? I think but Ik it’s through simple majority
They can choose how long they want to stay, like they can stay till death or they retire etc
Hope it helps
Taft reshaped U.S. diplomacy through dollar diplomacy, and Woodrow Wilson used moral diplomacy
Emmanuel-Joseph Sieyès, (born May 3, 1748, Fréjus, France—died June 20, 1836, Paris), churchman and constitutional theorist whose concept of popular sovereignty guided the National Assembly in its struggle against the monarchy and nobility during the opening months of the French Revolution.