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The Democratic-Republican Congress that dominated the Legislative Branch following the 1800 presidential election repealed the Judiciary Act of 1801. Incoming President Thomas Jefferson undoubtedly pushed for the Act's repeal.
In 1809, Congress repealed the Embargo Act of 1807. This act, passed during President Thomas Jefferson's administration, had banned American ships from trading with foreign nations in an attempt to avoid conflicts between the United States and European powers. However, it severely impacted American merchants and led to widespread economic hardship, leading Congress to repeal it.
14th amendment.
The term is 'repeal'.
Yes and no. Congress and the President CAN repeal a law, but it takes a brand new law to do that. For example, Congress is considering rescinding the Defense of Marriage Act, but it is taking full-blown legislation in its own right - called the Respect for Marriage Act - to do that.
The Declaratory Act
The rioting an boycotting were harming British trade.
Repeal
The act passed by British Parliment which accompanied the repeal of the Stamp Act.
According to my history textbook, American Pageant: "In a similarly self-denying vein, Wilson persuaded Congress in early 1914 to repeal the Panama Canal Tolls Act of 1912, which had exempted American coastwise shipping from tolls and thereby provoked sharp protests from injured Britain."