much of the 7th as hath not been decided on, submit the following report:—
That the subsequent propositions be recommended to the Convention, on condition that both shall be generally adopted.
"1. That, in the first branch of the legislature, each of the states now in the Union be allowed one member for every forty thousand inhabitants of the description reported in the 7th resolution of the committee of the whole house; that each state not containing that number shall be allowed one member; that all bills for raising or appropriating money, and for fixing the salaries of the officers of the government of the United States, shall originate in the first branch of the legislature, and shall not be altered or amended by the second branch; and that no money shall be drawn from the public treasury, but in pursuance of appropriations to be originated by the first branch.
"2. That in the second branch of the legislature, each state shall have an equal vote."
It was moved and seconded to postpone the consideration of the 1st proposition contained in the report, in order to take up the 2d.
On the question to postpone, it passed in the negative.
Yeas: New York, South Carolina, 2. Nays: Massachusetts, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia, 8.
It was then moved by Mr. Rutledge, and seconded, to postpone the 1st clause of the report, in order to take up the following, namely:—
"That the suffrages of the several states be regulated and proportioned according to the sums to be paid towards the general revenue by the inhabitants of each state, respectively; that an apportionment of suffrages, according to the ratio aforesaid, shall be made and regulated at the end of years from the first meeting of the legislature of the United States, and so from time to time, at the end of every years thereafter, but that for the present, and until the period first above mentioned, shall have one suffrage," &c.[1]
And on the question to postpone, it passed in the negative.
- ↑ The two following statements are among the papers of Mr. Brearly, furnished by General Bloomfield. They have, apparently, reference to this resolution.
States Number Whites. Number Blacks. States Number Whites. New Hampshire 82,000 102,000 Delaware 37,000 Massachusetts Bay 352,000 Maryland 174,000 Rhode Island 58,000 Virginia 300,000 Connecticut 202,000 North Carolina 181,000 New York 238,000 South Carolina 93,000 New Jersey 138,000 145,000 Georgia 27,000 Pennsylvania 341,000 The following quotas of taxation are extracted from the printed journals of the old Congress, September 27, 1785:—