The 'New Jersey Plan' was a proposal for the structure of the
United States Government proposed by
William Paterson on
June 15,
1787. The plan was created in response to the
Virginia Plan's call for two houses of Congress, both elected with
proportional representation. The less populous states were adamantly opposed to giving most of the control of the national government to the larger states, and so proposed an alternate plan that would have given one vote per state for equal representation under one legislative body. This was a compromise for the issue of the houses.
When the
Connecticut Compromise was constructed, the New Jersey Plan's legislative body was used as the model for the
United States Senate.
Under the New Jersey Plan, the organization of the legislature was similar to that of the modern day
United Nations and other like institutions. This position reflected the belief that the states were independent entities, and, as they entered the United States of America freely and individually, so they remained.