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Did Jackson's unofficial cabinet became known as the "kitchen cabinet." true or false
yes.
President Andrew Jackson's unofficial cabinet became known as the Kitchen Cabinet. This was a term created and used by his opponents.
Assuming you mean the US cabinet. America does not have one. The so called 'Kitchen Cabinet' was an unofficial group of advisers not directly employed by the government.
President Andrew Jackson's unofficial cabinet became known as the Kitchen Cabinet. This was a term created and used by his opponents.
Andrew Jackson's unofficial advisers
Andrew Jackson noted for having a kitchen cabinet to advise him.
No. The name sometimes used for the President's unofficial advisers (dating from Franklin Roosevelt's administration) has been "kitchen" cabinet.
Andrew Jackson had personal advisers that could not be approved as member of his Cabinet by the Senate. So he chose personal advisers that met in the Kitchen. They became known as the Kitchen Cabinet. You must know that Andrew Jackson was a very rough frontier man and his friends were also. So when he brought his friends to Washington D. C. the established society was distressed to say the least. At his inauguration the people climbed on the furniture with their muddy boots. They left the White House in a mess. There was no way the Senate would approve "that kind of a man" as a member of the official Presidential Cabinet. He rarely met with the paid official Presidential Cabinet. .
The term "Kitchen Cabinet" refers to the name give to President Andrew Jackson's informal advisers. His critics felt he relied on these advisers more than he did his official cabinet.
Andrew Jackson's conflict with his advisors that left him with his "kitchen cabinet" of unofficial advisors
They were known as his "kitchen cabinet". They included his wife's nephew, Andrew Donelson, who served as his personal secretary, and newspaper editors, Frances Blair and Amos Kendall, and old soldier friend Wm Lewis.