History, asked by digsbynehavens, 2 months ago

How did President Andrew Johnson’s Reconstruction plan differ from President Abraham Lincoln’s?

Group of answer choices

It opposed the establishment of the Freedmen’s Bureau in the South.

It required the Southern states to repeal legislation claiming the right to secede.

It called for the complete elimination of state governments in all former Confederate states.

It invited Southern plantation owners to join Congress after the next election.

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Answers

Answered by sarojgodara0701
1

Answer:

How was President Johnson's Reconstruction plan similar and different from President Lincoln's 10% plan? They were similar in that they both wanted to reunite the nation as quickly as possible. ... But with Johnson's plan wealthy Southerners and former confederate officials would need a presidential pardon to get amnesty.

Answered by sangeetha01sl
1

Answer:

The correct option is -

It required the Southern states to repeal legislation claiming the right to secede.

Explanation:

The main difference between Lincoln's and Johnson's reconstruction plans lay in the rights of freedom after the civil war ended. Although Lincoln wanted to guarantee rights, such as voting rights for the formerly enslaved but Johnson's plan did not meet these requirements.

President Abraham Lincoln's Reconstruction Plan

The plan called for the states to be reunited once 10 percent of that state's electorate, as measured by the 1860 legislature, had officially pledged allegiance to the states and pledged to support abolition. of slavery as described in the Emancipation Proclamation. Once the appropriate number of voters were accounted for, the 10 percent plan outlined how voters would select delegates to debate and write new state constitutions and form new state governments.

President Andrew Johnson Reconstruction Plan

President Johnson outlined plans that would provide opportunities for Confederate soldiers, sympathizers, and even senior officers to be pardoned for their crimes against the Union. Similar to Lincoln's plan, reunification could come after the reaffirmation of allegiance by 10 percent of the 1860 electorate. In addition to pardons and reunification, Johnson's plan offered those who pledged their allegiance to the Union an opportunity to reclaim property confiscated by Union troops during the war.

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