Yes Benjamin Franklin did support the Virginia Plan. The Virginia plan stated that representation should be decided by population. Benjamin Franklin liked this because he was from a big state, Pennsylvania.
Larger states with significant populations, such as Virginia, Pennsylvania, and Massachusetts, would most likely support the Virginia Plan during the Constitutional Convention. The plan proposed a bicameral legislature with representation based on population, which favored these states over smaller ones. States like Virginia, which had a large population and a strong interest in increasing their influence in the national government, would have been particularly supportive of this plan.
Virginia plan
The Virginia plan! It said that representation in Congress would be based on population.
The Virginia Plan, also known as the Rudolph Plan or the Large-State Plan, was proposed by Virginia delegates and drafted by James Madison.
no William few was for the Virginia plan and him and Abraham Baldwin were the only people from Georgia to sign the constitution
virginia plan
Virginia plan
no he did not he supported the Virginia plan
Georgia voted in favor of the Virginia Plan during the Constitutional Convention in 1787. The plan proposed a strong national government with a bicameral legislature, which appealed to Georgia's interests in having representation based on population. As one of the smaller states, Georgia supported the plan, believing it would enhance its influence within the federal government. Ultimately, the Virginia Plan laid the groundwork for the structure of the U.S. Constitution.
No.
did Maryland support the virgina plan in 1787
to be represented
Patrik Henry Did support the Virginia plan ,however he was very afraid of a strong central government and thought that it would just develop into a monarchy.
No.
Robert Yates was the only founder who rejected the Constitution. He walked out of the Convention without supporting a plan, let alone the Virginia plan.
They would support it because they had very large populations. In the Virginia Plan, the greater the population, the greater the voice. Therefore, larger states would support the plan, but smaller states would have low population, and therefore little voice.