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The Federalist Papers
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FEDERALIST. No. 1
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General Introduction
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For the Independent Journal.
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HAMILTON
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To the People of the State of New York:
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AFTER an unequivocal experience of the inefficiency of the
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subsisting federal government, you are called upon to deliberate on
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a new Constitution for the United States of America. The subject
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speaks its own importance; comprehending in its consequences
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nothing less than the existence of the UNION, the safety and welfare
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of the parts of which it is composed, the fate of an empire in many
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respects the most interesting in the world. It has been frequently
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remarked that it seems to have been reserved to the people of this
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country, by their conduct and example, to decide the important
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question, whether societies of men are really capable or not of
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establishing good government from reflection and choice, or whether
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they are forever destined to depend for their political
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constitutions on accident and force. If there be any truth in the
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remark, the crisis at which we are arrived may with propriety be
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regarded as the era in which that decision is to be made; and a
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wrong election of the part we shall act may, in this view, deserve
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to be considered as the general misfortune of mankind.
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This idea will add the inducements of philanthropy to those of
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patriotism, to heighten the solicitude which all considerate and
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good men must feel for the event. Happy will it be if our choice
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should be directed by a judicious estimate of our true interests,
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unperplexed and unbiased by considerations not connected with the
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public good. But this is a thing more ardently to be wished than
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seriously to be expected. The plan offered to our deliberations
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affects too many particular interests, innovates upon too many local
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institutions, not to involve in its discussion a variety of objects
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foreign to its merits, and of views, passions and prejudices little
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favorable to the discovery of truth.
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Among the most formidable of the obstacles which the new
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Constitution will have to encounter may readily be distinguished the
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obvious interest of a certain class of men in every State to resist
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all changes which may hazard a diminution of the power, emolument,
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and consequence of the offices they hold under the State
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establishments; and the perverted ambition of another class of men,
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who will either hope to aggrandize themselves by the confusions of
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their country, or will flatter themselves with fairer prospects of
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elevation from the subdivision of the empire into several partial
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confederacies than from its union under one government.
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It is not, however, my design to dwell upon observations of this
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nature. I am well aware that it would be disingenuous to resolve
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indiscriminately the opposition of any set of men (merely because
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their situations might subject them to suspicion) into interested or
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ambitious views. Candor will oblige us to admit that even such men
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may be actuated by upright intentions; and it cannot be doubted
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that much of the opposition which has made its appearance, or may
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hereafter make its appearance, will spring from sources, blameless
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at least, if not respectable--the honest errors of minds led astray
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by preconceived jealousies and fears. So numerous indeed and so
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powerful are the causes which serve to give a false bias to the
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judgment, that we, upon many occasions, see wise and good men on the
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wrong as well as on the right side of questions of the first
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magnitude to society. This circumstance, if duly attended to, would
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furnish a lesson of moderation to those who are ever so much
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persuaded of their being in the right in any controversy. And a
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further reason for caution, in this respect, might be drawn from the
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reflection that we are not always sure that those who advocate the
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truth are influenced by purer principles than their antagonists.
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Ambition, avarice, personal animosity, party opposition, and many
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other motives not more laudable than these, are apt to operate as
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well upon those who support as those who oppose the right side of a
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question. Were there not even these inducements to moderation,
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nothing could be more ill-judged than that intolerant spirit which
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has, at all times, characterized political parties. For in
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politics, as in religion, it is equally absurd to aim at making
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proselytes by fire and sword. Heresies in either can rarely be
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cured by persecution.
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And yet, however just these sentiments will be allowed to be, we
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have already sufficient indications that it will happen in this as
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in all former cases of great national discussion. A torrent of
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angry and malignant passions will be let loose. To judge from the
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conduct of the opposite parties, we shall be led to conclude that
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they will mutually hope to evince the justness of their opinions,
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and to increase the number of their converts by the loudness of
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their declamations and the bitterness of their invectives. An
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enlightened zeal for the energy and efficiency of government will be
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stigmatized as the offspring of a temper fond of despotic power and
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hostile to the principles of liberty. An over-scrupulous jealousy
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of danger to the rights of the people, which is more commonly the
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fault of the head than of the heart, will be represented as mere
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pretense and artifice, the stale bait for popularity at the expense
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of the public good. It will be forgotten, on the one hand, that
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jealousy is the usual concomitant of love, and that the noble
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enthusiasm of liberty is apt to be infected with a spirit of narrow
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and illiberal distrust. On the other hand, it will be equally
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forgotten that the vigor of government is essential to the security
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of liberty; that, in the contemplation of a sound and well-informed
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judgment, their interest can never be separated; and that a
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dangerous ambition more often lurks behind the specious mask of zeal
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for the rights of the people than under the forbidden appearance of
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zeal for the firmness and efficiency of government. History will
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teach us that the former has been found a much more certain road to
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the introduction of despotism than the latter, and that of those men
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who have overturned the liberties of republics, the greatest number
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have begun their career by paying an obsequious court to the people;
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commencing demagogues, and ending tyrants.
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In the course of the preceding observations, I have had an eye,
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my fellow-citizens, to putting you upon your guard against all
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attempts, from whatever quarter, to influence your decision in a
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matter of the utmost moment to your welfare, by any impressions
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other than those which may result from the evidence of truth. You
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will, no doubt, at the same time, have collected from the general
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scope of them, that they proceed from a source not unfriendly to the
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new Constitution. Yes, my countrymen, I own to you that, after
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having given it an attentive consideration, I am clearly of opinion
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it is your interest to adopt it. I am convinced that this is the
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safest course for your liberty, your dignity, and your happiness. I
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affect not reserves which I do not feel. I will not amuse you with
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an appearance of deliberation when I have decided. I frankly
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acknowledge to you my convictions, and I will freely lay before you
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the reasons on which they are founded. The consciousness of good
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intentions disdains ambiguity. I shall not, however, multiply
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professions on this head. My motives must remain in the depository
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of my own breast. My arguments will be open to all, and may be
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judged of by all. They shall at least be offered in a spirit which
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will not disgrace the cause of truth.
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I propose, in a series of papers, to discuss the following
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interesting particulars:
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THE UTILITY OF THE UNION TO YOUR POLITICAL PROSPERITY
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THE INSUFFICIENCY OF THE PRESENT CONFEDERATION
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TO PRESERVE THAT UNION THE NECESSITY OF A GOVERNMENT AT LEAST
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EQUALLY ENERGETIC WITH THE ONE PROPOSED, TO THE ATTAINMENT OF THIS
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OBJECT THE CONFORMITY OF THE PROPOSED CONSTITUTION TO THE TRUE
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PRINCIPLES OF REPUBLICAN GOVERNMENT
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ITS ANALOGY TO YOUR OWN STATE CONSTITUTION
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and lastly, THE ADDITIONAL SECURITY WHICH ITS
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ADOPTION WILL AFFORD TO THE PRESERVATION OF THAT SPECIES OF
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GOVERNMENT, TO LIBERTY, AND TO PROPERTY.
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In the progress of this discussion I shall endeavor to give a
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satisfactory answer to all the objections which shall have made
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their appearance, that may seem to have any claim to your attention.
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It may perhaps be thought superfluous to offer arguments to
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prove the utility of the UNION, a point, no doubt, deeply engraved
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on the hearts of the great body of the people in every State, and
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one, which it may be imagined, has no adversaries. But the fact is,
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that we already hear it whispered in the private circles of those
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who oppose the new Constitution, that the thirteen States are of too
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great extent for any general system, and that we must of necessity
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resort to separate confederacies of distinct portions of the
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whole.1 This doctrine will, in all probability, be gradually
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propagated, till it has votaries enough to countenance an open
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avowal of it. For nothing can be more evident, to those who are
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able to take an enlarged view of the subject, than the alternative
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of an adoption of the new Constitution or a dismemberment of the
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Union. It will therefore be of use to begin by examining the
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advantages of that Union, the certain evils, and the probable
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dangers, to which every State will be exposed from its dissolution.
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This shall accordingly constitute the subject of my next address.
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PUBLIUS.
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1 The same idea, tracing the arguments to their consequences, is
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held out in several of the late publications against the new
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Constitution.
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FEDERALIST No. 2
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Concerning Dangers from Foreign Force and Influence
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For the Independent Journal.
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JAY
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To the People of the State of New York:
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WHEN the people of America reflect that they are now called upon
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to decide a question, which, in its consequences, must prove one of
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the most important that ever engaged their attention, the propriety
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of their taking a very comprehensive, as well as a very serious,
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view of it, will be evident.
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Nothing is more certain than the indispensable necessity of
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government, and it is equally undeniable, that whenever and however
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it is instituted, the people must cede to it some of their natural
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rights in order to vest it with requisite powers. It is well worthy
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of consideration therefore, whether it would conduce more to the
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interest of the people of America that they should, to all general
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purposes, be one nation, under one federal government, or that they
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should divide themselves into separate confederacies, and give to
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the head of each the same kind of powers which they are advised to
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place in one national government.
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It has until lately been a received and uncontradicted opinion
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that the prosperity of the people of America depended on their
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continuing firmly united, and the wishes, prayers, and efforts of
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our best and wisest citizens have been constantly directed to that
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object. But politicians now appear, who insist that this opinion is
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erroneous, and that instead of looking for safety and happiness in
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union, we ought to seek it in a division of the States into distinct
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confederacies or sovereignties. However extraordinary this new
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doctrine may appear, it nevertheless has its advocates; and certain
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characters who were much opposed to it formerly, are at present of
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the number. Whatever may be the arguments or inducements which have
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wrought this change in the sentiments and declarations of these
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gentlemen, it certainly would not be wise in the people at large to
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adopt these new political tenets without being fully convinced that
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they are founded in truth and sound policy.
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It has often given me pleasure to observe that independent
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America was not composed of detached and distant territories, but
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that one connected, fertile, widespreading country was the portion
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of our western sons of liberty. Providence has in a particular
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manner blessed it with a variety of soils and productions, and
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watered it with innumerable streams, for the delight and
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accommodation of its inhabitants. A succession of navigable waters
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forms a kind of chain round its borders, as if to bind it together;
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while the most noble rivers in the world, running at convenient
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distances, present them with highways for the easy communication of
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friendly aids, and the mutual transportation and exchange of their
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various commodities.
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With equal pleasure I have as often taken notice that Providence
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has been pleased to give this one connected country to one united
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people--a people descended from the same ancestors, speaking the same
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language, professing the same religion, attached to the same
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principles of government, very similar in their manners and customs,
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and who, by their joint counsels, arms, and efforts, fighting side
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by side throughout a long and bloody war, have nobly established
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general liberty and independence.
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This country and this people seem to have been made for each
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other, and it appears as if it was the design of Providence, that an
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inheritance so proper and convenient for a band of brethren, united
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to each other by the strongest ties, should never be split into a
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number of unsocial, jealous, and alien sovereignties.
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Similar sentiments have hitherto prevailed among all orders and
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denominations of men among us. To all general purposes we have
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uniformly been one people each individual citizen everywhere
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enjoying the same national rights, privileges, and protection. As a
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nation we have made peace and war; as a nation we have vanquished
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our common enemies; as a nation we have formed alliances, and made
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treaties, and entered into various compacts and conventions with
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foreign states.
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A strong sense of the value and blessings of union induced the
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people, at a very early period, to institute a federal government to
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preserve and perpetuate it. They formed it almost as soon as they
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had a political existence; nay, at a time when their habitations
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were in flames, when many of their citizens were bleeding, and when
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the progress of hostility and desolation left little room for those
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calm and mature inquiries and reflections which must ever precede
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the formation of a wise and wellbalanced government for a free
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people. It is not to be wondered at, that a government instituted
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in times so inauspicious, should on experiment be found greatly
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deficient and inadequate to the purpose it was intended to answer.
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This intelligent people perceived and regretted these defects.
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Still continuing no less attached to union than enamored of
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liberty, they observed the danger which immediately threatened the
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former and more remotely the latter; and being pursuaded that ample
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security for both could only be found in a national government more
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wisely framed, they as with one voice, convened the late convention
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at Philadelphia, to take that important subject under consideration.
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This convention composed of men who possessed the confidence of
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the people, and many of whom had become highly distinguished by
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their patriotism, virtue and wisdom, in times which tried the minds
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and hearts of men, undertook the arduous task. In the mild season
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of peace, with minds unoccupied by other subjects, they passed many
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months in cool, uninterrupted, and daily consultation; and finally,
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without having been awed by power, or influenced by any passions
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except love for their country, they presented and recommended to the
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people the plan produced by their joint and very unanimous councils.
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Admit, for so is the fact, that this plan is only RECOMMENDED,
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not imposed, yet let it be remembered that it is neither recommended
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to BLIND approbation, nor to BLIND reprobation; but to that sedate
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and candid consideration which the magnitude and importance of the
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subject demand, and which it certainly ought to receive. But this
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(as was remarked in the foregoing number of this paper) is more to
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be wished than expected, that it may be so considered and examined.
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Experience on a former occasion teaches us not to be too sanguine
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in such hopes. It is not yet forgotten that well-grounded
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apprehensions of imminent danger induced the people of America to
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form the memorable Congress of 1774. That body recommended certain
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measures to their constituents, and the event proved their wisdom;
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yet it is fresh in our memories how soon the press began to teem
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with pamphlets and weekly papers against those very measures. Not
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only many of the officers of government, who obeyed the dictates of
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personal interest, but others, from a mistaken estimate of
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consequences, or the undue influence of former attachments, or whose
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ambition aimed at objects which did not correspond with the public
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good, were indefatigable in their efforts to pursuade the people to
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reject the advice of that patriotic Congress. Many, indeed, were
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deceived and deluded, but the great majority of the people reasoned
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and decided judiciously; and happy they are in reflecting that they
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did so.
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They considered that the Congress was composed of many wise and
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experienced men. That, being convened from different parts of the
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country, they brought with them and communicated to each other a
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variety of useful information. That, in the course of the time they
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passed together in inquiring into and discussing the true interests
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of their country, they must have acquired very accurate knowledge on
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that head. That they were individually interested in the public
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liberty and prosperity, and therefore that it was not less their
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inclination than their duty to recommend only such measures as,
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after the most mature deliberation, they really thought prudent and
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advisable.
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These and similar considerations then induced the people to rely
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greatly on the judgment and integrity of the Congress; and they
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took their advice, notwithstanding the various arts and endeavors
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used to deter them from it. But if the people at large had reason
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to confide in the men of that Congress, few of whom had been fully
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tried or generally known, still greater reason have they now to
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respect the judgment and advice of the convention, for it is well
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known that some of the most distinguished members of that Congress,
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who have been since tried and justly approved for patriotism and
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abilities, and who have grown old in acquiring political
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information, were also members of this convention, and carried into
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it their accumulated knowledge and experience.
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It is worthy of remark that not only the first, but every
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succeeding Congress, as well as the late convention, have invariably
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joined with the people in thinking that the prosperity of America
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depended on its Union. To preserve and perpetuate it was the great
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object of the people in forming that convention, and it is also the
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great object of the plan which the convention has advised them to
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adopt. With what propriety, therefore, or for what good purposes,
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are attempts at this particular period made by some men to
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depreciate the importance of the Union? Or why is it suggested that
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three or four confederacies would be better than one? I am
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persuaded in my own mind that the people have always thought right
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on this subject, and that their universal and uniform attachment to
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the cause of the Union rests on great and weighty reasons, which I
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shall endeavor to develop and explain in some ensuing papers. They
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who promote the idea of substituting a number of distinct
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confederacies in the room of the plan of the convention, seem
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clearly to foresee that the rejection of it would put the
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continuance of the Union in the utmost jeopardy. That certainly
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would be the case, and I sincerely wish that it may be as clearly
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foreseen by every good citizen, that whenever the dissolution of the
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Union arrives, America will have reason to exclaim, in the words of
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the poet: ``FAREWELL! A LONG FAREWELL TO ALL MY GREATNESS.''
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PUBLIUS.
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FEDERALIST No. 3
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The Same Subject Continued
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(Concerning Dangers From Foreign Force and Influence)
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For the Independent Journal.
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JAY
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To the People of the State of New York:
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IT IS not a new observation that the people of any country (if,
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like the Americans, intelligent and wellinformed) seldom adopt and
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steadily persevere for many years in an erroneous opinion respecting
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their interests. That consideration naturally tends to create great
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respect for the high opinion which the people of America have so
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long and uniformly entertained of the importance of their continuing
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firmly united under one federal government, vested with sufficient
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powers for all general and national purposes.
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The more attentively I consider and investigate the reasons
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which appear to have given birth to this opinion, the more I become
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convinced that they are cogent and conclusive.
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Among the many objects to which a wise and free people find it
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necessary to direct their attention, that of providing for their
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SAFETY seems to be the first. The SAFETY of the people doubtless
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has relation to a great variety of circumstances and considerations,
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and consequently affords great latitude to those who wish to define
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it precisely and comprehensively.
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At present I mean only to consider it as it respects security
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for the preservation of peace and tranquillity, as well as against
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dangers from FOREIGN ARMS AND INFLUENCE, as from dangers of the LIKE
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KIND arising from domestic causes. As the former of these comes
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first in order, it is proper it should be the first discussed. Let
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us therefore proceed to examine whether the people are not right in
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their opinion that a cordial Union, under an efficient national
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government, affords them the best security that can be devised
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against HOSTILITIES from abroad.
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The number of wars which have happened or will happen in the
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world will always be found to be in proportion to the number and
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weight of the causes, whether REAL or PRETENDED, which PROVOKE or
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INVITE them. If this remark be just, it becomes useful to inquire
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whether so many JUST causes of war are likely to be given by UNITED
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AMERICA as by DISUNITED America; for if it should turn out that
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United America will probably give the fewest, then it will follow
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that in this respect the Union tends most to preserve the people in
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a state of peace with other nations.
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The JUST causes of war, for the most part, arise either from
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violation of treaties or from direct violence. America has already
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formed treaties with no less than six foreign nations, and all of
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them, except Prussia, are maritime, and therefore able to annoy and
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injure us. She has also extensive commerce with Portugal, Spain,
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and Britain, and, with respect to the two latter, has, in addition,
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the circumstance of neighborhood to attend to.
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It is of high importance to the peace of America that she
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observe the laws of nations towards all these powers, and to me it
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appears evident that this will be more perfectly and punctually done
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by one national government than it could be either by thirteen
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separate States or by three or four distinct confederacies.
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Because when once an efficient national government is
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established, the best men in the country will not only consent to
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serve, but also will generally be appointed to manage it; for,
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although town or country, or other contracted influence, may place
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men in State assemblies, or senates, or courts of justice, or
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executive departments, yet more general and extensive reputation for
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talents and other qualifications will be necessary to recommend men
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to offices under the national government,--especially as it will have
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the widest field for choice, and never experience that want of
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proper persons which is not uncommon in some of the States. Hence,
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it will result that the administration, the political counsels, and
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the judicial decisions of the national government will be more wise,
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systematical, and judicious than those of individual States, and
|
|
consequently more satisfactory with respect to other nations, as
|
|
well as more SAFE with respect to us.
|
|
Because, under the national government, treaties and articles of
|
|
treaties, as well as the laws of nations, will always be expounded
|
|
in one sense and executed in the same manner,--whereas, adjudications
|
|
on the same points and questions, in thirteen States, or in three or
|
|
four confederacies, will not always accord or be consistent; and
|
|
that, as well from the variety of independent courts and judges
|
|
appointed by different and independent governments, as from the
|
|
different local laws and interests which may affect and influence
|
|
them. The wisdom of the convention, in committing such questions to
|
|
the jurisdiction and judgment of courts appointed by and responsible
|
|
only to one national government, cannot be too much commended.
|
|
Because the prospect of present loss or advantage may often
|
|
tempt the governing party in one or two States to swerve from good
|
|
faith and justice; but those temptations, not reaching the other
|
|
States, and consequently having little or no influence on the
|
|
national government, the temptation will be fruitless, and good
|
|
faith and justice be preserved. The case of the treaty of peace
|
|
with Britain adds great weight to this reasoning.
|
|
Because, even if the governing party in a State should be
|
|
disposed to resist such temptations, yet as such temptations may,
|
|
and commonly do, result from circumstances peculiar to the State,
|
|
and may affect a great number of the inhabitants, the governing
|
|
party may not always be able, if willing, to prevent the injustice
|
|
meditated, or to punish the aggressors. But the national
|
|
government, not being affected by those local circumstances, will
|
|
neither be induced to commit the wrong themselves, nor want power or
|
|
inclination to prevent or punish its commission by others.
|
|
So far, therefore, as either designed or accidental violations
|
|
of treaties and the laws of nations afford JUST causes of war, they
|
|
are less to be apprehended under one general government than under
|
|
several lesser ones, and in that respect the former most favors the
|
|
SAFETY of the people.
|
|
As to those just causes of war which proceed from direct and
|
|
unlawful violence, it appears equally clear to me that one good
|
|
national government affords vastly more security against dangers of
|
|
that sort than can be derived from any other quarter.
|
|
Because such violences are more frequently caused by the
|
|
passions and interests of a part than of the whole; of one or two
|
|
States than of the Union. Not a single Indian war has yet been
|
|
occasioned by aggressions of the present federal government, feeble
|
|
as it is; but there are several instances of Indian hostilities
|
|
having been provoked by the improper conduct of individual States,
|
|
who, either unable or unwilling to restrain or punish offenses, have
|
|
given occasion to the slaughter of many innocent inhabitants.
|
|
The neighborhood of Spanish and British territories, bordering
|
|
on some States and not on others, naturally confines the causes of
|
|
quarrel more immediately to the borderers. The bordering States, if
|
|
any, will be those who, under the impulse of sudden irritation, and
|
|
a quick sense of apparent interest or injury, will be most likely,
|
|
by direct violence, to excite war with these nations; and nothing
|
|
can so effectually obviate that danger as a national government,
|
|
whose wisdom and prudence will not be diminished by the passions
|
|
which actuate the parties immediately interested.
|
|
But not only fewer just causes of war will be given by the
|
|
national government, but it will also be more in their power to
|
|
accommodate and settle them amicably. They will be more temperate
|
|
and cool, and in that respect, as well as in others, will be more in
|
|
capacity to act advisedly than the offending State. The pride of
|
|
states, as well as of men, naturally disposes them to justify all
|
|
their actions, and opposes their acknowledging, correcting, or
|
|
repairing their errors and offenses. The national government, in
|
|
such cases, will not be affected by this pride, but will proceed
|
|
with moderation and candor to consider and decide on the means most
|
|
proper to extricate them from the difficulties which threaten them.
|
|
Besides, it is well known that acknowledgments, explanations,
|
|
and compensations are often accepted as satisfactory from a strong
|
|
united nation, which would be rejected as unsatisfactory if offered
|
|
by a State or confederacy of little consideration or power.
|
|
In the year 1685, the state of Genoa having offended Louis XIV.,
|
|
endeavored to appease him. He demanded that they should send their
|
|
Doge, or chief magistrate, accompanied by four of their
|
|
senators, to FRANCE, to ask his pardon and receive his terms. They
|
|
were obliged to submit to it for the sake of peace. Would he on any
|
|
occasion either have demanded or have received the like humiliation
|
|
from Spain, or Britain, or any other POWERFUL nation?
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 4
|
|
|
|
The Same Subject Continued
|
|
(Concerning Dangers From Foreign Force and Influence)
|
|
For the Independent Journal.
|
|
|
|
JAY
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
MY LAST paper assigned several reasons why the safety of the
|
|
people would be best secured by union against the danger it may be
|
|
exposed to by JUST causes of war given to other nations; and those
|
|
reasons show that such causes would not only be more rarely given,
|
|
but would also be more easily accommodated, by a national government
|
|
than either by the State governments or the proposed little
|
|
confederacies.
|
|
But the safety of the people of America against dangers from
|
|
FOREIGN force depends not only on their forbearing to give JUST
|
|
causes of war to other nations, but also on their placing and
|
|
continuing themselves in such a situation as not to INVITE hostility
|
|
or insult; for it need not be observed that there are PRETENDED as
|
|
well as just causes of war.
|
|
It is too true, however disgraceful it may be to human nature,
|
|
that nations in general will make war whenever they have a prospect
|
|
of getting anything by it; nay, absolute monarchs will often make
|
|
war when their nations are to get nothing by it, but for the
|
|
purposes and objects merely personal, such as thirst for military
|
|
glory, revenge for personal affronts, ambition, or private compacts
|
|
to aggrandize or support their particular families or partisans.
|
|
These and a variety of other motives, which affect only the mind of
|
|
the sovereign, often lead him to engage in wars not sanctified by
|
|
justice or the voice and interests of his people. But, independent
|
|
of these inducements to war, which are more prevalent in absolute
|
|
monarchies, but which well deserve our attention, there are others
|
|
which affect nations as often as kings; and some of them will on
|
|
examination be found to grow out of our relative situation and
|
|
circumstances.
|
|
With France and with Britain we are rivals in the fisheries, and
|
|
can supply their markets cheaper than they can themselves,
|
|
notwithstanding any efforts to prevent it by bounties on their own
|
|
or duties on foreign fish.
|
|
With them and with most other European nations we are rivals in
|
|
navigation and the carrying trade; and we shall deceive ourselves
|
|
if we suppose that any of them will rejoice to see it flourish;
|
|
for, as our carrying trade cannot increase without in some degree
|
|
diminishing theirs, it is more their interest, and will be more
|
|
their policy, to restrain than to promote it.
|
|
In the trade to China and India, we interfere with more than one
|
|
nation, inasmuch as it enables us to partake in advantages which
|
|
they had in a manner monopolized, and as we thereby supply ourselves
|
|
with commodities which we used to purchase from them.
|
|
The extension of our own commerce in our own vessels cannot give
|
|
pleasure to any nations who possess territories on or near this
|
|
continent, because the cheapness and excellence of our productions,
|
|
added to the circumstance of vicinity, and the enterprise and
|
|
address of our merchants and navigators, will give us a greater
|
|
share in the advantages which those territories afford, than
|
|
consists with the wishes or policy of their respective sovereigns.
|
|
Spain thinks it convenient to shut the Mississippi against us on
|
|
the one side, and Britain excludes us from the Saint Lawrence on the
|
|
other; nor will either of them permit the other waters which are
|
|
between them and us to become the means of mutual intercourse and
|
|
traffic.
|
|
From these and such like considerations, which might, if
|
|
consistent with prudence, be more amplified and detailed, it is easy
|
|
to see that jealousies and uneasinesses may gradually slide into the
|
|
minds and cabinets of other nations, and that we are not to expect
|
|
that they should regard our advancement in union, in power and
|
|
consequence by land and by sea, with an eye of indifference and
|
|
composure.
|
|
The people of America are aware that inducements to war may
|
|
arise out of these circumstances, as well as from others not so
|
|
obvious at present, and that whenever such inducements may find fit
|
|
time and opportunity for operation, pretenses to color and justify
|
|
them will not be wanting. Wisely, therefore, do they consider union
|
|
and a good national government as necessary to put and keep them in
|
|
SUCH A SITUATION as, instead of INVITING war, will tend to repress
|
|
and discourage it. That situation consists in the best possible
|
|
state of defense, and necessarily depends on the government, the
|
|
arms, and the resources of the country.
|
|
As the safety of the whole is the interest of the whole, and
|
|
cannot be provided for without government, either one or more or
|
|
many, let us inquire whether one good government is not, relative to
|
|
the object in question, more competent than any other given number
|
|
whatever.
|
|
One government can collect and avail itself of the talents and
|
|
experience of the ablest men, in whatever part of the Union they may
|
|
be found. It can move on uniform principles of policy. It can
|
|
harmonize, assimilate, and protect the several parts and members,
|
|
and extend the benefit of its foresight and precautions to each. In
|
|
the formation of treaties, it will regard the interest of the whole,
|
|
and the particular interests of the parts as connected with that of
|
|
the whole. It can apply the resources and power of the whole to the
|
|
defense of any particular part, and that more easily and
|
|
expeditiously than State governments or separate confederacies can
|
|
possibly do, for want of concert and unity of system. It can place
|
|
the militia under one plan of discipline, and, by putting their
|
|
officers in a proper line of subordination to the Chief Magistrate,
|
|
will, as it were, consolidate them into one corps, and thereby
|
|
render them more efficient than if divided into thirteen or into
|
|
three or four distinct independent companies.
|
|
What would the militia of Britain be if the English militia
|
|
obeyed the government of England, if the Scotch militia obeyed the
|
|
government of Scotland, and if the Welsh militia obeyed the
|
|
government of Wales? Suppose an invasion; would those three
|
|
governments (if they agreed at all) be able, with all their
|
|
respective forces, to operate against the enemy so effectually as
|
|
the single government of Great Britain would?
|
|
We have heard much of the fleets of Britain, and the time may
|
|
come, if we are wise, when the fleets of America may engage
|
|
attention. But if one national government, had not so regulated the
|
|
navigation of Britain as to make it a nursery for seamen--if one
|
|
national government had not called forth all the national means and
|
|
materials for forming fleets, their prowess and their thunder would
|
|
never have been celebrated. Let England have its navigation and
|
|
fleet--let Scotland have its navigation and fleet--let Wales have its
|
|
navigation and fleet--let Ireland have its navigation and fleet--let
|
|
those four of the constituent parts of the British empire be be
|
|
under four independent governments, and it is easy to perceive how
|
|
soon they would each dwindle into comparative insignificance.
|
|
Apply these facts to our own case. Leave America divided into
|
|
thirteen or, if you please, into three or four independent
|
|
governments--what armies could they raise and pay--what fleets could
|
|
they ever hope to have? If one was attacked, would the others fly
|
|
to its succor, and spend their blood and money in its defense?
|
|
Would there be no danger of their being flattered into neutrality
|
|
by its specious promises, or seduced by a too great fondness for
|
|
peace to decline hazarding their tranquillity and present safety for
|
|
the sake of neighbors, of whom perhaps they have been jealous, and
|
|
whose importance they are content to see diminished? Although such
|
|
conduct would not be wise, it would, nevertheless, be natural. The
|
|
history of the states of Greece, and of other countries, abounds
|
|
with such instances, and it is not improbable that what has so often
|
|
happened would, under similar circumstances, happen again.
|
|
But admit that they might be willing to help the invaded State
|
|
or confederacy. How, and when, and in what proportion shall aids of
|
|
men and money be afforded? Who shall command the allied armies, and
|
|
from which of them shall he receive his orders? Who shall settle
|
|
the terms of peace, and in case of disputes what umpire shall decide
|
|
between them and compel acquiescence? Various difficulties and
|
|
inconveniences would be inseparable from such a situation; whereas
|
|
one government, watching over the general and common interests, and
|
|
combining and directing the powers and resources of the whole, would
|
|
be free from all these embarrassments, and conduce far more to the
|
|
safety of the people.
|
|
But whatever may be our situation, whether firmly united under
|
|
one national government, or split into a number of confederacies,
|
|
certain it is, that foreign nations will know and view it exactly as
|
|
it is; and they will act toward us accordingly. If they see that
|
|
our national government is efficient and well administered, our
|
|
trade prudently regulated, our militia properly organized and
|
|
disciplined, our resources and finances discreetly managed, our
|
|
credit re-established, our people free, contented, and united, they
|
|
will be much more disposed to cultivate our friendship than provoke
|
|
our resentment. If, on the other hand, they find us either
|
|
destitute of an effectual government (each State doing right or
|
|
wrong, as to its rulers may seem convenient), or split into three or
|
|
four independent and probably discordant republics or confederacies,
|
|
one inclining to Britain, another to France, and a third to Spain,
|
|
and perhaps played off against each other by the three, what a poor,
|
|
pitiful figure will America make in their eyes! How liable would
|
|
she become not only to their contempt but to their outrage, and how
|
|
soon would dear-bought experience proclaim that when a people or
|
|
family so divide, it never fails to be against themselves.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 5
|
|
|
|
The Same Subject Continued
|
|
(Concerning Dangers From Foreign Force and Influence)
|
|
For the Independent Journal.
