The Conneticut Compromise
Connecticut Compromise (A+)
Connecticut Compromise
Conneticute compromise :0) Roberto dlc
Currently no. There have been bills proposed in the legislature to opt out of this requirement but so far none of them have passed
Proposed legislation bills can be defeated by opponents after they have been introduced. The members of the House of Representatives or the Senate can vote down the proposed bills.
Proposed legislation bills can be defeated by opponents after they have been introduced. The members of the House of Representatives or the Senate can vote down the proposed bills.
Proposed legislation bills can be defeated by opponents after they have been introduced. The members of the House of Representatives or the Senate can vote down the proposed bills.
All bills for raising revenue must originate in the House.
The bills proposed to raise money for the federal government are called revenue bills. Revenue bills must pass through both houses, but originate in the House of Representatives.
No. The "Connecticut Compromise" used aspects of both the Virginia (large state) Plan and the New Jersey (small state) Plan and created a bicameral legislature.
The members of the US House of Representatives are elected directly by the people they represent. Senators were originally selected by state governments or governors, not by popular election. Since the founders were concerned to assure the clear consent of the people for taxation and money expenditures, they wrote the Constitution to require that money bills originate in the House, the part of the federal legislature that was closest to the people.
Tax bills must originate in the House of Representatives according to the Constitution.