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they wanted to leave the union because couldn't nullify the Tariff of 1816.
South Carolina Exposition and Protest
right of states to nullify federal laws
is their a international tariff issue right now
The protective tarrif went up in the north, making goods more expencive in the south and the southerners did not like this. So the south desided that they could nullify it. Buth they were wrong. The reason was that they thought that the constitution did not aply to them. Like, they could abbid by the laws which they found suitable for their state. This, of course is not what the constitution is for. But john Adams did not want this for the union and there for did not allow South Carolina to abbid by them. It did create a frenzy, but was soon died off under the president's threat.
he felt that congress had no right to purpose a tariff that only pin pointed one part of the country.
South Carolina.
South Carolina
President Jackson's commitment to states' rights was challenged during the Nullification Crisis when South Carolina chose to nullify a tariff they believed would not operate in the state's best interest. He threatened to use the military to force the state to comply.
they wanted to leave the union because couldn't nullify the Tariff of 1816.
The high tariff on imported goods that the South needed, because they had no industry.
The leader of South Carolina's reaction to nullify the tariff of 1826 by Andrew Jackson was politician John C. Calhoun from South Carolina
South Carolina
South Carolina Exposition and Protest
Nullification was the idea that the states could declare acts of congress to be unconstitutional. In particular South Carolina objected to the federal tariff while Jackson was president and decided to nullify it and so not collect it or pay it.
the right to nullify.. hope that helped :)
South Carolina disliked the fact that they would have to bear the problems of the government. The tariffs were used to raise money for the government. The tariff was an abomination amongst the people whom lived there. They believed that Jackson singled South Carolina out just to make John C. Calhoun a stronger Presidential candidate.