No, Webster favored the union and federalism. He represented at least four clients against states' interests before the US Supreme Court - and won every case.
Daniel Webster's Notable Supreme Court Cases:
Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 17 US 518 (1819) (represented Dartmouth)
McCulloch v. Maryland, 17 US 316 (1819) (represented McCulloch)
Cohens v. Virgina, 19 US 264 (1821) (represented Cohens)
Gibbons v. Ogden, 22 US 1 (1824) (represented Gibbons)
President Andrew Johnson
The view of "States Rights" was very strong in the Southern States. Based on their view of the US Constitution, each State had the right to legalize slavery in as much as the US Constitution did not forbid slavery. Thus whatever powers not delegated to the Federal Government, were left to the States to decide.
True
the Federalist were all for the constitution and the anti-federalist were against it because they thought it needed a bill of rights to protect individual rights!
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Daniel Webster opposed sectionalism, believing that it threatened the unity of the nation. He argued for a strong federal government to help maintain cohesion between the North and the South, emphasizing the importance of national unity and the preservation of the Union.
John C. Calhoun and Daniel Webster were senators in the 1800s who represented South Carolina and Massachusetts, respectively. Around this time was the civil war and slavery. Calhoun believed in expansionism, and was pro-slavery in the interest of southern economics, wanting power in the state to be strongest. Webster focused on northern interests, and saw value in the federal government's power growing.
Human rights, not states rights.
Daniel Webster believed that women's primary role was in the domestic sphere as wives and mothers. He did not support women working outside the home, as he believed it could undermine societal and family values.
Henry Clay believed in states rights, meaning he thought states should decide if laws were unconstitutional or not and if they thought they were unconstitutional, they didn't have to obey them.
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He thought Islam was better.
Selective incorporation
The bass player and back-singer of the sccotish band The View
his view was that presidential election should be given on how each state feel about the person just not larger states. Small states should be given the same rights as anybody else.
selective incorporation
they said it was some donkey doo doo