History, asked by lilyf, 1 year ago

The “spoils” of the spoils system, which was established in the late 1820s, were

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Answered by Shaizakincsem
1
The spoils system, likewise called Patronage System, is a training in which the political party winning an election remunerates its battle specialists and other dynamic supporters by arrangement to government posts and by different favors. The spoils system includes political action by public representatives with the help of their party and the workers' expulsion from office if their party loses the election.

An adjustment in party control of government fundamentally conveys new authorities with high positions conveying political obligation, however, the corruption stretches out workforce turnover down to normal or subordinate governmental positions.
Answered by writersparadise
8
The correct answer is - The government jobs were taken from a current president’s opponents and given to the supporters.

In the US politics, the "spoils system" is a kind of a patronage system, in which the political parties practiced a ritual of transferring the government civil jobs to the supporters, friends, and family of the winning party as a token of merit for supporting the candidates through the win.

The US Federal government worked on the basis of this spoils system until 1883, when the Pendleton Act was passed as a part of the civil service reform movement.
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