Strong State Government
yes they did
There was no Republican Party per se at the time of the adoption of the Bill of Rights; the two parties at the time were the Federalists and the Democratic Republicans. Federalists believed in a strong centralized government, while Democratic Republicans believed in a weaker central government. The Bill of rights grew out of a tacit agreement between the two parties that Democratic Republicans would support the new constitution provided it was subsequently amended to expressly include provisions to protect certain individual rights; these were the first ten amendments to the constitution and became comonly known as the Bill of Rights.
They favored a strong state government and a weak national government
Federalists wanted to support England and also wanted a strong and powerful government, a national bank, and a loose interpretation of the Coast. The Democratic-Republicans wanted to support France and also wanted a small federal government, no national bank, and a strict interpretation of the Coast.
Please provide more information/context/clarification to help us answer this question. You can post your response in this answer text by clicking "Edit."
The loss of such stalwarts as Molly Ivens, Ann Richards and Lyndon B.Johnson has certainly weakened the DNC's power base in Texas,
strong state government
The Federalist Party believed in a strong national (federal) government with powers over the state governments. The Democratic-Republicans believed that states should have more power than the national government. This is known as the States' Rights theory.
Rule by the people.
I go to Connections also and I think it's "A" its not a everyone
Federalists favored a strong central government and Democratic-Republicans faved states retaining authority.
The federalists believed that regular, hardworking, and patriotic people should govern. They did not believe in people governing based on the families they were from.
There was no Republican Party per se at the time of the adoption of the Bill of Rights; the two parties at the time were the Federalists and the Democratic Republicans. Federalists believed in a strong centralized government, while Democratic Republicans believed in a weaker central government. The Bill of rights grew out of a tacit agreement between the two parties that Democratic Republicans would support the new constitution provided it was subsequently amended to expressly include provisions to protect certain individual rights; these were the first ten amendments to the constitution and became comonly known as the Bill of Rights.
because they believed in a strong central goverment. ............. im in 7th grade answering big boy questions cause i got my big boyy pants on
the Feduralist... i think i spelled that wrong.
democratic-republians believed in a strong state government.
While it was not a political party in the idea of political parties today, those who opposed the Jeffersonian Democratic-Republicans (first political party) favored a strong federal (national) government and weak state governments. They took the name "Federalists" as that was the name given to the people who had supported ratification of the U.S. Constitution.
Democratic-Republican.