The issue regarding slaves at the Constitutional Convention of 1787 centered on how to address slavery in the new Constitution. Delegates debated whether enslaved individuals should be counted for representation and taxation, ultimately leading to the Three-Fifths Compromise, which counted each enslaved person as three-fifths of a person for congressional representation. This compromise highlighted the deep divisions over slavery and set the stage for future conflicts in the United States. The convention's decisions reflected the political and economic interests of slaveholding states, entrenching slavery in the nation's framework.
The Constitutional Convention dealt with slavery issue in a conclusive manner. The addressed the rights of the slaves and their right to own property among other contentious issues.
At the Constitutional Convention, the most significant disagreement dealt with the issue of representation in the legislature. The convention was held in 1787.
Represntation
Constitutional convention deadlocked over the issue of representation. The delegates did not seem to agree on the selection of representatives to the Congress.
The fundamental issue that was raised at the constitutional convention was slave trade and human rights abuses. Those were the issues that were strife then.
This was not an issue presented at the Constitutional Convention in 1787 in Philadelphia. It was an issue that came about later and was resolved with the 3/5 compromise. Each slave was counted as 3/5 a person for census/taxation purposes. Good Luck!
The issue of the Three-Fifths Compromise was resolved at the Constitutional Convention, which determined how slaves would be counted for the purpose of taxation and representation in Congress. The compromise stated that each slave would be counted as three-fifths of a person for these purposes.
The taxes
Slavery remained legal so that the states would stay united.
control of commerce
By counting 60% of slaves for the purposes of representation and taxes. All delegates to the Convention recognized that this was an imperfect compromise to a difficult issue, but many of the delegates redesigning American government didn't want to deal with slavery at all. by counting 60% for all slaves--APEX
representation of the states in congress