You would think something like a group of colonies would be satisfied with one vote one colony rule, but not all colonies were alike. Some had a lot more population than others. This lead to the Congress being formed with two houses where the Senate is 2 members for every state and The House of Representative membership based on the population of the state.
Colony
It was unfair for each estate to have one vote because the first and second estate would always out-vote the third estate, seeing they have more common interests. Moreover, the third estate encompassed 97% of the French population yet they only receive one vote in the Estate's General.
It was unfair for each estate to have one vote because the first and second estate would always out-vote the third estate, seeing they have more common interests. Moreover, the third estate encompassed 97% of the French population yet they only receive one vote in the Estate's General.
No. At one time only adult white male landowners had the right to vote. Then only adult males. Women got the right to vote as a result of the women's sufferage movement and eventually black men and women also got the right to vote.
Virginia was a colony and Jamestown one of the places in the colony. It helped establish Virginia as a colony.
Colony
colony
Colony
It was unfair for each estate to have one vote because the first and second estate would always out-vote the third estate, seeing they have more common interests. Moreover, the third estate encompassed 97% of the French population yet they only receive one vote in the Estate's General.
Every vote in an election is important because one vote could be the difference between a terrible official being elected versus a great one being elected.
I think one of them was Sir Walter Raleigh
So they could all be represented.
James Monroe received every electoral vote but one
Every man over 21 cannot vote. In some countries no one can.
The General Assembly - every state has one vote.
It was unfair for each estate to have one vote because the first and second estate would always out-vote the third estate, seeing they have more common interests. Moreover, the third estate encompassed 97% of the French population yet they only receive one vote in the Estate's General.
It was unfair for each estate to have one vote because the first and second estate would always out-vote the third estate, seeing they have more common interests. Moreover, the third estate encompassed 97% of the French population yet they only receive one vote in the Estate's General.