President Johnson was impeached and nearly removed from office in 1868. Following his trial, the Senate acquitted Johnson of the impeachment charges by one vote.
The Radical Republicans viewed Andrew Johnson as a Southern sympathizer because he wanted to bring the states that seceded prior to the Civil War back into the Union immediately and unconditionally. The Republicans saw this as a potential threat to Reconstruction.
The Radical Republicans viewed Andrew Johnson as a Southern sympathizer because he wanted to bring the states that seceded prior to the Civil War back into the Union immediately and unconditionally. The Republicans saw this as a potential threat to Reconstruction.
Johnson and the Radicals came into conflict because the Radical Republicans wanted a different reconstruction plan then Johnson did.
Andrew Johnson, because he vetoed bills passed by radical Republicans during the Reconstruction Era.
Not very well; they did everything in their power to prevent him from exercising the Executive powers of President because they saw him as a Southern sympathizer. Congress voted to reduce the number of seats on the Supreme Court during Johnson's presidency to prevent him from nominating a justice; they also impeached Johnson and attempted to remove him from office for reasons as diverse as violating the 1867 Tenure of Office Act to libeling Congress.
The radical Republicans did believe that Catholicism was a threat to the democracy of the US because of the anti-democracy teachings then.
No. Andrew Johnson was a Democrat who had run for election as President Lincoln's Vice-President on the National Union ticket. The Radical Republicans wanted drastic changes in the South during Reconstruction; Johnson was more sympathetic to the South, and wanted to reunite them with the Union immediately and unconditionally.
Radical Republicans expanded their Congressional majority in the elections of 1866.
Because he wanted the same things that they wanted. and the were VERY happy that this happened. they knew it would benefit them.
they view the reconstruction with a hatred, because they were on the side of the slaves
because they both wanted the goverment to chnge
Because Johnson's plan was implemented when Congress was out of session. Power play, pure and simple. jesslyn bigelow answered this(: