Section 1. No person shall be elected to the office of the President more than twice, and no person who has held the office of President, or acted as President, for more than two years of a term to which some other person was elected President shall be elected to the office of the President more than once.
Q. What does the Constitution say about Electoral College votes?
Each State shall appoint, in such Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct, a Number of Electors, equal to the whole Number of Senators and Representatives to which the State may be entitled in the Congress: but no Senator or Representative, or Person holding an Office of Trust or Profit under the United States.
Table of Contents
- Q. What does the Constitution say about Electoral College votes?
- Q. Is the Electoral College mandated by the Constitution?
- Q. What was the disputed election of 1824?
- Q. What decision led Andrew Jackson’s supporters to say there was a corrupt bargain in the election of 1824?
- Q. Why did Andrew Jackson call the election of 1824 the corrupt bargain?
- Q. Who benefited from accusations of a corrupt bargain?
- Q. How did Andrew Jackson benefit the common man?
- Q. Who stood to gain from the tariff of abominations and who expected to lose by it?
- Q. Why did jacksonians consider the political deal between Adams and Clay corrupt?
- Q. Why did jacksonians consider the political deal?
- Q. Which candidate agreed to help Adams became president?
- Q. Why did three times as many people vote in the presidential election of 1828 as voted in 1824?
- Q. Why did many whites call the creek?
- Q. Which group was most hurt by Jackson’s removal?
- Q. Which group was hurt the most by Jackson’s removal policy?
- Q. How did the Supreme Court interpret the Indian Removal Act group of answer choices?
- Q. What was the practice of rewarding political supporters with government jobs?
- Q. What was the name given to Jackson handing out jobs to his supports?
- Q. What term refers to government jobs that were given to the political supporters of the winning party regardless of ability or awarding political favoritism rather than on abilities?
- Q. What practice became known as the spoils system?
Q. Is the Electoral College mandated by the Constitution?
Established in Article II, Section 1 of the U.S. Constitution, the Electoral College is the formal body which elects the President and Vice President of the United States.
Q. What was the disputed election of 1824?
John Quincy Adams defeated Andrew Jackson in 1824 by garnering more electoral votes through the House of Representatives, even though Jackson originally received more popular and electoral votes.
Q. What decision led Andrew Jackson’s supporters to say there was a corrupt bargain in the election of 1824?
In the 1824 election, without an absolute majority in the Electoral College, the 12th Amendment dictated that the Presidential election be sent to the House of Representatives, whose Speaker and candidate in his own right, Henry Clay, gave his support to John Quincy Adams and was then selected to be his Secretary of …
Q. Why did Andrew Jackson call the election of 1824 the corrupt bargain?
A “corrupt bargain” Jackson laid the blame on Clay, telling anyone who would listen that the Speaker had approached him with the offer of a deal: Clay would support Jackson in return for Jackson’s appointment of Clay as secretary of state. In Jackson’s words, Clay had sold his influence in a “corrupt bargain.”
Q. Who benefited from accusations of a corrupt bargain?
Andrew Jackson
Q. How did Andrew Jackson benefit the common man?
Led by President Andrew Jackson, the movement championed greater rights for the common man and was opposed to any signs of aristocracy in the nation, Jacksonian democracy was aided by the strong spirit of equality among the people of the newer settlements in the South and the West.
Q. Who stood to gain from the tariff of abominations and who expected to lose by it?
Who stood to gain from the Tariff of Abominations, and who expected to lose by it? Northern manufacturers were expected to gain from the tariff because it made competing goods from abroad more expensive than those they made.
Q. Why did jacksonians consider the political deal between Adams and Clay corrupt?
Why did Jacksonians consider the political deal between Adams and Clay “corrupt”? They considered it corrupt because as soon as Adams was put into presidency, he automatically promoted Clay to secretary of state which was traditionally known as the stepping stone to presidency.
Q. Why did jacksonians consider the political deal?
Why did Jacksonians consider the political deal between Adams and Clay “corrupt”? Jacksonians considered the political deal corrupt because as soon as Adams was elected President he promoted Clay to the secretary of state, which was commonly known to be the stepping stone to presidency.
Q. Which candidate agreed to help Adams became president?
Representative Henry Clay, who was disqualified from the House vote as a fourth-place candidate, agreed to use his influence to have John Quincy Adams elected.
Q. Why did three times as many people vote in the presidential election of 1828 as voted in 1824?
Why did three times as many people vote i the presidential election of 1828 as voted in 1824? By 1828, women had gained the right to vote in some states, while no women could vote in 1824. By 1828, voting laws had been changed in most states to give all white men the right to vote.
Q. Why did many whites call the creek?
Why did many whites call the Creek, Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Seminole “The Five Civilized Tribes”? Because they had adapted to many white ways. Yet they still didn’t always share the same goals as the whites. Who was most upset by Jackson’s crusade to destroy the bank of the United States?
Q. Which group was most hurt by Jackson’s removal?
These groups had agreed to leave their homelands peacefully. Q. Which group was the most hurt by Jackson’s removal policy? a crusader for states’ rights.
Q. Which group was hurt the most by Jackson’s removal policy?
Which group was most hurt by Jackson’s removal policy? Jackson’s angry negotiations with the Five Civilized Tribes. the movement of Seminole Indians from the West to Florida. government workers who lost their jobs due to Jackson’s spoils system.
Q. How did the Supreme Court interpret the Indian Removal Act group of answer choices?
How did the Supreme Court interpret the Indian Removal Act? Tribes could choose to remain on their lands. Tribes had no right to any land in the new territories. Tribes had to abide by the decisions of the United States.
Q. What was the practice of rewarding political supporters with government jobs?
Spoils system, also called patronage system, practice in which the political party winning an election rewards its campaign workers and other active supporters by appointment to government posts and with other favours.
Q. What was the name given to Jackson handing out jobs to his supports?
POLITICAL- This system, of handing out jobs to supporters, was first used by Martin Van Buren when he was in office in New York. In 1829, Andrew Jackson began this practice on the national level, and it became a central, and corrupting, feature of American political life.
Q. What term refers to government jobs that were given to the political supporters of the winning party regardless of ability or awarding political favoritism rather than on abilities?
The merit system is the process of promoting and hiring government employees based on their ability to perform a job, rather than on their political connections.
Q. What practice became known as the spoils system?
“The Spoils System” was the name given to the practice of hiring and firing federal workers when presidential administrations changed in the 19th century. It is also known as the patronage system. The practice began during the administration of President Andrew Jackson, who took office in March 1829.