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What was the Three-Fifths Compromise at the Constitutional Convention?

Knowing that George Washington would be the first president, people at the Convention wrote the powers of the president with him in mind.


Some powers were given to the states, some to the federal government, and some to both.


Congress was divided into two houses. The Senate was seated equally by state; the House of Representatives was seated by population.


Only three-fifths of the enslaved population would be counted when calculating each state's representation in Congress.

User Amir Molaa
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Answer:

D. Only three-fifths of the enslaved population would be counted when calculating each state's representation in Congress.

Step-by-step explanation:

I took the test

User Vitaly Kravtsov
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It struck a balance between large slave states in the South and smaller northern states that had abolished slavery. It restricted, but not eliminated, the apportioned congressional representation of slave states by limiting the Census to counting slaves as only three-fifths of a person.

(Reference.com)
User Mlecar
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