The Connecticut compromise was a plan that called for two houses of congress and it settled the dispute between the Virginia plan and the New Jersey plan
2
legislative branch
The Virginia plan called for a legislative branch that had 2 chambers also known as a bicameral legislative branch. James Madison drafted the Virginia plan.
that by my reckoning that would be the Legislative branch.
The Legislative Branch is the branch of government responsible for passing laws. An example of a sentence using the term "Legislative Branch" is "In the US, the Legislative Branch of the federal government is Congress. "
In the legislative branch there are 100 members in congress plus the other 762 in the House of Representatives. If you add that together you get 862 members together. If you divide by 2 which would be half, you would get 431 even. So 431 is 50% in the Legislative Branch.
The Virginia plan because both houses in the legislative branch would assign representatives according to state population, or wealth.
that would be the judical not executive or legislative
the legislative branch...congress does also
the legislative branch. or maybe the powers of the big states versus the powers of the small states.it determined that the legislative branch would be split into two houses. The House of Representatives was created to please the large states and give them power. The Senate was created to please the small states and give them power.
The agreement under the Great Compromise of 1787 was that all states would be equally represented in the Senate and they would be proportionally represented in the House of Representatives. This system still occurs today as each state is represented by two Senators and the numbers of House of Representatives is chosen by the population of the state.
The adjective "oversee" implies such committees would have authority over the Executive Branch. This is NOT the case. The Legislative Branch (Congress) may establish so-called "Watchdog Committees"but their activities are strictly passive - they observe and report back to Congress on their areas of concern but they do not "oversee" the Executive Branch