Long and often rancorous debates ensue over…
1787 CE
Long and often rancorous debates ensue over issues such as states' rights, representation, and slavery.
Delegates from small and large states disagree over whether the number of representatives in the new federal legislature should be the same for each state—as was the case under the Articles of Confederation—or different depending on a state's population.
In addition, some delegates from Northern states seek to abolish slavery or, failing that, to make representation dependent on the size of a state's free population.
At the same time, some Southern delegates threaten to abandon the convention if their demands to keep slavery and the slave trade legal and to count slaves for representation purposes are not met.
Eventually the framers resolve their disputes by adopting a proposal put forward by the Connecticut delegation.
The Great Compromise, as it comes to be known, creates a bicameral legislature with a Senate, in which all states will be equally represented, and a House of Representatives, in which representation will be apportioned on the basis of a state's free population plus three-fifths of its slave population. (The inclusion of the slave population is known separately as the Three-Fifths compromise.)
A further compromise on slavery prohibits Congress from banning the importation of slaves until 1808 (Article I, Section 9).