Slave ownership in territories could be decided by popular sovereignty
No he did not believe so.
i believe it did because of the rebellion the taxes wasdiscused
the right of African Americans to vote was a matter for states to decide
The solution was, to divide Clay's plan into a series of measures that Congress could vote on separately
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Stephen A. Douglas believed in popular sovereignty.
Stephen A. Douglas believed that the issue of slavery had a constitutional basis in its resolution through popular sovereignty. He argued that the Constitution allowed territories to decide for themselves whether to allow slavery, thus advocating for the idea that residents of a territory should determine their own laws. This approach aimed to balance the interests of both pro-slavery and anti-slavery factions while upholding the principles of democracy and self-governance.
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Stephen Douglas believed that the states had the right to decide if African Americans should have the right to vote. He was a US Senator.
Slave ownership in territories could be decided by popular sovereignty
The answer to this question is Thomas Jefferson i believe that he was the delegate that made or created the final copy that we have today
the right of African Americans to vote was a matter for the states to decide.
Stephen Douglas believed in the doctrine of popular sovereignty, which allowed residents of new territories to decide for themselves whether to allow slavery. He played a key role in the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which applied popular sovereignty to the Kansas and Nebraska territories. Douglas argued that this approach would help preserve national unity by defusing tensions over slavery.
constitutional monarchythe answer is constitutional monarchy
I Believe - Stephen Gately song - was created on 2000-10-14.
No
Senator Stephen A. Douglas was not an abolitionist. He thought that the slavery debate would never be resolved peacefully in its current form. So he proposed that each new state, before it applied for statehood, should be allowed to vote on whether to be slave or free. The result was the 1854 Kansas-Nebraska Act. This was based on his belief in popular sovereignty. Douglas was a nationally known leader who also hoped the transcontinental railroad would start from Chicago, Illinois, his home state.