Question
How did President Roosevelt respond to the Supreme Court's opposition to New Deal legislation? (U3.4) (Units 1-4 EOC Study Notes) TEKS - 16(C)(1 point) Responses He reduced the Court's funding. He reduced the Court's funding. He replaced justices with his supporters called the "Court Reduction Act." He replaced justices with his supporters called the "Court Reduction Act." All of these answers are correct. All of these answers are correct. He passed an amendment limiting judicial power. He passed an amendment limiting judicial power. He proposed adding more justices to the Court called "Court Packing."
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
President Franklin D. Roosevelt faced significant opposition from the Supreme Court regarding his New Deal legislation, which led him to respond with several controversial strategies aimed at influencing the Court's decisions. One of the most notable responses was his proposal to expand the number of justices on the Supreme Court, commonly referred to as the "court-packing plan." He suggested adding justices to the Court to create a more favorable majority for his programs.
Additionally, while there were discussions around funding and adjustments to judicial power, the most direct and well-known response was the court-packing proposal.
Thus, in the context of your question, if you are looking for the most comprehensive and correct statement among the responses you've provided, the answer that encapsulates his primary method of responding to the Supreme Court's opposition would be:
**He proposed adding more justices to the Court called "Court Packing."**
The option "All of these answers are correct" could also be considered valid if you interpret it to mean that Roosevelt had a multifaceted approach, although not all the responses were implemented or were as significant as the court-packing plan.
Additionally, while there were discussions around funding and adjustments to judicial power, the most direct and well-known response was the court-packing proposal.
Thus, in the context of your question, if you are looking for the most comprehensive and correct statement among the responses you've provided, the answer that encapsulates his primary method of responding to the Supreme Court's opposition would be:
**He proposed adding more justices to the Court called "Court Packing."**
The option "All of these answers are correct" could also be considered valid if you interpret it to mean that Roosevelt had a multifaceted approach, although not all the responses were implemented or were as significant as the court-packing plan.
There are no human answers yet. A form for humans to post answers is coming very soon!