Examples of Wade-Davis Bill in the following topics:
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- They passed the more demanding Wade-Davis bill in 1864 instead.
- Lincoln pocket-vetoed this bill.
- In 1866, Johnson vetoed two important bills.
- The first bolstered the protection that the Freedmen's Bureau gave to blacks, and the second was a civil rights bill that gave blacks full citizenship.
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- In the summer of 1864, the Radical Republicans passed a new bill to counter the plan, known as the "Wade-Davis Bill."
- As opposed to Lincoln's plan, this new bill would make readmission into the Union more difficult.
- The bill stated that for a state to be readmitted, the majority of the state would have to take a loyalty oath, not just ten percent.
- Lincoln later pocket vetoed this new bill.
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- Lincoln vetoed the Radical Republicans' alternate plan, the Wade-Davis Bill of 1864, which was much more strict than the Ten Percent Plan, calling for the majority of a state's population to take a loyalty oath.
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- The Ninth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which is part of the Bill of Rights, addresses rights of the people that are not specifically enumerated in the Constitution.
- Wade ruled in favor of a "Ninth Amendment right to choose to have an abortion," although it stressed that the right was "not unqualified or unfettered. "
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- Wade.
- Wade.
- On February 27, 2006, Mississippi's House Public Health Committee voted to approve a ban on abortion, and that bill died after the House and Senate failed to agree on compromise legislation.
- Wade were overturned.
- Wade.
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- In February 1861, the six states that had seceded at that point formed the Confederate States of America and unanimously elected Jefferson Davis as president and Alexander Stephens as provisional vice president.
- Davis was elected to serve a six-year term without the possibility of reelection.
- Congress addressed military concerns such as control of state militias, conscription and exemption, and economic and fiscal policy, and supported the Davis administration in foreign affairs and peace negotiations.
- Compare and contrast the Confederate governance and constitution with that of the United States, and discuss bills passed in Congress after the secession of the South
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- Davis (1924) and Al Smith (1928), who mobilized businessmen into the American Liberty League.
- On the day after Roosevelt's lend-lease bill was submitted to the United States Congress, Wood promised AFC opposition "with all the vigor it can exert. " America First staunchly opposed the convoying of ships, the Atlantic Charter, and the placing of economic pressure on Japan.
- Lindbergh adopted an anti-war stance even before the Battle of Britain and before the advent of the lend-lease bill.
- On June 20, 1941 Lindbergh spoke to a rally in Los Angeles billed as "Peace and Preparedness Mass Meeting. " In his speech that day, Lindbergh criticized those movements which he perceived were leading America into the war.
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- Administrative Law Judge Steven Davis issued his decision on December 17, 2010.
- In the decade following its passage, opponents of the Wagner Act introduced several hundred bills to amend and/or repeal the law.
- These bills either failed or were vetoed, until the passage of the Taft-Hartley amendments in 1947.
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- Some artists from New York, such as Norman Bluhm and Sam Francis, took advantage of the GI Bill and left for Europe, to return later with acclaim.
- The new Bebop and cool jazz musicians in the 1940s and 1950s (such as Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, John Coltrane, and Gerry Mulligan) coincided with the New York School and abstract expressionism.
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- Davis, Jr. served as commander of the famed Tuskegee Airmen during the War.
- Davis, Sr., had been the first African American Brigadier General in the Army (1940).
- On January 13, 1997, President Bill Clinton awarded the Medal to seven African American World War II veterans; of these, only Vernon Baker was still alive.