Question
How did McCulloch v. Maryland establish the implied powers doctrine?(1 point)
Responses
It allowed Congress to establish a post office even though it was not expressed in the Constitution.
It allowed Congress to establish a post office even though it was not expressed in the Constitution.
It allowed Congress to declare war even though it was not expressed in the Constitution.
It allowed Congress to declare war even though it was not expressed in the Constitution.
It allowed Congress to collect taxes even though it was not expressed in the Constitution.
It allowed Congress to collect taxes even though it was not expressed in the Constitution.
It allowed Congress to create a national bank even though it was not expressed in the Constitution.
Responses
It allowed Congress to establish a post office even though it was not expressed in the Constitution.
It allowed Congress to establish a post office even though it was not expressed in the Constitution.
It allowed Congress to declare war even though it was not expressed in the Constitution.
It allowed Congress to declare war even though it was not expressed in the Constitution.
It allowed Congress to collect taxes even though it was not expressed in the Constitution.
It allowed Congress to collect taxes even though it was not expressed in the Constitution.
It allowed Congress to create a national bank even though it was not expressed in the Constitution.
Answers
GPT-4o mini
The correct response is:
It allowed Congress to create a national bank even though it was not expressed in the Constitution.
McCulloch v. Maryland (1819) established that Congress had implied powers to create a national bank, which was not explicitly stated in the Constitution, thus reinforcing the concept of implied powers.
It allowed Congress to create a national bank even though it was not expressed in the Constitution.
McCulloch v. Maryland (1819) established that Congress had implied powers to create a national bank, which was not explicitly stated in the Constitution, thus reinforcing the concept of implied powers.