anyone who was in the south favored the plan to add black people as people for the purpose of counting representatives, and if they were from the the north, they didn't want black people to be people, due to the north having fantastically low slave rate for people who voted in the north, mainly do to NOT HAVING SLAVES THERE! The Virginia Plan, as he lived in a state with a high population, and under that plan, his states would get more representatives.
Jersey plan
smaller ones
The Virginia plan favored the people of Virginia.
The New Jersey plan does not favor Delaware. When the United States Constitution was being drafted in 1787, the New Jersey Plan was an option proposed by William Paterson, a New Jersey delegate. The Plan called for only one house of Congress with each state to have one vote in Congress instead of the number of votes being based on population. The New Jersey Plan was made as an alternative to the Virginia Plan, which provided for a central government with representation by population. The New Jersey Plan was opposed by the less populous states. The New Jersey Plan was supported by William Patterson, governor of New Jersey. Opposition was led by James Madison and Edmund Randolph (the proponents of the Virginia state Plan).
it favored the french
Many of the larger states that knew they would get better representation voted in favor of this, such as New York and other densely populated areas. The supporters of the New Jesey plan were smaller staes, because the New Jersey Plan offered equal represenation. Small states such as Delaware preferred this plan much more.
A republic
NEW JERSEY PLAN: STRENGTHS: # IT WOULD GIVE FAIR REPRESENTATON TO EVERYONE. # THE SMALL STATES APROVED IT. WEAKNESS: # THE LARGER STATES WOULDNT HAVE ENOUGHT VOTES ON THEIR FAVOR # THE LARGER STATES DIDINT AGREE WITH IT.
Experts say Justice Thomas is not particularly receptive to arguments in favor of same-sex marriage.
Alexander Hamilton favored the elite, or wealthy class, while Thomas Jefferson was more in favor of the less fortunate, unlike himself.
larger states
Thomas Edwards has written: 'The argument in favor of Christianity drawn from the character and discourses of Christ'