His writing led to an increased opinion of independence. On July 4, 1776, the Declaration of Independence was adopted, a document that officially stated the colonies were no longer under British rule. The Articles of Confederation established Congress as the central government in the US, but it was a flawed system, as they were without many powers, instead giving a large amount of power to the states. During the Constitutional Convention, the idea of writing a constitution to make way for a more powerful central government rose. The US Constitution had to appeal to the majority of the Americans living there, to ensure this, many compromises had to be made. The Great Compromise was an arrangement that combined ideas from both the Virginia and New Jersey Plans. The Great Compromise would mean a two chamber system, the house of representatives, which would have an amount of elected individuals based on state population, and the senate, which would have two members per state, elected by the state legislatures, regardless of state
His writing led to an increased opinion of independence. On July 4, 1776, the Declaration of Independence was adopted, a document that officially stated the colonies were no longer under British rule. The Articles of Confederation established Congress as the central government in the US, but it was a flawed system, as they were without many powers, instead giving a large amount of power to the states. During the Constitutional Convention, the idea of writing a constitution to make way for a more powerful central government rose. The US Constitution had to appeal to the majority of the Americans living there, to ensure this, many compromises had to be made. The Great Compromise was an arrangement that combined ideas from both the Virginia and New Jersey Plans. The Great Compromise would mean a two chamber system, the house of representatives, which would have an amount of elected individuals based on state population, and the senate, which would have two members per state, elected by the state legislatures, regardless of state