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In US history, doctrine asserting the right of states to ignore any federal law that they deem unconstitutional. The theory was set out by US vice president John C Calhoun, based on the idea that the Union is a voluntary coalition, with sovereign states and a federal government whose powers are restricted specifically to the US Constitution. The Confederate states used this doctrine to defend their right of secession.

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13y ago
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14y ago
  1. Principle of Nullification
    • nullification - Challenging the Supremacy Clause Sometimes States challenge the federal governments power by nullifying federal law. A prime example of this is the local legalization of marijuana in California or the Fugitive Slave Act written in response to a conflict between Pennsylvania and Virginia ca.1793
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11y ago

The doctrine of nullification allowed the states to deem a congressional act or law "unconstitutional", thus null and void within that state.

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13y ago

A South Carolina state law that canceled a federal tariff law

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13y ago

Sup bro, its actually "The Advancement in the Secretary of States' Board"

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Q: What did the doctrine of nullification state?
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