Illinois Senator Stephen A. Douglas was a leading Democrat in the US. He sought to solve the slavery issue by having the citizens of a US Territory, vote on the slavery issue. Then when the Territory applied for statehood, the slavery issue would have already been decided.This was a sane measure, however, there was a lack of Law and Order in Kansas at the time of 1854.
The result was chaos and murder in Kansas.
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popular sovereignty
There was not a major decision that led to it but there were many that led to it such as the dred Scott decision and the Missouri compromise and the compromise of 1850 and the Lincoln- Douglas debate
'Popular Sovereignty' was the term coined by Stephen Douglas for a local vote on slavery in each new state as it joined the Union. It was the basis of the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which was first tested - disastrously - when Kansas was admitted as free soil. This followed the unsuccessful Compromise of 1850, which did not involve Popular Sovereignty.
The senator from Illinois, Stephen A. Douglas supported the right to have Territory citizens vote on the slavery issue before the territory became a State. He was the prime fore behind the Kansas - Nebraska Act of 1854. He called it popular sovereignty. He maintained this position in the 1858 senatorial race with Abraham Lincoln. Douglas won the election.
Stephen A Douglas
popular sovereignty
Popular Sovereignty
kansas and nebraska
The theory promoted by Stephen Douglas was popular sovereignty. This theory allowed the people of a territory to decide for themselves whether to allow or forbid slavery when they applied for statehood, as outlined in the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854.
The Dred Scott decision by the US Supreme Court in 1857 damaged Senator Douglas' main political position on slavery. It virtually vetoed his policy of popular sovereignty.
Douglas supported the doctorine of popular sovereignty.
Stephen A. Douglas
Stephan Douglas
One Stephen Douglas was the original advocate of Popular Sovereignty. He was tasked with organizing the new territories in terms of their popularity.
Douglas endorsed popular sovereignty
Stephen A. Douglas believed in popular sovereignty.