It was a bill over the rechartering the Second Bank of the United States. Anti-Jacksonian democrats organized to opposed re-authorization because it award economic benefits to big businessmen. Opponents also viewed the bank as a threat to agriculture-based business. The bank’s owner Nicholas Biddel aligned with Nationalist Republicans led by Nicholas Clay and Daniel Webster mad the re-charting a referendum of legitimacy of the bank in the 1832 general election. Jackson vetoed the Bill when Congress re-authorized the bank. In the presidential elections, it became an issue and Jackson’s campaign won against the bank and its supporters. Eventually Biddle lost the battle and the Bank declined and the bank was liquidated in 1841.