|
|
|
|
JAY
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
QUEEN ANNE, in her letter of the 1st July, 1706, to the Scotch
|
|
Parliament, makes some observations on the importance of the UNION
|
|
then forming between England and Scotland, which merit our attention.
|
|
I shall present the public with one or two extracts from it: ``An
|
|
entire and perfect union will be the solid foundation of lasting
|
|
peace: It will secure your religion, liberty, and property; remove
|
|
the animosities amongst yourselves, and the jealousies and
|
|
differences betwixt our two kingdoms. It must increase your
|
|
strength, riches, and trade; and by this union the whole island,
|
|
being joined in affection and free from all apprehensions of
|
|
different interest, will be ENABLED TO RESIST ALL ITS ENEMIES.''
|
|
``We most earnestly recommend to you calmness and unanimity in this
|
|
great and weighty affair, that the union may be brought to a happy
|
|
conclusion, being the only EFFECTUAL way to secure our present and
|
|
future happiness, and disappoint the designs of our and your
|
|
enemies, who will doubtless, on this occasion, USE THEIR UTMOST
|
|
ENDEAVORS TO PREVENT OR DELAY THIS UNION.''
|
|
It was remarked in the preceding paper, that weakness and
|
|
divisions at home would invite dangers from abroad; and that
|
|
nothing would tend more to secure us from them than union, strength,
|
|
and good government within ourselves. This subject is copious and
|
|
cannot easily be exhausted.
|
|
The history of Great Britain is the one with which we are in
|
|
general the best acquainted, and it gives us many useful lessons.
|
|
We may profit by their experience without paying the price which it
|
|
cost them. Although it seems obvious to common sense that the
|
|
people of such an island should be but one nation, yet we find that
|
|
they were for ages divided into three, and that those three were
|
|
almost constantly embroiled in quarrels and wars with one another.
|
|
Notwithstanding their true interest with respect to the continental
|
|
nations was really the same, yet by the arts and policy and
|
|
practices of those nations, their mutual jealousies were perpetually
|
|
kept inflamed, and for a long series of years they were far more
|
|
inconvenient and troublesome than they were useful and assisting to
|
|
each other.
|
|
Should the people of America divide themselves into three or
|
|
four nations, would not the same thing happen? Would not similar
|
|
jealousies arise, and be in like manner cherished? Instead of their
|
|
being ``joined in affection'' and free from all apprehension of
|
|
different ``interests,'' envy and jealousy would soon extinguish
|
|
confidence and affection, and the partial interests of each
|
|
confederacy, instead of the general interests of all America, would
|
|
be the only objects of their policy and pursuits. Hence, like most
|
|
other BORDERING nations, they would always be either involved in
|
|
disputes and war, or live in the constant apprehension of them.
|
|
The most sanguine advocates for three or four confederacies
|
|
cannot reasonably suppose that they would long remain exactly on an
|
|
equal footing in point of strength, even if it was possible to form
|
|
them so at first; but, admitting that to be practicable, yet what
|
|
human contrivance can secure the continuance of such equality?
|
|
Independent of those local circumstances which tend to beget and
|
|
increase power in one part and to impede its progress in another, we
|
|
must advert to the effects of that superior policy and good
|
|
management which would probably distinguish the government of one
|
|
above the rest, and by which their relative equality in strength and
|
|
consideration would be destroyed. For it cannot be presumed that
|
|
the same degree of sound policy, prudence, and foresight would
|
|
uniformly be observed by each of these confederacies for a long
|
|
succession of years.
|
|
Whenever, and from whatever causes, it might happen, and happen
|
|
it would, that any one of these nations or confederacies should rise
|
|
on the scale of political importance much above the degree of her
|
|
neighbors, that moment would those neighbors behold her with envy
|
|
and with fear. Both those passions would lead them to countenance,
|
|
if not to promote, whatever might promise to diminish her
|
|
importance; and would also restrain them from measures calculated
|
|
to advance or even to secure her prosperity. Much time would not be
|
|
necessary to enable her to discern these unfriendly dispositions.
|
|
She would soon begin, not only to lose confidence in her neighbors,
|
|
but also to feel a disposition equally unfavorable to them.
|
|
Distrust naturally creates distrust, and by nothing is good-will
|
|
and kind conduct more speedily changed than by invidious jealousies
|
|
and uncandid imputations, whether expressed or implied.
|
|
The North is generally the region of strength, and many local
|
|
circumstances render it probable that the most Northern of the
|
|
proposed confederacies would, at a period not very distant, be
|
|
unquestionably more formidable than any of the others. No sooner
|
|
would this become evident than the NORTHERN HIVE would excite the
|
|
same ideas and sensations in the more southern parts of America
|
|
which it formerly did in the southern parts of Europe. Nor does it
|
|
appear to be a rash conjecture that its young swarms might often be
|
|
tempted to gather honey in the more blooming fields and milder air
|
|
of their luxurious and more delicate neighbors.
|
|
They who well consider the history of similar divisions and
|
|
confederacies will find abundant reason to apprehend that those in
|
|
contemplation would in no other sense be neighbors than as they
|
|
would be borderers; that they would neither love nor trust one
|
|
another, but on the contrary would be a prey to discord, jealousy,
|
|
and mutual injuries; in short, that they would place us exactly in
|
|
the situations in which some nations doubtless wish to see us, viz.,
|
|
FORMIDABLE ONLY TO EACH OTHER.
|
|
From these considerations it appears that those gentlemen are
|
|
greatly mistaken who suppose that alliances offensive and defensive
|
|
might be formed between these confederacies, and would produce that
|
|
combination and union of wills of arms and of resources, which would
|
|
be necessary to put and keep them in a formidable state of defense
|
|
against foreign enemies.
|
|
When did the independent states, into which Britain and Spain
|
|
were formerly divided, combine in such alliance, or unite their
|
|
forces against a foreign enemy? The proposed confederacies will be
|
|
DISTINCT NATIONS. Each of them would have its commerce with
|
|
foreigners to regulate by distinct treaties; and as their
|
|
productions and commodities are different and proper for different
|
|
markets, so would those treaties be essentially different.
|
|
Different commercial concerns must create different interests, and
|
|
of course different degrees of political attachment to and
|
|
connection with different foreign nations. Hence it might and
|
|
probably would happen that the foreign nation with whom the SOUTHERN
|
|
confederacy might be at war would be the one with whom the NORTHERN
|
|
confederacy would be the most desirous of preserving peace and
|
|
friendship. An alliance so contrary to their immediate interest
|
|
would not therefore be easy to form, nor, if formed, would it be
|
|
observed and fulfilled with perfect good faith.
|
|
Nay, it is far more probable that in America, as in Europe,
|
|
neighboring nations, acting under the impulse of opposite interests
|
|
and unfriendly passions, would frequently be found taking different
|
|
sides. Considering our distance from Europe, it would be more
|
|
natural for these confederacies to apprehend danger from one another
|
|
than from distant nations, and therefore that each of them should be
|
|
more desirous to guard against the others by the aid of foreign
|
|
alliances, than to guard against foreign dangers by alliances
|
|
between themselves. And here let us not forget how much more easy
|
|
it is to receive foreign fleets into our ports, and foreign armies
|
|
into our country, than it is to persuade or compel them to depart.
|
|
How many conquests did the Romans and others make in the characters
|
|
of allies, and what innovations did they under the same character
|
|
introduce into the governments of those whom they pretended to
|
|
protect.
|
|
Let candid men judge, then, whether the division of America into
|
|
any given number of independent sovereignties would tend to secure
|
|
us against the hostilities and improper interference of foreign
|
|
nations.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 6
|
|
|
|
Concerning Dangers from Dissensions Between the States
|
|
For the Independent Journal.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE three last numbers of this paper have been dedicated to an
|
|
enumeration of the dangers to which we should be exposed, in a state
|
|
of disunion, from the arms and arts of foreign nations. I shall now
|
|
proceed to delineate dangers of a different and, perhaps, still more
|
|
alarming kind--those which will in all probability flow from
|
|
dissensions between the States themselves, and from domestic
|
|
factions and convulsions. These have been already in some instances
|
|
slightly anticipated; but they deserve a more particular and more
|
|
full investigation.
|
|
A man must be far gone in Utopian speculations who can seriously
|
|
doubt that, if these States should either be wholly disunited, or
|
|
only united in partial confederacies, the subdivisions into which
|
|
they might be thrown would have frequent and violent contests with
|
|
each other. To presume a want of motives for such contests as an
|
|
argument against their existence, would be to forget that men are
|
|
ambitious, vindictive, and rapacious. To look for a continuation of
|
|
harmony between a number of independent, unconnected sovereignties
|
|
in the same neighborhood, would be to disregard the uniform course
|
|
of human events, and to set at defiance the accumulated experience
|
|
of ages.
|
|
The causes of hostility among nations are innumerable. There
|
|
are some which have a general and almost constant operation upon the
|
|
collective bodies of society. Of this description are the love of
|
|
power or the desire of pre-eminence and dominion--the jealousy of
|
|
power, or the desire of equality and safety. There are others which
|
|
have a more circumscribed though an equally operative influence
|
|
within their spheres. Such are the rivalships and competitions of
|
|
commerce between commercial nations. And there are others, not less
|
|
numerous than either of the former, which take their origin entirely
|
|
in private passions; in the attachments, enmities, interests,
|
|
hopes, and fears of leading individuals in the communities of which
|
|
they are members. Men of this class, whether the favorites of a
|
|
king or of a people, have in too many instances abused the
|
|
confidence they possessed; and assuming the pretext of some public
|
|
motive, have not scrupled to sacrifice the national tranquillity to
|
|
personal advantage or personal gratification.
|
|
The celebrated Pericles, in compliance with the resentment of a
|
|
prostitute,1 at the expense of much of the blood and treasure of
|
|
his countrymen, attacked, vanquished, and destroyed the city of the
|
|
SAMNIANS. The same man, stimulated by private pique against the
|
|
MEGARENSIANS,2 another nation of Greece, or to avoid a
|
|
prosecution with which he was threatened as an accomplice of a
|
|
supposed theft of the statuary Phidias,3 or to get rid of the
|
|
accusations prepared to be brought against him for dissipating the
|
|
funds of the state in the purchase of popularity,4 or from a
|
|
combination of all these causes, was the primitive author of that
|
|
famous and fatal war, distinguished in the Grecian annals by the
|
|
name of the PELOPONNESIAN war; which, after various vicissitudes,
|
|
intermissions, and renewals, terminated in the ruin of the Athenian
|
|
commonwealth.
|
|
The ambitious cardinal, who was prime minister to Henry VIII.,
|
|
permitting his vanity to aspire to the triple crown,5
|
|
entertained hopes of succeeding in the acquisition of that splendid
|
|
prize by the influence of the Emperor Charles V. To secure the
|
|
favor and interest of this enterprising and powerful monarch, he
|
|
precipitated England into a war with France, contrary to the
|
|
plainest dictates of policy, and at the hazard of the safety and
|
|
independence, as well of the kingdom over which he presided by his
|
|
counsels, as of Europe in general. For if there ever was a
|
|
sovereign who bid fair to realize the project of universal monarchy,
|
|
it was the Emperor Charles V., of whose intrigues Wolsey was at once
|
|
the instrument and the dupe.
|
|
The influence which the bigotry of one female,6 the
|
|
petulance of another,7 and the cabals of a third,8 had in
|
|
the contemporary policy, ferments, and pacifications, of a
|
|
considerable part of Europe, are topics that have been too often
|
|
descanted upon not to be generally known.
|
|
To multiply examples of the agency of personal considerations in
|
|
the production of great national events, either foreign or domestic,
|
|
according to their direction, would be an unnecessary waste of time.
|
|
Those who have but a superficial acquaintance with the sources from
|
|
which they are to be drawn, will themselves recollect a variety of
|
|
instances; and those who have a tolerable knowledge of human nature
|
|
will not stand in need of such lights to form their opinion either
|
|
of the reality or extent of that agency. Perhaps, however, a
|
|
reference, tending to illustrate the general principle, may with
|
|
propriety be made to a case which has lately happened among
|
|
ourselves. If Shays had not been a DESPERATE DEBTOR, it is much to
|
|
be doubted whether Massachusetts would have been plunged into a
|
|
civil war.
|
|
But notwithstanding the concurring testimony of experience, in
|
|
this particular, there are still to be found visionary or designing
|
|
men, who stand ready to advocate the paradox of perpetual peace
|
|
between the States, though dismembered and alienated from each other.
|
|
The genius of republics (say they) is pacific; the spirit of
|
|
commerce has a tendency to soften the manners of men, and to
|
|
extinguish those inflammable humors which have so often kindled into
|
|
wars. Commercial republics, like ours, will never be disposed to
|
|
waste themselves in ruinous contentions with each other. They will
|
|
be governed by mutual interest, and will cultivate a spirit of
|
|
mutual amity and concord.
|
|
Is it not (we may ask these projectors in politics) the true
|
|
interest of all nations to cultivate the same benevolent and
|
|
philosophic spirit? If this be their true interest, have they in
|
|
fact pursued it? Has it not, on the contrary, invariably been found
|
|
that momentary passions, and immediate interest, have a more active
|
|
and imperious control over human conduct than general or remote
|
|
considerations of policy, utility or justice? Have republics in
|
|
practice been less addicted to war than monarchies? Are not the
|
|
former administered by MEN as well as the latter? Are there not
|
|
aversions, predilections, rivalships, and desires of unjust
|
|
acquisitions, that affect nations as well as kings? Are not popular
|
|
assemblies frequently subject to the impulses of rage, resentment,
|
|
jealousy, avarice, and of other irregular and violent propensities?
|
|
Is it not well known that their determinations are often governed
|
|
by a few individuals in whom they place confidence, and are, of
|
|
course, liable to be tinctured by the passions and views of those
|
|
individuals? Has commerce hitherto done anything more than change
|
|
the objects of war? Is not the love of wealth as domineering and
|
|
enterprising a passion as that of power or glory? Have there not
|
|
been as many wars founded upon commercial motives since that has
|
|
become the prevailing system of nations, as were before occasioned
|
|
by the cupidity of territory or dominion? Has not the spirit of
|
|
commerce, in many instances, administered new incentives to the
|
|
appetite, both for the one and for the other? Let experience, the
|
|
least fallible guide of human opinions, be appealed to for an answer
|
|
to these inquiries.
|
|
Sparta, Athens, Rome, and Carthage were all republics; two of
|
|
them, Athens and Carthage, of the commercial kind. Yet were they as
|
|
often engaged in wars, offensive and defensive, as the neighboring
|
|
monarchies of the same times. Sparta was little better than a
|
|
wellregulated camp; and Rome was never sated of carnage and
|
|
conquest.
|
|
Carthage, though a commercial republic, was the aggressor in the
|
|
very war that ended in her destruction. Hannibal had carried her
|
|
arms into the heart of Italy and to the gates of Rome, before
|
|
Scipio, in turn, gave him an overthrow in the territories of
|
|
Carthage, and made a conquest of the commonwealth.
|
|
Venice, in later times, figured more than once in wars of
|
|
ambition, till, becoming an object to the other Italian states, Pope
|
|
Julius II. found means to accomplish that formidable league,9
|
|
which gave a deadly blow to the power and pride of this haughty
|
|
republic.
|
|
The provinces of Holland, till they were overwhelmed in debts
|
|
and taxes, took a leading and conspicuous part in the wars of Europe.
|
|
They had furious contests with England for the dominion of the
|
|
sea, and were among the most persevering and most implacable of the
|
|
opponents of Louis XIV.
|
|
In the government of Britain the representatives of the people
|
|
compose one branch of the national legislature. Commerce has been
|
|
for ages the predominant pursuit of that country. Few nations,
|
|
nevertheless, have been more frequently engaged in war; and the
|
|
wars in which that kingdom has been engaged have, in numerous
|
|
instances, proceeded from the people.
|
|
There have been, if I may so express it, almost as many popular
|
|
as royal wars. The cries of the nation and the importunities of
|
|
their representatives have, upon various occasions, dragged their
|
|
monarchs into war, or continued them in it, contrary to their
|
|
inclinations, and sometimes contrary to the real interests of the
|
|
State. In that memorable struggle for superiority between the rival
|
|
houses of AUSTRIA and BOURBON, which so long kept Europe in a flame,
|
|
it is well known that the antipathies of the English against the
|
|
French, seconding the ambition, or rather the avarice, of a favorite
|
|
leader,10 protracted the war beyond the limits marked out by
|
|
sound policy, and for a considerable time in opposition to the views
|
|
of the court.
|
|
The wars of these two last-mentioned nations have in a great
|
|
measure grown out of commercial considerations,--the desire of
|
|
supplanting and the fear of being supplanted, either in particular
|
|
branches of traffic or in the general advantages of trade and
|
|
navigation.
|
|
From this summary of what has taken place in other countries,
|
|
whose situations have borne the nearest resemblance to our own, what
|
|
reason can we have to confide in those reveries which would seduce
|
|
us into an expectation of peace and cordiality between the members
|
|
of the present confederacy, in a state of separation? Have we not
|
|
already seen enough of the fallacy and extravagance of those idle
|
|
theories which have amused us with promises of an exemption from the
|
|
imperfections, weaknesses and evils incident to society in every
|
|
shape? Is it not time to awake from the deceitful dream of a golden
|
|
age, and to adopt as a practical maxim for the direction of our
|
|
political conduct that we, as well as the other inhabitants of the
|
|
globe, are yet remote from the happy empire of perfect wisdom and
|
|
perfect virtue?
|
|
Let the point of extreme depression to which our national
|
|
dignity and credit have sunk, let the inconveniences felt everywhere
|
|
from a lax and ill administration of government, let the revolt of a
|
|
part of the State of North Carolina, the late menacing disturbances
|
|
in Pennsylvania, and the actual insurrections and rebellions in
|
|
Massachusetts, declare--!
|
|
So far is the general sense of mankind from corresponding with
|
|
the tenets of those who endeavor to lull asleep our apprehensions of
|
|
discord and hostility between the States, in the event of disunion,
|
|
that it has from long observation of the progress of society become
|
|
a sort of axiom in politics, that vicinity or nearness of situation,
|
|
constitutes nations natural enemies. An intelligent writer
|
|
expresses himself on this subject to this effect: ``NEIGHBORING
|
|
NATIONS (says he) are naturally enemies of each other unless their
|
|
common weakness forces them to league in a CONFEDERATE REPUBLIC, and
|
|
their constitution prevents the differences that neighborhood
|
|
occasions, extinguishing that secret jealousy which disposes all
|
|
states to aggrandize themselves at the expense of their
|
|
neighbors.''11 This passage, at the same time, points out the
|
|
EVIL and suggests the REMEDY.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
1 Aspasia, vide ``Plutarch's Life of Pericles.''
|
|
2 Ibid.
|
|
3 Ibid.
|
|
4 ] Ibid. Phidias was supposed to have stolen some public
|
|
gold, with the connivance of Pericles, for the embellishment of the
|
|
statue of Minerva.
|
|
5 P Worn by the popes.
|
|
6 Madame de Maintenon.
|
|
7 Duchess of Marlborough.
|
|
8 Madame de Pompadour.
|
|
9 The League of Cambray, comprehending the Emperor, the King of
|
|
France, the King of Aragon, and most of the Italian princes and
|
|
states.
|
|
10 The Duke of Marlborough.
|
|
11 Vide ``Principes des Negociations'' par 1'Abbe de Mably.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST. No. 7
|
|
|
|
The Same Subject Continued
|
|
(Concerning Dangers from Dissensions Between the States)
|
|
For the Independent Journal.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
IT IS sometimes asked, with an air of seeming triumph, what
|
|
inducements could the States have, if disunited, to make war upon
|
|
each other? It would be a full answer to this question to
|
|
say--precisely the same inducements which have, at different times,
|
|
deluged in blood all the nations in the world. But, unfortunately
|
|
for us, the question admits of a more particular answer. There are
|
|
causes of differences within our immediate contemplation, of the
|
|
tendency of which, even under the restraints of a federal
|
|
constitution, we have had sufficient experience to enable us to form
|
|
a judgment of what might be expected if those restraints were
|
|
removed.
|
|
Territorial disputes have at all times been found one of the
|
|
most fertile sources of hostility among nations. Perhaps the
|
|
greatest proportion of wars that have desolated the earth have
|
|
sprung from this origin. This cause would exist among us in full
|
|
force. We have a vast tract of unsettled territory within the
|
|
boundaries of the United States. There still are discordant and
|
|
undecided claims between several of them, and the dissolution of the
|
|
Union would lay a foundation for similar claims between them all.
|
|
It is well known that they have heretofore had serious and animated
|
|
discussion concerning the rights to the lands which were ungranted
|
|
at the time of the Revolution, and which usually went under the name
|
|
of crown lands. The States within the limits of whose colonial
|
|
governments they were comprised have claimed them as their property,
|
|
the others have contended that the rights of the crown in this
|
|
article devolved upon the Union; especially as to all that part of
|
|
the Western territory which, either by actual possession, or through
|
|
the submission of the Indian proprietors, was subjected to the
|
|
jurisdiction of the king of Great Britain, till it was relinquished
|
|
in the treaty of peace. This, it has been said, was at all events
|
|
an acquisition to the Confederacy by compact with a foreign power.
|
|
It has been the prudent policy of Congress to appease this
|
|
controversy, by prevailing upon the States to make cessions to the
|
|
United States for the benefit of the whole. This has been so far
|
|
accomplished as, under a continuation of the Union, to afford a
|
|
decided prospect of an amicable termination of the dispute. A
|
|
dismemberment of the Confederacy, however, would revive this
|
|
dispute, and would create others on the same subject. At present, a
|
|
large part of the vacant Western territory is, by cession at least,
|
|
if not by any anterior right, the common property of the Union. If
|
|
that were at an end, the States which made the cession, on a
|
|
principle of federal compromise, would be apt when the motive of the
|
|
grant had ceased, to reclaim the lands as a reversion. The other
|
|
States would no doubt insist on a proportion, by right of
|
|
representation. Their argument would be, that a grant, once made,
|
|
could not be revoked; and that the justice of participating in
|
|
territory acquired or secured by the joint efforts of the
|
|
Confederacy, remained undiminished. If, contrary to probability, it
|
|
should be admitted by all the States, that each had a right to a
|
|
share of this common stock, there would still be a difficulty to be
|
|
surmounted, as to a proper rule of apportionment. Different
|
|
principles would be set up by different States for this purpose;
|
|
and as they would affect the opposite interests of the parties,
|
|
they might not easily be susceptible of a pacific adjustment.
|
|
In the wide field of Western territory, therefore, we perceive
|
|
an ample theatre for hostile pretensions, without any umpire or
|
|
common judge to interpose between the contending parties. To reason
|
|
from the past to the future, we shall have good ground to apprehend,
|
|
that the sword would sometimes be appealed to as the arbiter of
|
|
their differences. The circumstances of the dispute between
|
|
Connecticut and Pennsylvania, respecting the land at Wyoming,
|
|
admonish us not to be sanguine in expecting an easy accommodation of
|
|
such differences. The articles of confederation obliged the parties
|
|
to submit the matter to the decision of a federal court. The
|
|
submission was made, and the court decided in favor of Pennsylvania.
|
|
But Connecticut gave strong indications of dissatisfaction with
|
|
that determination; nor did she appear to be entirely resigned to
|
|
it, till, by negotiation and management, something like an
|
|
equivalent was found for the loss she supposed herself to have
|
|
sustained. Nothing here said is intended to convey the slightest
|
|
censure on the conduct of that State. She no doubt sincerely
|
|
believed herself to have been injured by the decision; and States,
|
|
like individuals, acquiesce with great reluctance in determinations
|
|
to their disadvantage.
|
|
Those who had an opportunity of seeing the inside of the
|
|
transactions which attended the progress of the controversy between
|
|
this State and the district of Vermont, can vouch the opposition we
|
|
experienced, as well from States not interested as from those which
|
|
were interested in the claim; and can attest the danger to which
|
|
the peace of the Confederacy might have been exposed, had this State
|
|
attempted to assert its rights by force. Two motives preponderated
|
|
in that opposition: one, a jealousy entertained of our future
|
|
power; and the other, the interest of certain individuals of
|
|
influence in the neighboring States, who had obtained grants of
|
|
lands under the actual government of that district. Even the States
|
|
which brought forward claims, in contradiction to ours, seemed more
|
|
solicitous to dismember this State, than to establish their own
|
|
pretensions. These were New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and
|
|
Connecticut. New Jersey and Rhode Island, upon all occasions,
|
|
discovered a warm zeal for the independence of Vermont; and
|
|
Maryland, till alarmed by the appearance of a connection between
|
|
Canada and that State, entered deeply into the same views. These
|
|
being small States, saw with an unfriendly eye the perspective of
|
|
our growing greatness. In a review of these transactions we may
|
|
trace some of the causes which would be likely to embroil the States
|
|
with each other, if it should be their unpropitious destiny to
|
|
become disunited.
|
|
The competitions of commerce would be another fruitful source of
|
|
contention. The States less favorably circumstanced would be
|
|
desirous of escaping from the disadvantages of local situation, and
|
|
of sharing in the advantages of their more fortunate neighbors.
|
|
Each State, or separate confederacy, would pursue a system of
|
|
commercial policy peculiar to itself. This would occasion
|
|
distinctions, preferences, and exclusions, which would beget
|
|
discontent. The habits of intercourse, on the basis of equal
|
|
privileges, to which we have been accustomed since the earliest
|
|
settlement of the country, would give a keener edge to those causes
|
|
of discontent than they would naturally have independent of this
|
|
circumstance. WE SHOULD BE READY TO DENOMINATE INJURIES THOSE
|
|
THINGS WHICH WERE IN REALITY THE JUSTIFIABLE ACTS OF INDEPENDENT
|
|
SOVEREIGNTIES CONSULTING A DISTINCT INTEREST. The spirit of
|
|
enterprise, which characterizes the commercial part of America, has
|
|
left no occasion of displaying itself unimproved. It is not at all
|
|
probable that this unbridled spirit would pay much respect to those
|
|
regulations of trade by which particular States might endeavor to
|
|
secure exclusive benefits to their own citizens. The infractions of
|
|
these regulations, on one side, the efforts to prevent and repel
|
|
them, on the other, would naturally lead to outrages, and these to
|
|
reprisals and wars.
|
|
The opportunities which some States would have of rendering
|
|
others tributary to them by commercial regulations would be
|
|
impatiently submitted to by the tributary States. The relative
|
|
situation of New York, Connecticut, and New Jersey would afford an
|
|
example of this kind. New York, from the necessities of revenue,
|
|
must lay duties on her importations. A great part of these duties
|
|
must be paid by the inhabitants of the two other States in the
|
|
capacity of consumers of what we import. New York would neither be
|
|
willing nor able to forego this advantage. Her citizens would not
|
|
consent that a duty paid by them should be remitted in favor of the
|
|
citizens of her neighbors; nor would it be practicable, if there
|
|
were not this impediment in the way, to distinguish the customers in
|
|
our own markets. Would Connecticut and New Jersey long submit to be
|
|
taxed by New York for her exclusive benefit? Should we be long
|
|
permitted to remain in the quiet and undisturbed enjoyment of a
|
|
metropolis, from the possession of which we derived an advantage so
|
|
odious to our neighbors, and, in their opinion, so oppressive?
|
|
Should we be able to preserve it against the incumbent weight of
|
|
Connecticut on the one side, and the co-operating pressure of New
|
|
Jersey on the other? These are questions that temerity alone will
|
|
answer in the affirmative.
|
|
The public debt of the Union would be a further cause of
|
|
collision between the separate States or confederacies. The
|
|
apportionment, in the first instance, and the progressive
|
|
extinguishment afterward, would be alike productive of ill-humor and
|
|
animosity. How would it be possible to agree upon a rule of
|
|
apportionment satisfactory to all? There is scarcely any that can
|
|
be proposed which is entirely free from real objections. These, as
|
|
usual, would be exaggerated by the adverse interest of the parties.
|
|
There are even dissimilar views among the States as to the general
|
|
principle of discharging the public debt. Some of them, either less
|
|
impressed with the importance of national credit, or because their
|
|
citizens have little, if any, immediate interest in the question,
|
|
feel an indifference, if not a repugnance, to the payment of the
|
|
domestic debt at any rate. These would be inclined to magnify the
|
|
difficulties of a distribution. Others of them, a numerous body of
|
|
whose citizens are creditors to the public beyond proportion of the
|
|
State in the total amount of the national debt, would be strenuous
|
|
for some equitable and effective provision. The procrastinations of
|
|
the former would excite the resentments of the latter. The
|
|
settlement of a rule would, in the meantime, be postponed by real
|
|
differences of opinion and affected delays. The citizens of the
|
|
States interested would clamour; foreign powers would urge for the
|
|
satisfaction of their just demands, and the peace of the States
|
|
would be hazarded to the double contingency of external invasion and
|
|
internal contention.
|
|
Suppose the difficulties of agreeing upon a rule surmounted, and
|
|
the apportionment made. Still there is great room to suppose that
|
|
the rule agreed upon would, upon experiment, be found to bear harder
|
|
upon some States than upon others. Those which were sufferers by it
|
|
would naturally seek for a mitigation of the burden. The others
|
|
would as naturally be disinclined to a revision, which was likely to
|
|
end in an increase of their own incumbrances. Their refusal would
|
|
be too plausible a pretext to the complaining States to withhold
|
|
their contributions, not to be embraced with avidity; and the
|
|
non-compliance of these States with their engagements would be a
|
|
ground of bitter discussion and altercation. If even the rule
|
|
adopted should in practice justify the equality of its principle,
|
|
still delinquencies in payments on the part of some of the States
|
|
would result from a diversity of other causes--the real deficiency of
|
|
resources; the mismanagement of their finances; accidental
|
|
disorders in the management of the government; and, in addition to
|
|
the rest, the reluctance with which men commonly part with money for
|
|
purposes that have outlived the exigencies which produced them, and
|
|
interfere with the supply of immediate wants. Delinquencies, from
|
|
whatever causes, would be productive of complaints, recriminations,
|
|
and quarrels. There is, perhaps, nothing more likely to disturb the
|
|
tranquillity of nations than their being bound to mutual
|
|
contributions for any common object that does not yield an equal and
|
|
coincident benefit. For it is an observation, as true as it is
|
|
trite, that there is nothing men differ so readily about as the
|
|
payment of money.
|
|
Laws in violation of private contracts, as they amount to
|
|
aggressions on the rights of those States whose citizens are injured
|
|
by them, may be considered as another probable source of hostility.
|
|
We are not authorized to expect that a more liberal or more
|
|
equitable spirit would preside over the legislations of the
|
|
individual States hereafter, if unrestrained by any additional
|
|
checks, than we have heretofore seen in too many instances
|
|
disgracing their several codes. We have observed the disposition to
|
|
retaliation excited in Connecticut in consequence of the enormities
|
|
perpetrated by the Legislature of Rhode Island; and we reasonably
|
|
infer that, in similar cases, under other circumstances, a war, not
|
|
of PARCHMENT, but of the sword, would chastise such atrocious
|
|
breaches of moral obligation and social justice.
|
|
The probability of incompatible alliances between the different
|
|
States or confederacies and different foreign nations, and the
|
|
effects of this situation upon the peace of the whole, have been
|
|
sufficiently unfolded in some preceding papers. From the view they
|
|
have exhibited of this part of the subject, this conclusion is to be
|
|
drawn, that America, if not connected at all, or only by the feeble
|
|
tie of a simple league, offensive and defensive, would, by the
|
|
operation of such jarring alliances, be gradually entangled in all
|
|
the pernicious labyrinths of European politics and wars; and by the
|
|
destructive contentions of the parts into which she was divided,
|
|
would be likely to become a prey to the artifices and machinations
|
|
of powers equally the enemies of them all. Divide et
|
|
impera1 must be the motto of every nation that either hates or
|
|
fears us.2 PUBLIUS.
|
|
1 Divide and command.
|
|
2 In order that the whole subject of these papers may as soon as
|
|
possible be laid before the public, it is proposed to publish them
|
|
four times a week--on Tuesday in the New York Packet and on
|
|
Thursday in the Daily Advertiser.
