The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Andrew Jackson's opponents reacted in the following way when he vetoed the bill renewing the charter of the Second National Bank of the United States. The opponents felt that Jackson had disregarded the decisions of both, Congress and the Supreme Court.
There used to be many tensions in the relationship between Congress and President Andrew Jackson. Things got worse when President Jackson vetoed the bill that renewed the charter of the Second National Bank of the United States, in July 1832. He considered that it favored the rich and was not good for the common citizen. He thought that the bank was monopolistic, handled by wealthy men and foreign interests.