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He didn’t care about the tribes. His philosophy was the only good Indian was a dead one.
Party Solidarity:Once a decision is made by the PM and Cabinet every member of the party is expected to publically support that decision and vote accordinglyPunishment for breaking Party solidarity can be removal from comitties, lack of support for rival, removal from Party etc...If the MP wants power or a Cabinet position, they follow Party SolidarityCivics...Unit Test Review...
Hard to pin down really. The largest forced removal was of the Southeastern tribes (Cherokee, Creek, et al) in the 1830's "Trail of Tears." Despite a Supreme Court decision that allowed them to stay where they were, Present Andrew Jackson ignored the decision and ordered the Army to move them west into Oklahoma Territory. After that, most Indian removal was really a matter of Indian being told they could stay on certain portions of their land and then having the US Government go back on the promises when they wanted the land for whites. This trended to push the Indians into smaller and smaller pockets of territory (reservations). Many tribes rebelled against this treatment from the mid 1800's to the end of the century. The last Battle of these Indian Wars was at Wounded Knee in 1890. This was not really a battle, since the US troops simply attacked an Indian camp with warning one morning and killed everyone in sight including women and children.
To put it bluntly Jackson felt that the only good Indian was a dead one. He built his reputation on killing native Americans and there were many who agreed with him. The US policy towards the Native Americans was one of discrimination and it was apartheid at it's very worse. The Indian Removable Act moved native people off of ancestral lands so settlers could take the land or the railroad go through. Moving people to reservations meant that they were unable hunt, and unable to live within reasonable means. It was death and Jackson was intolerant in his attitude to Native Americans.
the removal treaties
He used Manfest Destiny as an excuse and this act spelled the end of Native American rights. They were forced to assimilate and concede to US law or leave their homelands.
Jackson refused to obey the court's ruling
Jackson refused to obey the court's ruling
He passed it.
The Indian Removal Act was passed by Congress in 1830.
When Jackson found out there was gold, he immediatly called for the Indian removal act
Andrew Jackson
The Native Americans were hurt by Jackson's removal policy. They were forced to move to what is now Oklahoma.
In the case of Worcester v. Georgia (1832), the Supreme Court ruled that Georgia's laws did not apply to the Cherokee Nation and that the removal of Native Americans from their lands was unconstitutional. President Andrew Jackson disagreed with the ruling and famously said, "John Marshall has made his decision; now let him enforce it." Jackson refused to enforce the court's decision, leading to the forced removal of Native Americans along the Trail of Tears.
I am certain that it is Andrew Jackson who was the president during the Removal Act of the Native Americans.
Which group was most hurt by Jackson removal policy indians being removed from their homelands
President Andrew Jackson (1829-1837) pushed for and signed into law the removal act, he administrated the removal for all but the last year or two of the removal; Martin Van Buren (1837- 1841) finished the work.