Produce based on farming and natural resources be it sugar, furs or fish was the main driving force pushing the French colonisation activity in North America. Therefore the best answer listed would be B. They wanted to establish sugar plantations.
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Answer:
increased
Romania
collapse of communism
Explanation:
Poverty refers to a lack of necessities of life including food, shelter, and clothing.
Communism is a system in which the authority of the distribution of property and resources is under the government.
According to the chart, the percentage of people living in poverty in Europe increased from 1987 to 1995.
The country with the greatest jump in the percentage of the population living in poverty was Romania.
According to what you have learned in the lesson, the collapse of communism was a contributing factor to the trends shown on the chart.
The correct answer is the Mexican American War
David Wilmot was a Congressman from the state of Pennsylvania who wanted to ban slavery from exisiting in the new territories that the US received after the Mexican American War. This includes modern day California, Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, Colorado, etc.
Wilmot's idea was met with fierece opposition from Southern politicians. This is due to the fact that this would result in a significant increase in power for anti-slave states in Congress. Southerners feared that if Northern politicians gained too much power in Congress, they would outlaw the institution of slavery all over the United States. This fierece opposition is one of the reasons why the Wilmot Proviso is never actually used.
A multi-party system is the most common system in the world today.
America's 2-party system is not the common model most other democratic nations follow, with three or more political parties. Some nations have dozens parties. Canada's parliamentary system has six major political parties. Mexico has seven parties active in its politics. One American political commentator has written: "The divisive and competitive politics of the Democrats and Republicans have many Americans wondering whether we’d be better off with a multi-party system" (Rachel Eckhardt in HuffPost, 10/26/2015).