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|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 8
|
|
|
|
The Consequences of Hostilities Between the States
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|
From the New York Packet.
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|
Tuesday, November 20, 1787.
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|
|
|
HAMILTON
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|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
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|
ASSUMING it therefore as an established truth that the several
|
|
States, in case of disunion, or such combinations of them as might
|
|
happen to be formed out of the wreck of the general Confederacy,
|
|
would be subject to those vicissitudes of peace and war, of
|
|
friendship and enmity, with each other, which have fallen to the lot
|
|
of all neighboring nations not united under one government, let us
|
|
enter into a concise detail of some of the consequences that would
|
|
attend such a situation.
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|
War between the States, in the first period of their separate
|
|
existence, would be accompanied with much greater distresses than it
|
|
commonly is in those countries where regular military establishments
|
|
have long obtained. The disciplined armies always kept on foot on
|
|
the continent of Europe, though they bear a malignant aspect to
|
|
liberty and economy, have, notwithstanding, been productive of the
|
|
signal advantage of rendering sudden conquests impracticable, and of
|
|
preventing that rapid desolation which used to mark the progress of
|
|
war prior to their introduction. The art of fortification has
|
|
contributed to the same ends. The nations of Europe are encircled
|
|
with chains of fortified places, which mutually obstruct invasion.
|
|
Campaigns are wasted in reducing two or three frontier garrisons,
|
|
to gain admittance into an enemy's country. Similar impediments
|
|
occur at every step, to exhaust the strength and delay the progress
|
|
of an invader. Formerly, an invading army would penetrate into the
|
|
heart of a neighboring country almost as soon as intelligence of its
|
|
approach could be received; but now a comparatively small force of
|
|
disciplined troops, acting on the defensive, with the aid of posts,
|
|
is able to impede, and finally to frustrate, the enterprises of one
|
|
much more considerable. The history of war, in that quarter of the
|
|
globe, is no longer a history of nations subdued and empires
|
|
overturned, but of towns taken and retaken; of battles that decide
|
|
nothing; of retreats more beneficial than victories; of much
|
|
effort and little acquisition.
|
|
In this country the scene would be altogether reversed. The
|
|
jealousy of military establishments would postpone them as long as
|
|
possible. The want of fortifications, leaving the frontiers of one
|
|
state open to another, would facilitate inroads. The populous
|
|
States would, with little difficulty, overrun their less populous
|
|
neighbors. Conquests would be as easy to be made as difficult to be
|
|
retained. War, therefore, would be desultory and predatory.
|
|
PLUNDER and devastation ever march in the train of irregulars. The
|
|
calamities of individuals would make the principal figure in the
|
|
events which would characterize our military exploits.
|
|
This picture is not too highly wrought; though, I confess, it
|
|
would not long remain a just one. Safety from external danger is
|
|
the most powerful director of national conduct. Even the ardent
|
|
love of liberty will, after a time, give way to its dictates. The
|
|
violent destruction of life and property incident to war, the
|
|
continual effort and alarm attendant on a state of continual danger,
|
|
will compel nations the most attached to liberty to resort for
|
|
repose and security to institutions which have a tendency to destroy
|
|
their civil and political rights. To be more safe, they at length
|
|
become willing to run the risk of being less free.
|
|
The institutions chiefly alluded to are STANDING ARMIES and the
|
|
correspondent appendages of military establishments. Standing
|
|
armies, it is said, are not provided against in the new
|
|
Constitution; and it is therefore inferred that they may exist
|
|
under it.1 Their existence, however, from the very terms of the
|
|
proposition, is, at most, problematical and uncertain. But standing
|
|
armies, it may be replied, must inevitably result from a dissolution
|
|
of the Confederacy. Frequent war and constant apprehension, which
|
|
require a state of as constant preparation, will infallibly produce
|
|
them. The weaker States or confederacies would first have recourse
|
|
to them, to put themselves upon an equality with their more potent
|
|
neighbors. They would endeavor to supply the inferiority of
|
|
population and resources by a more regular and effective system of
|
|
defense, by disciplined troops, and by fortifications. They would,
|
|
at the same time, be necessitated to strengthen the executive arm of
|
|
government, in doing which their constitutions would acquire a
|
|
progressive direction toward monarchy. It is of the nature of war
|
|
to increase the executive at the expense of the legislative
|
|
authority.
|
|
The expedients which have been mentioned would soon give the
|
|
States or confederacies that made use of them a superiority over
|
|
their neighbors. Small states, or states of less natural strength,
|
|
under vigorous governments, and with the assistance of disciplined
|
|
armies, have often triumphed over large states, or states of greater
|
|
natural strength, which have been destitute of these advantages.
|
|
Neither the pride nor the safety of the more important States or
|
|
confederacies would permit them long to submit to this mortifying
|
|
and adventitious superiority. They would quickly resort to means
|
|
similar to those by which it had been effected, to reinstate
|
|
themselves in their lost pre-eminence. Thus, we should, in a little
|
|
time, see established in every part of this country the same engines
|
|
of despotism which have been the scourge of the Old World. This, at
|
|
least, would be the natural course of things; and our reasonings
|
|
will be the more likely to be just, in proportion as they are
|
|
accommodated to this standard.
|
|
These are not vague inferences drawn from supposed or
|
|
speculative defects in a Constitution, the whole power of which is
|
|
lodged in the hands of a people, or their representatives and
|
|
delegates, but they are solid conclusions, drawn from the natural
|
|
and necessary progress of human affairs.
|
|
It may, perhaps, be asked, by way of objection to this, why did
|
|
not standing armies spring up out of the contentions which so often
|
|
distracted the ancient republics of Greece? Different answers,
|
|
equally satisfactory, may be given to this question. The
|
|
industrious habits of the people of the present day, absorbed in the
|
|
pursuits of gain, and devoted to the improvements of agriculture and
|
|
commerce, are incompatible with the condition of a nation of
|
|
soldiers, which was the true condition of the people of those
|
|
republics. The means of revenue, which have been so greatly
|
|
multiplied by the increase of gold and silver and of the arts of
|
|
industry, and the science of finance, which is the offspring of
|
|
modern times, concurring with the habits of nations, have produced
|
|
an entire revolution in the system of war, and have rendered
|
|
disciplined armies, distinct from the body of the citizens, the
|
|
inseparable companions of frequent hostility.
|
|
There is a wide difference, also, between military
|
|
establishments in a country seldom exposed by its situation to
|
|
internal invasions, and in one which is often subject to them, and
|
|
always apprehensive of them. The rulers of the former can have a
|
|
good pretext, if they are even so inclined, to keep on foot armies
|
|
so numerous as must of necessity be maintained in the latter. These
|
|
armies being, in the first case, rarely, if at all, called into
|
|
activity for interior defense, the people are in no danger of being
|
|
broken to military subordination. The laws are not accustomed to
|
|
relaxations, in favor of military exigencies; the civil state
|
|
remains in full vigor, neither corrupted, nor confounded with the
|
|
principles or propensities of the other state. The smallness of the
|
|
army renders the natural strength of the community an over-match for
|
|
it; and the citizens, not habituated to look up to the military
|
|
power for protection, or to submit to its oppressions, neither love
|
|
nor fear the soldiery; they view them with a spirit of jealous
|
|
acquiescence in a necessary evil, and stand ready to resist a power
|
|
which they suppose may be exerted to the prejudice of their rights.
|
|
The army under such circumstances may usefully aid the magistrate
|
|
to suppress a small faction, or an occasional mob, or insurrection;
|
|
but it will be unable to enforce encroachments against the united
|
|
efforts of the great body of the people.
|
|
In a country in the predicament last described, the contrary of
|
|
all this happens. The perpetual menacings of danger oblige the
|
|
government to be always prepared to repel it; its armies must be
|
|
numerous enough for instant defense. The continual necessity for
|
|
their services enhances the importance of the soldier, and
|
|
proportionably degrades the condition of the citizen. The military
|
|
state becomes elevated above the civil. The inhabitants of
|
|
territories, often the theatre of war, are unavoidably subjected to
|
|
frequent infringements on their rights, which serve to weaken their
|
|
sense of those rights; and by degrees the people are brought to
|
|
consider the soldiery not only as their protectors, but as their
|
|
superiors. The transition from this disposition to that of
|
|
considering them masters, is neither remote nor difficult; but it
|
|
is very difficult to prevail upon a people under such impressions,
|
|
to make a bold or effectual resistance to usurpations supported by
|
|
the military power.
|
|
The kingdom of Great Britain falls within the first description.
|
|
An insular situation, and a powerful marine, guarding it in a great
|
|
measure against the possibility of foreign invasion, supersede the
|
|
necessity of a numerous army within the kingdom. A sufficient force
|
|
to make head against a sudden descent, till the militia could have
|
|
time to rally and embody, is all that has been deemed requisite. No
|
|
motive of national policy has demanded, nor would public opinion
|
|
have tolerated, a larger number of troops upon its domestic
|
|
establishment. There has been, for a long time past, little room
|
|
for the operation of the other causes, which have been enumerated as
|
|
the consequences of internal war. This peculiar felicity of
|
|
situation has, in a great degree, contributed to preserve the
|
|
liberty which that country to this day enjoys, in spite of the
|
|
prevalent venality and corruption. If, on the contrary, Britain had
|
|
been situated on the continent, and had been compelled, as she would
|
|
have been, by that situation, to make her military establishments at
|
|
home coextensive with those of the other great powers of Europe,
|
|
she, like them, would in all probability be, at this day, a victim
|
|
to the absolute power of a single man. 'T is possible, though not
|
|
easy, that the people of that island may be enslaved from other
|
|
causes; but it cannot be by the prowess of an army so
|
|
inconsiderable as that which has been usually kept up within the
|
|
kingdom.
|
|
If we are wise enough to preserve the Union we may for ages
|
|
enjoy an advantage similar to that of an insulated situation.
|
|
Europe is at a great distance from us. Her colonies in our
|
|
vicinity will be likely to continue too much disproportioned in
|
|
strength to be able to give us any dangerous annoyance. Extensive
|
|
military establishments cannot, in this position, be necessary to
|
|
our security. But if we should be disunited, and the integral parts
|
|
should either remain separated, or, which is most probable, should
|
|
be thrown together into two or three confederacies, we should be, in
|
|
a short course of time, in the predicament of the continental powers
|
|
of Europe --our liberties would be a prey to the means of defending
|
|
ourselves against the ambition and jealousy of each other.
|
|
This is an idea not superficial or futile, but solid and weighty.
|
|
It deserves the most serious and mature consideration of every
|
|
prudent and honest man of whatever party. If such men will make a
|
|
firm and solemn pause, and meditate dispassionately on the
|
|
importance of this interesting idea; if they will contemplate it in
|
|
all its attitudes, and trace it to all its consequences, they will
|
|
not hesitate to part with trivial objections to a Constitution, the
|
|
rejection of which would in all probability put a final period to
|
|
the Union. The airy phantoms that flit before the distempered
|
|
imaginations of some of its adversaries would quickly give place to
|
|
the more substantial forms of dangers, real, certain, and formidable.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
1 This objection will be fully examined in its proper place, and
|
|
it will be shown that the only natural precaution which could have
|
|
been taken on this subject has been taken; and a much better one
|
|
than is to be found in any constitution that has been heretofore
|
|
framed in America, most of which contain no guard at all on this
|
|
subject.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 9
|
|
|
|
The Union as a Safeguard Against Domestic Faction and Insurrection
|
|
For the Independent Journal.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
A FIRM Union will be of the utmost moment to the peace and
|
|
liberty of the States, as a barrier against domestic faction and
|
|
insurrection. It is impossible to read the history of the petty
|
|
republics of Greece and Italy without feeling sensations of horror
|
|
and disgust at the distractions with which they were continually
|
|
agitated, and at the rapid succession of revolutions by which they
|
|
were kept in a state of perpetual vibration between the extremes of
|
|
tyranny and anarchy. If they exhibit occasional calms, these only
|
|
serve as short-lived contrast to the furious storms that are to
|
|
succeed. If now and then intervals of felicity open to view, we
|
|
behold them with a mixture of regret, arising from the reflection
|
|
that the pleasing scenes before us are soon to be overwhelmed by the
|
|
tempestuous waves of sedition and party rage. If momentary rays of
|
|
glory break forth from the gloom, while they dazzle us with a
|
|
transient and fleeting brilliancy, they at the same time admonish us
|
|
to lament that the vices of government should pervert the direction
|
|
and tarnish the lustre of those bright talents and exalted
|
|
endowments for which the favored soils that produced them have been
|
|
so justly celebrated.
|
|
From the disorders that disfigure the annals of those republics
|
|
the advocates of despotism have drawn arguments, not only against
|
|
the forms of republican government, but against the very principles
|
|
of civil liberty. They have decried all free government as
|
|
inconsistent with the order of society, and have indulged themselves
|
|
in malicious exultation over its friends and partisans. Happily for
|
|
mankind, stupendous fabrics reared on the basis of liberty, which
|
|
have flourished for ages, have, in a few glorious instances, refuted
|
|
their gloomy sophisms. And, I trust, America will be the broad and
|
|
solid foundation of other edifices, not less magnificent, which will
|
|
be equally permanent monuments of their errors.
|
|
But it is not to be denied that the portraits they have sketched
|
|
of republican government were too just copies of the originals from
|
|
which they were taken. If it had been found impracticable to have
|
|
devised models of a more perfect structure, the enlightened friends
|
|
to liberty would have been obliged to abandon the cause of that
|
|
species of government as indefensible. The science of politics,
|
|
however, like most other sciences, has received great improvement.
|
|
The efficacy of various principles is now well understood, which
|
|
were either not known at all, or imperfectly known to the ancients.
|
|
The regular distribution of power into distinct departments; the
|
|
introduction of legislative balances and checks; the institution of
|
|
courts composed of judges holding their offices during good
|
|
behavior; the representation of the people in the legislature by
|
|
deputies of their own election: these are wholly new discoveries,
|
|
or have made their principal progress towards perfection in modern
|
|
times. They are means, and powerful means, by which the excellences
|
|
of republican government may be retained and its imperfections
|
|
lessened or avoided. To this catalogue of circumstances that tend
|
|
to the amelioration of popular systems of civil government, I shall
|
|
venture, however novel it may appear to some, to add one more, on a
|
|
principle which has been made the foundation of an objection to the
|
|
new Constitution; I mean the ENLARGEMENT of the ORBIT within which
|
|
such systems are to revolve, either in respect to the dimensions of
|
|
a single State or to the consolidation of several smaller States
|
|
into one great Confederacy. The latter is that which immediately
|
|
concerns the object under consideration. It will, however, be of
|
|
use to examine the principle in its application to a single State,
|
|
which shall be attended to in another place.
|
|
The utility of a Confederacy, as well to suppress faction and to
|
|
guard the internal tranquillity of States, as to increase their
|
|
external force and security, is in reality not a new idea. It has
|
|
been practiced upon in different countries and ages, and has
|
|
received the sanction of the most approved writers on the subject of
|
|
politics. The opponents of the plan proposed have, with great
|
|
assiduity, cited and circulated the observations of Montesquieu on
|
|
the necessity of a contracted territory for a republican government.
|
|
But they seem not to have been apprised of the sentiments of that
|
|
great man expressed in another part of his work, nor to have
|
|
adverted to the consequences of the principle to which they
|
|
subscribe with such ready acquiescence.
|
|
When Montesquieu recommends a small extent for republics, the
|
|
standards he had in view were of dimensions far short of the limits
|
|
of almost every one of these States. Neither Virginia,
|
|
Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, New York, North Carolina, nor Georgia
|
|
can by any means be compared with the models from which he reasoned
|
|
and to which the terms of his description apply. If we therefore
|
|
take his ideas on this point as the criterion of truth, we shall be
|
|
driven to the alternative either of taking refuge at once in the
|
|
arms of monarchy, or of splitting ourselves into an infinity of
|
|
little, jealous, clashing, tumultuous commonwealths, the wretched
|
|
nurseries of unceasing discord, and the miserable objects of
|
|
universal pity or contempt. Some of the writers who have come
|
|
forward on the other side of the question seem to have been aware of
|
|
the dilemma; and have even been bold enough to hint at the division
|
|
of the larger States as a desirable thing. Such an infatuated
|
|
policy, such a desperate expedient, might, by the multiplication of
|
|
petty offices, answer the views of men who possess not
|
|
qualifications to extend their influence beyond the narrow circles
|
|
of personal intrigue, but it could never promote the greatness or
|
|
happiness of the people of America.
|
|
Referring the examination of the principle itself to another
|
|
place, as has been already mentioned, it will be sufficient to
|
|
remark here that, in the sense of the author who has been most
|
|
emphatically quoted upon the occasion, it would only dictate a
|
|
reduction of the SIZE of the more considerable MEMBERS of the Union,
|
|
but would not militate against their being all comprehended in one
|
|
confederate government. And this is the true question, in the
|
|
discussion of which we are at present interested.
|
|
So far are the suggestions of Montesquieu from standing in
|
|
opposition to a general Union of the States, that he explicitly
|
|
treats of a CONFEDERATE REPUBLIC as the expedient for extending the
|
|
sphere of popular government, and reconciling the advantages of
|
|
monarchy with those of republicanism.
|
|
``It is very probable,'' (says he1) ``that mankind would
|
|
have been obliged at length to live constantly under the government
|
|
of a single person, had they not contrived a kind of constitution
|
|
that has all the internal advantages of a republican, together with
|
|
the external force of a monarchical government. I mean a
|
|
CONFEDERATE REPUBLIC.
|
|
``This form of government is a convention by which several
|
|
smaller STATES agree to become members of a larger ONE, which they
|
|
intend to form. It is a kind of assemblage of societies that
|
|
constitute a new one, capable of increasing, by means of new
|
|
associations, till they arrive to such a degree of power as to be
|
|
able to provide for the security of the united body.
|
|
``A republic of this kind, able to withstand an external force,
|
|
may support itself without any internal corruptions. The form of
|
|
this society prevents all manner of inconveniences.
|
|
``If a single member should attempt to usurp the supreme
|
|
authority, he could not be supposed to have an equal authority and
|
|
credit in all the confederate states. Were he to have too great
|
|
influence over one, this would alarm the rest. Were he to subdue a
|
|
part, that which would still remain free might oppose him with
|
|
forces independent of those which he had usurped and overpower him
|
|
before he could be settled in his usurpation.
|
|
``Should a popular insurrection happen in one of the confederate
|
|
states the others are able to quell it. Should abuses creep into
|
|
one part, they are reformed by those that remain sound. The state
|
|
may be destroyed on one side, and not on the other; the confederacy
|
|
may be dissolved, and the confederates preserve their sovereignty.
|
|
``As this government is composed of small republics, it enjoys
|
|
the internal happiness of each; and with respect to its external
|
|
situation, it is possessed, by means of the association, of all the
|
|
advantages of large monarchies.''
|
|
I have thought it proper to quote at length these interesting
|
|
passages, because they contain a luminous abridgment of the
|
|
principal arguments in favor of the Union, and must effectually
|
|
remove the false impressions which a misapplication of other parts
|
|
of the work was calculated to make. They have, at the same time, an
|
|
intimate connection with the more immediate design of this paper;
|
|
which is, to illustrate the tendency of the Union to repress
|
|
domestic faction and insurrection.
|
|
A distinction, more subtle than accurate, has been raised
|
|
between a CONFEDERACY and a CONSOLIDATION of the States. The
|
|
essential characteristic of the first is said to be, the restriction
|
|
of its authority to the members in their collective capacities,
|
|
without reaching to the individuals of whom they are composed. It
|
|
is contended that the national council ought to have no concern with
|
|
any object of internal administration. An exact equality of
|
|
suffrage between the members has also been insisted upon as a
|
|
leading feature of a confederate government. These positions are,
|
|
in the main, arbitrary; they are supported neither by principle nor
|
|
precedent. It has indeed happened, that governments of this kind
|
|
have generally operated in the manner which the distinction taken
|
|
notice of, supposes to be inherent in their nature; but there have
|
|
been in most of them extensive exceptions to the practice, which
|
|
serve to prove, as far as example will go, that there is no absolute
|
|
rule on the subject. And it will be clearly shown in the course of
|
|
this investigation that as far as the principle contended for has
|
|
prevailed, it has been the cause of incurable disorder and
|
|
imbecility in the government.
|
|
The definition of a CONFEDERATE REPUBLIC seems simply to be ``an
|
|
assemblage of societies,'' or an association of two or more states
|
|
into one state. The extent, modifications, and objects of the
|
|
federal authority are mere matters of discretion. So long as the
|
|
separate organization of the members be not abolished; so long as
|
|
it exists, by a constitutional necessity, for local purposes;
|
|
though it should be in perfect subordination to the general
|
|
authority of the union, it would still be, in fact and in theory, an
|
|
association of states, or a confederacy. The proposed Constitution,
|
|
so far from implying an abolition of the State governments, makes
|
|
them constituent parts of the national sovereignty, by allowing them
|
|
a direct representation in the Senate, and leaves in their
|
|
possession certain exclusive and very important portions of
|
|
sovereign power. This fully corresponds, in every rational import
|
|
of the terms, with the idea of a federal government.
|
|
In the Lycian confederacy, which consisted of twenty-three
|
|
CITIES or republics, the largest were entitled to THREE votes in the
|
|
COMMON COUNCIL, those of the middle class to TWO, and the smallest
|
|
to ONE. The COMMON COUNCIL had the appointment of all the judges
|
|
and magistrates of the respective CITIES. This was certainly the
|
|
most, delicate species of interference in their internal
|
|
administration; for if there be any thing that seems exclusively
|
|
appropriated to the local jurisdictions, it is the appointment of
|
|
their own officers. Yet Montesquieu, speaking of this association,
|
|
says: ``Were I to give a model of an excellent Confederate
|
|
Republic, it would be that of Lycia.'' Thus we perceive that the
|
|
distinctions insisted upon were not within the contemplation of this
|
|
enlightened civilian; and we shall be led to conclude, that they
|
|
are the novel refinements of an erroneous theory.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
1 ``Spirit of Lawa,'' vol. i., book ix., chap. i.
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|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 10
|
|
|
|
The Same Subject Continued
|
|
(The Union as a Safeguard Against Domestic Faction and
|
|
Insurrection)
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Friday, November 23, 1787.
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|
|
|
MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
AMONG the numerous advantages promised by a wellconstructed
|
|
Union, none deserves to be more accurately developed than its
|
|
tendency to break and control the violence of faction. The friend
|
|
of popular governments never finds himself so much alarmed for their
|
|
character and fate, as when he contemplates their propensity to this
|
|
dangerous vice. He will not fail, therefore, to set a due value on
|
|
any plan which, without violating the principles to which he is
|
|
attached, provides a proper cure for it. The instability,
|
|
injustice, and confusion introduced into the public councils, have,
|
|
in truth, been the mortal diseases under which popular governments
|
|
have everywhere perished; as they continue to be the favorite and
|
|
fruitful topics from which the adversaries to liberty derive their
|
|
most specious declamations. The valuable improvements made by the
|
|
American constitutions on the popular models, both ancient and
|
|
modern, cannot certainly be too much admired; but it would be an
|
|
unwarrantable partiality, to contend that they have as effectually
|
|
obviated the danger on this side, as was wished and expected.
|
|
Complaints are everywhere heard from our most considerate and
|
|
virtuous citizens, equally the friends of public and private faith,
|
|
and of public and personal liberty, that our governments are too
|
|
unstable, that the public good is disregarded in the conflicts of
|
|
rival parties, and that measures are too often decided, not
|
|
according to the rules of justice and the rights of the minor party,
|
|
but by the superior force of an interested and overbearing majority.
|
|
However anxiously we may wish that these complaints had no
|
|
foundation, the evidence, of known facts will not permit us to deny
|
|
that they are in some degree true. It will be found, indeed, on a
|
|
candid review of our situation, that some of the distresses under
|
|
which we labor have been erroneously charged on the operation of our
|
|
governments; but it will be found, at the same time, that other
|
|
causes will not alone account for many of our heaviest misfortunes;
|
|
and, particularly, for that prevailing and increasing distrust of
|
|
public engagements, and alarm for private rights, which are echoed
|
|
from one end of the continent to the other. These must be chiefly,
|
|
if not wholly, effects of the unsteadiness and injustice with which
|
|
a factious spirit has tainted our public administrations.
|
|
By a faction, I understand a number of citizens, whether
|
|
amounting to a majority or a minority of the whole, who are united
|
|
and actuated by some common impulse of passion, or of interest,
|
|
adversed to the rights of other citizens, or to the permanent and
|
|
aggregate interests of the community.
|
|
There are two methods of curing the mischiefs of faction: the
|
|
one, by removing its causes; the other, by controlling its effects.
|
|
There are again two methods of removing the causes of faction:
|
|
the one, by destroying the liberty which is essential to its
|
|
existence; the other, by giving to every citizen the same opinions,
|
|
the same passions, and the same interests.
|
|
It could never be more truly said than of the first remedy, that
|
|
it was worse than the disease. Liberty is to faction what air is to
|
|
fire, an aliment without which it instantly expires. But it could
|
|
not be less folly to abolish liberty, which is essential to
|
|
political life, because it nourishes faction, than it would be to
|
|
wish the annihilation of air, which is essential to animal life,
|
|
because it imparts to fire its destructive agency.
|
|
The second expedient is as impracticable as the first would be
|
|
unwise. As long as the reason of man continues fallible, and he is
|
|
at liberty to exercise it, different opinions will be formed. As
|
|
long as the connection subsists between his reason and his
|
|
self-love, his opinions and his passions will have a reciprocal
|
|
influence on each other; and the former will be objects to which
|
|
the latter will attach themselves. The diversity in the faculties
|
|
of men, from which the rights of property originate, is not less an
|
|
insuperable obstacle to a uniformity of interests. The protection
|
|
of these faculties is the first object of government. From the
|
|
protection of different and unequal faculties of acquiring property,
|
|
the possession of different degrees and kinds of property
|
|
immediately results; and from the influence of these on the
|
|
sentiments and views of the respective proprietors, ensues a
|
|
division of the society into different interests and parties.
|
|
The latent causes of faction are thus sown in the nature of man;
|
|
and we see them everywhere brought into different degrees of
|
|
activity, according to the different circumstances of civil society.
|
|
A zeal for different opinions concerning religion, concerning
|
|
government, and many other points, as well of speculation as of
|
|
practice; an attachment to different leaders ambitiously contending
|
|
for pre-eminence and power; or to persons of other descriptions
|
|
whose fortunes have been interesting to the human passions, have, in
|
|
turn, divided mankind into parties, inflamed them with mutual
|
|
animosity, and rendered them much more disposed to vex and oppress
|
|
each other than to co-operate for their common good. So strong is
|
|
this propensity of mankind to fall into mutual animosities, that
|
|
where no substantial occasion presents itself, the most frivolous
|
|
and fanciful distinctions have been sufficient to kindle their
|
|
unfriendly passions and excite their most violent conflicts. But
|
|
the most common and durable source of factions has been the various
|
|
and unequal distribution of property. Those who hold and those who
|
|
are without property have ever formed distinct interests in society.
|
|
Those who are creditors, and those who are debtors, fall under a
|
|
like discrimination. A landed interest, a manufacturing interest, a
|
|
mercantile interest, a moneyed interest, with many lesser interests,
|
|
grow up of necessity in civilized nations, and divide them into
|
|
different classes, actuated by different sentiments and views. The
|
|
regulation of these various and interfering interests forms the
|
|
principal task of modern legislation, and involves the spirit of
|
|
party and faction in the necessary and ordinary operations of the
|
|
government.
|
|
No man is allowed to be a judge in his own cause, because his
|
|
interest would certainly bias his judgment, and, not improbably,
|
|
corrupt his integrity. With equal, nay with greater reason, a body
|
|
of men are unfit to be both judges and parties at the same time;
|
|
yet what are many of the most important acts of legislation, but so
|
|
many judicial determinations, not indeed concerning the rights of
|
|
single persons, but concerning the rights of large bodies of
|
|
citizens? And what are the different classes of legislators but
|
|
advocates and parties to the causes which they determine? Is a law
|
|
proposed concerning private debts? It is a question to which the
|
|
creditors are parties on one side and the debtors on the other.
|
|
Justice ought to hold the balance between them. Yet the parties
|
|
are, and must be, themselves the judges; and the most numerous
|
|
party, or, in other words, the most powerful faction must be
|
|
expected to prevail. Shall domestic manufactures be encouraged, and
|
|
in what degree, by restrictions on foreign manufactures? are
|
|
questions which would be differently decided by the landed and the
|
|
manufacturing classes, and probably by neither with a sole regard to
|
|
justice and the public good. The apportionment of taxes on the
|
|
various descriptions of property is an act which seems to require
|
|
the most exact impartiality; yet there is, perhaps, no legislative
|
|
act in which greater opportunity and temptation are given to a
|
|
predominant party to trample on the rules of justice. Every
|
|
shilling with which they overburden the inferior number, is a
|
|
shilling saved to their own pockets.
|
|
It is in vain to say that enlightened statesmen will be able to
|
|
adjust these clashing interests, and render them all subservient to
|
|
the public good. Enlightened statesmen will not always be at the
|
|
helm. Nor, in many cases, can such an adjustment be made at all
|
|
without taking into view indirect and remote considerations, which
|
|
will rarely prevail over the immediate interest which one party may
|
|
find in disregarding the rights of another or the good of the whole.
|
|
The inference to which we are brought is, that the CAUSES of
|
|
faction cannot be removed, and that relief is only to be sought in
|
|
the means of controlling its EFFECTS.
|
|
If a faction consists of less than a majority, relief is
|
|
supplied by the republican principle, which enables the majority to
|
|
defeat its sinister views by regular vote. It may clog the
|
|
administration, it may convulse the society; but it will be unable
|
|
to execute and mask its violence under the forms of the Constitution.
|
|
When a majority is included in a faction, the form of popular
|
|
government, on the other hand, enables it to sacrifice to its ruling
|
|
passion or interest both the public good and the rights of other
|
|
citizens. To secure the public good and private rights against the
|
|
danger of such a faction, and at the same time to preserve the
|
|
spirit and the form of popular government, is then the great object
|
|
to which our inquiries are directed. Let me add that it is the
|
|
great desideratum by which this form of government can be rescued
|
|
from the opprobrium under which it has so long labored, and be
|
|
recommended to the esteem and adoption of mankind.
|
|
By what means is this object attainable? Evidently by one of
|
|
two only. Either the existence of the same passion or interest in a
|
|
majority at the same time must be prevented, or the majority, having
|
|
such coexistent passion or interest, must be rendered, by their
|
|
number and local situation, unable to concert and carry into effect
|
|
schemes of oppression. If the impulse and the opportunity be
|
|
suffered to coincide, we well know that neither moral nor religious
|
|
motives can be relied on as an adequate control. They are not found
|
|
to be such on the injustice and violence of individuals, and lose
|
|
their efficacy in proportion to the number combined together, that
|
|
is, in proportion as their efficacy becomes needful.
