View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Jacksonian.
Jacksonian
Jacksonian meaning
An adherent of Andrew Jackson's politics and policies, or one who admires Jackson as a historical figure.
Synonyms of Jacksonian
Example sentences (16)
Throughout this process, Richard’s has proven it has the capability to do the job and secure a Jacksonian workforce a good paying job with benefits they would not receive with previous vendors.
But as mentioned earlier, its critical image is both the founding of the United States and, more importantly, the era of the Jacksonian Democracy.
But he remained ill at ease with his adopted country’s Jacksonian populism.
Targeting him was, in fact, true to the Jacksonian spirit of Trumpism, which calls for avoiding foreign adventures whenever possible but also teaching your enemy a harsh lesson whenever he crosses the line.
Jacksonian foreign policy is focused on defending that nation state against malign influences and the cosmopolitan impulses of the elites.
American Quarterly Vol. 5 No. 1 (Spring, 1953) in Essays on Jacksonian America, Ed. Frank Otto Gatell.
His Jacksonian opponents, however, distrusted the federal government and opposed all federal aid for internal improvements and they again frustrated Clay's plan.
In doing so, Jackson abandoned the traditional Jeffersonian-Jacksonian formula that had required its Northern and Southern wings to compromise on constitutional slavery disputes.
It included many active Protestants, and voiced a moralistic opposition to the Jacksonian Indian removal policies.
Nagel argues that Adams' political problems were the result of an unusually hostile Jacksonian faction, and Adams' own dislike of the office.
Shrewd Adams supporters determined to use the strong anti-Masonic feeling to create a new party in opposition to the rising Jacksonian Democracy nationally, and the Albany Regency political organization of Martin Van Buren in New York.
South Atlantic Quarterly. pp. 55–72 in Essays on Jacksonian America, Ed. Frank Otto Gatell.
The economic ideas of the Jacksonian era were almost universally the ideas of classical liberalism.
This is especially true of periodizing labels derived from individuals or ruling dynasties, such as the Jacksonian Era in America, the Meiji Era in Japan, or the Merovingian Period in France.
When Adams appointed Clay as Secretary of State—the position that Adams and his three predecessors had held before becoming president— Jacksonian Democrats were outraged, and claimed that Adams and Clay had struck a " corrupt bargain ".
While he was in Washington in April 1832, anti-Jacksonian Congressman William Stanbery of Ohio made accusations about Houston in a speech on the floor of Congress.