In response, there are long lists of arguments showing that, yes indeed, slavery and anti-slavery were very important on both sides.
The point I want to bring out here concerns the alleged "supermajority of Northerners" who voted for Corwin.
FLT-bird on Corwin (post #232): "Sure, but a supermajority of Northerners supported it."
So let's look at these numbers.
The House of Representatives vote for Corwin (February 28, 1861) was 133 yes, 65 no, a 2/3 "supermajority".
The breakdown of "yes" votes is:
133 total House votes for Corwin, of which 43% came from Southern Democrats, 20% from Northern Democrats and 37% from Republicans.
In summary:
51% of all Northerners & Westerners voted for Corwin, not a supermajority.
100% of all Southerners in Congress voted for Corwin, unanimous.
100% of all Democrats voted for Corwin, unanimous.
41% of all Republicans voted for Corwin, a minority.
Doughface Democrat President Buchanan signed Corwin.
Republican President Lincoln said he did not try to block Corwin because it made no change to the Constitution as he understood it.
BroJoeK, take me off your ping list