Question
How did the role of Congress change as the Articles of Confederation failed and the Constitution was introduced?(1 point)
Responses
Congress became the sole authority of the government and retained control over all of the states in all areas, including taxation and trade.
Congress became the sole authority of the government and retained control over all of the states in all areas, including taxation and trade.
Congress was given less power and served as the lowest of the branches that were introduced.
Congress was given less power and served as the lowest of the branches that were introduced.
Congress retained the same authority but had two additional branches of government introduced.
Congress retained the same authority but had two additional branches of government introduced.
Congress was given the power to levy taxes, coin money, and regulate trade as one of three branches of government.
Responses
Congress became the sole authority of the government and retained control over all of the states in all areas, including taxation and trade.
Congress became the sole authority of the government and retained control over all of the states in all areas, including taxation and trade.
Congress was given less power and served as the lowest of the branches that were introduced.
Congress was given less power and served as the lowest of the branches that were introduced.
Congress retained the same authority but had two additional branches of government introduced.
Congress retained the same authority but had two additional branches of government introduced.
Congress was given the power to levy taxes, coin money, and regulate trade as one of three branches of government.
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The correct response is:
**Congress was given the power to levy taxes, coin money, and regulate trade as one of three branches of government.**
This reflects how the Constitution created a stronger federal government compared to the Articles of Confederation, which had limited Congressional powers and did not allow for effective taxation or regulation of trade. The new structure established Congress as one of three branches of government alongside the Executive and Judicial branches, enhancing its authority and responsibilities.
**Congress was given the power to levy taxes, coin money, and regulate trade as one of three branches of government.**
This reflects how the Constitution created a stronger federal government compared to the Articles of Confederation, which had limited Congressional powers and did not allow for effective taxation or regulation of trade. The new structure established Congress as one of three branches of government alongside the Executive and Judicial branches, enhancing its authority and responsibilities.