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Why were Alexander Hamilton's plans to tax the American people opposed by many southerners?





They believed the government should pay off their debts, not fund them.




They did not want to bail the northerners out.




They owed greater debts than northerners.




They did not believe the federal government had the right to tax them.

2 Answers

7 votes

The answer is "(B.) They did not want to bail the northerners out".

User FairyOnIce
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Answer:

Alexander Hamilton's plans to tax the American people opposed by many southerners because B: They did not want to bail the northerners out.

Step-by-step explanation:

Alexander Hamilton was an author of The Federalist and founder of the Federalist Party.

Economic condition of the country was worse after the American Revolution. So, George Washington chose Hamilton as the treasury secretary and take the challenge to improve the economic policy of the country. Government had to pay a lot of debt. He proposed Federal government to pay all the state taxes. But his ideas were quite controversial and not liked by the Southern states.

They had already paid the wartime taxes in their own. Now they thought other states should also do the same. Hamilton thought of charging cotton and southern tobacco which was also opposed as this would help the North.

User Mario Hendricks
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