1. Primary Campaign
2. Primary elections and Caucuses
3. National Nominating Convention
4. General Election Campaign
5. The General Election and Electoral College
6. Inauguration
Answer:
The author starts the story with a more serious and somber tone, but ends the story with a lively and exciting tone.
Explanation:
"Po-No-Kah" begins with the history of the first English colonists in North America. This beginning has a dark, serious and sad tone, because, as we know, the Pioneers had many difficulties in establishing themselves in America, in addition to being an environment that did not promote enough resources for their survival, they had to be constantly alert, afraid that the natives would attack them.
The story ends, however, with the release of the Hadeeman family from their captors, this is a happy moment, where the whole family, with the exception of the pet dog, left unscathed. This part of the story has a happy and lively tone.
Answer:
Private property
Explanation:
Realising the extinction of the entire community, the elders of the colony decided to try something radically different: the introduction of private property and the right of the individual families to keep the fruits of their own labor.
The Plymouth Colony experienced a great bounty of food. Private ownership meant that there was now a close link between work and reward. Industry became the order of the day as the men and women in each family went to the fields on their separate private farms. When the harvest time came, not only did many families produce enough for their own needs, but they had surpluses that they could freely exchange with their neighbors for mutual benefit and improvement.
The answer is A) His approach faced objection from all sides and could not garner enough support for passage. Bush's proposals were rejected by several factors: First)<em> The lack of support and resistance that he faced from not only the Democratic Party</em> but also from within his party because they perceived the projects as measures that were going to reward illegal immigrants. Second) While the reforms offered a different set of opportunities, representatives of the immigrant community saw <em>the focus of the measures as very narrow</em> because it put a lot of importance on family ties. Third) Some labor unions saw the assortment of plans and options of the reforms that will result in a wave of <em>cheap migrant labor</em>, one that they claimed took labor jobs from US citizens.