You are referring to the famous cartoon titled "King Andrew the First" (1833), which shows President Jackson as a tyrannical and abusive monarch who rules without consulting anybody and exceeds his power. He is humorously depicted holding a scepter and a "veto" in each one of his hands, and his feet are symbolically stepping on the United States Constitution and the coat of arms of Pennsylvania.
This caricature relates to an event known as the "Bank War," a campaign led by President Jackson to block the renewal of the Second National Bank (which was located in Philadelphia) without the consent or the approval from Congress. Jackson, who was suspicious of the bank's operations and management, first vetoed a bill to recharter the Bank in 1832, and one year later he ordered the removal of federal funds from the said institution - which were given to various state banks - and the prohibition to make deposits in it.