The balance of free and slave states in the senate was such an important issue because if the either had an advantage it would only help to trigger a war that was yet to come.
It directly affected their voting power in Washington.
The North was trying to protect its important manufacturing industry by levying taxes on cheap foreign imports. It was principally the South that wanted these imports, because they had almost no manufacturign industry of their own.
The bigger the Northern majority in Congress, the higher the taxes that Congress could impose. It looked and felt like the North taxing the South, and this had caused resentment for several decades.
A balance of free and slave states was important to the Senate because the country was very divided on the issue. If the balance was upset, one side could end up with complete control in the Senate. Neither side wanted the other to be in control.
The balance of free and slave states in the senate was such an important issue because if the either had an advantage it would only help to trigger a war that was yet to come.
they wanted to keep the number of free and slave states equal because they didn't want to have one side think that they were siding with the other and end up leaving the union
If either the north or the south had more representatives in the house, they could basically pass anything they wanted, even if it was 100% against the views of the other side
So that the two sections would have an equal voice in Congress. Otherwise one section would dominate, and pass laws that favoured their own interests at the expense of the other.
The western expansion of slavery and the balance between slave and free states in the Senate
Missouri applied to be admitted as a slave state, and if admitted, would: A: Tip the balance of the federal Senate to the slave states, 24-22 B: Create a large lump of slave-permitting territory jutting out into the plains. Northerners didn't want the Senate to get off balance, and also didn't want the South to use Missouri as a springboard to creating more slave states in the plains.
Southerners sought to extend slavery, already established in Texas. Northerners feared that annexation of more slave territory would tip the uneasy balance in the Senate in favor of slave states-and prompt war with Mexico.
It would upset the balance between the slave and free states in the Senate. By Paul A Rivera
A series of compromises, starting with the Missouri Compromise of 1820.
The balance of free and slave states in the senate was such an important issue because if the either had an advantage it would only help to trigger a war that was yet to come.
it was awesomew
Actually, the balance was important to the slave states since they could block the outlawing of slavery because they would have an equal number of votes in the US Senate. If the number of free states was allowed to become larger than the number of slave states, then the slave states would have to rely on votes from Senators in free states to continue slavery.
The western expansion of slavery and the balance between slave and free states in the Senate
It was because they had an even number of slave and free states. If Missouri came in as a slave state then it would make it uneven and it would upset the balance.
Missouri applied to be admitted as a slave state, and if admitted, would: A: Tip the balance of the federal Senate to the slave states, 24-22 B: Create a large lump of slave-permitting territory jutting out into the plains. Northerners didn't want the Senate to get off balance, and also didn't want the South to use Missouri as a springboard to creating more slave states in the plains.
Southerners sought to extend slavery, already established in Texas. Northerners feared that annexation of more slave territory would tip the uneasy balance in the Senate in favor of slave states-and prompt war with Mexico.
It would upset the balance between the slave and free states in the Senate. By Paul A Rivera
A series of compromises, starting with the Missouri Compromise of 1820.
Because it was an area in which slavery was legal, and to bring it into the Union would destroy the balance in the Senate between slave states and non-slave states. Also because the U.S. didnt want :D
Before the Civil War, there was a perfect balance between "slave" states and "free" states. Neither side could budge the other, and no new states could be admitted to the Union without a vote of the Congress - more specifically, the Senate. So new states were admitted in pairs, one slave and one free, to preserve the balance. If one new "slave" state had been admitted to the Union, the majority of slave state senators would have been able to outvote the "free" state senators and admit more "slave" states. The balance was shattered when the southern states seceded from the United States, and the Civil War settled the issue - at the cost of a half-million dead.
Maintaining a balance between slave states and free states was important to prevent one side from gaining too much power in the government and potentially leading to a breakdown in the Union. This balance was crucial to preserve political stability and avoid escalating tensions over the issue of slavery in the United States.