|
|
From this view of the subject it may be concluded that a pure
|
|
democracy, by which I mean a society consisting of a small number of
|
|
citizens, who assemble and administer the government in person, can
|
|
admit of no cure for the mischiefs of faction. A common passion or
|
|
interest will, in almost every case, be felt by a majority of the
|
|
whole; a communication and concert result from the form of
|
|
government itself; and there is nothing to check the inducements to
|
|
sacrifice the weaker party or an obnoxious individual. Hence it is
|
|
that such democracies have ever been spectacles of turbulence and
|
|
contention; have ever been found incompatible with personal
|
|
security or the rights of property; and have in general been as
|
|
short in their lives as they have been violent in their deaths.
|
|
Theoretic politicians, who have patronized this species of
|
|
government, have erroneously supposed that by reducing mankind to a
|
|
perfect equality in their political rights, they would, at the same
|
|
time, be perfectly equalized and assimilated in their possessions,
|
|
their opinions, and their passions.
|
|
A republic, by which I mean a government in which the scheme of
|
|
representation takes place, opens a different prospect, and promises
|
|
the cure for which we are seeking. Let us examine the points in
|
|
which it varies from pure democracy, and we shall comprehend both
|
|
the nature of the cure and the efficacy which it must derive from
|
|
the Union.
|
|
The two great points of difference between a democracy and a
|
|
republic are: first, the delegation of the government, in the
|
|
latter, to a small number of citizens elected by the rest;
|
|
secondly, the greater number of citizens, and greater sphere of
|
|
country, over which the latter may be extended.
|
|
The effect of the first difference is, on the one hand, to
|
|
refine and enlarge the public views, by passing them through the
|
|
medium of a chosen body of citizens, whose wisdom may best discern
|
|
the true interest of their country, and whose patriotism and love of
|
|
justice will be least likely to sacrifice it to temporary or partial
|
|
considerations. Under such a regulation, it may well happen that
|
|
the public voice, pronounced by the representatives of the people,
|
|
will be more consonant to the public good than if pronounced by the
|
|
people themselves, convened for the purpose. On the other hand, the
|
|
effect may be inverted. Men of factious tempers, of local
|
|
prejudices, or of sinister designs, may, by intrigue, by corruption,
|
|
or by other means, first obtain the suffrages, and then betray the
|
|
interests, of the people. The question resulting is, whether small
|
|
or extensive republics are more favorable to the election of proper
|
|
guardians of the public weal; and it is clearly decided in favor of
|
|
the latter by two obvious considerations:
|
|
In the first place, it is to be remarked that, however small the
|
|
republic may be, the representatives must be raised to a certain
|
|
number, in order to guard against the cabals of a few; and that,
|
|
however large it may be, they must be limited to a certain number,
|
|
in order to guard against the confusion of a multitude. Hence, the
|
|
number of representatives in the two cases not being in proportion
|
|
to that of the two constituents, and being proportionally greater in
|
|
the small republic, it follows that, if the proportion of fit
|
|
characters be not less in the large than in the small republic, the
|
|
former will present a greater option, and consequently a greater
|
|
probability of a fit choice.
|
|
In the next place, as each representative will be chosen by a
|
|
greater number of citizens in the large than in the small republic,
|
|
it will be more difficult for unworthy candidates to practice with
|
|
success the vicious arts by which elections are too often carried;
|
|
and the suffrages of the people being more free, will be more
|
|
likely to centre in men who possess the most attractive merit and
|
|
the most diffusive and established characters.
|
|
It must be confessed that in this, as in most other cases, there
|
|
is a mean, on both sides of which inconveniences will be found to
|
|
lie. By enlarging too much the number of electors, you render the
|
|
representatives too little acquainted with all their local
|
|
circumstances and lesser interests; as by reducing it too much, you
|
|
render him unduly attached to these, and too little fit to
|
|
comprehend and pursue great and national objects. The federal
|
|
Constitution forms a happy combination in this respect; the great
|
|
and aggregate interests being referred to the national, the local
|
|
and particular to the State legislatures.
|
|
The other point of difference is, the greater number of citizens
|
|
and extent of territory which may be brought within the compass of
|
|
republican than of democratic government; and it is this
|
|
circumstance principally which renders factious combinations less to
|
|
be dreaded in the former than in the latter. The smaller the
|
|
society, the fewer probably will be the distinct parties and
|
|
interests composing it; the fewer the distinct parties and
|
|
interests, the more frequently will a majority be found of the same
|
|
party; and the smaller the number of individuals composing a
|
|
majority, and the smaller the compass within which they are placed,
|
|
the more easily will they concert and execute their plans of
|
|
oppression. Extend the sphere, and you take in a greater variety of
|
|
parties and interests; you make it less probable that a majority of
|
|
the whole will have a common motive to invade the rights of other
|
|
citizens; or if such a common motive exists, it will be more
|
|
difficult for all who feel it to discover their own strength, and to
|
|
act in unison with each other. Besides other impediments, it may be
|
|
remarked that, where there is a consciousness of unjust or
|
|
dishonorable purposes, communication is always checked by distrust
|
|
in proportion to the number whose concurrence is necessary.
|
|
Hence, it clearly appears, that the same advantage which a
|
|
republic has over a democracy, in controlling the effects of
|
|
faction, is enjoyed by a large over a small republic,--is enjoyed by
|
|
the Union over the States composing it. Does the advantage consist
|
|
in the substitution of representatives whose enlightened views and
|
|
virtuous sentiments render them superior to local prejudices and
|
|
schemes of injustice? It will not be denied that the representation
|
|
of the Union will be most likely to possess these requisite
|
|
endowments. Does it consist in the greater security afforded by a
|
|
greater variety of parties, against the event of any one party being
|
|
able to outnumber and oppress the rest? In an equal degree does the
|
|
increased variety of parties comprised within the Union, increase
|
|
this security. Does it, in fine, consist in the greater obstacles
|
|
opposed to the concert and accomplishment of the secret wishes of an
|
|
unjust and interested majority? Here, again, the extent of the
|
|
Union gives it the most palpable advantage.
|
|
The influence of factious leaders may kindle a flame within
|
|
their particular States, but will be unable to spread a general
|
|
conflagration through the other States. A religious sect may
|
|
degenerate into a political faction in a part of the Confederacy;
|
|
but the variety of sects dispersed over the entire face of it must
|
|
secure the national councils against any danger from that source. A
|
|
rage for paper money, for an abolition of debts, for an equal
|
|
division of property, or for any other improper or wicked project,
|
|
will be less apt to pervade the whole body of the Union than a
|
|
particular member of it; in the same proportion as such a malady is
|
|
more likely to taint a particular county or district, than an entire
|
|
State.
|
|
In the extent and proper structure of the Union, therefore, we
|
|
behold a republican remedy for the diseases most incident to
|
|
republican government. And according to the degree of pleasure and
|
|
pride we feel in being republicans, ought to be our zeal in
|
|
cherishing the spirit and supporting the character of Federalists.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 11
|
|
|
|
The Utility of the Union in Respect to Commercial Relations and a
|
|
Navy
|
|
For the Independent Journal.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE importance of the Union, in a commercial light, is one of
|
|
those points about which there is least room to entertain a
|
|
difference of opinion, and which has, in fact, commanded the most
|
|
general assent of men who have any acquaintance with the subject.
|
|
This applies as well to our intercourse with foreign countries as
|
|
with each other.
|
|
There are appearances to authorize a supposition that the
|
|
adventurous spirit, which distinguishes the commercial character of
|
|
America, has already excited uneasy sensations in several of the
|
|
maritime powers of Europe. They seem to be apprehensive of our too
|
|
great interference in that carrying trade, which is the support of
|
|
their navigation and the foundation of their naval strength. Those
|
|
of them which have colonies in America look forward to what this
|
|
country is capable of becoming, with painful solicitude. They
|
|
foresee the dangers that may threaten their American dominions from
|
|
the neighborhood of States, which have all the dispositions, and
|
|
would possess all the means, requisite to the creation of a powerful
|
|
marine. Impressions of this kind will naturally indicate the policy
|
|
of fostering divisions among us, and of depriving us, as far as
|
|
possible, of an ACTIVE COMMERCE in our own bottoms. This would
|
|
answer the threefold purpose of preventing our interference in their
|
|
navigation, of monopolizing the profits of our trade, and of
|
|
clipping the wings by which we might soar to a dangerous greatness.
|
|
Did not prudence forbid the detail, it would not be difficult to
|
|
trace, by facts, the workings of this policy to the cabinets of
|
|
ministers.
|
|
If we continue united, we may counteract a policy so unfriendly
|
|
to our prosperity in a variety of ways. By prohibitory regulations,
|
|
extending, at the same time, throughout the States, we may oblige
|
|
foreign countries to bid against each other, for the privileges of
|
|
our markets. This assertion will not appear chimerical to those who
|
|
are able to appreciate the importance of the markets of three
|
|
millions of people--increasing in rapid progression, for the most
|
|
part exclusively addicted to agriculture, and likely from local
|
|
circumstances to remain so--to any manufacturing nation; and the
|
|
immense difference there would be to the trade and navigation of
|
|
such a nation, between a direct communication in its own ships, and
|
|
an indirect conveyance of its products and returns, to and from
|
|
America, in the ships of another country. Suppose, for instance, we
|
|
had a government in America, capable of excluding Great Britain
|
|
(with whom we have at present no treaty of commerce) from all our
|
|
ports; what would be the probable operation of this step upon her
|
|
politics? Would it not enable us to negotiate, with the fairest
|
|
prospect of success, for commercial privileges of the most valuable
|
|
and extensive kind, in the dominions of that kingdom? When these
|
|
questions have been asked, upon other occasions, they have received
|
|
a plausible, but not a solid or satisfactory answer. It has been
|
|
said that prohibitions on our part would produce no change in the
|
|
system of Britain, because she could prosecute her trade with us
|
|
through the medium of the Dutch, who would be her immediate
|
|
customers and paymasters for those articles which were wanted for
|
|
the supply of our markets. But would not her navigation be
|
|
materially injured by the loss of the important advantage of being
|
|
her own carrier in that trade? Would not the principal part of its
|
|
profits be intercepted by the Dutch, as a compensation for their
|
|
agency and risk? Would not the mere circumstance of freight
|
|
occasion a considerable deduction? Would not so circuitous an
|
|
intercourse facilitate the competitions of other nations, by
|
|
enhancing the price of British commodities in our markets, and by
|
|
transferring to other hands the management of this interesting
|
|
branch of the British commerce?
|
|
A mature consideration of the objects suggested by these
|
|
questions will justify a belief that the real disadvantages to
|
|
Britain from such a state of things, conspiring with the
|
|
pre-possessions of a great part of the nation in favor of the
|
|
American trade, and with the importunities of the West India
|
|
islands, would produce a relaxation in her present system, and would
|
|
let us into the enjoyment of privileges in the markets of those
|
|
islands elsewhere, from which our trade would derive the most
|
|
substantial benefits. Such a point gained from the British
|
|
government, and which could not be expected without an equivalent in
|
|
exemptions and immunities in our markets, would be likely to have a
|
|
correspondent effect on the conduct of other nations, who would not
|
|
be inclined to see themselves altogether supplanted in our trade.
|
|
A further resource for influencing the conduct of European
|
|
nations toward us, in this respect, would arise from the
|
|
establishment of a federal navy. There can be no doubt that the
|
|
continuance of the Union under an efficient government would put it
|
|
in our power, at a period not very distant, to create a navy which,
|
|
if it could not vie with those of the great maritime powers, would
|
|
at least be of respectable weight if thrown into the scale of either
|
|
of two contending parties. This would be more peculiarly the case
|
|
in relation to operations in the West Indies. A few ships of the
|
|
line, sent opportunely to the reinforcement of either side, would
|
|
often be sufficient to decide the fate of a campaign, on the event
|
|
of which interests of the greatest magnitude were suspended. Our
|
|
position is, in this respect, a most commanding one. And if to this
|
|
consideration we add that of the usefulness of supplies from this
|
|
country, in the prosecution of military operations in the West
|
|
Indies, it will readily be perceived that a situation so favorable
|
|
would enable us to bargain with great advantage for commercial
|
|
privileges. A price would be set not only upon our friendship, but
|
|
upon our neutrality. By a steady adherence to the Union we may
|
|
hope, erelong, to become the arbiter of Europe in America, and to be
|
|
able to incline the balance of European competitions in this part of
|
|
the world as our interest may dictate.
|
|
But in the reverse of this eligible situation, we shall discover
|
|
that the rivalships of the parts would make them checks upon each
|
|
other, and would frustrate all the tempting advantages which nature
|
|
has kindly placed within our reach. In a state so insignificant our
|
|
commerce would be a prey to the wanton intermeddlings of all nations
|
|
at war with each other; who, having nothing to fear from us, would
|
|
with little scruple or remorse, supply their wants by depredations
|
|
on our property as often as it fell in their way. The rights of
|
|
neutrality will only be respected when they are defended by an
|
|
adequate power. A nation, despicable by its weakness, forfeits even
|
|
the privilege of being neutral.
|
|
Under a vigorous national government, the natural strength and
|
|
resources of the country, directed to a common interest, would
|
|
baffle all the combinations of European jealousy to restrain our
|
|
growth. This situation would even take away the motive to such
|
|
combinations, by inducing an impracticability of success. An active
|
|
commerce, an extensive navigation, and a flourishing marine would
|
|
then be the offspring of moral and physical necessity. We might
|
|
defy the little arts of the little politicians to control or vary
|
|
the irresistible and unchangeable course of nature.
|
|
But in a state of disunion, these combinations might exist and
|
|
might operate with success. It would be in the power of the
|
|
maritime nations, availing themselves of our universal impotence, to
|
|
prescribe the conditions of our political existence; and as they
|
|
have a common interest in being our carriers, and still more in
|
|
preventing our becoming theirs, they would in all probability
|
|
combine to embarrass our navigation in such a manner as would in
|
|
effect destroy it, and confine us to a PASSIVE COMMERCE. We should
|
|
then be compelled to content ourselves with the first price of our
|
|
commodities, and to see the profits of our trade snatched from us to
|
|
enrich our enemies and p rsecutors. That unequaled spirit of
|
|
enterprise, which signalizes the genius of the American merchants
|
|
and navigators, and which is in itself an inexhaustible mine of
|
|
national wealth, would be stifled and lost, and poverty and disgrace
|
|
would overspread a country which, with wisdom, might make herself
|
|
the admiration and envy of the world.
|
|
There are rights of great moment to the trade of America which
|
|
are rights of the Union--I allude to the fisheries, to the navigation
|
|
of the Western lakes, and to that of the Mississippi. The
|
|
dissolution of the Confederacy would give room for delicate
|
|
questions concerning the future existence of these rights; which
|
|
the interest of more powerful partners would hardly fail to solve to
|
|
our disadvantage. The disposition of Spain with regard to the
|
|
Mississippi needs no comment. France and Britain are concerned with
|
|
us in the fisheries, and view them as of the utmost moment to their
|
|
navigation. They, of course, would hardly remain long indifferent
|
|
to that decided mastery, of which experience has shown us to be
|
|
possessed in this valuable branch of traffic, and by which we are
|
|
able to undersell those nations in their own markets. What more
|
|
natural than that they should be disposed to exclude from the lists
|
|
such dangerous competitors?
|
|
This branch of trade ought not to be considered as a partial
|
|
benefit. All the navigating States may, in different degrees,
|
|
advantageously participate in it, and under circumstances of a
|
|
greater extension of mercantile capital, would not be unlikely to do
|
|
it. As a nursery of seamen, it now is, or when time shall have more
|
|
nearly assimilated the principles of navigation in the several
|
|
States, will become, a universal resource. To the establishment of
|
|
a navy, it must be indispensable.
|
|
To this great national object, a NAVY, union will contribute in
|
|
various ways. Every institution will grow and flourish in
|
|
proportion to the quantity and extent of the means concentred
|
|
towards its formation and support. A navy of the United States, as
|
|
it would embrace the resources of all, is an object far less remote
|
|
than a navy of any single State or partial confederacy, which would
|
|
only embrace the resources of a single part. It happens, indeed,
|
|
that different portions of confederated America possess each some
|
|
peculiar advantage for this essential establishment. The more
|
|
southern States furnish in greater abundance certain kinds of naval
|
|
stores--tar, pitch, and turpentine. Their wood for the construction
|
|
of ships is also of a more solid and lasting texture. The
|
|
difference in the duration of the ships of which the navy might be
|
|
composed, if chiefly constructed of Southern wood, would be of
|
|
signal importance, either in the view of naval strength or of
|
|
national economy. Some of the Southern and of the Middle States
|
|
yield a greater plenty of iron, and of better quality. Seamen must
|
|
chiefly be drawn from the Northern hive. The necessity of naval
|
|
protection to external or maritime commerce does not require a
|
|
particular elucidation, no more than the conduciveness of that
|
|
species of commerce to the prosperity of a navy.
|
|
An unrestrained intercourse between the States themselves will
|
|
advance the trade of each by an interchange of their respective
|
|
productions, not only for the supply of reciprocal wants at home,
|
|
but for exportation to foreign markets. The veins of commerce in
|
|
every part will be replenished, and will acquire additional motion
|
|
and vigor from a free circulation of the commodities of every part.
|
|
Commercial enterprise will have much greater scope, from the
|
|
diversity in the productions of different States. When the staple
|
|
of one fails from a bad harvest or unproductive crop, it can call to
|
|
its aid the staple of another. The variety, not less than the
|
|
value, of products for exportation contributes to the activity of
|
|
foreign commerce. It can be conducted upon much better terms with a
|
|
large number of materials of a given value than with a small number
|
|
of materials of the same value; arising from the competitions of
|
|
trade and from the fluctations of markets. Particular articles may
|
|
be in great demand at certain periods, and unsalable at others; but
|
|
if there be a variety of articles, it can scarcely happen that they
|
|
should all be at one time in the latter predicament, and on this
|
|
account the operations of the merchant would be less liable to any
|
|
considerable obstruction or stagnation. The speculative trader will
|
|
at once perceive the force of these observations, and will
|
|
acknowledge that the aggregate balance of the commerce of the United
|
|
States would bid fair to be much more favorable than that of the
|
|
thirteen States without union or with partial unions.
|
|
It may perhaps be replied to this, that whether the States are
|
|
united or disunited, there would still be an intimate intercourse
|
|
between them which would answer the same ends; this intercourse
|
|
would be fettered, interrupted, and narrowed by a multiplicity of
|
|
causes, which in the course of these papers have been amply detailed.
|
|
A unity of commercial, as well as political, interests, can only
|
|
result from a unity of government.
|
|
There are other points of view in which this subject might be
|
|
placed, of a striking and animating kind. But they would lead us
|
|
too far into the regions of futurity, and would involve topics not
|
|
proper for a newspaper discussion. I shall briefly observe, that
|
|
our situation invites and our interests prompt us to aim at an
|
|
ascendant in the system of American affairs. The world may
|
|
politically, as well as geographically, be divided into four parts,
|
|
each having a distinct set of interests. Unhappily for the other
|
|
three, Europe, by her arms and by her negotiations, by force and by
|
|
fraud, has, in different degrees, extended her dominion over them
|
|
all. Africa, Asia, and America, have successively felt her
|
|
domination. The superiority she has long maintained has tempted her
|
|
to plume herself as the Mistress of the World, and to consider the
|
|
rest of mankind as created for her benefit. Men admired as profound
|
|
philosophers have, in direct terms, attributed to her inhabitants a
|
|
physical superiority, and have gravely asserted that all animals,
|
|
and with them the human species, degenerate in America--that even
|
|
dogs cease to bark after having breathed awhile in our
|
|
atmosphere.1 Facts have too long supported these arrogant
|
|
pretensions of the Europeans. It belongs to us to vindicate the
|
|
honor of the human race, and to teach that assuming brother,
|
|
moderation. Union will enable us to do it. Disunion will will add
|
|
another victim to his triumphs. Let Americans disdain to be the
|
|
instruments of European greatness! Let the thirteen States, bound
|
|
together in a strict and indissoluble Union, concur in erecting one
|
|
great American system, superior to the control of all transatlantic
|
|
force or influence, and able to dictate the terms of the connection
|
|
between the old and the new world!
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
``Recherches philosophiques sur les Americains.''
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 12
|
|
|
|
The Utility of the Union In Respect to Revenue
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Tuesday, November 27, 1787.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE effects of Union upon the commercial prosperity of the
|
|
States have been sufficiently delineated. Its tendency to promote
|
|
the interests of revenue will be the subject of our present inquiry.
|
|
The prosperity of commerce is now perceived and acknowledged by
|
|
all enlightened statesmen to be the most useful as well as the most
|
|
productive source of national wealth, and has accordingly become a
|
|
primary object of their political cares. By multipying the means of
|
|
gratification, by promoting the introduction and circulation of the
|
|
precious metals, those darling objects of human avarice and
|
|
enterprise, it serves to vivify and invigorate the channels of
|
|
industry, and to make them flow with greater activity and
|
|
copiousness. The assiduous merchant, the laborious husbandman, the
|
|
active mechanic, and the industrious manufacturer,--all orders of
|
|
men, look forward with eager expectation and growing alacrity to
|
|
this pleasing reward of their toils. The often-agitated question
|
|
between agriculture and commerce has, from indubitable experience,
|
|
received a decision which has silenced the rivalship that once
|
|
subsisted between them, and has proved, to the satisfaction of their
|
|
friends, that their interests are intimately blended and interwoven.
|
|
It has been found in various countries that, in proportion as
|
|
commerce has flourished, land has risen in value. And how could it
|
|
have happened otherwise? Could that which procures a freer vent for
|
|
the products of the earth, which furnishes new incitements to the
|
|
cultivation of land, which is the most powerful instrument in
|
|
increasing the quantity of money in a state--could that, in fine,
|
|
which is the faithful handmaid of labor and industry, in every
|
|
shape, fail to augment that article, which is the prolific parent of
|
|
far the greatest part of the objects upon which they are exerted?
|
|
It is astonishing that so simple a truth should ever have had an
|
|
adversary; and it is one, among a multitude of proofs, how apt a
|
|
spirit of ill-informed jealousy, or of too great abstraction and
|
|
refinement, is to lead men astray from the plainest truths of reason
|
|
and conviction.
|
|
The ability of a country to pay taxes must always be
|
|
proportioned, in a great degree, to the quantity of money in
|
|
circulation, and to the celerity with which it circulates.
|
|
Commerce, contributing to both these objects, must of necessity
|
|
render the payment of taxes easier, and facilitate the requisite
|
|
supplies to the treasury. The hereditary dominions of the Emperor
|
|
of Germany contain a great extent of fertile, cultivated, and
|
|
populous territory, a large proportion of which is situated in mild
|
|
and luxuriant climates. In some parts of this territory are to be
|
|
found the best gold and silver mines in Europe. And yet, from the
|
|
want of the fostering influence of commerce, that monarch can boast
|
|
but slender revenues. He has several times been compelled to owe
|
|
obligations to the pecuniary succors of other nations for the
|
|
preservation of his essential interests, and is unable, upon the
|
|
strength of his own resources, to sustain a long or continued war.
|
|
But it is not in this aspect of the subject alone that Union
|
|
will be seen to conduce to the purpose of revenue. There are other
|
|
points of view, in which its influence will appear more immediate
|
|
and decisive. It is evident from the state of the country, from the
|
|
habits of the people, from the experience we have had on the point
|
|
itself, that it is impracticable to raise any very considerable sums
|
|
by direct taxation. Tax laws have in vain been multiplied; new
|
|
methods to enforce the collection have in vain been tried; the
|
|
public expectation has been uniformly disappointed, and the
|
|
treasuries of the States have remained empty. The popular system of
|
|
administration inherent in the nature of popular government,
|
|
coinciding with the real scarcity of money incident to a languid and
|
|
mutilated state of trade, has hitherto defeated every experiment for
|
|
extensive collections, and has at length taught the different
|
|
legislatures the folly of attempting them.
|
|
No person acquainted with what happens in other countries will
|
|
be surprised at this circumstance. In so opulent a nation as that
|
|
of Britain, where direct taxes from superior wealth must be much
|
|
more tolerable, and, from the vigor of the government, much more
|
|
practicable, than in America, far the greatest part of the national
|
|
revenue is derived from taxes of the indirect kind, from imposts,
|
|
and from excises. Duties on imported articles form a large branch
|
|
of this latter description.
|
|
In America, it is evident that we must a long time depend for
|
|
the means of revenue chiefly on such duties. In most parts of it,
|
|
excises must be confined within a narrow compass. The genius of the
|
|
people will ill brook the inquisitive and peremptory spirit of
|
|
excise laws. The pockets of the farmers, on the other hand, will
|
|
reluctantly yield but scanty supplies, in the unwelcome shape of
|
|
impositions on their houses and lands; and personal property is too
|
|
precarious and invisible a fund to be laid hold of in any other way
|
|
than by the inperceptible agency of taxes on consumption.
|
|
If these remarks have any foundation, that state of things which
|
|
will best enable us to improve and extend so valuable a resource
|
|
must be best adapted to our political welfare. And it cannot admit
|
|
of a serious doubt, that this state of things must rest on the basis
|
|
of a general Union. As far as this would be conducive to the
|
|
interests of commerce, so far it must tend to the extension of the
|
|
revenue to be drawn from that source. As far as it would contribute
|
|
to rendering regulations for the collection of the duties more
|
|
simple and efficacious, so far it must serve to answer the purposes
|
|
of making the same rate of duties more productive, and of putting it
|
|
into the power of the government to increase the rate without
|
|
prejudice to trade.
|
|
The relative situation of these States; the number of rivers
|
|
with which they are intersected, and of bays that wash there shores;
|
|
the facility of communication in every direction; the affinity of
|
|
language and manners; the familiar habits of intercourse; --all
|
|
these are circumstances that would conspire to render an illicit
|
|
trade between them a matter of little difficulty, and would insure
|
|
frequent evasions of the commercial regulations of each other. The
|
|
separate States or confederacies would be necessitated by mutual
|
|
jealousy to avoid the temptations to that kind of trade by the
|
|
lowness of their duties. The temper of our governments, for a long
|
|
time to come, would not permit those rigorous precautions by which
|
|
the European nations guard the avenues into their respective
|
|
countries, as well by land as by water; and which, even there, are
|
|
found insufficient obstacles to the adventurous stratagems of
|
|
avarice.
|
|
In France, there is an army of patrols (as they are called)
|
|
constantly employed to secure their fiscal regulations against the
|
|
inroads of the dealers in contraband trade. Mr. Neckar computes the
|
|
number of these patrols at upwards of twenty thousand. This shows
|
|
the immense difficulty in preventing that species of traffic, where
|
|
there is an inland communication, and places in a strong light the
|
|
disadvantages with which the collection of duties in this country
|
|
would be encumbered, if by disunion the States should be placed in a
|
|
situation, with respect to each other, resembling that of France
|
|
with respect to her neighbors. The arbitrary and vexatious powers
|
|
with which the patrols are necessarily armed, would be intolerable
|
|
in a free country.
|
|
If, on the contrary, there be but one government pervading all
|
|
the States, there will be, as to the principal part of our commerce,
|
|
but ONE SIDE to guard--the ATLANTIC COAST. Vessels arriving directly
|
|
from foreign countries, laden with valuable cargoes, would rarely
|
|
choose to hazard themselves to the complicated and critical perils
|
|
which would attend attempts to unlade prior to their coming into
|
|
port. They would have to dread both the dangers of the coast, and
|
|
of detection, as well after as before their arrival at the places of
|
|
their final destination. An ordinary degree of vigilance would be
|
|
competent to the prevention of any material infractions upon the
|
|
rights of the revenue. A few armed vessels, judiciously stationed
|
|
at the entrances of our ports, might at a small expense be made
|
|
useful sentinels of the laws. And the government having the same
|
|
interest to provide against violations everywhere, the co-operation
|
|
of its measures in each State would have a powerful tendency to
|
|
render them effectual. Here also we should preserve by Union, an
|
|
advantage which nature holds out to us, and which would be
|
|
relinquished by separation. The United States lie at a great
|
|
distance from Europe, and at a considerable distance from all other
|
|
places with which they would have extensive connections of foreign
|
|
trade. The passage from them to us, in a few hours, or in a single
|
|
night, as between the coasts of France and Britain, and of other
|
|
neighboring nations, would be impracticable. This is a prodigious
|
|
security against a direct contraband with foreign countries; but a
|
|
circuitous contraband to one State, through the medium of another,
|
|
would be both easy and safe. The difference between a direct
|
|
importation from abroad, and an indirect importation through the
|
|
channel of a neighboring State, in small parcels, according to time
|
|
and opportunity, with the additional facilities of inland
|
|
communication, must be palpable to every man of discernment.
|
|
It is therefore evident, that one national government would be
|
|
able, at much less expense, to extend the duties on imports, beyond
|
|
comparison, further than would be practicable to the States
|
|
separately, or to any partial confederacies. Hitherto, I believe,
|
|
it may safely be asserted, that these duties have not upon an
|
|
average exceeded in any State three per cent. In France they are
|
|
estimated to be about fifteen per cent., and in Britain they exceed
|
|
this proportion.1 There seems to be nothing to hinder their
|
|
being increased in this country to at least treble their present
|
|
amount. The single article of ardent spirits, under federal
|
|
regulation, might be made to furnish a considerable revenue. Upon a
|
|
ratio to the importation into this State, the whole quantity
|
|
imported into the United States may be estimated at four millions of
|
|
gallons; which, at a shilling per gallon, would produce two hundred
|
|
thousand pounds. That article would well bear this rate of duty;
|
|
and if it should tend to diminish the consumption of it, such an
|
|
effect would be equally favorable to the agriculture, to the
|
|
economy, to the morals, and to the health of the society. There is,
|
|
perhaps, nothing so much a subject of national extravagance as these
|
|
spirits.
|
|
What will be the consequence, if we are not able to avail
|
|
ourselves of the resource in question in its full extent? A nation
|
|
cannot long exist without revenues. Destitute of this essential
|
|
support, it must resign its independence, and sink into the degraded
|
|
condition of a province. This is an extremity to which no
|
|
government will of choice accede. Revenue, therefore, must be had
|
|
at all events. In this country, if the principal part be not drawn
|
|
from commerce, it must fall with oppressive weight upon land. It
|
|
has been already intimated that excises, in their true
|
|
signification, are too little in unison with the feelings of the
|
|
people, to admit of great use being made of that mode of taxation;
|
|
nor, indeed, in the States where almost the sole employment is
|
|
agriculture, are the objects proper for excise sufficiently numerous
|
|
to permit very ample collections in that way. Personal estate (as
|
|
has been before remarked), from the difficulty in tracing it, cannot
|
|
be subjected to large contributions, by any other means than by
|
|
taxes on consumption. In populous cities, it may be enough the
|
|
subject of conjecture, to occasion the oppression of individuals,
|
|
without much aggregate benefit to the State; but beyond these
|
|
circles, it must, in a great measure, escape the eye and the hand of
|
|
the tax-gatherer. As the necessities of the State, nevertheless,
|
|
must be satisfied in some mode or other, the defect of other
|
|
resources must throw the principal weight of public burdens on the
|
|
possessors of land. And as, on the other hand, the wants of the
|
|
government can never obtain an adequate supply, unless all the
|
|
sources of revenue are open to its demands, the finances of the
|
|
community, under such embarrassments, cannot be put into a situation
|
|
consistent with its respectability or its security. Thus we shall
|
|
not even have the consolations of a full treasury, to atone for the
|
|
oppression of that valuable class of the citizens who are employed
|
|
in the cultivation of the soil. But public and private distress
|
|
will keep pace with each other in gloomy concert; and unite in
|
|
deploring the infatuation of those counsels which led to disunion.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
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|
1 If my memory be right they amount to twenty per cent.
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FEDERALIST No. 13
|
|
|
|
Advantage of the Union in Respect to Economy in Government
|
|
For the Independent Journal.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
As CONNECTED with the subject of revenue, we may with propriety
|
|
consider that of economy. The money saved from one object may be
|
|
usefully applied to another, and there will be so much the less to
|
|
be drawn from the pockets of the people. If the States are united
|
|
under one government, there will be but one national civil list to
|
|
support; if they are divided into several confederacies, there will
|
|
be as many different national civil lists to be provided for--and
|
|
each of them, as to the principal departments, coextensive with that
|
|
which would be necessary for a government of the whole. The entire
|
|
separation of the States into thirteen unconnected sovereignties is
|
|
a project too extravagant and too replete with danger to have many
|
|
advocates. The ideas of men who speculate upon the dismemberment of
|
|
the empire seem generally turned toward three confederacies--one
|
|
consisting of the four Northern, another of the four Middle, and a
|
|
third of the five Southern States. There is little probability that
|
|
there would be a greater number. According to this distribution,
|
|
each confederacy would comprise an extent of territory larger than
|
|
that of the kingdom of Great Britain. No well-informed man will
|
|
suppose that the affairs of such a confederacy can be properly
|
|
regulated by a government less comprehensive in its organs or
|
|
institutions than that which has been proposed by the convention.
