what was decided by the great compromise? select the two correct answers. (2 points)\n□ how many houses of…

what was decided by the great compromise? select the two correct answers. (2 points)\n□ how many houses of congress the government would include\n□ how enslaved people would be counted in the population of each state\n□ how the national government would be funded\n□ how to keep government from disregarding individual rights\n□ how states would be represented in congress

what was decided by the great compromise? select the two correct answers. (2 points)\n□ how many houses of congress the government would include\n□ how enslaved people would be counted in the population of each state\n□ how the national government would be funded\n□ how to keep government from disregarding individual rights\n□ how states would be represented in congress

Answer

Brief Explanations:

The Great Compromise (also known as the Connecticut Compromise) addressed two main issues:

  1. How many houses of Congress the government would include: It established a bicameral legislature with two houses (the Senate and the House of Representatives).
  2. How states would be represented in Congress: In the Senate, each state has equal representation (2 senators per state), and in the House of Representatives, representation is based on population.

The other options are not related to the Great Compromise:

  • "How enslaved people would be counted" was addressed by the Three - Fifths Compromise.
  • "How the national government would be funded" and "how to keep government from disregarding individual rights" were not the main focuses of the Great Compromise.

Answer:

A. how many houses of Congress the government would include E. how states would be represented in Congress

(Note: Assuming the options are labeled A to E in order as: A. how many houses of Congress the government would include, B. how enslaved people would be counted in the population of each state, C. how the national government would be funded, D. how to keep government from disregarding individual rights, E. how states would be represented in Congress)