History, asked by darumar4900, 8 months ago

The Enabling Act gave no powers to Hitler to side-line the Parliament​

Answers

Answered by sarthaksharma0803
2

Answer:

This Act gave Hitler the right to make laws without the Reichstag's approval for the next four years. Arguably this was the most critical event during this period. It gave Hitler absolute power to make laws, which enabled him to destroy all opposition to his rule.

Hitler workshopped his delivery, hand gestures, and body language while practicing his speeches. "He absolutely had to work at his presentation since it was half of his message," Loebs told Business Insider. "He had to add animation to his language in order to successfully communicate his ideas.

Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:

An enabling act is a piece of legislation by which a legislative body grants an entity which depends on it.

the power to take certain acts

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