He vetoed the bill and sent it back to Congress.
He vetoed the bill and sent it back to Congress with the reasons for his veto. His veto was no surprise.
He vetoed it. Not wanting to wait for the charter to expire, he withdrew federal funds from the bank.
He vetoed it, thereby denying the renewal of the charter for the bank. The bill to renew in advance was timed to make the bank a campaign issue in the 1832 presidential election.
he destroyed the bank
He vetoed the bill and sent it back to Congress.
When President Jackson did not renew the charter for the Bank of the US the government stated putting money in state banks. Money lending fell on these banks and four anti-bank resolutions were approved.
He vetoed the bill and sent it back to Congress with the reasons for his veto. His veto was no surprise.
Andrew Jackson vetoed the bill renewing the charter. Jackson did not favor a strong centralized government, and aimed to prevent a central government-run bank as well.
Andrew Jackson vetoed the bill renewing the charter. Jackson did not favor a strong centralized government, and aimed to prevent a central government-run bank as well.
After Jackson vetoed a bill to renew the Chater of the Bank and his veto stood up, he ordered federal funds to be withdrawn from the bank and moved to state banks. This forced the bank to call in loans and severely crippled it before its charter expired.
The formation of the Whig Party was primarily driven by the opposition to President Andrew Jackson and his policies, particularly his use of executive power and his handling of the national bank. Supporters of Henry Clay, who was a prominent critic of Jackson, helped establish the Whig Party in the 1830s to offer an alternative to Jacksonian Democrats.
No, Andrew Jackson did not replace the Bankof the U.S with one large state bank. Instead he vetoed the charter to renew the bank of the U.S then he took out all of its money and distrubited the money to various state banks.
Jackson decided to destroy the bank by transferring about $10 million in government deposits to state banks. Without this money the national bank struggled to survive. Before this Jackson had protested against national banks vehemently and refused to renew the Second Bank's charter. He had also vetoed the bank (well known as the "Bank Veto).
Nicholas Biddle, the president of the bank, was the main force in getting Congress to renew the charter in 1832 which was an election year. When Andrew Jackson vetoed the bill to renew it, it became a campaign issue.
Jackson's opposition made the bank charter an issue in 1832 election by pushing a bill to renew its charter through Congress before the charter was due to expire, forcing Jackson to veto it just before the election. The move backfired since Jackson won handily and his influence as President increased.
Nicholas Biddle was the president of the bank. He challenged Jackson and got Congress to renew the bank's charter in 1832, an election year. Jackson vetoed the bill to re-charter and the existence of the bank became a campaign issue.