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How Did Andrew Jackson Disobeyed The Supreme Court

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When Andrew Jackson was elected as the nation's seventh president in 1829 the crowd shouted words of joy and expressed happiness. A president to represent the common people was finally here, or so they thought. Things were going to be done differently with Jackson as president, and they were, however not in a way people ever would have wanted. By the end of his tyrannical term as president people were once again shouting, but this time for the opposite reason. They were glad to see a president who caused the death of thousands of innocent Native Americans, a horrid economic depression like the nation had never seen before, and disobeyed the Supreme Court’s ruling multiple times. Jackson was the worst president to ever walk this Earth.

His unforgivable …show more content…
The first account was when Jackson disregarded the Supreme Court’s ruling over Native American removal policies. When the Cherokee filed a court case over the matter of unfair laws in Georgia rather than resorting to violence, it was eventually escalated to the Supreme Court. They sided with the Cherokee and found the laws unconstitutional. Instead of enforcing the decision, Jackson supported Georgia and helped them move Cherokee off their land. It is very controversial because Jackson was a man of the common american people, which Cherokee were not, he still should have enforced the Supreme Court’s ruling and upheld the constitution. The second account occurred over the matter of the Second National Bank. The Supreme Court found the bank constitutional. Jackson once again did not uphold the Supreme Court’s ruling and continued his political war on the bank. Because of this, Jackson caused a horrible economic depression. On both of these accounts Jackson went against the presidential oath he took when he was sworn in to office and should have been impeached for not withholding the

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