Question
Why was it so difficult for the government under the Articles of Confederation to get laws passed?(1 point)
Responses
They could never get the delegates of all 13 colonies to come together to discuss and pass laws.
They could never get the delegates of all 13 colonies to come together to discuss and pass laws.
There was no executive branch, so there was no one to enforce the laws on the citizens.
There was no executive branch, so there was no one to enforce the laws on the citizens.
It was not easy to get all 13 states to agree on things because the leaders always put their state before country.
It was not easy to get all 13 states to agree on things because the leaders always put their state before country.
It was difficult to get 9 of the 13 states to agree on things because the leaders put their state before country.
Responses
They could never get the delegates of all 13 colonies to come together to discuss and pass laws.
They could never get the delegates of all 13 colonies to come together to discuss and pass laws.
There was no executive branch, so there was no one to enforce the laws on the citizens.
There was no executive branch, so there was no one to enforce the laws on the citizens.
It was not easy to get all 13 states to agree on things because the leaders always put their state before country.
It was not easy to get all 13 states to agree on things because the leaders always put their state before country.
It was difficult to get 9 of the 13 states to agree on things because the leaders put their state before country.
Answers
GPT-4o mini
The most accurate response is:
**It was difficult to get 9 of the 13 states to agree on things because the leaders put their state before country.**
Under the Articles of Confederation, laws required the approval of nine out of thirteen states, which was often difficult to achieve because state leaders prioritized their own state's interests over national concerns. This created significant challenges in passing legislation.
**It was difficult to get 9 of the 13 states to agree on things because the leaders put their state before country.**
Under the Articles of Confederation, laws required the approval of nine out of thirteen states, which was often difficult to achieve because state leaders prioritized their own state's interests over national concerns. This created significant challenges in passing legislation.