Yami's covered most of it already, but let me go back for a few things.
The representatives of the states much the same way the representatives of the various states voiced their opposition to the Crown and then seceded from it.
That doesn't answer the question. How were those men selected to represent the states? The red clay of Georgia didn't cry out the name of Howell Cobb. The people of Georgia didn't elect him to the Provisional Confederate Congress -- not even if you define "the people of Georgia" as "the white men of Georgia." So whence did the delegates to the Provisional Confederate Congress derive their authority?
Well, I would say the biggest event was the election of Lincoln which was perceived to mean that the federal government was going to overstep its bounds and interfere with how states would govern themselves.
You're damned right it was. They were afraid he was going to abolish slavery.
And obviously the issue of slavery was a factor as well, not to protect it but to end it with as little bloodshed and loss of life as possible.
Horse****. I don't even believe
you believe that. Who was going to end it with bloodshed if they didn't secede? The end of slavery was not imminent. Nobody was threatening to invade the South to free the slaves. The war, which the South started, precipitated the end of slavery and led to the greatest loss of American life in history. If they were trying to end slavery gradually or avoid loss of life, they did about the dumbest thing they could possibly have done.
This logically does not follow. The existence of slavery doesn't negate the democratic institutions that did exist in the South and that were defended when infringed upon from the North. You seem to be arguing that since the South had slavery therefore their democratic institutions could not be compromised. This is obviously false.
Come on, Joe. Do you really expect me to take your pious sentiments about "the consent of the governed" seriously when you're using them to defend a system under which 40% of the governed had no rights at all?
Even such white-only, male-only democratic institutions as the South had were not a factor in the attempt to establish breakaway government. The white male citizens didn't vote to secede. They didn't vote to elect representatives to the secession conventions. They didn't vote to elect representatives to the Provisional Confederate Congress. The whole thing, from start to finish, was an assertion of power by the slaveholding oligarchy for the sole purpose of protecting the prerogatives of the slaveholding oligarchy, and in particular their prerogative to hold 40% of the population of South in a hereditary state of involuntary servitude in which they had no more rights than cattle.
When you talk about "states' rights," all you're really talking about is the "right" of a privileged elite within the state to run it as a collection of personal fiefdoms. It doesn't have a damned thing to do with the consent of the governed.