|
|
When the dimensions of a State attain to a certain magnitude, it
|
|
requires the same energy of government and the same forms of
|
|
administration which are requisite in one of much greater extent.
|
|
This idea admits not of precise demonstration, because there is no
|
|
rule by which we can measure the momentum of civil power necessary
|
|
to the government of any given number of individuals; but when we
|
|
consider that the island of Britain, nearly commensurate with each
|
|
of the supposed confederacies, contains about eight millions of
|
|
people, and when we reflect upon the degree of authority required to
|
|
direct the passions of so large a society to the public good, we
|
|
shall see no reason to doubt that the like portion of power would be
|
|
sufficient to perform the same task in a society far more numerous.
|
|
Civil power, properly organized and exerted, is capable of
|
|
diffusing its force to a very great extent; and can, in a manner,
|
|
reproduce itself in every part of a great empire by a judicious
|
|
arrangement of subordinate institutions.
|
|
The supposition that each confederacy into which the States
|
|
would be likely to be divided would require a government not less
|
|
comprehensive than the one proposed, will be strengthened by another
|
|
supposition, more probable than that which presents us with three
|
|
confederacies as the alternative to a general Union. If we attend
|
|
carefully to geographical and commercial considerations, in
|
|
conjunction with the habits and prejudices of the different States,
|
|
we shall be led to conclude that in case of disunion they will most
|
|
naturally league themselves under two governments. The four Eastern
|
|
States, from all the causes that form the links of national sympathy
|
|
and connection, may with certainty be expected to unite. New York,
|
|
situated as she is, would never be unwise enough to oppose a feeble
|
|
and unsupported flank to the weight of that confederacy. There are
|
|
other obvious reasons that would facilitate her accession to it.
|
|
New Jersey is too small a State to think of being a frontier, in
|
|
opposition to this still more powerful combination; nor do there
|
|
appear to be any obstacles to her admission into it. Even
|
|
Pennsylvania would have strong inducements to join the Northern
|
|
league. An active foreign commerce, on the basis of her own
|
|
navigation, is her true policy, and coincides with the opinions and
|
|
dispositions of her citizens. The more Southern States, from
|
|
various circumstances, may not think themselves much interested in
|
|
the encouragement of navigation. They may prefer a system which
|
|
would give unlimited scope to all nations to be the carriers as well
|
|
as the purchasers of their commodities. Pennsylvania may not choose
|
|
to confound her interests in a connection so adverse to her policy.
|
|
As she must at all events be a frontier, she may deem it most
|
|
consistent with her safety to have her exposed side turned towards
|
|
the weaker power of the Southern, rather than towards the stronger
|
|
power of the Northern, Confederacy. This would give her the fairest
|
|
chance to avoid being the Flanders of America. Whatever may be the
|
|
determination of Pennsylvania, if the Northern Confederacy includes
|
|
New Jersey, there is no likelihood of more than one confederacy to
|
|
the south of that State.
|
|
Nothing can be more evident than that the thirteen States will
|
|
be able to support a national government better than one half, or
|
|
one third, or any number less than the whole. This reflection must
|
|
have great weight in obviating that objection to the proposed plan,
|
|
which is founded on the principle of expense; an objection,
|
|
however, which, when we come to take a nearer view of it, will
|
|
appear in every light to stand on mistaken ground.
|
|
If, in addition to the consideration of a plurality of civil
|
|
lists, we take into view the number of persons who must necessarily
|
|
be employed to guard the inland communication between the different
|
|
confederacies against illicit trade, and who in time will infallibly
|
|
spring up out of the necessities of revenue; and if we also take
|
|
into view the military establishments which it has been shown would
|
|
unavoidably result from the jealousies and conflicts of the several
|
|
nations into which the States would be divided, we shall clearly
|
|
discover that a separation would be not less injurious to the
|
|
economy, than to the tranquillity, commerce, revenue, and liberty of
|
|
every part.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 14
|
|
|
|
Objections to the Proposed Constitution From Extent of Territory
|
|
Answered
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Friday, November 30, 1787.
|
|
|
|
MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
WE HAVE seen the necessity of the Union, as our bulwark against
|
|
foreign danger, as the conservator of peace among ourselves, as the
|
|
guardian of our commerce and other common interests, as the only
|
|
substitute for those military establishments which have subverted
|
|
the liberties of the Old World, and as the proper antidote for the
|
|
diseases of faction, which have proved fatal to other popular
|
|
governments, and of which alarming symptoms have been betrayed by
|
|
our own. All that remains, within this branch of our inquiries, is
|
|
to take notice of an objection that may be drawn from the great
|
|
extent of country which the Union embraces. A few observations on
|
|
this subject will be the more proper, as it is perceived that the
|
|
adversaries of the new Constitution are availing themselves of the
|
|
prevailing prejudice with regard to the practicable sphere of
|
|
republican administration, in order to supply, by imaginary
|
|
difficulties, the want of those solid objections which they endeavor
|
|
in vain to find.
|
|
The error which limits republican government to a narrow
|
|
district has been unfolded and refuted in preceding papers. I
|
|
remark here only that it seems to owe its rise and prevalence
|
|
chiefly to the confounding of a republic with a democracy, applying
|
|
to the former reasonings drawn from the nature of the latter. The
|
|
true distinction between these forms was also adverted to on a
|
|
former occasion. It is, that in a democracy, the people meet and
|
|
exercise the government in person; in a republic, they assemble and
|
|
administer it by their representatives and agents. A democracy,
|
|
consequently, will be confined to a small spot. A republic may be
|
|
extended over a large region.
|
|
To this accidental source of the error may be added the artifice
|
|
of some celebrated authors, whose writings have had a great share in
|
|
forming the modern standard of political opinions. Being subjects
|
|
either of an absolute or limited monarchy, they have endeavored to
|
|
heighten the advantages, or palliate the evils of those forms, by
|
|
placing in comparison the vices and defects of the republican, and
|
|
by citing as specimens of the latter the turbulent democracies of
|
|
ancient Greece and modern Italy. Under the confusion of names, it
|
|
has been an easy task to transfer to a republic observations
|
|
applicable to a democracy only; and among others, the observation
|
|
that it can never be established but among a small number of people,
|
|
living within a small compass of territory.
|
|
Such a fallacy may have been the less perceived, as most of the
|
|
popular governments of antiquity were of the democratic species;
|
|
and even in modern Europe, to which we owe the great principle of
|
|
representation, no example is seen of a government wholly popular,
|
|
and founded, at the same time, wholly on that principle. If Europe
|
|
has the merit of discovering this great mechanical power in
|
|
government, by the simple agency of which the will of the largest
|
|
political body may be concentred, and its force directed to any
|
|
object which the public good requires, America can claim the merit
|
|
of making the discovery the basis of unmixed and extensive republics.
|
|
It is only to be lamented that any of her citizens should wish to
|
|
deprive her of the additional merit of displaying its full efficacy
|
|
in the establishment of the comprehensive system now under her
|
|
consideration.
|
|
As the natural limit of a democracy is that distance from the
|
|
central point which will just permit the most remote citizens to
|
|
assemble as often as their public functions demand, and will include
|
|
no greater number than can join in those functions; so the natural
|
|
limit of a republic is that distance from the centre which will
|
|
barely allow the representatives to meet as often as may be
|
|
necessary for the administration of public affairs. Can it be said
|
|
that the limits of the United States exceed this distance? It will
|
|
not be said by those who recollect that the Atlantic coast is the
|
|
longest side of the Union, that during the term of thirteen years,
|
|
the representatives of the States have been almost continually
|
|
assembled, and that the members from the most distant States are not
|
|
chargeable with greater intermissions of attendance than those from
|
|
the States in the neighborhood of Congress.
|
|
That we may form a juster estimate with regard to this
|
|
interesting subject, let us resort to the actual dimensions of the
|
|
Union. The limits, as fixed by the treaty of peace, are: on the
|
|
east the Atlantic, on the south the latitude of thirty-one degrees,
|
|
on the west the Mississippi, and on the north an irregular line
|
|
running in some instances beyond the forty-fifth degree, in others
|
|
falling as low as the forty-second. The southern shore of Lake Erie
|
|
lies below that latitude. Computing the distance between the
|
|
thirty-first and forty-fifth degrees, it amounts to nine hundred and
|
|
seventy-three common miles; computing it from thirty-one to
|
|
forty-two degrees, to seven hundred and sixty-four miles and a half.
|
|
Taking the mean for the distance, the amount will be eight hundred
|
|
and sixty-eight miles and three-fourths. The mean distance from the
|
|
Atlantic to the Mississippi does not probably exceed seven hundred
|
|
and fifty miles. On a comparison of this extent with that of
|
|
several countries in Europe, the practicability of rendering our
|
|
system commensurate to it appears to be demonstrable. It is not a
|
|
great deal larger than Germany, where a diet representing the whole
|
|
empire is continually assembled; or than Poland before the late
|
|
dismemberment, where another national diet was the depositary of the
|
|
supreme power. Passing by France and Spain, we find that in Great
|
|
Britain, inferior as it may be in size, the representatives of the
|
|
northern extremity of the island have as far to travel to the
|
|
national council as will be required of those of the most remote
|
|
parts of the Union.
|
|
Favorable as this view of the subject may be, some observations
|
|
remain which will place it in a light still more satisfactory.
|
|
In the first place it is to be remembered that the general
|
|
government is not to be charged with the whole power of making and
|
|
administering laws. Its jurisdiction is limited to certain
|
|
enumerated objects, which concern all the members of the republic,
|
|
but which are not to be attained by the separate provisions of any.
|
|
The subordinate governments, which can extend their care to all
|
|
those other subjects which can be separately provided for, will
|
|
retain their due authority and activity. Were it proposed by the
|
|
plan of the convention to abolish the governments of the particular
|
|
States, its adversaries would have some ground for their objection;
|
|
though it would not be difficult to show that if they were
|
|
abolished the general government would be compelled, by the
|
|
principle of self-preservation, to reinstate them in their proper
|
|
jurisdiction.
|
|
A second observation to be made is that the immediate object of
|
|
the federal Constitution is to secure the union of the thirteen
|
|
primitive States, which we know to be practicable; and to add to
|
|
them such other States as may arise in their own bosoms, or in their
|
|
neighborhoods, which we cannot doubt to be equally practicable. The
|
|
arrangements that may be necessary for those angles and fractions of
|
|
our territory which lie on our northwestern frontier, must be left
|
|
to those whom further discoveries and experience will render more
|
|
equal to the task.
|
|
Let it be remarked, in the third place, that the intercourse
|
|
throughout the Union will be facilitated by new improvements. Roads
|
|
will everywhere be shortened, and kept in better order;
|
|
accommodations for travelers will be multiplied and meliorated; an
|
|
interior navigation on our eastern side will be opened throughout,
|
|
or nearly throughout, the whole extent of the thirteen States. The
|
|
communication between the Western and Atlantic districts, and
|
|
between different parts of each, will be rendered more and more easy
|
|
by those numerous canals with which the beneficence of nature has
|
|
intersected our country, and which art finds it so little difficult
|
|
to connect and complete.
|
|
A fourth and still more important consideration is, that as
|
|
almost every State will, on one side or other, be a frontier, and
|
|
will thus find, in regard to its safety, an inducement to make some
|
|
sacrifices for the sake of the general protection; so the States
|
|
which lie at the greatest distance from the heart of the Union, and
|
|
which, of course, may partake least of the ordinary circulation of
|
|
its benefits, will be at the same time immediately contiguous to
|
|
foreign nations, and will consequently stand, on particular
|
|
occasions, in greatest need of its strength and resources. It may
|
|
be inconvenient for Georgia, or the States forming our western or
|
|
northeastern borders, to send their representatives to the seat of
|
|
government; but they would find it more so to struggle alone
|
|
against an invading enemy, or even to support alone the whole
|
|
expense of those precautions which may be dictated by the
|
|
neighborhood of continual danger. If they should derive less
|
|
benefit, therefore, from the Union in some respects than the less
|
|
distant States, they will derive greater benefit from it in other
|
|
respects, and thus the proper equilibrium will be maintained
|
|
throughout.
|
|
I submit to you, my fellow-citizens, these considerations, in
|
|
full confidence that the good sense which has so often marked your
|
|
decisions will allow them their due weight and effect; and that you
|
|
will never suffer difficulties, however formidable in appearance, or
|
|
however fashionable the error on which they may be founded, to drive
|
|
you into the gloomy and perilous scene into which the advocates for
|
|
disunion would conduct you. Hearken not to the unnatural voice
|
|
which tells you that the people of America, knit together as they
|
|
are by so many cords of affection, can no longer live together as
|
|
members of the same family; can no longer continue the mutual
|
|
guardians of their mutual happiness; can no longer be
|
|
fellowcitizens of one great, respectable, and flourishing empire.
|
|
Hearken not to the voice which petulantly tells you that the form
|
|
of government recommended for your adoption is a novelty in the
|
|
political world; that it has never yet had a place in the theories
|
|
of the wildest projectors; that it rashly attempts what it is
|
|
impossible to accomplish. No, my countrymen, shut your ears against
|
|
this unhallowed language. Shut your hearts against the poison which
|
|
it conveys; the kindred blood which flows in the veins of American
|
|
citizens, the mingled blood which they have shed in defense of their
|
|
sacred rights, consecrate their Union, and excite horror at the idea
|
|
of their becoming aliens, rivals, enemies. And if novelties are to
|
|
be shunned, believe me, the most alarming of all novelties, the most
|
|
wild of all projects, the most rash of all attempts, is that of
|
|
rendering us in pieces, in order to preserve our liberties and
|
|
promote our happiness. But why is the experiment of an extended
|
|
republic to be rejected, merely because it may comprise what is new?
|
|
Is it not the glory of the people of America, that, whilst they
|
|
have paid a decent regard to the opinions of former times and other
|
|
nations, they have not suffered a blind veneration for antiquity,
|
|
for custom, or for names, to overrule the suggestions of their own
|
|
good sense, the knowledge of their own situation, and the lessons of
|
|
their own experience? To this manly spirit, posterity will be
|
|
indebted for the possession, and the world for the example, of the
|
|
numerous innovations displayed on the American theatre, in favor of
|
|
private rights and public happiness. Had no important step been
|
|
taken by the leaders of the Revolution for which a precedent could
|
|
not be discovered, no government established of which an exact model
|
|
did not present itself, the people of the United States might, at
|
|
this moment have been numbered among the melancholy victims of
|
|
misguided councils, must at best have been laboring under the weight
|
|
of some of those forms which have crushed the liberties of the rest
|
|
of mankind. Happily for America, happily, we trust, for the whole
|
|
human race, they pursued a new and more noble course. They
|
|
accomplished a revolution which has no parallel in the annals of
|
|
human society. They reared the fabrics of governments which have no
|
|
model on the face of the globe. They formed the design of a great
|
|
Confederacy, which it is incumbent on their successors to improve
|
|
and perpetuate. If their works betray imperfections, we wonder at
|
|
the fewness of them. If they erred most in the structure of the
|
|
Union, this was the work most difficult to be executed; this is the
|
|
work which has been new modelled by the act of your convention, and
|
|
it is that act on which you are now to deliberate and to decide.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 15
|
|
|
|
The Insufficiency of the Present Confederation to Preserve the
|
|
Union
|
|
For the Independent Journal.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York.
|
|
IN THE course of the preceding papers, I have endeavored, my
|
|
fellow-citizens, to place before you, in a clear and convincing
|
|
light, the importance of Union to your political safety and
|
|
happiness. I have unfolded to you a complication of dangers to
|
|
which you would be exposed, should you permit that sacred knot which
|
|
binds the people of America together be severed or dissolved by
|
|
ambition or by avarice, by jealousy or by misrepresentation. In the
|
|
sequel of the inquiry through which I propose to accompany you, the
|
|
truths intended to be inculcated will receive further confirmation
|
|
from facts and arguments hitherto unnoticed. If the road over which
|
|
you will still have to pass should in some places appear to you
|
|
tedious or irksome, you will recollect that you are in quest of
|
|
information on a subject the most momentous which can engage the
|
|
attention of a free people, that the field through which you have to
|
|
travel is in itself spacious, and that the difficulties of the
|
|
journey have been unnecessarily increased by the mazes with which
|
|
sophistry has beset the way. It will be my aim to remove the
|
|
obstacles from your progress in as compendious a manner as it can be
|
|
done, without sacrificing utility to despatch.
|
|
In pursuance of the plan which I have laid down for the
|
|
discussion of the subject, the point next in order to be examined is
|
|
the ``insufficiency of the present Confederation to the preservation
|
|
of the Union.'' It may perhaps be asked what need there is of
|
|
reasoning or proof to illustrate a position which is not either
|
|
controverted or doubted, to which the understandings and feelings of
|
|
all classes of men assent, and which in substance is admitted by the
|
|
opponents as well as by the friends of the new Constitution. It
|
|
must in truth be acknowledged that, however these may differ in
|
|
other respects, they in general appear to harmonize in this
|
|
sentiment, at least, that there are material imperfections in our
|
|
national system, and that something is necessary to be done to
|
|
rescue us from impending anarchy. The facts that support this
|
|
opinion are no longer objects of speculation. They have forced
|
|
themselves upon the sensibility of the people at large, and have at
|
|
length extorted from those, whose mistaken policy has had the
|
|
principal share in precipitating the extremity at which we are
|
|
arrived, a reluctant confession of the reality of those defects in
|
|
the scheme of our federal government, which have been long pointed
|
|
out and regretted by the intelligent friends of the Union.
|
|
We may indeed with propriety be said to have reached almost the
|
|
last stage of national humiliation. There is scarcely anything that
|
|
can wound the pride or degrade the character of an independent
|
|
nation which we do not experience. Are there engagements to the
|
|
performance of which we are held by every tie respectable among men?
|
|
These are the subjects of constant and unblushing violation. Do we
|
|
owe debts to foreigners and to our own citizens contracted in a time
|
|
of imminent peril for the preservation of our political existence?
|
|
These remain without any proper or satisfactory provision for their
|
|
discharge. Have we valuable territories and important posts in the
|
|
possession of a foreign power which, by express stipulations, ought
|
|
long since to have been surrendered? These are still retained, to
|
|
the prejudice of our interests, not less than of our rights. Are we
|
|
in a condition to resent or to repel the aggression? We have
|
|
neither troops, nor treasury, nor government.1 Are we even in a
|
|
condition to remonstrate with dignity? The just imputations on our
|
|
own faith, in respect to the same treaty, ought first to be removed.
|
|
Are we entitled by nature and compact to a free participation in
|
|
the navigation of the Mississippi? Spain excludes us from it. Is
|
|
public credit an indispensable resource in time of public danger?
|
|
We seem to have abandoned its cause as desperate and irretrievable.
|
|
Is commerce of importance to national wealth? Ours is at the
|
|
lowest point of declension. Is respectability in the eyes of
|
|
foreign powers a safeguard against foreign encroachments? The
|
|
imbecility of our government even forbids them to treat with us.
|
|
Our ambassadors abroad are the mere pageants of mimic sovereignty.
|
|
Is a violent and unnatural decrease in the value of land a symptom
|
|
of national distress? The price of improved land in most parts of
|
|
the country is much lower than can be accounted for by the quantity
|
|
of waste land at market, and can only be fully explained by that
|
|
want of private and public confidence, which are so alarmingly
|
|
prevalent among all ranks, and which have a direct tendency to
|
|
depreciate property of every kind. Is private credit the friend and
|
|
patron of industry? That most useful kind which relates to
|
|
borrowing and lending is reduced within the narrowest limits, and
|
|
this still more from an opinion of insecurity than from the scarcity
|
|
of money. To shorten an enumeration of particulars which can afford
|
|
neither pleasure nor instruction, it may in general be demanded,
|
|
what indication is there of national disorder, poverty, and
|
|
insignificance that could befall a community so peculiarly blessed
|
|
with natural advantages as we are, which does not form a part of the
|
|
dark catalogue of our public misfortunes?
|
|
This is the melancholy situation to which we have been brought
|
|
by those very maxims and councils which would now deter us from
|
|
adopting the proposed Constitution; and which, not content with
|
|
having conducted us to the brink of a precipice, seem resolved to
|
|
plunge us into the abyss that awaits us below. Here, my countrymen,
|
|
impelled by every motive that ought to influence an enlightened
|
|
people, let us make a firm stand for our safety, our tranquillity,
|
|
our dignity, our reputation. Let us at last break the fatal charm
|
|
which has too long seduced us from the paths of felicity and
|
|
prosperity.
|
|
It is true, as has been before observed that facts, too stubborn
|
|
to be resisted, have produced a species of general assent to the
|
|
abstract proposition that there exist material defects in our
|
|
national system; but the usefulness of the concession, on the part
|
|
of the old adversaries of federal measures, is destroyed by a
|
|
strenuous opposition to a remedy, upon the only principles that can
|
|
give it a chance of success. While they admit that the government
|
|
of the United States is destitute of energy, they contend against
|
|
conferring upon it those powers which are requisite to supply that
|
|
energy. They seem still to aim at things repugnant and
|
|
irreconcilable; at an augmentation of federal authority, without a
|
|
diminution of State authority; at sovereignty in the Union, and
|
|
complete independence in the members. They still, in fine, seem to
|
|
cherish with blind devotion the political monster of an imperium
|
|
in imperio. This renders a full display of the principal defects
|
|
of the Confederation necessary, in order to show that the evils we
|
|
experience do not proceed from minute or partial imperfections, but
|
|
from fundamental errors in the structure of the building, which
|
|
cannot be amended otherwise than by an alteration in the first
|
|
principles and main pillars of the fabric.
|
|
The great and radical vice in the construction of the existing
|
|
Confederation is in the principle of LEGISLATION for STATES or
|
|
GOVERNMENTS, in their CORPORATE or COLLECTIVE CAPACITIES, and as
|
|
contradistinguished from the INDIVIDUALS of which they consist.
|
|
Though this principle does not run through all the powers delegated
|
|
to the Union, yet it pervades and governs those on which the
|
|
efficacy of the rest depends. Except as to the rule of appointment,
|
|
the United States has an indefinite discretion to make requisitions
|
|
for men and money; but they have no authority to raise either, by
|
|
regulations extending to the individual citizens of America. The
|
|
consequence of this is, that though in theory their resolutions
|
|
concerning those objects are laws, constitutionally binding on the
|
|
members of the Union, yet in practice they are mere recommendations
|
|
which the States observe or disregard at their option.
|
|
It is a singular instance of the capriciousness of the human
|
|
mind, that after all the admonitions we have had from experience on
|
|
this head, there should still be found men who object to the new
|
|
Constitution, for deviating from a principle which has been found
|
|
the bane of the old, and which is in itself evidently incompatible
|
|
with the idea of GOVERNMENT; a principle, in short, which, if it is
|
|
to be executed at all, must substitute the violent and sanguinary
|
|
agency of the sword to the mild influence of the magistracy.
|
|
There is nothing absurd or impracticable in the idea of a league
|
|
or alliance between independent nations for certain defined purposes
|
|
precisely stated in a treaty regulating all the details of time,
|
|
place, circumstance, and quantity; leaving nothing to future
|
|
discretion; and depending for its execution on the good faith of
|
|
the parties. Compacts of this kind exist among all civilized
|
|
nations, subject to the usual vicissitudes of peace and war, of
|
|
observance and non-observance, as the interests or passions of the
|
|
contracting powers dictate. In the early part of the present
|
|
century there was an epidemical rage in Europe for this species of
|
|
compacts, from which the politicians of the times fondly hoped for
|
|
benefits which were never realized. With a view to establishing the
|
|
equilibrium of power and the peace of that part of the world, all
|
|
the resources of negotiation were exhausted, and triple and
|
|
quadruple alliances were formed; but they were scarcely formed
|
|
before they were broken, giving an instructive but afflicting lesson
|
|
to mankind, how little dependence is to be placed on treaties which
|
|
have no other sanction than the obligations of good faith, and which
|
|
oppose general considerations of peace and justice to the impulse of
|
|
any immediate interest or passion.
|
|
If the particular States in this country are disposed to stand
|
|
in a similar relation to each other, and to drop the project of a
|
|
general DISCRETIONARY SUPERINTENDENCE, the scheme would indeed be
|
|
pernicious, and would entail upon us all the mischiefs which have
|
|
been enumerated under the first head; but it would have the merit
|
|
of being, at least, consistent and practicable Abandoning all views
|
|
towards a confederate government, this would bring us to a simple
|
|
alliance offensive and defensive; and would place us in a situation
|
|
to be alternate friends and enemies of each other, as our mutual
|
|
jealousies and rivalships, nourished by the intrigues of foreign
|
|
nations, should prescribe to us.
|
|
But if we are unwilling to be placed in this perilous situation;
|
|
if we still will adhere to the design of a national government, or,
|
|
which is the same thing, of a superintending power, under the
|
|
direction of a common council, we must resolve to incorporate into
|
|
our plan those ingredients which may be considered as forming the
|
|
characteristic difference between a league and a government; we
|
|
must extend the authority of the Union to the persons of the
|
|
citizens, --the only proper objects of government.
|
|
Government implies the power of making laws. It is essential to
|
|
the idea of a law, that it be attended with a sanction; or, in
|
|
other words, a penalty or punishment for disobedience. If there be
|
|
no penalty annexed to disobedience, the resolutions or commands
|
|
which pretend to be laws will, in fact, amount to nothing more than
|
|
advice or recommendation. This penalty, whatever it may be, can
|
|
only be inflicted in two ways: by the agency of the courts and
|
|
ministers of justice, or by military force; by the COERCION of the
|
|
magistracy, or by the COERCION of arms. The first kind can
|
|
evidently apply only to men; the last kind must of necessity, be
|
|
employed against bodies politic, or communities, or States. It is
|
|
evident that there is no process of a court by which the observance
|
|
of the laws can, in the last resort, be enforced. Sentences may be
|
|
denounced against them for violations of their duty; but these
|
|
sentences can only be carried into execution by the sword. In an
|
|
association where the general authority is confined to the
|
|
collective bodies of the communities, that compose it, every breach
|
|
of the laws must involve a state of war; and military execution
|
|
must become the only instrument of civil obedience. Such a state of
|
|
things can certainly not deserve the name of government, nor would
|
|
any prudent man choose to commit his happiness to it.
|
|
There was a time when we were told that breaches, by the States,
|
|
of the regulations of the federal authority were not to be expected;
|
|
that a sense of common interest would preside over the conduct of
|
|
the respective members, and would beget a full compliance with all
|
|
the constitutional requisitions of the Union. This language, at the
|
|
present day, would appear as wild as a great part of what we now
|
|
hear from the same quarter will be thought, when we shall have
|
|
received further lessons from that best oracle of wisdom, experience.
|
|
It at all times betrayed an ignorance of the true springs by which
|
|
human conduct is actuated, and belied the original inducements to
|
|
the establishment of civil power. Why has government been
|
|
instituted at all? Because the passions of men will not conform to
|
|
the dictates of reason and justice, without constraint. Has it been
|
|
found that bodies of men act with more rectitude or greater
|
|
disinterestedness than individuals? The contrary of this has been
|
|
inferred by all accurate observers of the conduct of mankind; and
|
|
the inference is founded upon obvious reasons. Regard to reputation
|
|
has a less active influence, when the infamy of a bad action is to
|
|
be divided among a number than when it is to fall singly upon one.
|
|
A spirit of faction, which is apt to mingle its poison in the
|
|
deliberations of all bodies of men, will often hurry the persons of
|
|
whom they are composed into improprieties and excesses, for which
|
|
they would blush in a private capacity.
|
|
In addition to all this, there is, in the nature of sovereign
|
|
power, an impatience of control, that disposes those who are
|
|
invested with the exercise of it, to look with an evil eye upon all
|
|
external attempts to restrain or direct its operations. From this
|
|
spirit it happens, that in every political association which is
|
|
formed upon the principle of uniting in a common interest a number
|
|
of lesser sovereignties, there will be found a kind of eccentric
|
|
tendency in the subordinate or inferior orbs, by the operation of
|
|
which there will be a perpetual effort in each to fly off from the
|
|
common centre. This tendency is not difficult to be accounted for.
|
|
It has its origin in the love of power. Power controlled or
|
|
abridged is almost always the rival and enemy of that power by which
|
|
it is controlled or abridged. This simple proposition will teach us
|
|
how little reason there is to expect, that the persons intrusted
|
|
with the administration of the affairs of the particular members of
|
|
a confederacy will at all times be ready, with perfect good-humor,
|
|
and an unbiased regard to the public weal, to execute the
|
|
resolutions or decrees of the general authority. The reverse of
|
|
this results from the constitution of human nature.
|
|
If, therefore, the measures of the Confederacy cannot be
|
|
executed without the intervention of the particular administrations,
|
|
there will be little prospect of their being executed at all. The
|
|
rulers of the respective members, whether they have a constitutional
|
|
right to do it or not, will undertake to judge of the propriety of
|
|
the measures themselves. They will consider the conformity of the
|
|
thing proposed or required to their immediate interests or aims;
|
|
the momentary conveniences or inconveniences that would attend its
|
|
adoption. All this will be done; and in a spirit of interested and
|
|
suspicious scrutiny, without that knowledge of national
|
|
circumstances and reasons of state, which is essential to a right
|
|
judgment, and with that strong predilection in favor of local
|
|
objects, which can hardly fail to mislead the decision. The same
|
|
process must be repeated in every member of which the body is
|
|
constituted; and the execution of the plans, framed by the councils
|
|
of the whole, will always fluctuate on the discretion of the
|
|
ill-informed and prejudiced opinion of every part. Those who have
|
|
been conversant in the proceedings of popular assemblies; who have
|
|
seen how difficult it often is, where there is no exterior pressure
|
|
of circumstances, to bring them to harmonious resolutions on
|
|
important points, will readily conceive how impossible it must be to
|
|
induce a number of such assemblies, deliberating at a distance from
|
|
each other, at different times, and under different impressions,
|
|
long to co-operate in the same views and pursuits.
|
|
In our case, the concurrence of thirteen distinct sovereign
|
|
wills is requisite, under the Confederation, to the complete
|
|
execution of every important measure that proceeds from the Union.
|
|
It has happened as was to have been foreseen. The measures of the
|
|
Union have not been executed; the delinquencies of the States have,
|
|
step by step, matured themselves to an extreme, which has, at
|
|
length, arrested all the wheels of the national government, and
|
|
brought them to an awful stand. Congress at this time scarcely
|
|
possess the means of keeping up the forms of administration, till
|
|
the States can have time to agree upon a more substantial substitute
|
|
for the present shadow of a federal government. Things did not come
|
|
to this desperate extremity at once. The causes which have been
|
|
specified produced at first only unequal and disproportionate
|
|
degrees of compliance with the requisitions of the Union. The
|
|
greater deficiencies of some States furnished the pretext of example
|
|
and the temptation of interest to the complying, or to the least
|
|
delinquent States. Why should we do more in proportion than those
|
|
who are embarked with us in the same political voyage? Why should
|
|
we consent to bear more than our proper share of the common burden?
|
|
These were suggestions which human selfishness could not withstand,
|
|
and which even speculative men, who looked forward to remote
|
|
consequences, could not, without hesitation, combat. Each State,
|
|
yielding to the persuasive voice of immediate interest or
|
|
convenience, has successively withdrawn its support, till the frail
|
|
and tottering edifice seems ready to fall upon our heads, and to
|
|
crush us beneath its ruins.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
1 ``I mean for the Union.''
