Page:Debates in the Several State Conventions, v1.djvu/225

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1787.]
REPRESENTATION.
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It was moved by Mr. Pinckney, and seconded, to postpone the 2d clause of the report from the grand committee, entered on the Journals of the 6th instant, in order to take up the following, namely:—

"That the second branch of the legislature shall have thirty-six members, of which number

New Hampshire shall have 2 Delaware shall have 1
Massachusetts 4 Maryland 3
Rhode Island 4 Virginia 5
Connecticut 3 North Carolina 3
New York 3 South Carolina 3
New Jersey 2 Georgia 2
Pennsylvania 4

On the question to postpone, it passed in the negative.

Yeas: Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, South Carolina, 4. Nays: Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Jersey, Delaware, North Carolina, Georgia, 6.

And then the house adjourned till Monday.

Monday, July 16, 1787.

The question being taken on the whole of the report from the grand committee, as amended, it passed in the affirmative, and is as follows, namely:—

"Resolved, That, in the original formation of the legislature of the United States, the first branch thereof shall consist of sixty-five members, of which number

New Hampshire shall have 3 Delaware shall have 1
Massachusetts 8 Maryland 6
Rhode Island 1 Virginia 10
Connecticut 5 North Carolina 5
New York 6 South Carolina 5
New Jersey 4 Georgia 3
Pennsylvania 8

"But, as the present situation of the states may probably alter in the number of their inhabitants, the legislature of the United States shall be authorized, from time to time, to apportion the number of representatives. And in case any of the states shall hereafter be divided, or enlarged by addition of territory, or any two or more states united, or any new states created within the limits of the United States, the legislature of the United States shall possess authority to regulate the number of representatives in any of the foregoing cases, upon the principle of their number of inhabitants, according to the provisions hereafter mentioned, namely:

"Provided always, That representation ought to be proportioned according to direct taxation. And, in order to ascertain the alteration in the direct taxation which may be required, from time to time, by the changes in the relative circumstances of the states,

"Resolved, That a census be taken within six years of the first meeting of the legislature of the United States, and once within the term of every ten years afterwards, of all the inhabitants of the United States, in the manner, and according to the ratio, recommended by Congress, in their resolution of April 18, 1783; and that the legislature of the United States shall proportion the direct taxation accordingly.
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