In 1–2 sentences, explain the Anti-Federalist objections to the necessary and proper clause and the supremacy clause.

Anti-Federalists objected to the necessary and proper clause as they believed it provided the federal government with too much power, and they criticized the supremacy clause as it would give the federal government the authority to override state laws.

The Anti-Federalists objected to the necessary and proper clause because they believed it granted the federal government too much power to make laws not expressly mentioned in the Constitution, while they also opposed the supremacy clause as they feared it would undermine the sovereignty of the states.

The Anti-Federalists objected to the necessary and proper clause because they believed it granted the federal government too much power, while they also opposed the supremacy clause as it placed federal laws above state laws, thereby undermining state sovereignty.