Stephen A. Douglas proposed the Kansas-Nebraska Act in 1854 to gain support from southern Democrats. The act allowed the territories of Kansas and Nebraska to decide for themselves whether to allow slavery through popular sovereignty. This appeal to southern interests aimed to foster unity within the Democratic Party by addressing their desire for the expansion of slavery into new territories, thereby gaining their support in the political landscape of the time.
The West attempted to gain the support of the Chinese government for their policies. They needed to improve relations so another rebellion didn't happen.gain the support of the Chinese government for their policies APEX:)
White southerners wanted the native americans 'Valuable land
Propaganda
He gained the support of the workers.
He got support of the peasants, strengthening communist power.
Douglas Gain was born in 1976.
Southerners who supported the government for their own gain.
will work hard to gain sucess
The term "Carpet Bagger" was derived from the Northerners who came into the South after the Civil War during the Reconstruction era, believed to have come to the South for private profits. While "scalawag" was a negative term used against White Southerners by other White Southerners, stating they are in support of Reconstruction for private gain.
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Stephen Douglas proposed abandoning the Missouri Compromise in order to facilitate the creation of the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which aimed to allow settlers in those territories to decide the issue of slavery through popular sovereignty. He believed that this approach would promote westward expansion and economic development. Douglas also sought to gain Southern support for his plans and to unify the Democratic Party, which was becoming increasingly divided over the issue of slavery. Ultimately, his proposal was controversial and led to significant conflict, including violent confrontations known as "Bleeding Kansas."
The group of Southerners who were often hated more than carpetbaggers were the "scalawags." Scalawags were white Southerners who supported Reconstruction and aligned themselves with the Republican Party, often seen as traitors to their region. Their collaboration with Northern politicians and support for policies that promoted civil rights for freedmen made them deeply unpopular among many Southern whites, who viewed them as opportunists seeking personal gain.
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