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 16
|
|
|
|
The Same Subject Continued
|
|
(The Insufficiency of the Present Confederation to Preserve the
|
|
Union)
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Tuesday, December 4, 1787.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE tendency of the principle of legislation for States, or
|
|
communities, in their political capacities, as it has been
|
|
exemplified by the experiment we have made of it, is equally
|
|
attested by the events which have befallen all other governments of
|
|
the confederate kind, of which we have any account, in exact
|
|
proportion to its prevalence in those systems. The confirmations of
|
|
this fact will be worthy of a distinct and particular examination.
|
|
I shall content myself with barely observing here, that of all the
|
|
confederacies of antiquity, which history has handed down to us, the
|
|
Lycian and Achaean leagues, as far as there remain vestiges of them,
|
|
appear to have been most free from the fetters of that mistaken
|
|
principle, and were accordingly those which have best deserved, and
|
|
have most liberally received, the applauding suffrages of political
|
|
writers.
|
|
This exceptionable principle may, as truly as emphatically, be
|
|
styled the parent of anarchy: It has been seen that delinquencies
|
|
in the members of the Union are its natural and necessary offspring;
|
|
and that whenever they happen, the only constitutional remedy is
|
|
force, and the immediate effect of the use of it, civil war.
|
|
It remains to inquire how far so odious an engine of government,
|
|
in its application to us, would even be capable of answering its end.
|
|
If there should not be a large army constantly at the disposal of
|
|
the national government it would either not be able to employ force
|
|
at all, or, when this could be done, it would amount to a war
|
|
between parts of the Confederacy concerning the infractions of a
|
|
league, in which the strongest combination would be most likely to
|
|
prevail, whether it consisted of those who supported or of those who
|
|
resisted the general authority. It would rarely happen that the
|
|
delinquency to be redressed would be confined to a single member,
|
|
and if there were more than one who had neglected their duty,
|
|
similarity of situation would induce them to unite for common
|
|
defense. Independent of this motive of sympathy, if a large and
|
|
influential State should happen to be the aggressing member, it
|
|
would commonly have weight enough with its neighbors to win over
|
|
some of them as associates to its cause. Specious arguments of
|
|
danger to the common liberty could easily be contrived; plausible
|
|
excuses for the deficiencies of the party could, without difficulty,
|
|
be invented to alarm the apprehensions, inflame the passions, and
|
|
conciliate the good-will, even of those States which were not
|
|
chargeable with any violation or omission of duty. This would be
|
|
the more likely to take place, as the delinquencies of the larger
|
|
members might be expected sometimes to proceed from an ambitious
|
|
premeditation in their rulers, with a view to getting rid of all
|
|
external control upon their designs of personal aggrandizement; the
|
|
better to effect which it is presumable they would tamper beforehand
|
|
with leading individuals in the adjacent States. If associates
|
|
could not be found at home, recourse would be had to the aid of
|
|
foreign powers, who would seldom be disinclined to encouraging the
|
|
dissensions of a Confederacy, from the firm union of which they had
|
|
so much to fear. When the sword is once drawn, the passions of men
|
|
observe no bounds of moderation. The suggestions of wounded pride,
|
|
the instigations of irritated resentment, would be apt to carry the
|
|
States against which the arms of the Union were exerted, to any
|
|
extremes necessary to avenge the affront or to avoid the disgrace of
|
|
submission. The first war of this kind would probably terminate in
|
|
a dissolution of the Union.
|
|
This may be considered as the violent death of the Confederacy.
|
|
Its more natural death is what we now seem to be on the point of
|
|
experiencing, if the federal system be not speedily renovated in a
|
|
more substantial form. It is not probable, considering the genius
|
|
of this country, that the complying States would often be inclined
|
|
to support the authority of the Union by engaging in a war against
|
|
the non-complying States. They would always be more ready to pursue
|
|
the milder course of putting themselves upon an equal footing with
|
|
the delinquent members by an imitation of their example. And the
|
|
guilt of all would thus become the security of all. Our past
|
|
experience has exhibited the operation of this spirit in its full
|
|
light. There would, in fact, be an insuperable difficulty in
|
|
ascertaining when force could with propriety be employed. In the
|
|
article of pecuniary contribution, which would be the most usual
|
|
source of delinquency, it would often be impossible to decide
|
|
whether it had proceeded from disinclination or inability. The
|
|
pretense of the latter would always be at hand. And the case must
|
|
be very flagrant in which its fallacy could be detected with
|
|
sufficient certainty to justify the harsh expedient of compulsion.
|
|
It is easy to see that this problem alone, as often as it should
|
|
occur, would open a wide field for the exercise of factious views,
|
|
of partiality, and of oppression, in the majority that happened to
|
|
prevail in the national council.
|
|
It seems to require no pains to prove that the States ought not
|
|
to prefer a national Constitution which could only be kept in motion
|
|
by the instrumentality of a large army continually on foot to
|
|
execute the ordinary requisitions or decrees of the government. And
|
|
yet this is the plain alternative involved by those who wish to deny
|
|
it the power of extending its operations to individuals. Such a
|
|
scheme, if practicable at all, would instantly degenerate into a
|
|
military despotism; but it will be found in every light
|
|
impracticable. The resources of the Union would not be equal to the
|
|
maintenance of an army considerable enough to confine the larger
|
|
States within the limits of their duty; nor would the means ever be
|
|
furnished of forming such an army in the first instance. Whoever
|
|
considers the populousness and strength of several of these States
|
|
singly at the present juncture, and looks forward to what they will
|
|
become, even at the distance of half a century, will at once dismiss
|
|
as idle and visionary any scheme which aims at regulating their
|
|
movements by laws to operate upon them in their collective
|
|
capacities, and to be executed by a coercion applicable to them in
|
|
the same capacities. A project of this kind is little less romantic
|
|
than the monster-taming spirit which is attributed to the fabulous
|
|
heroes and demi-gods of antiquity.
|
|
Even in those confederacies which have been composed of members
|
|
smaller than many of our counties, the principle of legislation for
|
|
sovereign States, supported by military coercion, has never been
|
|
found effectual. It has rarely been attempted to be employed, but
|
|
against the weaker members; and in most instances attempts to
|
|
coerce the refractory and disobedient have been the signals of
|
|
bloody wars, in which one half of the confederacy has displayed its
|
|
banners against the other half.
|
|
The result of these observations to an intelligent mind must be
|
|
clearly this, that if it be possible at any rate to construct a
|
|
federal government capable of regulating the common concerns and
|
|
preserving the general tranquillity, it must be founded, as to the
|
|
objects committed to its care, upon the reverse of the principle
|
|
contended for by the opponents of the proposed Constitution. It
|
|
must carry its agency to the persons of the citizens. It must stand
|
|
in need of no intermediate legislations; but must itself be
|
|
empowered to employ the arm of the ordinary magistrate to execute
|
|
its own resolutions. The majesty of the national authority must be
|
|
manifested through the medium of the courts of justice. The
|
|
government of the Union, like that of each State, must be able to
|
|
address itself immediately to the hopes and fears of individuals;
|
|
and to attract to its support those passions which have the
|
|
strongest influence upon the human heart. It must, in short,
|
|
possess all the means, and have aright to resort to all the methods,
|
|
of executing the powers with which it is intrusted, that are
|
|
possessed and exercised by the government of the particular States.
|
|
To this reasoning it may perhaps be objected, that if any State
|
|
should be disaffected to the authority of the Union, it could at any
|
|
time obstruct the execution of its laws, and bring the matter to the
|
|
same issue of force, with the necessity of which the opposite scheme
|
|
is reproached.
|
|
The pausibility of this objection will vanish the moment we
|
|
advert to the essential difference between a mere NON-COMPLIANCE and
|
|
a DIRECT and ACTIVE RESISTANCE. If the interposition of the State
|
|
legislatures be necessary to give effect to a measure of the Union,
|
|
they have only NOT TO ACT, or to ACT EVASIVELY, and the measure is
|
|
defeated. This neglect of duty may be disguised under affected but
|
|
unsubstantial provisions, so as not to appear, and of course not to
|
|
excite any alarm in the people for the safety of the Constitution.
|
|
The State leaders may even make a merit of their surreptitious
|
|
invasions of it on the ground of some temporary convenience,
|
|
exemption, or advantage.
|
|
But if the execution of the laws of the national government
|
|
should not require the intervention of the State legislatures, if
|
|
they were to pass into immediate operation upon the citizens
|
|
themselves, the particular governments could not interrupt their
|
|
progress without an open and violent exertion of an unconstitutional
|
|
power. No omissions nor evasions would answer the end. They would
|
|
be obliged to act, and in such a manner as would leave no doubt that
|
|
they had encroached on the national rights. An experiment of this
|
|
nature would always be hazardous in the face of a constitution in
|
|
any degree competent to its own defense, and of a people enlightened
|
|
enough to distinguish between a legal exercise and an illegal
|
|
usurpation of authority. The success of it would require not merely
|
|
a factious majority in the legislature, but the concurrence of the
|
|
courts of justice and of the body of the people. If the judges were
|
|
not embarked in a conspiracy with the legislature, they would
|
|
pronounce the resolutions of such a majority to be contrary to the
|
|
supreme law of the land, unconstitutional, and void. If the people
|
|
were not tainted with the spirit of their State representatives,
|
|
they, as the natural guardians of the Constitution, would throw
|
|
their weight into the national scale and give it a decided
|
|
preponderancy in the contest. Attempts of this kind would not often
|
|
be made with levity or rashness, because they could seldom be made
|
|
without danger to the authors, unless in cases of a tyrannical
|
|
exercise of the federal authority.
|
|
If opposition to the national government should arise from the
|
|
disorderly conduct of refractory or seditious individuals, it could
|
|
be overcome by the same means which are daily employed against the
|
|
same evil under the State governments. The magistracy, being
|
|
equally the ministers of the law of the land, from whatever source
|
|
it might emanate, would doubtless be as ready to guard the national
|
|
as the local regulations from the inroads of private licentiousness.
|
|
As to those partial commotions and insurrections, which sometimes
|
|
disquiet society, from the intrigues of an inconsiderable faction,
|
|
or from sudden or occasional illhumors that do not infect the great
|
|
body of the community the general government could command more
|
|
extensive resources for the suppression of disturbances of that kind
|
|
than would be in the power of any single member. And as to those
|
|
mortal feuds which, in certain conjunctures, spread a conflagration
|
|
through a whole nation, or through a very large proportion of it,
|
|
proceeding either from weighty causes of discontent given by the
|
|
government or from the contagion of some violent popular paroxysm,
|
|
they do not fall within any ordinary rules of calculation. When
|
|
they happen, they commonly amount to revolutions and dismemberments
|
|
of empire. No form of government can always either avoid or control
|
|
them. It is in vain to hope to guard against events too mighty for
|
|
human foresight or precaution, and it would be idle to object to a
|
|
government because it could not perform impossibilities.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 17
|
|
|
|
The Same Subject Continued
|
|
(The Insufficiency of the Present Confederation to Preserve the
|
|
Union)
|
|
For the Independent Journal.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
AN OBJECTION, of a nature different from that which has been
|
|
stated and answered, in my last address, may perhaps be likewise
|
|
urged against the principle of legislation for the individual
|
|
citizens of America. It may be said that it would tend to render
|
|
the government of the Union too powerful, and to enable it to absorb
|
|
those residuary authorities, which it might be judged proper to
|
|
leave with the States for local purposes. Allowing the utmost
|
|
latitude to the love of power which any reasonable man can require,
|
|
I confess I am at a loss to discover what temptation the persons
|
|
intrusted with the administration of the general government could
|
|
ever feel to divest the States of the authorities of that
|
|
description. The regulation of the mere domestic police of a State
|
|
appears to me to hold out slender allurements to ambition.
|
|
Commerce, finance, negotiation, and war seem to comprehend all the
|
|
objects which have charms for minds governed by that passion; and
|
|
all the powers necessary to those objects ought, in the first
|
|
instance, to be lodged in the national depository. The
|
|
administration of private justice between the citizens of the same
|
|
State, the supervision of agriculture and of other concerns of a
|
|
similar nature, all those things, in short, which are proper to be
|
|
provided for by local legislation, can never be desirable cares of a
|
|
general jurisdiction. It is therefore improbable that there should
|
|
exist a disposition in the federal councils to usurp the powers with
|
|
which they are connected; because the attempt to exercise those
|
|
powers would be as troublesome as it would be nugatory; and the
|
|
possession of them, for that reason, would contribute nothing to the
|
|
dignity, to the importance, or to the splendor of the national
|
|
government.
|
|
But let it be admitted, for argument's sake, that mere
|
|
wantonness and lust of domination would be sufficient to beget that
|
|
disposition; still it may be safely affirmed, that the sense of the
|
|
constituent body of the national representatives, or, in other
|
|
words, the people of the several States, would control the
|
|
indulgence of so extravagant an appetite. It will always be far
|
|
more easy for the State governments to encroach upon the national
|
|
authorities than for the national government to encroach upon the
|
|
State authorities. The proof of this proposition turns upon the
|
|
greater degree of influence which the State governments if they
|
|
administer their affairs with uprightness and prudence, will
|
|
generally possess over the people; a circumstance which at the same
|
|
time teaches us that there is an inherent and intrinsic weakness in
|
|
all federal constitutions; and that too much pains cannot be taken
|
|
in their organization, to give them all the force which is
|
|
compatible with the principles of liberty.
|
|
The superiority of influence in favor of the particular
|
|
governments would result partly from the diffusive construction of
|
|
the national government, but chiefly from the nature of the objects
|
|
to which the attention of the State administrations would be
|
|
directed.
|
|
It is a known fact in human nature, that its affections are
|
|
commonly weak in proportion to the distance or diffusiveness of the
|
|
object. Upon the same principle that a man is more attached to his
|
|
family than to his neighborhood, to his neighborhood than to the
|
|
community at large, the people of each State would be apt to feel a
|
|
stronger bias towards their local governments than towards the
|
|
government of the Union; unless the force of that principle should
|
|
be destroyed by a much better administration of the latter.
|
|
This strong propensity of the human heart would find powerful
|
|
auxiliaries in the objects of State regulation.
|
|
The variety of more minute interests, which will necessarily
|
|
fall under the superintendence of the local administrations, and
|
|
which will form so many rivulets of influence, running through every
|
|
part of the society, cannot be particularized, without involving a
|
|
detail too tedious and uninteresting to compensate for the
|
|
instruction it might afford.
|
|
There is one transcendant advantage belonging to the province of
|
|
the State governments, which alone suffices to place the matter in a
|
|
clear and satisfactory light,--I mean the ordinary administration of
|
|
criminal and civil justice. This, of all others, is the most
|
|
powerful, most universal, and most attractive source of popular
|
|
obedience and attachment. It is that which, being the immediate and
|
|
visible guardian of life and property, having its benefits and its
|
|
terrors in constant activity before the public eye, regulating all
|
|
those personal interests and familiar concerns to which the
|
|
sensibility of individuals is more immediately awake, contributes,
|
|
more than any other circumstance, to impressing upon the minds of
|
|
the people, affection, esteem, and reverence towards the government.
|
|
This great cement of society, which will diffuse itself almost
|
|
wholly through the channels of the particular governments,
|
|
independent of all other causes of influence, would insure them so
|
|
decided an empire over their respective citizens as to render them
|
|
at all times a complete counterpoise, and, not unfrequently,
|
|
dangerous rivals to the power of the Union.
|
|
The operations of the national government, on the other hand,
|
|
falling less immediately under the observation of the mass of the
|
|
citizens, the benefits derived from it will chiefly be perceived and
|
|
attended to by speculative men. Relating to more general interests,
|
|
they will be less apt to come home to the feelings of the people;
|
|
and, in proportion, less likely to inspire an habitual sense of
|
|
obligation, and an active sentiment of attachment.
|
|
The reasoning on this head has been abundantly exemplified by
|
|
the experience of all federal constitutions with which we are
|
|
acquainted, and of all others which have borne the least analogy to
|
|
them.
|
|
Though the ancient feudal systems were not, strictly speaking,
|
|
confederacies, yet they partook of the nature of that species of
|
|
association. There was a common head, chieftain, or sovereign,
|
|
whose authority extended over the whole nation; and a number of
|
|
subordinate vassals, or feudatories, who had large portions of land
|
|
allotted to them, and numerous trains of INFERIOR vassals or
|
|
retainers, who occupied and cultivated that land upon the tenure of
|
|
fealty or obedience, to the persons of whom they held it. Each
|
|
principal vassal was a kind of sovereign, within his particular
|
|
demesnes. The consequences of this situation were a continual
|
|
opposition to authority of the sovereign, and frequent wars between
|
|
the great barons or chief feudatories themselves. The power of the
|
|
head of the nation was commonly too weak, either to preserve the
|
|
public peace, or to protect the people against the oppressions of
|
|
their immediate lords. This period of European affairs is
|
|
emphatically styled by historians, the times of feudal anarchy.
|
|
When the sovereign happened to be a man of vigorous and warlike
|
|
temper and of superior abilities, he would acquire a personal weight
|
|
and influence, which answered, for the time, the purpose of a more
|
|
regular authority. But in general, the power of the barons
|
|
triumphed over that of the prince; and in many instances his
|
|
dominion was entirely thrown off, and the great fiefs were erected
|
|
into independent principalities or States. In those instances in
|
|
which the monarch finally prevailed over his vassals, his success
|
|
was chiefly owing to the tyranny of those vassals over their
|
|
dependents. The barons, or nobles, equally the enemies of the
|
|
sovereign and the oppressors of the common people, were dreaded and
|
|
detested by both; till mutual danger and mutual interest effected a
|
|
union between them fatal to the power of the aristocracy. Had the
|
|
nobles, by a conduct of clemency and justice, preserved the fidelity
|
|
and devotion of their retainers and followers, the contests between
|
|
them and the prince must almost always have ended in their favor,
|
|
and in the abridgment or subversion of the royal authority.
|
|
This is not an assertion founded merely in speculation or
|
|
conjecture. Among other illustrations of its truth which might be
|
|
cited, Scotland will furnish a cogent example. The spirit of
|
|
clanship which was, at an early day, introduced into that kingdom,
|
|
uniting the nobles and their dependants by ties equivalent to those
|
|
of kindred, rendered the aristocracy a constant overmatch for the
|
|
power of the monarch, till the incorporation with England subdued
|
|
its fierce and ungovernable spirit, and reduced it within those
|
|
rules of subordination which a more rational and more energetic
|
|
system of civil polity had previously established in the latter
|
|
kingdom.
|
|
The separate governments in a confederacy may aptly be compared
|
|
with the feudal baronies; with this advantage in their favor, that
|
|
from the reasons already explained, they will generally possess the
|
|
confidence and good-will of the people, and with so important a
|
|
support, will be able effectually to oppose all encroachments of the
|
|
national government. It will be well if they are not able to
|
|
counteract its legitimate and necessary authority. The points of
|
|
similitude consist in the rivalship of power, applicable to both,
|
|
and in the CONCENTRATION of large portions of the strength of the
|
|
community into particular DEPOSITS, in one case at the disposal of
|
|
individuals, in the other case at the disposal of political bodies.
|
|
A concise review of the events that have attended confederate
|
|
governments will further illustrate this important doctrine; an
|
|
inattention to which has been the great source of our political
|
|
mistakes, and has given our jealousy a direction to the wrong side.
|
|
This review shall form the subject of some ensuing papers.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 18
|
|
|
|
The Same Subject Continued
|
|
(The Insufficiency of the Present Confederation to Preserve the
|
|
Union)
|
|
For the Independent Journal.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON AND MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
AMONG the confederacies of antiquity, the most considerable was
|
|
that of the Grecian republics, associated under the Amphictyonic
|
|
council. From the best accounts transmitted of this celebrated
|
|
institution, it bore a very instructive analogy to the present
|
|
Confederation of the American States.
|
|
The members retained the character of independent and sovereign
|
|
states, and had equal votes in the federal council. This council
|
|
had a general authority to propose and resolve whatever it judged
|
|
necessary for the common welfare of Greece; to declare and carry on
|
|
war; to decide, in the last resort, all controversies between the
|
|
members; to fine the aggressing party; to employ the whole force
|
|
of the confederacy against the disobedient; to admit new members.
|
|
The Amphictyons were the guardians of religion, and of the immense
|
|
riches belonging to the temple of Delphos, where they had the right
|
|
of jurisdiction in controversies between the inhabitants and those
|
|
who came to consult the oracle. As a further provision for the
|
|
efficacy of the federal powers, they took an oath mutually to defend
|
|
and protect the united cities, to punish the violators of this oath,
|
|
and to inflict vengeance on sacrilegious despoilers of the temple.
|
|
In theory, and upon paper, this apparatus of powers seems amply
|
|
sufficient for all general purposes. In several material instances,
|
|
they exceed the powers enumerated in the articles of confederation.
|
|
The Amphictyons had in their hands the superstition of the times,
|
|
one of the principal engines by which government was then
|
|
maintained; they had a declared authority to use coercion against
|
|
refractory cities, and were bound by oath to exert this authority on
|
|
the necessary occasions.
|
|
Very different, nevertheless, was the experiment from the theory.
|
|
The powers, like those of the present Congress, were administered
|
|
by deputies appointed wholly by the cities in their political
|
|
capacities; and exercised over them in the same capacities. Hence
|
|
the weakness, the disorders, and finally the destruction of the
|
|
confederacy. The more powerful members, instead of being kept in
|
|
awe and subordination, tyrannized successively over all the rest.
|
|
Athens, as we learn from Demosthenes, was the arbiter of Greece
|
|
seventy-three years. The Lacedaemonians next governed it
|
|
twenty-nine years; at a subsequent period, after the battle of
|
|
Leuctra, the Thebans had their turn of domination.
|
|
It happened but too often, according to Plutarch, that the
|
|
deputies of the strongest cities awed and corrupted those of the
|
|
weaker; and that judgment went in favor of the most powerful party.
|
|
Even in the midst of defensive and dangerous wars with Persia
|
|
and Macedon, the members never acted in concert, and were, more or
|
|
fewer of them, eternally the dupes or the hirelings of the common
|
|
enemy. The intervals of foreign war were filled up by domestic
|
|
vicissitudes convulsions, and carnage.
|
|
After the conclusion of the war with Xerxes, it appears that the
|
|
Lacedaemonians required that a number of the cities should be turned
|
|
out of the confederacy for the unfaithful part they had acted. The
|
|
Athenians, finding that the Lacedaemonians would lose fewer
|
|
partisans by such a measure than themselves, and would become
|
|
masters of the public deliberations, vigorously opposed and defeated
|
|
the attempt. This piece of history proves at once the inefficiency
|
|
of the union, the ambition and jealousy of its most powerful
|
|
members, and the dependent and degraded condition of the rest. The
|
|
smaller members, though entitled by the theory of their system to
|
|
revolve in equal pride and majesty around the common center, had
|
|
become, in fact, satellites of the orbs of primary magnitude.
|
|
Had the Greeks, says the Abbe Milot, been as wise as they were
|
|
courageous, they would have been admonished by experience of the
|
|
necessity of a closer union, and would have availed themselves of
|
|
the peace which followed their success against the Persian arms, to
|
|
establish such a reformation. Instead of this obvious policy,
|
|
Athens and Sparta, inflated with the victories and the glory they
|
|
had acquired, became first rivals and then enemies; and did each
|
|
other infinitely more mischief than they had suffered from Xerxes.
|
|
Their mutual jealousies, fears, hatreds, and injuries ended in the
|
|
celebrated Peloponnesian war; which itself ended in the ruin and
|
|
slavery of the Athenians who had begun it.
|
|
As a weak government, when not at war, is ever agitated by
|
|
internal dissentions, so these never fail to bring on fresh
|
|
calamities from abroad. The Phocians having ploughed up some
|
|
consecrated ground belonging to the temple of Apollo, the
|
|
Amphictyonic council, according to the superstition of the age,
|
|
imposed a fine on the sacrilegious offenders. The Phocians, being
|
|
abetted by Athens and Sparta, refused to submit to the decree. The
|
|
Thebans, with others of the cities, undertook to maintain the
|
|
authority of the Amphictyons, and to avenge the violated god. The
|
|
latter, being the weaker party, invited the assistance of Philip of
|
|
Macedon, who had secretly fostered the contest. Philip gladly
|
|
seized the opportunity of executing the designs he had long planned
|
|
against the liberties of Greece. By his intrigues and bribes he won
|
|
over to his interests the popular leaders of several cities; by
|
|
their influence and votes, gained admission into the Amphictyonic
|
|
council; and by his arts and his arms, made himself master of the
|
|
confederacy.
|
|
Such were the consequences of the fallacious principle on which
|
|
this interesting establishment was founded. Had Greece, says a
|
|
judicious observer on her fate, been united by a stricter
|
|
confederation, and persevered in her union, she would never have
|
|
worn the chains of Macedon; and might have proved a barrier to the
|
|
vast projects of Rome.
|
|
The Achaean league, as it is called, was another society of
|
|
Grecian republics, which supplies us with valuable instruction.
|
|
The Union here was far more intimate, and its organization much
|
|
wiser, than in the preceding instance. It will accordingly appear,
|
|
that though not exempt from a similar catastrophe, it by no means
|
|
equally deserved it.
|
|
The cities composing this league retained their municipal
|
|
jurisdiction, appointed their own officers, and enjoyed a perfect
|
|
equality. The senate, in which they were represented, had the sole
|
|
and exclusive right of peace and war; of sending and receiving
|
|
ambassadors; of entering into treaties and alliances; of
|
|
appointing a chief magistrate or praetor, as he was called, who
|
|
commanded their armies, and who, with the advice and consent of ten
|
|
of the senators, not only administered the government in the recess
|
|
of the senate, but had a great share in its deliberations, when
|
|
assembled. According to the primitive constitution, there were two
|
|
praetors associated in the administration; but on trial a single
|
|
one was preferred.
|
|
It appears that the cities had all the same laws and customs,
|
|
the same weights and measures, and the same money. But how far this
|
|
effect proceeded from the authority of the federal council is left
|
|
in uncertainty. It is said only that the cities were in a manner
|
|
compelled to receive the same laws and usages. When Lacedaemon was
|
|
brought into the league by Philopoemen, it was attended with an
|
|
abolition of the institutions and laws of Lycurgus, and an adoption
|
|
of those of the Achaeans. The Amphictyonic confederacy, of which
|
|
she had been a member, left her in the full exercise of her
|
|
government and her legislation. This circumstance alone proves a
|
|
very material difference in the genius of the two systems.
|
|
It is much to be regretted that such imperfect monuments remain
|
|
of this curious political fabric. Could its interior structure and
|
|
regular operation be ascertained, it is probable that more light
|
|
would be thrown by it on the science of federal government, than by
|
|
any of the like experiments with which we are acquainted.
|
|
One important fact seems to be witnessed by all the historians
|
|
who take notice of Achaean affairs. It is, that as well after the
|
|
renovation of the league by Aratus, as before its dissolution by the
|
|
arts of Macedon, there was infinitely more of moderation and justice
|
|
in the administration of its government, and less of violence and
|
|
sedition in the people, than were to be found in any of the cities
|
|
exercising SINGLY all the prerogatives of sovereignty. The Abbe
|
|
Mably, in his observations on Greece, says that the popular
|
|
government, which was so tempestuous elsewhere, caused no disorders
|
|
in the members of the Achaean republic, BECAUSE IT WAS THERE
|
|
TEMPERED BY THE GENERAL AUTHORITY AND LAWS OF THE CONFEDERACY.
|
|
We are not to conclude too hastily, however, that faction did
|
|
not, in a certain degree, agitate the particular cities; much less
|
|
that a due subordination and harmony reigned in the general system.
|
|
The contrary is sufficiently displayed in the vicissitudes and fate
|
|
of the republic.
|
|
Whilst the Amphictyonic confederacy remained, that of the
|
|
Achaeans, which comprehended the less important cities only, made
|
|
little figure on the theatre of Greece. When the former became a
|
|
victim to Macedon, the latter was spared by the policy of Philip and
|
|
Alexander. Under the successors of these princes, however, a
|
|
different policy prevailed. The arts of division were practiced
|
|
among the Achaeans. Each city was seduced into a separate interest;
|
|
the union was dissolved. Some of the cities fell under the tyranny
|
|
of Macedonian garrisons; others under that of usurpers springing
|
|
out of their own confusions. Shame and oppression erelong awaken
|
|
their love of liberty. A few cities reunited. Their example was
|
|
followed by others, as opportunities were found of cutting off their
|
|
tyrants. The league soon embraced almost the whole Peloponnesus.
|
|
Macedon saw its progress; but was hindered by internal dissensions
|
|
from stopping it. All Greece caught the enthusiasm and seemed ready
|
|
to unite in one confederacy, when the jealousy and envy in Sparta
|
|
and Athens, of the rising glory of the Achaeans, threw a fatal damp
|
|
on the enterprise. The dread of the Macedonian power induced the
|
|
league to court the alliance of the Kings of Egypt and Syria, who,
|
|
as successors of Alexander, were rivals of the king of Macedon.
|
|
This policy was defeated by Cleomenes, king of Sparta, who was led
|
|
by his ambition to make an unprovoked attack on his neighbors, the
|
|
Achaeans, and who, as an enemy to Macedon, had interest enough with
|
|
the Egyptian and Syrian princes to effect a breach of their
|
|
engagements with the league.
|
|
The Achaeans were now reduced to the dilemma of submitting to
|
|
Cleomenes, or of supplicating the aid of Macedon, its former
|
|
oppressor. The latter expedient was adopted. The contests of the
|
|
Greeks always afforded a pleasing opportunity to that powerful
|
|
neighbor of intermeddling in their affairs. A Macedonian army
|
|
quickly appeared. Cleomenes was vanquished. The Achaeans soon
|
|
experienced, as often happens, that a victorious and powerful ally
|
|
is but another name for a master. All that their most abject
|
|
compliances could obtain from him was a toleration of the exercise
|
|
of their laws. Philip, who was now on the throne of Macedon, soon
|
|
provoked by his tyrannies, fresh combinations among the Greeks. The
|
|
Achaeans, though weakenened by internal dissensions and by the
|
|
revolt of Messene, one of its members, being joined by the AEtolians
|
|
and Athenians, erected the standard of opposition. Finding
|
|
themselves, though thus supported, unequal to the undertaking, they
|
|
once more had recourse to the dangerous expedient of introducing the
|
|
succor of foreign arms. The Romans, to whom the invitation was
|
|
made, eagerly embraced it. Philip was conquered; Macedon subdued.
|
|
A new crisis ensued to the league. Dissensions broke out among it
|
|
members. These the Romans fostered. Callicrates and other popular
|
|
leaders became mercenary instruments for inveigling their countrymen.
|
|
The more effectually to nourish discord and disorder the Romans
|
|
had, to the astonishment of those who confided in their sincerity,
|
|
already proclaimed universal liberty1 throughout Greece. With
|
|
the same insidious views, they now seduced the members from the
|
|
league, by representing to their pride the violation it committed on
|
|
their sovereignty. By these arts this union, the last hope of
|
|
Greece, the last hope of ancient liberty, was torn into pieces; and
|
|
such imbecility and distraction introduced, that the arms of Rome
|
|
found little difficulty in completing the ruin which their arts had
|
|
commenced. The Achaeans were cut to pieces, and Achaia loaded with
|
|
chains, under which it is groaning at this hour.
|
|
I have thought it not superfluous to give the outlines of this
|
|
important portion of history; both because it teaches more than one
|
|
lesson, and because, as a supplement to the outlines of the Achaean
|
|
constitution, it emphatically illustrates the tendency of federal
|
|
bodies rather to anarchy among the members, than to tyranny in the
|
|
head.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
1 This was but another name more specious for the independence
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of the members on the federal head.
