Asked by darren
How did the Articles of Confederation differ from the Constitution?
Hints:
Differ = not the same.
Group of answer choices
The Articles gave more power to the national government than the Constitution
The Articles had more rules about individual rights than the Constitution
The Constitution created a stronger central government than the Articles
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Correct choice: "The Constitution created a stronger central government than the Articles."
Brief explanation: Under the Articles of Confederation most power stayed with the states — Congress had no separate executive, no federal courts, couldn’t levy taxes directly or regulate interstate/foreign commerce, and amendments required unanimous consent. The Constitution established a stronger national government with an executive, a federal judiciary, the power to tax and regulate commerce, and a system of checks and balances (and later the Bill of Rights to protect individual liberties).
Brief explanation: Under the Articles of Confederation most power stayed with the states — Congress had no separate executive, no federal courts, couldn’t levy taxes directly or regulate interstate/foreign commerce, and amendments required unanimous consent. The Constitution established a stronger national government with an executive, a federal judiciary, the power to tax and regulate commerce, and a system of checks and balances (and later the Bill of Rights to protect individual liberties).
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