Disagreement at the Constitutional Convention of 1787 over the Virginiaand New Jersey plans was resolved by a compromise that
1 point
(1) guaranteed continuation of the slave trade for at least twenty more years
(2) limited the power of the federal government to wage war
(3) provided for construction of a new national capital in the south
(4) created a Congress made up of a Senate and a House of Representatives

Answers

Answer 1
Answer:

Final answer:

The disagreement at the Constitutional Convention of 1787 was resolved by creating a Congress made up of a Senate and a House of Representatives.

Explanation:

The disagreement at the Constitutional Convention of 1787 over the Virginia and New Jersey plans was resolved by a compromise that created a Congress made up of a Senate and a House of Representatives (Option 4). This compromise, known as the Great Compromise or the Connecticut Compromise, addressed the issue of representation in the legislative branch. It established a bicameral legislature where states would be represented equally in the Senate and based on population in the House of Representatives.

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Answer 2
Answer:

Answer:

created a Congress made up of a Senate and House of Representatives.

Explanation:

The Great Compromise created two legislative bodies in Congress.


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Which action occurs in both presidential and parliamentary governments?A. Voters elect members of the legislative branch.
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Answers

The action that takes place in both the presidential, as well as, parliamentary governments would be:

A). Voters elect members of the legislative branch.

  • The commonality between the presidential, and parliamentary governments is that they both give people the authority to elect their representatives or leaders.
  • They both work upon democratic principles and therefore, they both include the head of the state.
  • This head of the state or the legislative branch either in the form of the president or in the prime minister is elected by the votes of the people.

Thus, option A is the correct answer.

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Answers

Answer:

Colorado

Explanation:

•Texas (I think). Let me know if I am wrong

If you think anything from your vehicle check could affect your safety or ability to control your car, you should ____

Answers

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Answer:

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Explanation:

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What are the responsibilities of the first responding officer at a crime scene?

Answers

Answer:

The first one is to determine whether the victim is alive or dead. Second, detain the perpetrator, or notify of his/her escape. Third, preserve the scene and detain suspects or witnesses.

Explanation:

10 facts about Robert Peel

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HomePolitics, Law & GovernmentWorld LeadersPrime Ministers


Robert Peel
prime minister of United Kingdom

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WRITTEN BY
Norman Gash
Emeritus Professor of History, University of St. Andrews, Scotland. Author of Sir Robert Peel and others.
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Alternative Titles: Sir Robert Peel, 2nd Baronet
Robert Peel, in full Sir Robert Peel, 2nd Baronet, (born February 5, 1788, Bury, Lancashire, England—died July 2, 1850, London), British prime minister (1834–35, 1841–46) and founder of the Conservative Party. Peel was responsible for the repeal (1846) of the Corn Laws that had restricted imports.

Robert Peel
QUICK FACTS
John Linnell: Sir Robert Peel
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BORN
February 5, 1788
Bury, England
DIED
July 2, 1850 (aged 62)
London, England
TITLE / OFFICE
Prime Minister, United Kingdom (1841-1846)
Prime Minister, United Kingdom (1834-1835)
Home Secretary, United Kingdom (1828-1830)
Home Secretary, United Kingdom (1822-1827)
House Of Commons, United Kingdom (1809-1850)
POLITICAL AFFILIATION
Conservative Party
Tory Party
ROLE IN
Corn Law
FOUNDER OF
Conservative Party
Early Political Career

He was the eldest son of a wealthy cotton manufacturer, Robert Peel (1750–1830), who was made a baronet by William Pitt the Younger. The younger Robert was educated at Harrow and at Oxford, and, with his father’s money, a parliamentary seat was found for him as soon as he came of age, in 1809.

As an able government supporter, Peel received appointment as undersecretary for war and colonies in 1810. Two years later he accepted the difficult post of chief secretary for Ireland. There he made his reputation as a skilled and incorruptible administrator, and, at the end of his Irish secretaryship, he was marked out for early promotion. He had also distinguished himself as the ablest of the “Protestant” party that resisted the admittance of Roman Catholics to Parliament, and in 1817 he gained the coveted honour of election as member of Parliament for the University of Oxford. Though declining immediate office after his return from Ireland, he was made chairman, in 1819, of the important currency commission that brought about a return to the gold standard.

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In the 1822 ministerial reconstruction pursued by Robert Banks Jenkinson, 2nd earl of Liverpool, Peel accepted the post of secretary of state for the home department and a seat in the cabinet. His first task was to meet the long-standing demands in Parliament for a radical reform of the criminal laws. He then proceeded to a comprehensive reorganization of the criminal code. Between 1825 and 1830 he effected its fundamental consolidation and reform, covering three-quarters of all criminal offenses. Rising crime statistics convinced him that legal reform should be accompanied by improved methods of crime prevention. In 1829 he carried through the Metropolitan Police Act, which set up the first disciplined police force for the Greater London area. As a result of Peel’s efforts, the London police force became known as Bobby’s boys and later simply as bobbies.

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When George Canning succeeded Liverpool as prime minister in 1827, Peel resigned on the issue of Roman Catholic emancipation. He returned to office under Arthur Wellesley, 1st duke of Wellington, early in 1828 as home secretary and leader of the House of Commons. Differences with Wellington led to the resignation of several followers of Canning after only four months in office, which thus considerably weakened the government. This was followed by the Catholic crisis of 1828–29 that grew out of the renewal of the Irish movement for emancipation in 1823 with the formation of the Catholic Association. Its growing strength culminated in the victory of Daniel O’Connell, the Irish “Liberator,” at a by-election for County Clare in 1828. Convinced that further resistance was useless, Peel proffered his resignation and urged the prime minister to make a final settlement of the Catholic question. Faced with severe opposition from the king and the Anglican church, Wellington persuaded Peel in 1829 to remain in office and assist in carrying through the policy of concession to the Catholics on which they now bo