Examples of recall election in the following topics:
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- U'Ren also helped in the passage of an amendment in 1908 that gave voters power to recall elected officials.
- A recall election (also called a "recall referendum" or "representative recall") is a procedure by which voters can remove an elected official from office through a direct vote before his or her term has ended.
- Recalls are initiated when sufficient voters sign a petition.
- About 16 states began using primary elections to reduce the power of bosses and machines.
- The goals of his policy included establishing the recall, referendum, direct primary, and initiative.
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- In 1902, the Oregon System of "Initiative, Referendum, and Recall" was passed, largely due to the efforts of Progressive senator William S.
- U'Ren also helped in the passage of an amendment in 1908 giving voters power to recall elected officials he would go on to establish, at the state level, popular election of U.S.
- The Seventeenth Amendment was ratified in 1913, requiring that all senators be elected by the people, instead of by state legislatures.
- When Democrat Woodrow Wilson was elected President with a Democratic Congress in 1912, he implemented a series of progressive policies in economics.
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- Also, reforms were made to give voters more say in government, among these were the initiative, referendum, and recall .
- The recall allowed voters to demand special elections to remove elected officials from office.
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- Three practices - the referendum, the initiative, and the recall - were created.
- The referendum allowed the voters to vote on a bill at an election before it took force as law.
- Finally, the recall permitted voters to remove elected officials from office in the middle of the term.
- Finally, the recall, allowed the voters to remove public officials for wrongdoing while in office.
- U'Ren also helped in the passage of an amendment in 1908 that gave voters power to recall elected officials, and would go on to establish, at the state level, popular election of U.S.
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- Reformers worked to improve workers' lives, implementing measures such as the initiative, referendum, and recall.
- Three practices were developed to accomplish this: the referendum, the initiative, and the recall.
- Finally, the recall provided the opportunity to remove elected officials from office before the end of their terms.
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- The New Jersey plan was created in response to the Virginia Plan, which called for two houses of Congress both elected with apportionment according to population.
- The dual principles of rotation in office and recall would be applied to the lower house of the national legislature.
- Members of one of the two legislative chambers would be elected by the people and members of that chamber would then elect the second chamber from nominations submitted by state legislatures.
- Terms of office were unspecified, but the executive and members of the popularly elected legislative chamber could not be elected for an undetermined time afterward.
- Congress would elect a federal executive, consisting of multiple people, who cannot be re-elected and can be recalled by Congress when requested by the majority of executives of the states.
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- On May 25, the delegations convened in the Pennsylvania State House, and George Washington was unanimously elected as president of the convention.
- The delegates agreed that the executive office should consist of a single individual elected for a fixed term, in which foreign affairs, control over the armed forces, and appointment of federal officers (including Supreme Court judges) would be consigned.
- Members of one of the two legislative chambers would be elected by the people, and members of that chamber would then elect those of the second chamber from nominations submitted by state legislatures.
- The plan also proposed that Congress would elect a federal executive branch, consisting of multiple people, who could not be re-elected and could be recalled by Congress when requested by the majority of state executives.
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- When Berkeley refused to go against the Native Americans, farmers gathered to form a raiding party, of which Nathaniel Bacon was elected leader.
- After an investigative committee returned its report to King Charles II, Berkeley was relieved of the governorship and recalled to England.
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- This recalling of loans at once curtailed land sales and slowed the U.S. production boom, which occurred simultaneously with the recovery of Europe.
- The Whigs and anti-Jackson National Republicans hoped they would gain enough seats in Congress during the election of 1836 to override a second Jackson veto, thereby extending the Bank's charter.
- However, their strategy was not successful, and their coalition still lacked the necessary majority in Congress following the election to extend the Bank's charter.
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- The election of 1856 demonstrated the extremity of sectional
polarization in U.S. national politics.
- The election of 1856 demonstrated the extremity
of sectional polarization in national politics during this era.
- Since the previous election, the Whig Party had disintegrated over the issue of slavery, and new
parties (including the Republican Party) competed to replace it.
- Buchanan won the
election of 1856 with the full support of the South as well as five free
states.
- Although Buchanan won the election and Frémont received fewer than 600
votes in all slave states, the results in the Electoral College indicated that
the Republican Party could succeed in the next election if they won just two
more states.