1808
Congress could pass laws about the slave market prior to the abolition of slavery in the United States. The slave trade was banned in the United States in 1808, and Congress could have passed laws regulating or outlawing the domestic slave trade before that date. However, the enactment of such laws would have been unlikely given the economic and political interests associated with slavery at the time.
slave codes
the southerners were worried of this ecause they depended on many exported goods such as: tobaccorice and other products.They also worried that congress might stop slave traders from bringing enslaved people to the U.S.
Laws that determined states' slave populations would be counted as 3/5th of the entire population for representation in Congress and taxation purposes.
States passed slave codes and slave laws. These laws kept the slaves in a subordinate position and made it so even a free slave could be captured and sent back into slavery.
States passed laws known as slave codes to restrict the activities and rights of enslaved persons. These laws regulated where slaves could travel, what work they could perform, and limited their ability to gather in groups. These codes were aimed at maintaining control and preventing uprisings among the enslaved population.
no they could not enforce the laws.
States passed slave codes and slave laws. These laws kept the slaves in a subordinate position and made it so even a free slave could be captured and sent back into slavery.
The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 required citizens to assist in capturing runaway slaves and denied fugitives the right to a trial by jury. It increased the power of slaveholders and federal authorities to recapture escaped slaves, leading to heightened tensions between Northern and Southern states. The law was highly controversial and fueled the abolitionist movement in the United States.
States could nullify laws of Congress
Because it was becoming increasingly difficult to get Congress to agree to create new slave-states. This meant that the South was increasingly out-voted in Congress, which would then pass laws that favoured the North against the South.
Congress could tax goods coming into the country but not goods going out.
Because it was getting harder to create new slave-states, so the South was increasingly getting out-voted in Congress, which then tended to pass laws favorable to the North.