Make your question more clear. What tariffs and when? If you did not answer your own question, someone would get a right one to you.
their states rights.
they wanted to get rid of tariffs on the Northern goods.
The tariffs protected Northern industries which made the Southerners that wanted to sell their cotton to England unhappy.
Northerners favored the protective tariffs of the 1820s because these tariffs benefited their emerging manufacturing industries by making imported goods more expensive, encouraging consumers to buy domestically produced items. In contrast, southerners detested these tariffs as they relied heavily on imported goods and were concerned that higher prices would hurt their economy. Additionally, they felt that the tariffs favored northern interests at the expense of southern agricultural economies, leading to tensions between the regions.
true
the tariffs did not benfit trade in southern cities.
They thought it was unfair
Southerners bought many products from northeastern manufacturers
their states rights.
They depended on goods from Europe.
The Southerners believed that the teriffs violated their states rights. PS. DeDe_swagg01 on instagram follow me.
the tariff helped only the north while reducing European interest in the exports that the south and west relied on.
Because it favored the North
The possibility of higher tariffs upset southerners because they relied heavily on the export of agricultural products, particularly cotton, which would become more expensive for foreign buyers if tariffs were imposed. Higher tariffs could lead to retaliatory measures from other countries, harming southern economies. Additionally, southerners viewed tariffs as favoring northern industrial interests at their expense, exacerbating regional tensions and contributing to the sense of economic inequality between the North and South.
they wanted to get rid of tariffs on the Northern goods.
The Northeast and West wanted the government to spend money on transportation to help transport goods. Southerners opposed this because the money to pay for the improvements would come from tariffs, and southerners did not want an increase in tariffs.
Southerners disliked tariffs primarily because they relied on imported goods, such as manufactured products, which became more expensive due to these taxes. They felt that tariffs disproportionately benefited the industrial North at their expense, as Southern economies were largely agrarian and dependent on exports. Additionally, many Southerners viewed tariffs as a means of federal overreach that threatened their economic autonomy and interests. This resentment contributed to the growing sectional tensions leading up to the Civil War.