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FEDERALIST No. 19
|
|
|
|
The Same Subject Continued
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|
(The Insufficiency of the Present Confederation to Preserve the
|
|
Union)
|
|
For the Independent Journal.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON AND MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE examples of ancient confederacies, cited in my last paper,
|
|
have not exhausted the source of experimental instruction on this
|
|
subject. There are existing institutions, founded on a similar
|
|
principle, which merit particular consideration. The first which
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|
presents itself is the Germanic body.
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|
In the early ages of Christianity, Germany was occupied by seven
|
|
distinct nations, who had no common chief. The Franks, one of the
|
|
number, having conquered the Gauls, established the kingdom which
|
|
has taken its name from them. In the ninth century Charlemagne, its
|
|
warlike monarch, carried his victorious arms in every direction;
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|
and Germany became a part of his vast dominions. On the
|
|
dismemberment, which took place under his sons, this part was
|
|
erected into a separate and independent empire. Charlemagne and his
|
|
immediate descendants possessed the reality, as well as the ensigns
|
|
and dignity of imperial power. But the principal vassals, whose
|
|
fiefs had become hereditary, and who composed the national diets
|
|
which Charlemagne had not abolished, gradually threw off the yoke
|
|
and advanced to sovereign jurisdiction and independence. The force
|
|
of imperial sovereignty was insufficient to restrain such powerful
|
|
dependants; or to preserve the unity and tranquillity of the empire.
|
|
The most furious private wars, accompanied with every species of
|
|
calamity, were carried on between the different princes and states.
|
|
The imperial authority, unable to maintain the public order,
|
|
declined by degrees till it was almost extinct in the anarchy, which
|
|
agitated the long interval between the death of the last emperor of
|
|
the Suabian, and the accession of the first emperor of the Austrian
|
|
lines. In the eleventh century the emperors enjoyed full
|
|
sovereignty: In the fifteenth they had little more than the symbols
|
|
and decorations of power.
|
|
Out of this feudal system, which has itself many of the
|
|
important features of a confederacy, has grown the federal system
|
|
which constitutes the Germanic empire. Its powers are vested in a
|
|
diet representing the component members of the confederacy; in the
|
|
emperor, who is the executive magistrate, with a negative on the
|
|
decrees of the diet; and in the imperial chamber and the aulic
|
|
council, two judiciary tribunals having supreme jurisdiction in
|
|
controversies which concern the empire, or which happen among its
|
|
members.
|
|
The diet possesses the general power of legislating for the
|
|
empire; of making war and peace; contracting alliances; assessing
|
|
quotas of troops and money; constructing fortresses; regulating
|
|
coin; admitting new members; and subjecting disobedient members to
|
|
the ban of the empire, by which the party is degraded from his
|
|
sovereign rights and his possessions forfeited. The members of the
|
|
confederacy are expressly restricted from entering into compacts
|
|
prejudicial to the empire; from imposing tolls and duties on their
|
|
mutual intercourse, without the consent of the emperor and diet;
|
|
from altering the value of money; from doing injustice to one
|
|
another; or from affording assistance or retreat to disturbers of
|
|
the public peace. And the ban is denounced against such as shall
|
|
violate any of these restrictions. The members of the diet, as
|
|
such, are subject in all cases to be judged by the emperor and diet,
|
|
and in their private capacities by the aulic council and imperial
|
|
chamber.
|
|
The prerogatives of the emperor are numerous. The most
|
|
important of them are: his exclusive right to make propositions to
|
|
the diet; to negative its resolutions; to name ambassadors; to
|
|
confer dignities and titles; to fill vacant electorates; to found
|
|
universities; to grant privileges not injurious to the states of
|
|
the empire; to receive and apply the public revenues; and
|
|
generally to watch over the public safety. In certain cases, the
|
|
electors form a council to him. In quality of emperor, he possesses
|
|
no territory within the empire, nor receives any revenue for his
|
|
support. But his revenue and dominions, in other qualities,
|
|
constitute him one of the most powerful princes in Europe.
|
|
From such a parade of constitutional powers, in the
|
|
representatives and head of this confederacy, the natural
|
|
supposition would be, that it must form an exception to the general
|
|
character which belongs to its kindred systems. Nothing would be
|
|
further from the reality. The fundamental principle on which it
|
|
rests, that the empire is a community of sovereigns, that the diet
|
|
is a representation of sovereigns and that the laws are addressed to
|
|
sovereigns, renders the empire a nerveless body, incapable of
|
|
regulating its own members, insecure against external dangers, and
|
|
agitated with unceasing fermentations in its own bowels.
|
|
The history of Germany is a history of wars between the emperor
|
|
and the princes and states; of wars among the princes and states
|
|
themselves; of the licentiousness of the strong, and the oppression
|
|
of the weak; of foreign intrusions, and foreign intrigues; of
|
|
requisitions of men and money disregarded, or partially complied
|
|
with; of attempts to enforce them, altogether abortive, or attended
|
|
with slaughter and desolation, involving the innocent with the
|
|
guilty; of general inbecility, confusion, and misery.
|
|
In the sixteenth century, the emperor, with one part of the
|
|
empire on his side, was seen engaged against the other princes and
|
|
states. In one of the conflicts, the emperor himself was put to
|
|
flight, and very near being made prisoner by the elector of Saxony.
|
|
The late king of Prussia was more than once pitted against his
|
|
imperial sovereign; and commonly proved an overmatch for him.
|
|
Controversies and wars among the members themselves have been so
|
|
common, that the German annals are crowded with the bloody pages
|
|
which describe them. Previous to the peace of Westphalia, Germany
|
|
was desolated by a war of thirty years, in which the emperor, with
|
|
one half of the empire, was on one side, and Sweden, with the other
|
|
half, on the opposite side. Peace was at length negotiated, and
|
|
dictated by foreign powers; and the articles of it, to which
|
|
foreign powers are parties, made a fundamental part of the Germanic
|
|
constitution.
|
|
If the nation happens, on any emergency, to be more united by
|
|
the necessity of self-defense, its situation is still deplorable.
|
|
Military preparations must be preceded by so many tedious
|
|
discussions, arising from the jealousies, pride, separate views, and
|
|
clashing pretensions of sovereign bodies, that before the diet can
|
|
settle the arrangements, the enemy are in the field; and before the
|
|
federal troops are ready to take it, are retiring into winter
|
|
quarters.
|
|
The small body of national troops, which has been judged
|
|
necessary in time of peace, is defectively kept up, badly paid,
|
|
infected with local prejudices, and supported by irregular and
|
|
disproportionate contributions to the treasury.
|
|
The impossibility of maintaining order and dispensing justice
|
|
among these sovereign subjects, produced the experiment of dividing
|
|
the empire into nine or ten circles or districts; of giving them an
|
|
interior organization, and of charging them with the military
|
|
execution of the laws against delinquent and contumacious members.
|
|
This experiment has only served to demonstrate more fully the
|
|
radical vice of the constitution. Each circle is the miniature
|
|
picture of the deformities of this political monster. They either
|
|
fail to execute their commissions, or they do it with all the
|
|
devastation and carnage of civil war. Sometimes whole circles are
|
|
defaulters; and then they increase the mischief which they were
|
|
instituted to remedy.
|
|
We may form some judgment of this scheme of military coercion
|
|
from a sample given by Thuanus. In Donawerth, a free and imperial
|
|
city of the circle of Suabia, the Abb 300 de St. Croix enjoyed
|
|
certain immunities which had been reserved to him. In the exercise
|
|
of these, on some public occasions, outrages were committed on him
|
|
by the people of the city. The consequence was that the city was
|
|
put under the ban of the empire, and the Duke of Bavaria, though
|
|
director of another circle, obtained an appointment to enforce it.
|
|
He soon appeared before the city with a corps of ten thousand
|
|
troops, and finding it a fit occasion, as he had secretly intended
|
|
from the beginning, to revive an antiquated claim, on the pretext
|
|
that his ancestors had suffered the place to be dismembered from his
|
|
territory,1 he took possession of it in his own name, disarmed,
|
|
and punished the inhabitants, and reannexed the city to his domains.
|
|
It may be asked, perhaps, what has so long kept this disjointed
|
|
machine from falling entirely to pieces? The answer is obvious:
|
|
The weakness of most of the members, who are unwilling to expose
|
|
themselves to the mercy of foreign powers; the weakness of most of
|
|
the principal members, compared with the formidable powers all
|
|
around them; the vast weight and influence which the emperor
|
|
derives from his separate and heriditary dominions; and the
|
|
interest he feels in preserving a system with which his family pride
|
|
is connected, and which constitutes him the first prince in Europe;
|
|
--these causes support a feeble and precarious Union; whilst the
|
|
repellant quality, incident to the nature of sovereignty, and which
|
|
time continually strengthens, prevents any reform whatever, founded
|
|
on a proper consolidation. Nor is it to be imagined, if this
|
|
obstacle could be surmounted, that the neighboring powers would
|
|
suffer a revolution to take place which would give to the empire the
|
|
force and preeminence to which it is entitled. Foreign nations have
|
|
long considered themselves as interested in the changes made by
|
|
events in this constitution; and have, on various occasions,
|
|
betrayed their policy of perpetuating its anarchy and weakness.
|
|
If more direct examples were wanting, Poland, as a government
|
|
over local sovereigns, might not improperly be taken notice of. Nor
|
|
could any proof more striking be given of the calamities flowing
|
|
from such institutions. Equally unfit for self-government and
|
|
self-defense, it has long been at the mercy of its powerful
|
|
neighbors; who have lately had the mercy to disburden it of one
|
|
third of its people and territories.
|
|
The connection among the Swiss cantons scarcely amounts to a
|
|
confederacy; though it is sometimes cited as an instance of the
|
|
stability of such institutions.
|
|
They have no common treasury; no common troops even in war; no
|
|
common coin; no common judicatory; nor any other common mark of
|
|
sovereignty.
|
|
They are kept together by the peculiarity of their topographical
|
|
position; by their individual weakness and insignificancy; by the
|
|
fear of powerful neighbors, to one of which they were formerly
|
|
subject; by the few sources of contention among a people of such
|
|
simple and homogeneous manners; by their joint interest in their
|
|
dependent possessions; by the mutual aid they stand in need of, for
|
|
suppressing insurrections and rebellions, an aid expressly
|
|
stipulated and often required and afforded; and by the necessity of
|
|
some regular and permanent provision for accomodating disputes among
|
|
the cantons. The provision is, that the parties at variance shall
|
|
each choose four judges out of the neutral cantons, who, in case of
|
|
disagreement, choose an umpire. This tribunal, under an oath of
|
|
impartiality, pronounces definitive sentence, which all the cantons
|
|
are bound to enforce. The competency of this regulation may be
|
|
estimated by a clause in their treaty of 1683, with Victor Amadeus
|
|
of Savoy; in which he obliges himself to interpose as mediator in
|
|
disputes between the cantons, and to employ force, if necessary,
|
|
against the contumacious party.
|
|
So far as the peculiarity of their case will admit of comparison
|
|
with that of the United States, it serves to confirm the principle
|
|
intended to be established. Whatever efficacy the union may have
|
|
had in ordinary cases, it appears that the moment a cause of
|
|
difference sprang up, capable of trying its strength, it failed.
|
|
The controversies on the subject of religion, which in three
|
|
instances have kindled violent and bloody contests, may be said, in
|
|
fact, to have severed the league. The Protestant and Catholic
|
|
cantons have since had their separate diets, where all the most
|
|
important concerns are adjusted, and which have left the general
|
|
diet little other business than to take care of the common bailages.
|
|
That separation had another consequence, which merits attention.
|
|
It produced opposite alliances with foreign powers: of Berne, at
|
|
the head of the Protestant association, with the United Provinces;
|
|
and of Luzerne, at the head of the Catholic association, with
|
|
France.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
1 Pfeffel, ``Nouvel Abreg. Chronol. de l'Hist., etc.,
|
|
d'Allemagne,'' says the pretext was to indemnify himself for the
|
|
expense of the expedition.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 20
|
|
|
|
The Same Subject Continued
|
|
(The Insufficiency fo the Present Confederation to Preserve the
|
|
Union)
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Tuesday, December 11, 1787.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON AND MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE United Netherlands are a confederacy of republics, or rather
|
|
of aristocracies of a very remarkable texture, yet confirming all
|
|
the lessons derived from those which we have already reviewed.
|
|
The union is composed of seven coequal and sovereign states, and
|
|
each state or province is a composition of equal and independent
|
|
cities. In all important cases, not only the provinces but the
|
|
cities must be unanimous.
|
|
The sovereignty of the Union is represented by the
|
|
States-General, consisting usually of about fifty deputies appointed
|
|
by the provinces. They hold their seats, some for life, some for
|
|
six, three, and one years; from two provinces they continue in
|
|
appointment during pleasure.
|
|
The States-General have authority to enter into treaties and
|
|
alliances; to make war and peace; to raise armies and equip
|
|
fleets; to ascertain quotas and demand contributions. In all these
|
|
cases, however, unanimity and the sanction of their constituents are
|
|
requisite. They have authority to appoint and receive ambassadors;
|
|
to execute treaties and alliances already formed; to provide for
|
|
the collection of duties on imports and exports; to regulate the
|
|
mint, with a saving to the provincial rights; to govern as
|
|
sovereigns the dependent territories. The provinces are restrained,
|
|
unless with the general consent, from entering into foreign
|
|
treaties; from establishing imposts injurious to others, or
|
|
charging their neighbors with higher duties than their own subjects.
|
|
A council of state, a chamber of accounts, with five colleges of
|
|
admiralty, aid and fortify the federal administration.
|
|
The executive magistrate of the union is the stadtholder, who is
|
|
now an hereditary prince. His principal weight and influence in the
|
|
republic are derived from this independent title; from his great
|
|
patrimonial estates; from his family connections with some of the
|
|
chief potentates of Europe; and, more than all, perhaps, from his
|
|
being stadtholder in the several provinces, as well as for the
|
|
union; in which provincial quality he has the appointment of town
|
|
magistrates under certain regulations, executes provincial decrees,
|
|
presides when he pleases in the provincial tribunals, and has
|
|
throughout the power of pardon.
|
|
As stadtholder of the union, he has, however, considerable
|
|
prerogatives.
|
|
In his political capacity he has authority to settle disputes
|
|
between the provinces, when other methods fail; to assist at the
|
|
deliberations of the States-General, and at their particular
|
|
conferences; to give audiences to foreign ambassadors, and to keep
|
|
agents for his particular affairs at foreign courts.
|
|
In his military capacity he commands the federal troops,
|
|
provides for garrisons, and in general regulates military affairs;
|
|
disposes of all appointments, from colonels to ensigns, and of the
|
|
governments and posts of fortified towns.
|
|
In his marine capacity he is admiral-general, and superintends
|
|
and directs every thing relative to naval forces and other naval
|
|
affairs; presides in the admiralties in person or by proxy;
|
|
appoints lieutenant-admirals and other officers; and establishes
|
|
councils of war, whose sentences are not executed till he approves
|
|
them.
|
|
His revenue, exclusive of his private income, amounts to three
|
|
hundred thousand florins. The standing army which he commands
|
|
consists of about forty thousand men.
|
|
Such is the nature of the celebrated Belgic confederacy, as
|
|
delineated on parchment. What are the characters which practice has
|
|
stamped upon it? Imbecility in the government; discord among the
|
|
provinces; foreign influence and indignities; a precarious
|
|
existence in peace, and peculiar calamities from war.
|
|
It was long ago remarked by Grotius, that nothing but the hatred
|
|
of his countrymen to the house of Austria kept them from being
|
|
ruined by the vices of their constitution.
|
|
The union of Utrecht, says another respectable writer, reposes
|
|
an authority in the States-General, seemingly sufficient to secure
|
|
harmony, but the jealousy in each province renders the practice very
|
|
different from the theory.
|
|
The same instrument, says another, obliges each province to levy
|
|
certain contributions; but this article never could, and probably
|
|
never will, be executed; because the inland provinces, who have
|
|
little commerce, cannot pay an equal quota.
|
|
In matters of contribution, it is the practice to waive the
|
|
articles of the constitution. The danger of delay obliges the
|
|
consenting provinces to furnish their quotas, without waiting for
|
|
the others; and then to obtain reimbursement from the others, by
|
|
deputations, which are frequent, or otherwise, as they can. The
|
|
great wealth and influence of the province of Holland enable her to
|
|
effect both these purposes.
|
|
It has more than once happened, that the deficiencies had to be
|
|
ultimately collected at the point of the bayonet; a thing
|
|
practicable, though dreadful, in a confedracy where one of the
|
|
members exceeds in force all the rest, and where several of them are
|
|
too small to meditate resistance; but utterly impracticable in one
|
|
composed of members, several of which are equal to each other in
|
|
strength and resources, and equal singly to a vigorous and
|
|
persevering defense.
|
|
Foreign ministers, says Sir William Temple, who was himself a
|
|
foreign minister, elude matters taken ad referendum, by
|
|
tampering with the provinces and cities. In 1726, the treaty of
|
|
Hanover was delayed by these means a whole year. Instances of a
|
|
like nature are numerous and notorious.
|
|
In critical emergencies, the States-General are often compelled
|
|
to overleap their constitutional bounds. In 1688, they concluded a
|
|
treaty of themselves at the risk of their heads. The treaty of
|
|
Westphalia, in 1648, by which their independence was formerly and
|
|
finally recognized, was concluded without the consent of Zealand.
|
|
Even as recently as the last treaty of peace with Great Britain,
|
|
the constitutional principle of unanimity was departed from. A weak
|
|
constitution must necessarily terminate in dissolution, for want of
|
|
proper powers, or the usurpation of powers requisite for the public
|
|
safety. Whether the usurpation, when once begun, will stop at the
|
|
salutary point, or go forward to the dangerous extreme, must depend
|
|
on the contingencies of the moment. Tyranny has perhaps oftener
|
|
grown out of the assumptions of power, called for, on pressing
|
|
exigencies, by a defective constitution, than out of the full
|
|
exercise of the largest constitutional authorities.
|
|
Notwithstanding the calamities produced by the stadtholdership,
|
|
it has been supposed that without his influence in the individual
|
|
provinces, the causes of anarchy manifest in the confederacy would
|
|
long ago have dissolved it. ``Under such a government,'' says the
|
|
Abbe Mably, ``the Union could never have subsisted, if the provinces
|
|
had not a spring within themselves, capable of quickening their
|
|
tardiness, and compelling them to the same way of thinking. This
|
|
spring is the stadtholder.'' It is remarked by Sir William Temple,
|
|
``that in the intermissions of the stadtholdership, Holland, by her
|
|
riches and her authority, which drew the others into a sort of
|
|
dependence, supplied the place.''
|
|
These are not the only circumstances which have controlled the
|
|
tendency to anarchy and dissolution. The surrounding powers impose
|
|
an absolute necessity of union to a certain degree, at the same time
|
|
that they nourish by their intrigues the constitutional vices which
|
|
keep the republic in some degree always at their mercy.
|
|
The true patriots have long bewailed the fatal tendency of these
|
|
vices, and have made no less than four regular experiments by
|
|
EXTRAORDINARY ASSEMBLIES, convened for the special purpose, to apply
|
|
a remedy. As many times has their laudable zeal found it impossible
|
|
to UNITE THE PUBLIC COUNCILS in reforming the known, the
|
|
acknowledged, the fatal evils of the existing constitution. Let us
|
|
pause, my fellow-citizens, for one moment, over this melancholy and
|
|
monitory lesson of history; and with the tear that drops for the
|
|
calamities brought on mankind by their adverse opinions and selfish
|
|
passions, let our gratitude mingle an ejaculation to Heaven, for the
|
|
propitious concord which has distinguished the consultations for our
|
|
political happiness.
|
|
A design was also conceived of establishing a general tax to be
|
|
administered by the federal authority. This also had its
|
|
adversaries and failed.
|
|
This unhappy people seem to be now suffering from popular
|
|
convulsions, from dissensions among the states, and from the actual
|
|
invasion of foreign arms, the crisis of their distiny. All nations
|
|
have their eyes fixed on the awful spectacle. The first wish
|
|
prompted by humanity is, that this severe trial may issue in such a
|
|
revolution of their government as will establish their union, and
|
|
render it the parent of tranquillity, freedom and happiness: The
|
|
next, that the asylum under which, we trust, the enjoyment of these
|
|
blessings will speedily be secured in this country, may receive and
|
|
console them for the catastrophe of their own.
|
|
I make no apology for having dwelt so long on the contemplation
|
|
of these federal precedents. Experience is the oracle of truth;
|
|
and where its responses are unequivocal, they ought to be
|
|
conclusive and sacred. The important truth, which it unequivocally
|
|
pronounces in the present case, is that a sovereignty over
|
|
sovereigns, a government over governments, a legislation for
|
|
communities, as contradistinguished from individuals, as it is a
|
|
solecism in theory, so in practice it is subversive of the order and
|
|
ends of civil polity, by substituting VIOLENCE in place of LAW, or
|
|
the destructive COERCION of the SWORD in place of the mild and
|
|
salutary COERCION of the MAGISTRACY.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 21
|
|
|
|
Other Defects of the Present Confederation
|
|
For the Independent Journal.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
HAVING in the three last numbers taken a summary review of the
|
|
principal circumstances and events which have depicted the genius
|
|
and fate of other confederate governments, I shall now proceed in
|
|
the enumeration of the most important of those defects which have
|
|
hitherto disappointed our hopes from the system established among
|
|
ourselves. To form a safe and satisfactory judgment of the proper
|
|
remedy, it is absolutely necessary that we should be well acquainted
|
|
with the extent and malignity of the disease.
|
|
The next most palpable defect of the subsisting Confederation,
|
|
is the total want of a SANCTION to its laws. The United States, as
|
|
now composed, have no powers to exact obedience, or punish
|
|
disobedience to their resolutions, either by pecuniary mulcts, by a
|
|
suspension or divestiture of privileges, or by any other
|
|
constitutional mode. There is no express delegation of authority to
|
|
them to use force against delinquent members; and if such a right
|
|
should be ascribed to the federal head, as resulting from the nature
|
|
of the social compact between the States, it must be by inference
|
|
and construction, in the face of that part of the second article, by
|
|
which it is declared, ``that each State shall retain every power,
|
|
jurisdiction, and right, not EXPRESSLY delegated to the United
|
|
States in Congress assembled.'' There is, doubtless, a striking
|
|
absurdity in supposing that a right of this kind does not exist, but
|
|
we are reduced to the dilemma either of embracing that supposition,
|
|
preposterous as it may seem, or of contravening or explaining away a
|
|
provision, which has been of late a repeated theme of the eulogies
|
|
of those who oppose the new Constitution; and the want of which, in
|
|
that plan, has been the subject of much plausible animadversion, and
|
|
severe criticism. If we are unwilling to impair the force of this
|
|
applauded provision, we shall be obliged to conclude, that the
|
|
United States afford the extraordinary spectacle of a government
|
|
destitute even of the shadow of constitutional power to enforce the
|
|
execution of its own laws. It will appear, from the specimens which
|
|
have been cited, that the American Confederacy, in this particular,
|
|
stands discriminated from every other institution of a similar kind,
|
|
and exhibits a new and unexampled phenomenon in the political world.
|
|
The want of a mutual guaranty of the State governments is
|
|
another capital imperfection in the federal plan. There is nothing
|
|
of this kind declared in the articles that compose it; and to imply
|
|
a tacit guaranty from considerations of utility, would be a still
|
|
more flagrant departure from the clause which has been mentioned,
|
|
than to imply a tacit power of coercion from the like considerations
|
|
. The want of a guaranty, though it might in its consequences
|
|
endanger the Union, does not so immediately attack its existence as
|
|
the want of a constitutional sanction to its laws.
|
|
Without a guaranty the assistance to be derived from the Union
|
|
in repelling those domestic dangers which may sometimes threaten the
|
|
existence of the State constitutions, must be renounced. Usurpation
|
|
may rear its crest in each State, and trample upon the liberties of
|
|
the people, while the national government could legally do nothing
|
|
more than behold its encroachments with indignation and regret. A
|
|
successful faction may erect a tyranny on the ruins of order and
|
|
law, while no succor could constitutionally be afforded by the Union
|
|
to the friends and supporters of the government. The tempestuous
|
|
situation from which Massachusetts has scarcely emerged, evinces
|
|
that dangers of this kind are not merely speculative. Who can
|
|
determine what might have been the issue of her late convulsions, if
|
|
the malcontents had been headed by a Caesar or by a Cromwell? Who
|
|
can predict what effect a despotism, established in Massachusetts,
|
|
would have upon the liberties of New Hampshire or Rhode Island, of
|
|
Connecticut or New York?
|
|
The inordinate pride of State importance has suggested to some
|
|
minds an objection to the principle of a guaranty in the federal
|
|
government, as involving an officious interference in the domestic
|
|
concerns of the members. A scruple of this kind would deprive us of
|
|
one of the principal advantages to be expected from union, and can
|
|
only flow from a misapprehension of the nature of the provision
|
|
itself. It could be no impediment to reforms of the State
|
|
constitution by a majority of the people in a legal and peaceable
|
|
mode. This right would remain undiminished. The guaranty could
|
|
only operate against changes to be effected by violence. Towards
|
|
the preventions of calamities of this kind, too many checks cannot
|
|
be provided. The peace of society and the stability of government
|
|
depend absolutely on the efficacy of the precautions adopted on this
|
|
head. Where the whole power of the government is in the hands of
|
|
the people, there is the less pretense for the use of violent
|
|
remedies in partial or occasional distempers of the State. The
|
|
natural cure for an ill-administration, in a popular or
|
|
representative constitution, is a change of men. A guaranty by the
|
|
national authority would be as much levelled against the usurpations
|
|
of rulers as against the ferments and outrages of faction and
|
|
sedition in the community.
|
|
The principle of regulating the contributions of the States to
|
|
the common treasury by QUOTAS is another fundamental error in the
|
|
Confederation. Its repugnancy to an adequate supply of the national
|
|
exigencies has been already pointed out, and has sufficiently
|
|
appeared from the trial which has been made of it. I speak of it
|
|
now solely with a view to equality among the States. Those who have
|
|
been accustomed to contemplate the circumstances which produce and
|
|
constitute national wealth, must be satisfied that there is no
|
|
common standard or barometer by which the degrees of it can be
|
|
ascertained. Neither the value of lands, nor the numbers of the
|
|
people, which have been successively proposed as the rule of State
|
|
contributions, has any pretension to being a just representative.
|
|
If we compare the wealth of the United Netherlands with that of
|
|
Russia or Germany, or even of France, and if we at the same time
|
|
compare the total value of the lands and the aggregate population of
|
|
that contracted district with the total value of the lands and the
|
|
aggregate population of the immense regions of either of the three
|
|
last-mentioned countries, we shall at once discover that there is no
|
|
comparison between the proportion of either of these two objects and
|
|
that of the relative wealth of those nations. If the like parallel
|
|
were to be run between several of the American States, it would
|
|
furnish a like result. Let Virginia be contrasted with North
|
|
Carolina, Pennsylvania with Connecticut, or Maryland with New
|
|
Jersey, and we shall be convinced that the respective abilities of
|
|
those States, in relation to revenue, bear little or no analogy to
|
|
their comparative stock in lands or to their comparative population.
|
|
The position may be equally illustrated by a similar process
|
|
between the counties of the same State. No man who is acquainted
|
|
with the State of New York will doubt that the active wealth of
|
|
King's County bears a much greater proportion to that of Montgomery
|
|
than it would appear to be if we should take either the total value
|
|
of the lands or the total number of the people as a criterion!
|
|
The wealth of nations depends upon an infinite variety of causes.
|
|
Situation, soil, climate, the nature of the productions, the
|
|
nature of the government, the genius of the citizens, the degree of
|
|
information they possess, the state of commerce, of arts, of
|
|
industry, these circumstances and many more, too complex, minute, or
|
|
adventitious to admit of a particular specification, occasion
|
|
differences hardly conceivable in the relative opulence and riches
|
|
of different countries. The consequence clearly is that there can
|
|
be no common measure of national wealth, and, of course, no general
|
|
or stationary rule by which the ability of a state to pay taxes can
|
|
be determined. The attempt, therefore, to regulate the
|
|
contributions of the members of a confederacy by any such rule,
|
|
cannot fail to be productive of glaring inequality and extreme
|
|
oppression.
|
|
This inequality would of itself be sufficient in America to work
|
|
the eventual destruction of the Union, if any mode of enforcing a
|
|
compliance with its requisitions could be devised. The suffering
|
|
States would not long consent to remain associated upon a principle
|
|
which distributes the public burdens with so unequal a hand, and
|
|
which was calculated to impoverish and oppress the citizens of some
|
|
States, while those of others would scarcely be conscious of the
|
|
small proportion of the weight they were required to sustain. This,
|
|
however, is an evil inseparable from the principle of quotas and
|
|
requisitions.
|
|
There is no method of steering clear of this inconvenience, but
|
|
by authorizing the national government to raise its own revenues in
|
|
its own way. Imposts, excises, and, in general, all duties upon
|
|
articles of consumption, may be compared to a fluid, which will, in
|
|
time, find its level with the means of paying them. The amount to
|
|
be contributed by each citizen will in a degree be at his own
|
|
option, and can be regulated by an attention to his resources. The
|
|
rich may be extravagant, the poor can be frugal; and private
|
|
oppression may always be avoided by a judicious selection of objects
|
|
proper for such impositions. If inequalities should arise in some
|
|
States from duties on particular objects, these will, in all
|
|
probability, be counterbalanced by proportional inequalities in
|
|
other States, from the duties on other objects. In the course of
|
|
time and things, an equilibrium, as far as it is attainable in so
|
|
complicated a subject, will be established everywhere. Or, if
|
|
inequalities should still exist, they would neither be so great in
|
|
their degree, so uniform in their operation, nor so odious in their
|
|
appearance, as those which would necessarily spring from quotas,
|
|
upon any scale that can possibly be devised.
|
|
It is a signal advantage of taxes on articles of consumption,
|
|
that they contain in their own nature a security against excess.
|
|
They prescribe their own limit; which cannot be exceeded without
|
|
defeating the end proposed, that is, an extension of the revenue.
|
|
When applied to this object, the saying is as just as it is witty,
|
|
that, ``in political arithmetic, two and two do not always make four
|
|
.'' If duties are too high, they lessen the consumption; the
|
|
collection is eluded; and the product to the treasury is not so
|
|
great as when they are confined within proper and moderate bounds.
