Indian Removal Act.
No. President Andrew Jackson, who was in office from 1829-1837, was never impeached He was censored by the Senate, which does not have the power to impeach. Later, they voted to remove the censorship from the Senate record.
President Andrew Jackson was the official who approved of the Indian Removal Act of 1830. There were five major tribes: the Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek, and Seminole. The Cherokee challenged the Indian Removal Act in the courts of the United States. It made its way up to the Supreme Court where it went under the supervision of John Marshall. He ruled the favor to the Cherokee. Note the Supreme Court could make the ruling but cannot enforce it, only the executive branch (the president) has the power to do so. The president at that time, Andrew Jackson ignored the decision of the Supreme Court and stilled removed the Indians from their land.
Andrew Jackson was the first president to excersize his power for a pocket veto.
Andrew Jackson expanded the powers of the presidency, which led to his opponents referring to him as King Andrew. Jackson was president from 1829 to 1837.
the people.
Andrew Jackson should be praised because when he was the president, it was like him being king he had too have power or else he would start killing
Andrew Jackson did not support the concept of a strong centralized federal government. He favored a limited government with more power given to the states. Jackson also opposed the idea of a national bank, believing it benefited the wealthy at the expense of the common people.
chaks and balences
No
The growing power and voice of the frontier
Opponents of Andrew Jackson referred to him as "King Andrew" because they believed he acted like a monarch by wielding excessive power and disregarding the principles of limited government. Critics argued that Jackson's expansion of presidential authority and use of executive power undermined the doctrine of separation of powers and threatened democratic governance. They considered his actions autocratic and contrary to the intent of the Constitution.
Thomas Jefferson wanted to limit the power of the federal government while Andrew Jackson wanted to expand it. Andrew Jackson wanted to exclude the native Americans from American society, but Jefferson wanted to include them.