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What ended President William H. Taft’s anti-trust efforts?

the elimination of monopolies in the U.S.

banks' refusal to support dollar diplomacy

the end of his term in office

his decision to avoid antagonizing big business

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User Yagger
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2 Answers

5 votes

What ended President William H. Taft’s anti-trust efforts was the end of his term in office.

Throughout his administration President Taft consistently launched antitrust cases because he was inclined to believe that courts were to regulate trust activities and not the executive branch of the federal government.


answered
User DaveKub
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4 votes

The answer is:

The end of his term in office .

Step-by-step explanation:

Taft’s asministration did much to continue many progressive measures initiated by Roosevelt and in fact he did more to regulate monopolies than Franklin D. Roosevelt. William Howard Taft was at one point even called “The Trust Buster” when he ordered the prosecution that broke up Standard Oil in 1911.

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User Sahhhm
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