veto power
Divided government, the condition where the majority party in at least one house is different than the president's party, leads to increased challenges to presidential appointments. Opposing party members tend to resist approval of an appointment from far across party lines
the act or power of resisting, opposing, or withstanding.
No, not generally. The President has no legal connection to Congress. A president whose party gets a big majority in Congress has a lot of say over Congress, but it is mo tly because of respect or of party demands. Every President has some power over Congress because of the veto and because of appointments, but when the Congress is from the opposing party, his power over them is rather limited.
The three opposing forces in the Russian government were the conservatives, the social democrats, and Lenin's followers.
you can't because they have opposing views
The obvious problem was the one that provoked a Constitutional change. Two people with strongly opposing views ran for president. One of them won by a narrow margin and the other became Vice-president. The vice-president thus became a constant voice of opposition in the capital. And- suppose the president had died- suddenly the government would change- the new president would want to replace all the high-ranking Cabinet members- all of the president's initiatives would likely be scrapped and the government would be in turmoil. Indeed , there would be an incentive for an opposing party to remove the president if they lost the election.
Jefferson Davis
Rather than encountering an opposing battle line, or a single large city that is resisting, resistance is found prodcued by relatively small groups, dispersed in different locales.
The goal of the opposing party is make the president look bad and defeat him in the next election. The vice-president presides over the US Senate and can cast the deciding vote in the case of a tie. It would undermine the administration to have a vice-president working against it.
Legislative Branch
the principle of opposing government interference in economic affairs
No the opposing forces were the Jacobites and the Government.