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Nullification - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nullification may refer to: • Nullification (U.S. Constitution), a legal theory that a U.S. State has the right to nullify, or invalidate, any federal law which that state has deemed unconstitutional...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nullification |
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Nullification Crisis - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The origins of nullification are found in the Federalist-Republican debate of the late 1700s. James Madison and Thomas Jefferson in the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions (1798) declared that the states had the right to nullify laws by which the federal government overstepped its limits of jurisprudence.
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Nullification Proclamation: Primary Documents of American History (Virtual Services and Programs, Digital Reference Section, Library of Congress) ... Contains a broadside providing the names of the State Rights and Nullification ticket for the South Carolina state convention in 1832.
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Jury nullification - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The role of Nullification Crisis in the history of the United States of America. ... Jackson immediately offered his thought that nullification was tantamount to treason and quickly dispatched ships to Charleston harbor and began strengthening federal fortifications there.
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Nullification, the constitutional theory that states can block enforcement of federal laws they find objectionable, was crackpot from the start and hasn't been seriously entertained anywhere in the county since the Civil War (with the exception of feigned attempts in... ... Nullification, to give you a thumbnail idea,
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