The Constitutional Convention?
True
In the Constitutional convention
the Virginia plan
The New Jersey Plan.
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.
The Great Compromise
The Virginia Plan, which was a proposal for a bicameral legislative branch, was drafted by James Madison for the Constitutional Convention of 1787.
True.
The great comprimise I think it's the Virginia plan / "the large-state plan"
James Madison drafted the Virginia Plan, and Edmund Randolph presented it to the Constitutional Convention of 1787. It proposed a bicameral legislature for the United States.
The delegates at the Constitutional Convention decided to base the Constitution on the Virginia Plan, which was drafted by James Madison. The Virginia Plan called for a strong central government with separate branches and a bicameral legislature. Madison's plan heavily influenced the structure and principles of the Constitution.
An amended version of the Virginia plan was adopted at the Constitutional convention. The Constitutional convention was held in Philadelphia from May 25th to September 17th, 1787.
During the Constitutional Convention of 1787, delegates debated primarily between the Virginia Plan and the New Jersey Plan. The Virginia Plan proposed a strong national government with a bicameral legislature based on population, favoring larger states. In contrast, the New Jersey Plan advocated for a unicameral legislature with equal representation for each state, appealing to smaller states. This debate ultimately led to the Great Compromise, which established a bicameral legislature with both proportional and equal representation.
The Virginia Plan proposed a bicameral legislature with representation based on population in the lower house. This plan was put forward by the delegates from Virginia at the Constitutional Convention in 1787.
A bicameral legislature
At the Constitutional Convention of 1787 serious differences about representation were resolved by creating a bicameral legislature.
The proposal described at the Constitutional Convention that included a president, courts, and a bicameral legislature is known as the Virginia Plan. Introduced by Edmund Randolph and largely drafted by James Madison, it called for a strong national government with three branches: executive, legislative, and judicial. The bicameral legislature would consist of two houses, with representation based on state population, aiming to balance the interests of both large and small states. This plan served as a foundation for the eventual structure of the U.S. Constitution.