no
The Federalist Party believed in a strong national (federal) government with powers over the state governments. The Democratic-Republicans believed that states should have more power than the national government. This is known as the States' Rights theory.
They didn't agree that the Southern states should be allowed into the Union so quickly and that they should pay for what they did.
Basically there was none. It did not have any serious supporters except from Radical Republicans who suggested that freed slaves that remained on the plantations could receive free farmland. This proposal had no serious Northern support. The Radical Republicans also gave a recommendation that Union soldiers should receive land taken from wealthy Southern plantation owners.
Give free slaves the right to vote immediately
no
Republicans gained control of Congress in 1866. Radical Republicans had the support of many Northerners who believed stricter measures should be taken against the former Confederate states. After the vicious violence in New Orleans that had killed dozens of Freedman, they supported the Radical Republicans and the Fourteenth Amendment.
Radical Republicans believed black people were entitled to the same rights as everyone else, and believed the Confederates should be punished for going to war with their country. They also wanted to keep Republicans in power in both the North and the South.
they believed that african americans should be granted full citizenship
Much of Lincoln's plan for Reconstruction came from a group of Congressmen from his own party. The group, known as the Radical Republicans, believed that the Civil War had been fought over the moral issue of slavery. The Radicals insisted that the main goal of Reconstruction should be a total restructuring of society to guarantee black people true equality.
The political ideas of the Radical Republicans were the strict policies of slavery. Many Southerners still refused to accept abolishing slavery in the 14th Amendment and believed Africans should not have equal rights.
they wanted to keep slavery
the moderate republicans believed that blacks should not have their rights. The radical republicans had a vision of whites and blacks living in the same community without fighting," even a hundred years later they will still have this same problem, that they solved in the 60's called the civil rights movement and Martin Luther King Jr was a key figure in this issue. Back to the 1800's they both thought they should live together without fighting.
I assume you are referring to the group of Republicans in the era of the Civil War, rather than some Republicans in the current congress who make controversial statements. The "Radical Republicans" of the early 1860s were a group of Republicans who believed that President Lincoln was not moving fast enough. They wanted a total end to slavery and they believed both races should have equal rights (we may assume they referred to males, since at that time, the idea of giving the vote to women was not being discussed). The "Radical Republicans," who included journalist Horace Greeley, lawyer and politician Benjamin Wade, and abolitionist Frederick Douglass, vehemently opposed the Fugitive Slave Act, believed black soldiers should be allowed to serve in the Union army, and wanted a bolder plan for Reconstruction, one that dismantled the white power structure in the deep south. For their era, these Republicans were very much ahead of their time, and were seen as "radicals" in comparison to most of the party, which preferred a more moderate set of changes, or in some cases, no change at all.
Radical Republicans believed blacks were entitled to the same political rights as whites. They believed the Confederates were traitors and that they should be punished for their roles in the American Civil War. Following Lincolnâ??s assassination, they vigorously opposed President Johnsonâ??s lenient approach to the south and engaged in a fierce political battle with him.
The South should be punished.
The South Should Be punished.