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Chapter 5 Section 1

Chapter 5 Section 1. The Constitutional Convention. Agreement and Disagreement. Agree - need national government - guard against abuse of power (separation of power) - limit government powers (state and national) Disagree - number of representatives for each state

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Chapter 5 Section 1

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  1. Chapter 5 Section 1 The Constitutional Convention

  2. Agreement and Disagreement • Agree - need national government - guard against abuse of power (separation of power) - limit government powers (state and national) • Disagree - number of representatives for each state - power of national government

  3. Getting Organizedpage 113 Constitutional Convention (May 25th 1787) - PA State House (Philadelphia) - presiding officer- George Washington Setting the Rules

  4. Getting Organized • Other Rules - each state had one vote - no whispering, passing notes, or reading while a delegate was speaking *How did the delegate’s rules provide the freedom to explore ideas?

  5. Madison’s Plan (Virginia Plan)Page 114 Madison’s Plan - James Madison (Virginia) - strong national government - with separation of powers - Legislature – House of Representative - people elect directly - seats based on population Senate - House would choose - seats based on population *What did many delegates fear would happen with this plan?

  6. Reaching Compromise The VA and NJ Plans - How many representatives would each state have in their legislature? - Virginia - state’s population - Problem: larger states would out-vote them - New Jersey - William Paterson (N.J.) - one-house legislature - each state have equal number of voters

  7. Reaching CompromisePage 116 The Great Compromise - Roger Sherman (Connecticut) - Bicameral Legislature - House of Representatives: elected based on population - Senate: each state would have two senators (regardless of population) *How does this ensure fairness?

  8. The Three-Fifths CompromisePage 117 *What was the purpose of the Three-Fifths Compromise?

  9. Executive and Judicial Branchespage 117 • Executive Power - given to one President - enforce laws • Judicial Power - given to Supreme Court - interpret laws *What was the argument made in regards to electing a President?

  10. Executive and Judicial Branches • Voting and Elections - Caucasian men (land owners) vote on House of Representatives - state legislatures select senators - electoral college selects President *each state legislature determines how state electors are chosen

  11. The Signing September 17th 1787 - 39 delegates signed the Constitution

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