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Washington in history: Was he willing to give up power or was he forced to leave?

Proactively let go of power.

After the victory of the Revolutionary War, General Washington took control of the country's military. On his way to report his work to Congress, he disbanded the army. When he arrived at Congress, there were only more than 50 guards left. In China, a dynasty was born.

After independence, the United States faced a serious financial crisis and the government was in vacillation. Washington's old ministry wrote to him to persuade him to join, expressing his willingness to summon the old troops to worship him as King George I. After receiving the letter, Washington sternly refused and broke off diplomatic relations with him.

Washington served as the first president of the United States when the United States was at its most precarious. He only served in two presidents, led the United States back to normal, and then refused to run for the third president of the United States. Later, it became the practice in the United States that the president could only hold two hats. It was not until Roosevelt broke the convention and held four hats that the United States passed a law mandating that the president could only hold two hats at most.