Many members of Congress opposed President Johnson’s plan for Reconstruction because.
A. they believed the South had not suffered enough consequences for the war. B.they did not want newly freed African Americans to be granted voting rights. C.they thought former Confederate officials should return to leadership roles. D.they thought it should be more lenient on Southerners, like Lincoln’s plan.
Answers
Answered by
2
a) They believed the South had not suffered enough consequences for the war.
Explanation:
- The chaos following the civil war was when the Southern Confederacy was revived and the four million newly freed slaves reintegrated into the US.
- The representatives dismissed the idea as it was too conservative. The restore policy did not appear to be sufficiently serious since the South had been convicted and had to be punished as a result of its opinion.
- The Southern States never denied their right of self-governance and, from Johnson's point of view, the federal government had no authority to determine terms of vote or other issues.
- The whole country, seized by the Union Army and dispersed by the army or the Freedmen Bureau to freed slaves, was to return to its pre-war owners under the Johnson presidential restoration process. In addition to endorsing freedom from slavery, pledging loyalty to the EU and reimbursing war debt, southern states were able to restore themselves.
- Due to Johnson's indulgence, many southern states essentially passed a series of black codes in 1865 and 1866, meant to regulate free blacks' practises and secure their supply of labor. These patriarchal codes were wroth with many in the north, like several congressmen, who refused to sit Congressmen and elected Senators from southern countries.
To know more
What are the results of the American civil war? - Brainly.in
brainly.in/question/6672137
Similar questions