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PLEASE HELP URGENT

The emergence of “New England," "New France," "New Spain," and "New
Netherland" in the Americas shows the *
a)
limits of political power in Europe.
b) spread of Native American Indian empire.
c) influence of European settlement in North and South America.
d) expansion of European power in Asia.
People living in the thirteen colonies adopted many of their principles of
4 points

2 Answers

2 votes

i tried searching up the answers, and do a quick skim of things but i couldnt find any valid explanation. if i had to choose any id say D or C. leaning a little more to C, but im not exactly sure. ill keep looking, i hope you figure it out! sorry!

User Yogesh Wadhwa
by
6.1k points
10 votes

Answer:

The roughly 75 days between

a U.S. presidential election

and the inauguration are

as important to a second-term

president as they are to a newly

elected president, but the priorities are different.

A re-elected president is not under

time pressure to fill a full slate of

top government positions, but he

likely will need to fill many of

nearly 3,000 mid-level appointed

positions as they become vacant.

Some mid-level managers choose

to pursue other jobs after gaining

a few years of government experience. Others may retire.

The biggest challenge is finding the right people to fill those

slots so that the business of government continues. Second-term

presidents need a strong administration because they often face

tougher challenges working

with Congress, whose leaders

are familiar with the president’s

ideas and negotiating style.

How is the president’s

Cabinet chosen?

Even a re-elected president will

have some decisions to make

about the 15 executive department leaders who, along with

the vice president, make up the

Cabinet. In addition, seven officials in the Obama administration, such as the administrator

of the Environmental Protection

Agency and the U.S. Trade

Representative, hold Cabinet-rank

positions. Some of these leaders

will remain in their jobs, but others may leave or move to a different position, or the president may

choose to replace them.

The Cabinet is the president’s

group of top policy advisers. The

U.S. Constitution specifies the

president “may require the opinion, in writing, of the principal

officer in each of the executive

departments, upon any subject

relating to the duties of their

respective offices.” The Cabinet

usually meets with the president

at least weekly.

The president can dismiss Cabinet

members as he pleases. They also

are expected to resign when a

new president takes office, but

some presidents invite selected

Cabinet members from the previous administration to remain.

A Cabinet member cannot be a

member of Congress, a sitting

governor or a member of the

president’s immediate family.

The president nominates Cabinet

members, but the Senate must

confirm them before they get the

job. Sitting Cabinet members do

not need to be re-confirmed.

The number of positions requiring Senate confirmation has

grown considerably over time,

Step-by-step explanation:

User Jenkas
by
6.7k points