The problem solved by the "Great Comprise" was so that the Senate or House Of Representatives diddnt have too much power over the other.
it solved the problems of boundaries
it solved the problems of boundaries
it solved the problems of boundaries
problems were solved
it solved the problems of boundaries
The Connecticut compromise is the same exact thing as the great compromise its just another name for it. so the Connecticut compromise/ the great compromise is when the larger states wanted the representatives to be determined on population and the smaller states wanted the representatives to be determined on equality/ equal amount of people on each side for representatives. so they came up with The House of Representatives and the Senate to solve the problem. The great compromise solved a lot of problems and issues that people had.
The Great Compromise, also known as the Connecticut Compromise, solved the issue of how the states were represented in congress. Resolved in the Constitutional Convention of 1787, the Great Compromise solved the problem of representation for smaller states by having Congress have two senators for the Senate and proportional representation in the House of Representatives, based on population of the state.
it solved the issue of how people were going to be represented in government. the three fifths compromise stated that three out of five southern blacks would count as people, and the great compromise set up the bicameral houses of legislation. the house representation based on population, and the senate giving each state two representatives.
The Founding Fathers used debate and compromise to solve problems at the Constitutional Convention. The convention was held in 1787.
Problems that are not promptly solved create more problems.
Missouri compromise
Three significant problems addressed by compromise in the U.S. Constitution include representation, slavery, and the balance of power between state and federal governments. The Great Compromise established a bicameral legislature, balancing the needs of both populous and smaller states. The Three-Fifths Compromise addressed the contentious issue of slavery by counting enslaved individuals as three-fifths of a person for representation and taxation purposes, while the Federalism compromise created a system of shared power to mitigate conflicts between state and national authority.