thegreekdog wrote:TheSaxlad wrote:Just before I run off my big trap on this can someone explain to me. Would the slaves have voted or would their owners vote for them?
Neither. Slaves were not permitted to vote. Slave owners did not "vote for their slaves." Per person, a southerner's vote counted more than a white male northerner's vote (I think I'm getting that right).
Basically. It meant that the population in southern states was given as higher than the real legal voting population. Because house seats are allocated based on relative population, it gave southern states more power in the house. And yes, effectively made the southern males' vote a bit more powerful than the northern male's vote for those seats. For the Senate, it might have changed the lines within the state. That would have given the powerful plantation holders more or equal power to groups of urban, less rural poor folks. It would not have changed the state power within the Senate, though.