No, John Marshall did not like Andrew Jackson. Marshall was a staunch Federalist and believed in a strong central government, while Jackson was a Democratic-Republican who favored state power and opposed the Supreme Court's authority. Additionally, Jackson famously disregarded Marshall's rulings in cases such as Worcester v. Georgia, leading to strained relations between the two.
In the court case Worcester v. Georgia, Marshall ruled that Jackson's Indian Removal Act was unconstitutional and that he should abolish it immediately. Jackson said, "John Marshall has made his decision; now let him enforce it!" and completely ignored Marshall's orders. This caused hatred between the two men.
The Cherokee went to the supreme court and won but Andrew Jackson didn't listen to the ruling because john Marshall couldn't enforce the ruling.
President John Adams nominated his Secretary of State, John Marshall, to be Chief Justice of the United States in 1801, following Adams' defeat to rival Thomas Jefferson. Marshall was a Federalist like Adams and a distant cousin of Thomas Jefferson, with whom he had a strained relationship.Chief Justice Marshall served on the Court from 1801 until his death in 1835. He had the longest tenure of any Chief Justice, and is considered the most influential leader in Supreme Court history.
Andrew Jackson was never a Supreme Court justice; he was the seventh President of the United States, from March 4, 1829 until March 4, 1837.
No. He was a distinguished Chief Justice of the US Supreme Court. He would be very unlikely to assassinate anyone, let alone a legally elected President.
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No, Andrew Jackson was not a member of the Supreme Court. He served as the 7th President of the United States from 1829 to 1837. The Supreme Court is a separate branch of government responsible for interpreting laws, and its members are appointed by the President, but Jackson did not hold a seat on the Court.
It was andrew JACKSON, and he ignored the ruling of Supreme Court leader John Marshall when he decided that the Cherokee Indians couldn't be forcibly removed from their land in Central Georgia. He sent the army to forcibly relocate them to Oklahoma, the journey known as the Trail of Tears.
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