Answer:
The Great Compromise.
Explanation:
<u>Roger Sherman was an American politician, judge, and statesman who hugely supported the need for America to fight free of British power/ rule</u>. He advocated for the inclusion of the large and small states in the government.
Sherman was part of the delegates who helped draft the Constitution where he advocated for equal representation in the Senate and also asked for inclusion of representatives from both large and small states in the House. Though he was a staunch Conservative supporter, he nevertheless felt the need to agree and even promote the need for the colonies to fight for their freedom and independence from Britain. His <u>Great Compromise/ Connecticut Compromise called for equal representation and inclusion of all states, large and small in the Senate and the House, the two governing powerhouses of the US.
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The answer is C. There would be two houses in Congress, and representatives would be assigned based on state population.
In one short, succinct statement Justice George Sutherland altered the relationship between Congress and the executive branch. “The President [operates] as the sole organ of the federal government in the field of international relations,” he wrote in the United States Supreme Court’s decision of U.S. v. Curtiss-Wright Export Corporation<span>. Whereas the Constitution lays out distinct, delegated powers to Congress, such as the power to declare war and the power to ratify treaties, and to the executive, primarily the role of the president as Commander-in-Chief, Justice Sutherland’s statement altered the relationship between the two aforementioned branches. Suddenly, the executive branch had a legal precedent with which to become the leading force in foreign policy and upon which it could fall back on if actions are legally challenged.</span>
Uhhhhhhh i’m confused but okayy :)
Conflict in the Middle East disrupted energy markets, causing high oil and gas prices in the United States. D. Conflict in the Middle East disrupted oil exports from the region, leading to a boom in U.S. oil production