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Why was Henry Clay so influential in the election? simple answer please no plagirasim

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Answered by sakethnair004
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Answer:

Henry Clay was very influential in the election

Explanation:

The 1810-11 elections produced many young, anti-British members of Congress who, like Clay, supported going to war with Great Britain. Buoyed by the support of fellow war hawks, Clay was elected Speaker of the House for the 12th Congress. At 34, he was the youngest person to become speaker, a distinction he held until the election of 30-year-old Robert M. T. Hunter in 1839. He was also the first of only two new members elected speaker to date, the other being William Pennington in 1860.

Between 1810 and 1824, Clay was elected to seven terms in the House.[60] His tenure was interrupted from 1814 to 1815, when he was a commissioner to peace talks with the British in Ghent, United Netherlands to end the War of 1812, and from 1821 to 1823, when he left Congress to rebuild his family's fortune in the aftermath of the Panic of 1819. Elected speaker six times, Clay's cumulative tenure in office of 10 years, 196 days, is the second-longest after Sam Rayburn.

As speaker, Clay wielded considerable power in making committee appointments, and, like many of his predecessors, he assigned his allies to important committees. Clay was exceptional in his ability to control the legislative agenda through well-placed allies and the establishment of new committees and departed from precedent by frequently taking part in floor debates.[63] Yet he also gained a reputation for personal courteousness and fairness in his rulings and committee appointments. Clay's drive to increase the power of the office of the speaker was aided by President James Madison, who deferred to Congress in most matters. John Randolph, a member of the Democratic-Republican Party but also a member of the "tertium quids" group that opposed many federal initiatives, emerged as a prominent opponent of Speaker Clay. While Randolph frequently attempted to obstruct Clay's initiatives, Clay became a master of parliamentary manoeuvers that enabled him to advance his agenda even over the attempted obstruction of Randolph and others.

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Answered by mohdfarukh568
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Answer:

In 1829, he helped bring an end to a sectional crisis over slavery by leading the passage of the Missouri Compromise. Clay finished with the fourth most electoral votes in the multi candidate 1824 presidential election, and he helped John Quincy Adams win the contingent election help to select the President.

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