|
|
This forms a complete barrier against any material oppression of
|
|
the citizens by taxes of this class, and is itself a natural
|
|
limitation of the power of imposing them.
|
|
Impositions of this kind usually fall under the denomination of
|
|
indirect taxes, and must for a long time constitute the chief part
|
|
of the revenue raised in this country. Those of the direct kind,
|
|
which principally relate to land and buildings, may admit of a rule
|
|
of apportionment. Either the value of land, or the number of the
|
|
people, may serve as a standard. The state of agriculture and the
|
|
populousness of a country have been considered as nearly connected
|
|
with each other. And, as a rule, for the purpose intended, numbers,
|
|
in the view of simplicity and certainty, are entitled to a
|
|
preference. In every country it is a herculean task to obtain a
|
|
valuation of the land; in a country imperfectly settled and
|
|
progressive in improvement, the difficulties are increased almost to
|
|
impracticability. The expense of an accurate valuation is, in all
|
|
situations, a formidable objection. In a branch of taxation where
|
|
no limits to the discretion of the government are to be found in the
|
|
nature of things, the establishment of a fixed rule, not
|
|
incompatible with the end, may be attended with fewer inconveniences
|
|
than to leave that discretion altogether at large.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 22
|
|
|
|
The Same Subject Continued
|
|
(Other Defects of the Present Confederation)
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Friday, December 14, 1787.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
IN ADDITION to the defects already enumerated in the existing
|
|
federal system, there are others of not less importance, which
|
|
concur in rendering it altogether unfit for the administration of
|
|
the affairs of the Union.
|
|
The want of a power to regulate commerce is by all parties
|
|
allowed to be of the number. The utility of such a power has been
|
|
anticipated under the first head of our inquiries; and for this
|
|
reason, as well as from the universal conviction entertained upon
|
|
the subject, little need be added in this place. It is indeed
|
|
evident, on the most superficial view, that there is no object,
|
|
either as it respects the interests of trade or finance, that more
|
|
strongly demands a federal superintendence. The want of it has
|
|
already operated as a bar to the formation of beneficial treaties
|
|
with foreign powers, and has given occasions of dissatisfaction
|
|
between the States. No nation acquainted with the nature of our
|
|
political association would be unwise enough to enter into
|
|
stipulations with the United States, by which they conceded
|
|
privileges of any importance to them, while they were apprised that
|
|
the engagements on the part of the Union might at any moment be
|
|
violated by its members, and while they found from experience that
|
|
they might enjoy every advantage they desired in our markets,
|
|
without granting us any return but such as their momentary
|
|
convenience might suggest. It is not, therefore, to be wondered at
|
|
that Mr. Jenkinson, in ushering into the House of Commons a bill for
|
|
regulating the temporary intercourse between the two countries,
|
|
should preface its introduction by a declaration that similar
|
|
provisions in former bills had been found to answer every purpose to
|
|
the commerce of Great Britain, and that it would be prudent to
|
|
persist in the plan until it should appear whether the American
|
|
government was likely or not to acquire greater consistency.%n1%n
|
|
Several States have endeavored, by separate prohibitions,
|
|
restrictions, and exclusions, to influence the conduct of that
|
|
kingdom in this particular, but the want of concert, arising from
|
|
the want of a general authority and from clashing and dissimilar
|
|
views in the State, has hitherto frustrated every experiment of the
|
|
kind, and will continue to do so as long as the same obstacles to a
|
|
uniformity of measures continue to exist.
|
|
The interfering and unneighborly regulations of some States,
|
|
contrary to the true spirit of the Union, have, in different
|
|
instances, given just cause of umbrage and complaint to others, and
|
|
it is to be feared that examples of this nature, if not restrained
|
|
by a national control, would be multiplied and extended till they
|
|
became not less serious sources of animosity and discord than
|
|
injurious impediments to the intcrcourse between the different parts
|
|
of the Confederacy. ``The commerce of the German empire%n2%n is in
|
|
continual trammels from the multiplicity of the duties which the
|
|
several princes and states exact upon the merchandises passing
|
|
through their territories, by means of which the fine streams and
|
|
navigable rivers with which Germany is so happily watered are
|
|
rendered almost useless.'' Though the genius of the people of this
|
|
country might never permit this description to be strictly
|
|
applicable to us, yet we may reasonably expect, from the gradual
|
|
conflicts of State regulations, that the citizens of each would at
|
|
length come to be considered and treated by the others in no better
|
|
light than that of foreigners and aliens.
|
|
The power of raising armies, by the most obvious construction of
|
|
the articles of the Confederation, is merely a power of making
|
|
requisitions upon the States for quotas of men. This practice in
|
|
the course of the late war, was found replete with obstructions to a
|
|
vigorous and to an economical system of defense. It gave birth to a
|
|
competition between the States which created a kind of auction for
|
|
men. In order to furnish the quotas required of them, they outbid
|
|
each other till bounties grew to an enormous and insupportable size.
|
|
The hope of a still further increase afforded an inducement to
|
|
those who were disposed to serve to procrastinate their enlistment,
|
|
and disinclined them from engaging for any considerable periods.
|
|
Hence, slow and scanty levies of men, in the most critical
|
|
emergencies of our affairs; short enlistments at an unparalleled
|
|
expense; continual fluctuations in the troops, ruinous to their
|
|
discipline and subjecting the public safety frequently to the
|
|
perilous crisis of a disbanded army. Hence, also, those oppressive
|
|
expedients for raising men which were upon several occasions
|
|
practiced, and which nothing but the enthusiasm of liberty would
|
|
have induced the people to endure.
|
|
This method of raising troops is not more unfriendly to economy
|
|
and vigor than it is to an equal distribution of the burden. The
|
|
States near the seat of war, influenced by motives of
|
|
self-preservation, made efforts to furnish their quotas, which even
|
|
exceeded their abilities; while those at a distance from danger
|
|
were, for the most part, as remiss as the others were diligent, in
|
|
their exertions. The immediate pressure of this inequality was not
|
|
in this case, as in that of the contributions of money, alleviated
|
|
by the hope of a final liquidation. The States which did not pay
|
|
their proportions of money might at least be charged with their
|
|
deficiencies; but no account could be formed of the deficiencies in
|
|
the supplies of men. We shall not, however, see much reason to
|
|
reget the want of this hope, when we consider how little prospect
|
|
there is, that the most delinquent States will ever be able to make
|
|
compensation for their pecuniary failures. The system of quotas and
|
|
requisitions, whether it be applied to men or money, is, in every
|
|
view, a system of imbecility in the Union, and of inequality and
|
|
injustice among the members.
|
|
The right of equal suffrage among the States is another
|
|
exceptionable part of the Confederation. Every idea of proportion
|
|
and every rule of fair representation conspire to condemn a
|
|
principle, which gives to Rhode Island an equal weight in the scale
|
|
of power with Massachusetts, or Connecticut, or New York; and to
|
|
Deleware an equal voice in the national deliberations with
|
|
Pennsylvania, or Virginia, or North Carolina. Its operation
|
|
contradicts the fundamental maxim of republican government, which
|
|
requires that the sense of the majority should prevail. Sophistry
|
|
may reply, that sovereigns are equal, and that a majority of the
|
|
votes of the States will be a majority of confederated America. But
|
|
this kind of logical legerdemain will never counteract the plain
|
|
suggestions of justice and common-sense. It may happen that this
|
|
majority of States is a small minority of the people of
|
|
America%n3%n; and two thirds of the people of America could not
|
|
long be persuaded, upon the credit of artificial distinctions and
|
|
syllogistic subtleties, to submit their interests to the management
|
|
and disposal of one third. The larger States would after a while
|
|
revolt from the idea of receiving the law from the smaller. To
|
|
acquiesce in such a privation of their due importance in the
|
|
political scale, would be not merely to be insensible to the love of
|
|
power, but even to sacrifice the desire of equality. It is neither
|
|
rational to expect the first, nor just to require the last. The
|
|
smaller States, considering how peculiarly their safety and welfare
|
|
depend on union, ought readily to renounce a pretension which, if
|
|
not relinquished, would prove fatal to its duration.
|
|
It may be objected to this, that not seven but nine States, or
|
|
two thirds of the whole number, must consent to the most important
|
|
resolutions; and it may be thence inferred that nine States would
|
|
always comprehend a majority of the Union. But this does not
|
|
obviate the impropriety of an equal vote between States of the most
|
|
unequal dimensions and populousness; nor is the inference accurate
|
|
in point of fact; for we can enumerate nine States which contain
|
|
less than a majority of the people%n4%n; and it is constitutionally
|
|
possible that these nine may give the vote. Besides, there are
|
|
matters of considerable moment determinable by a bare majority; and
|
|
there are others, concerning which doubts have been entertained,
|
|
which, if interpreted in favor of the sufficiency of a vote of seven
|
|
States, would extend its operation to interests of the first
|
|
magnitude. In addition to this, it is to be observed that there is
|
|
a probability of an increase in the number of States, and no
|
|
provision for a proportional augmentation of the ratio of votes.
|
|
But this is not all: what at first sight may seem a remedy, is,
|
|
in reality, a poison. To give a minority a negative upon the
|
|
majority (which is always the case where more than a majority is
|
|
requisite to a decision), is, in its tendency, to subject the sense
|
|
of the greater number to that of the lesser. Congress, from the
|
|
nonattendance of a few States, have been frequently in the situation
|
|
of a Polish diet, where a single VOTE has been sufficient to put a
|
|
stop to all their movements. A sixtieth part of the Union, which is
|
|
about the proportion of Delaware and Rhode Island, has several times
|
|
been able to oppose an entire bar to its operations. This is one of
|
|
those refinements which, in practice, has an effect the reverse of
|
|
what is expected from it in theory. The necessity of unanimity in
|
|
public bodies, or of something approaching towards it, has been
|
|
founded upon a supposition that it would contribute to security.
|
|
But its real operation is to embarrass the administration, to
|
|
destroy the energy of the government, and to substitute the
|
|
pleasure, caprice, or artifices of an insignificant, turbulent, or
|
|
corrupt junto, to the regular deliberations and decisions of a
|
|
respectable majority. In those emergencies of a nation, in which
|
|
the goodness or badness, the weakness or strength of its government,
|
|
is of the greatest importance, there is commonly a necessity for
|
|
action. The public business must, in some way or other, go forward.
|
|
If a pertinacious minority can control the opinion of a majority,
|
|
respecting the best mode of conducting it, the majority, in order
|
|
that something may be done, must conform to the views of the
|
|
minority; and thus the sense of the smaller number will overrule
|
|
that of the greater, and give a tone to the national proceedings.
|
|
Hence, tedious delays; continual negotiation and intrigue;
|
|
contemptible compromises of the public good. And yet, in such a
|
|
system, it is even happy when such compromises can take place: for
|
|
upon some occasions things will not admit of accommodation; and
|
|
then the measures of government must be injuriously suspended, or
|
|
fatally defeated. It is often, by the impracticability of obtaining
|
|
the concurrence of the necessary number of votes, kept in a state of
|
|
inaction. Its situation must always savor of weakness, sometimes
|
|
border upon anarchy.
|
|
It is not difficult to discover, that a principle of this kind
|
|
gives greater scope to foreign corruption, as well as to domestic
|
|
faction, than that which permits the sense of the majority to
|
|
decide; though the contrary of this has been presumed. The mistake
|
|
has proceeded from not attending with due care to the mischiefs that
|
|
may be occasioned by obstructing the progress of government at
|
|
certain critical seasons. When the concurrence of a large number is
|
|
required by the Constitution to the doing of any national act, we
|
|
are apt to rest satisfied that all is safe, because nothing improper
|
|
will be likely TO BE DONE, but we forget how much good may be
|
|
prevented, and how much ill may be produced, by the power of
|
|
hindering the doing what may be necessary, and of keeping affairs in
|
|
the same unfavorable posture in which they may happen to stand at
|
|
particular periods.
|
|
Suppose, for instance, we were engaged in a war, in conjunction
|
|
with one foreign nation, against another. Suppose the necessity of
|
|
our situation demanded peace, and the interest or ambition of our
|
|
ally led him to seek the prosecution of the war, with views that
|
|
might justify us in making separate terms. In such a state of
|
|
things, this ally of ours would evidently find it much easier, by
|
|
his bribes and intrigues, to tie up the hands of government from
|
|
making peace, where two thirds of all the votes were requisite to
|
|
that object, than where a simple majority would suffice. In the
|
|
first case, he would have to corrupt a smaller number; in the last,
|
|
a greater number. Upon the same principle, it would be much easier
|
|
for a foreign power with which we were at war to perplex our
|
|
councils and embarrass our exertions. And, in a commercial view, we
|
|
may be subjected to similar inconveniences. A nation, with which we
|
|
might have a treaty of commerce, could with much greater facility
|
|
prevent our forming a connection with her competitor in trade,
|
|
though such a connection should be ever so beneficial to ourselves.
|
|
Evils of this description ought not to be regarded as imaginary.
|
|
One of the weak sides of republics, among their numerous
|
|
advantages, is that they afford too easy an inlet to foreign
|
|
corruption. An hereditary monarch, though often disposed to
|
|
sacrifice his subjects to his ambition, has so great a personal
|
|
interest in the government and in the external glory of the nation,
|
|
that it is not easy for a foreign power to give him an equivalent
|
|
for what he would sacrifice by treachery to the state. The world
|
|
has accordingly been witness to few examples of this species of
|
|
royal prostitution, though there have been abundant specimens of
|
|
every other kind.
|
|
In republics, persons elevated from the mass of the community,
|
|
by the suffrages of their fellow-citizens, to stations of great
|
|
pre-eminence and power, may find compensations for betraying their
|
|
trust, which, to any but minds animated and guided by superior
|
|
virtue, may appear to exceed the proportion of interest they have in
|
|
the common stock, and to overbalance the obligations of duty. Hence
|
|
it is that history furnishes us with so many mortifying examples of
|
|
the prevalency of foreign corruption in republican governments. How
|
|
much this contributed to the ruin of the ancient commonwealths has
|
|
been already delineated. It is well known that the deputies of the
|
|
United Provinces have, in various instances, been purchased by the
|
|
emissaries of the neighboring kingdoms. The Earl of Chesterfield
|
|
(if my memory serves me right), in a letter to his court, intimates
|
|
that his success in an important negotiation must depend on his
|
|
obtaining a major's commission for one of those deputies. And in
|
|
Sweden the parties were alternately bought by France and England in
|
|
so barefaced and notorious a manner that it excited universal
|
|
disgust in the nation, and was a principal cause that the most
|
|
limited monarch in Europe, in a single day, without tumult,
|
|
violence, or opposition, became one of the most absolute and
|
|
uncontrolled.
|
|
A circumstance which crowns the defects of the Confederation
|
|
remains yet to be mentioned, the want of a judiciary power. Laws
|
|
are a dead letter without courts to expound and define their true
|
|
meaning and operation. The treaties of the United States, to have
|
|
any force at all, must be considered as part of the law of the land.
|
|
Their true import, as far as respects individuals, must, like all
|
|
other laws, be ascertained by judicial determinations. To produce
|
|
uniformity in these determinations, they ought to be submitted, in
|
|
the last resort, to one SUPREME TRIBUNAL. And this tribunal ought
|
|
to be instituted under the same authority which forms the treaties
|
|
themselves. These ingredients are both indispensable. If there is
|
|
in each State a court of final jurisdiction, there may be as many
|
|
different final determinations on the same point as there are courts.
|
|
There are endless diversities in the opinions of men. We often
|
|
see not only different courts but the judges of the came court
|
|
differing from each other. To avoid the confusion which would
|
|
unavoidably result from the contradictory decisions of a number of
|
|
independent judicatories, all nations have found it necessary to
|
|
establish one court paramount to the rest, possessing a general
|
|
superintendence, and authorized to settle and declare in the last
|
|
resort a uniform rule of civil justice.
|
|
This is the more necessary where the frame of the government is
|
|
so compounded that the laws of the whole are in danger of being
|
|
contravened by the laws of the parts. In this case, if the
|
|
particular tribunals are invested with a right of ultimate
|
|
jurisdiction, besides the contradictions to be expected from
|
|
difference of opinion, there will be much to fear from the bias of
|
|
local views and prejudices, and from the interference of local
|
|
regulations. As often as such an interference was to happen, there
|
|
would be reason to apprehend that the provisions of the particular
|
|
laws might be preferred to those of the general laws; for nothing
|
|
is more natural to men in office than to look with peculiar
|
|
deference towards that authority to which they owe their official
|
|
existence. The treaties of the United States, under the present
|
|
Constitution, are liable to the infractions of thirteen different
|
|
legislatures, and as many different courts of final jurisdiction,
|
|
acting under the authority of those legislatures. The faith, the
|
|
reputation, the peace of the whole Union, are thus continually at
|
|
the mercy of the prejudices, the passions, and the interests of
|
|
every member of which it is composed. Is it possible that foreign
|
|
nations can either respect or confide in such a government? Is it
|
|
possible that the people of America will longer consent to trust
|
|
their honor, their happiness, their safety, on so precarious a
|
|
foundation?
|
|
In this review of the Confederation, I have confined myself to
|
|
the exhibition of its most material defects; passing over those
|
|
imperfections in its details by which even a great part of the power
|
|
intended to be conferred upon it has been in a great measure
|
|
rendered abortive. It must be by this time evident to all men of
|
|
reflection, who can divest themselves of the prepossessions of
|
|
preconceived opinions, that it is a system so radically vicious and
|
|
unsound, as to admit not of amendment but by an entire change in its
|
|
leading features and characters.
|
|
The organization of Congress is itself utterly improper for the
|
|
exercise of those powers which are necessary to be deposited in the
|
|
Union. A single assembly may be a proper receptacle of those
|
|
slender, or rather fettered, authorities, which have been heretofore
|
|
delegated to the federal head; but it would be inconsistent with
|
|
all the principles of good government, to intrust it with those
|
|
additional powers which, even the moderate and more rational
|
|
adversaries of the proposed Constitution admit, ought to reside in
|
|
the United States. If that plan should not be adopted, and if the
|
|
necessity of the Union should be able to withstand the ambitious
|
|
aims of those men who may indulge magnificent schemes of personal
|
|
aggrandizement from its dissolution, the probability would be, that
|
|
we should run into the project of conferring supplementary powers
|
|
upon Congress, as they are now constituted; and either the machine,
|
|
from the intrinsic feebleness of its structure, will moulder into
|
|
pieces, in spite of our ill-judged efforts to prop it; or, by
|
|
successive augmentations of its force an energy, as necessity might
|
|
prompt, we shall finally accumulate, in a single body, all the most
|
|
important prerogatives of sovereignty, and thus entail upon our
|
|
posterity one of the most execrable forms of government that human
|
|
infatuation ever contrived. Thus, we should create in reality that
|
|
very tyranny which the adversaries of the new Constitution either
|
|
are, or affect to be, solicitous to avert.
|
|
It has not a little contributed to the infirmities of the
|
|
existing federal system, that it never had a ratification by the
|
|
PEOPLE. Resting on no better foundation than the consent of the
|
|
several legislatures, it has been exposed to frequent and intricate
|
|
questions concerning the validity of its powers, and has, in some
|
|
instances, given birth to the enormous doctrine of a right of
|
|
legislative repeal. Owing its ratification to the law of a State,
|
|
it has been contended that the same authority might repeal the law
|
|
by which it was ratified. However gross a heresy it may be to
|
|
maintain that a PARTY to a COMPACT has a right to revoke that
|
|
COMPACT, the doctrine itself has had respectable advocates. The
|
|
possibility of a question of this nature proves the necessity of
|
|
laying the foundations of our national government deeper than in the
|
|
mere sanction of delegated authority. The fabric of American empire
|
|
ought to rest on the solid basis of THE CONSENT OF THE PEOPLE. The
|
|
streams of national power ought to flow immediately from that pure,
|
|
original fountain of all legitimate authority.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
FNA1@@1 This, as nearly as I can recollect, was the sense of his
|
|
speech on introducing the last bill.
|
|
FNA1@@2 Encyclopedia, article ``Empire.''
|
|
FNA1@@3 New Hampshire, Rhode Island, New Jersey, Delaware, Georgia,
|
|
South Carolina, and Maryland are a majority of the whole number of
|
|
the States, but they do not contain one third of the people.
|
|
FNA1@@4 Add New York and Connecticut to the foregoing seven, and they
|
|
will be less than a majority.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 23
|
|
|
|
The Necessity of a Government as Energetic as the One Proposed to
|
|
the Preservation of the Union
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Tuesday, December 18, 1787.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE necessity of a Constitution, at least equally energetic with
|
|
the one proposed, to the preservation of the Union, is the point at
|
|
the examination of which we are now arrived.
|
|
This inquiry will naturally divide itself into three
|
|
branches the objects to be provided for by the federal government,
|
|
the quantity of power necessary to the accomplishment of those
|
|
objects, the persons upon whom that power ought to operate. Its
|
|
distribution and organization will more properly claim our attention
|
|
under the succeeding head.
|
|
The principal purposes to be answered by union are these the
|
|
common defense of the members; the preservation of the public peace
|
|
as well against internal convulsions as external attacks; the
|
|
regulation of commerce with other nations and between the States;
|
|
the superintendence of our intercourse, political and commercial,
|
|
with foreign countries.
|
|
The authorities essential to the common defense are these: to
|
|
raise armies; to build and equip fleets; to prescribe rules for
|
|
the government of both; to direct their operations; to provide for
|
|
their support. These powers ought to exist without limitation,
|
|
BECAUSE IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO FORESEE OR DEFINE THE EXTENT AND VARIETY
|
|
OF NATIONAL EXIGENCIES, OR THE CORRESPONDENT EXTENT AND VARIETY OF
|
|
THE MEANS WHICH MAY BE NECESSARY TO SATISFY THEM. The circumstances
|
|
that endanger the safety of nations are infinite, and for this
|
|
reason no constitutional shackles can wisely be imposed on the power
|
|
to which the care of it is committed. This power ought to be
|
|
coextensive with all the possible combinations of such
|
|
circumstances; and ought to be under the direction of the same
|
|
councils which are appointed to preside over the common defense.
|
|
This is one of those truths which, to a correct and unprejudiced
|
|
mind, carries its own evidence along with it; and may be obscured,
|
|
but cannot be made plainer by argument or reasoning. It rests upon
|
|
axioms as simple as they are universal; the MEANS ought to be
|
|
proportioned to the END; the persons, from whose agency the
|
|
attainment of any END is expected, ought to possess the MEANS by
|
|
which it is to be attained.
|
|
Whether there ought to be a federal government intrusted with
|
|
the care of the common defense, is a question in the first instance,
|
|
open for discussion; but the moment it is decided in the
|
|
affirmative, it will follow, that that government ought to be
|
|
clothed with all the powers requisite to complete execution of its
|
|
trust. And unless it can be shown that the circumstances which may
|
|
affect the public safety are reducible within certain determinate
|
|
limits; unless the contrary of this position can be fairly and
|
|
rationally disputed, it must be admitted, as a necessary
|
|
consequence, that there can be no limitation of that authority which
|
|
is to provide for the defense and protection of the community, in
|
|
any matter essential to its efficacy that is, in any matter
|
|
essential to the FORMATION, DIRECTION, or SUPPORT of the NATIONAL
|
|
FORCES.
|
|
Defective as the present Confederation has been proved to be,
|
|
this principle appears to have been fully recognized by the framers
|
|
of it; though they have not made proper or adequate provision for
|
|
its exercise. Congress have an unlimited discretion to make
|
|
requisitions of men and money; to govern the army and navy; to
|
|
direct their operations. As their requisitions are made
|
|
constitutionally binding upon the States, who are in fact under the
|
|
most solemn obligations to furnish the supplies required of them,
|
|
the intention evidently was that the United States should command
|
|
whatever resources were by them judged requisite to the ``common
|
|
defense and general welfare.'' It was presumed that a sense of
|
|
their true interests, and a regard to the dictates of good faith,
|
|
would be found sufficient pledges for the punctual performance of
|
|
the duty of the members to the federal head.
|
|
The experiment has, however, demonstrated that this expectation
|
|
was ill-founded and illusory; and the observations, made under the
|
|
last head, will, I imagine, have sufficed to convince the impartial
|
|
and discerning, that there is an absolute necessity for an entire
|
|
change in the first principles of the system; that if we are in
|
|
earnest about giving the Union energy and duration, we must abandon
|
|
the vain project of legislating upon the States in their collective
|
|
capacities; we must extend the laws of the federal government to
|
|
the individual citizens of America; we must discard the fallacious
|
|
scheme of quotas and requisitions, as equally impracticable and
|
|
unjust. The result from all this is that the Union ought to be
|
|
invested with full power to levy troops; to build and equip fleets;
|
|
and to raise the revenues which will be required for the formation
|
|
and support of an army and navy, in the customary and ordinary modes
|
|
practiced in other governments.
|
|
If the circumstances of our country are such as to demand a
|
|
compound instead of a simple, a confederate instead of a sole,
|
|
government, the essential point which will remain to be adjusted
|
|
will be to discriminate the OBJECTS, as far as it can be done, which
|
|
shall appertain to the different provinces or departments of power;
|
|
allowing to each the most ample authority for fulfilling the
|
|
objects committed to its charge. Shall the Union be constituted the
|
|
guardian of the common safety? Are fleets and armies and revenues
|
|
necessary to this purpose? The government of the Union must be
|
|
empowered to pass all laws, and to make all regulations which have
|
|
relation to them. The same must be the case in respect to commerce,
|
|
and to every other matter to which its jurisdiction is permitted to
|
|
extend. Is the administration of justice between the citizens of
|
|
the same State the proper department of the local governments?
|
|
These must possess all the authorities which are connected with
|
|
this object, and with every other that may be allotted to their
|
|
particular cognizance and direction. Not to confer in each case a
|
|
degree of power commensurate to the end, would be to violate the
|
|
most obvious rules of prudence and propriety, and improvidently to
|
|
trust the great interests of the nation to hands which are disabled
|
|
from managing them with vigor and success.
|
|
Who is likely to make suitable provisions for the public
|
|
defense, as that body to which the guardianship of the public safety
|
|
is confided; which, as the centre of information, will best
|
|
understand the extent and urgency of the dangers that threaten; as
|
|
the representative of the WHOLE, will feel itself most deeply
|
|
interested in the preservation of every part; which, from the
|
|
responsibility implied in the duty assigned to it, will be most
|
|
sensibly impressed with the necessity of proper exertions; and
|
|
which, by the extension of its authority throughout the States, can
|
|
alone establish uniformity and concert in the plans and measures by
|
|
which the common safety is to be secured? Is there not a manifest
|
|
inconsistency in devolving upon the federal government the care of
|
|
the general defense, and leaving in the State governments the
|
|
EFFECTIVE powers by which it is to be provided for? Is not a want
|
|
of co-operation the infallible consequence of such a system? And
|
|
will not weakness, disorder, an undue distribution of the burdens
|
|
and calamities of war, an unnecessary and intolerable increase of
|
|
expense, be its natural and inevitable concomitants? Have we not
|
|
had unequivocal experience of its effects in the course of the
|
|
revolution which we have just accomplished?
|
|
Every view we may take of the subject, as candid inquirers after
|
|
truth, will serve to convince us, that it is both unwise and
|
|
dangerous to deny the federal government an unconfined authority, as
|
|
to all those objects which are intrusted to its management. It will
|
|
indeed deserve the most vigilant and careful attention of the
|
|
people, to see that it be modeled in such a manner as to admit of
|
|
its being safely vested with the requisite powers. If any plan
|
|
which has been, or may be, offered to our consideration, should not,
|
|
upon a dispassionate inspection, be found to answer this
|
|
description, it ought to be rejected. A government, the
|
|
constitution of which renders it unfit to be trusted with all the
|
|
powers which a free people OUGHT TO DELEGATE TO ANY GOVERNMENT,
|
|
would be an unsafe and improper depositary of the NATIONAL INTERESTS.
|
|
Wherever THESE can with propriety be confided, the coincident
|
|
powers may safely accompany them. This is the true result of all
|
|
just reasoning upon the subject. And the adversaries of the plan
|
|
promulgated by the convention ought to have confined themselves to
|
|
showing, that the internal structure of the proposed government was
|
|
such as to render it unworthy of the confidence of the people. They
|
|
ought not to have wandered into inflammatory declamations and
|
|
unmeaning cavils about the extent of the powers. The POWERS are not
|
|
too extensive for the OBJECTS of federal administration, or, in
|
|
other words, for the management of our NATIONAL INTERESTS; nor can
|
|
any satisfactory argument be framed to show that they are chargeable
|
|
with such an excess. If it be true, as has been insinuated by some
|
|
of the writers on the other side, that the difficulty arises from
|
|
the nature of the thing, and that the extent of the country will not
|
|
permit us to form a government in which such ample powers can safely
|
|
be reposed, it would prove that we ought to contract our views, and
|
|
resort to the expedient of separate confederacies, which will move
|
|
within more practicable spheres. For the absurdity must continually
|
|
stare us in the face of confiding to a government the direction of
|
|
the most essential national interests, without daring to trust it to
|
|
the authorities which are indispensible to their proper and
|
|
efficient management. Let us not attempt to reconcile
|
|
contradictions, but firmly embrace a rational alternative.
|
|
I trust, however, that the impracticability of one general
|
|
system cannot be shown. I am greatly mistaken, if any thing of
|
|
weight has yet been advanced of this tendency; and I flatter
|
|
myself, that the observations which have been made in the course of
|
|
these papers have served to place the reverse of that position in as
|
|
clear a light as any matter still in the womb of time and experience
|
|
can be susceptible of. This, at all events, must be evident, that
|
|
the very difficulty itself, drawn from the extent of the country, is
|
|
the strongest argument in favor of an energetic government; for any
|
|
other can certainly never preserve the Union of so large an empire.
|
|
If we embrace the tenets of those who oppose the adoption of the
|
|
proposed Constitution, as the standard of our political creed, we
|
|
cannot fail to verify the gloomy doctrines which predict the
|
|
impracticability of a national system pervading entire limits of the
|
|
present Confederacy.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 24
|
|
|
|
The Powers Necessary to the Common Defense Further Considered
|
|
For the Independent Journal.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
To THE powers proposed to be conferred upon the federal
|
|
government, in respect to the creation and direction of the national
|
|
forces, I have met with but one specific objection, which, if I
|
|
understand it right, is this, that proper provision has not been
|
|
made against the existence of standing armies in time of peace; an
|
|
objection which, I shall now endeavor to show, rests on weak and
|
|
unsubstantial foundations.
|
|
It has indeed been brought forward in the most vague and general
|
|
form, supported only by bold assertions, without the appearance of
|
|
argument; without even the sanction of theoretical opinions; in
|
|
contradiction to the practice of other free nations, and to the
|
|
general sense of America, as expressed in most of the existing
|
|
constitutions. The proprietory of this remark will appear, the
|
|
moment it is recollected that the objection under consideration
|
|
turns upon a supposed necessity of restraining the LEGISLATIVE
|
|
authority of the nation, in the article of military establishments;
|
|
a principle unheard of, except in one or two of our State
|
|
constitutions, and rejected in all the rest.
|
|
A stranger to our politics, who was to read our newspapers at
|
|
the present juncture, without having previously inspected the plan
|
|
reported by the convention, would be naturally led to one of two
|
|
conclusions: either that it contained a positive injunction, that
|
|
standing armies should be kept up in time of peace; or that it
|
|
vested in the EXECUTIVE the whole power of levying troops, without
|
|
subjecting his discretion, in any shape, to the control of the
|
|
legislature.
|
|
If he came afterwards to peruse the plan itself, he would be
|
|
surprised to discover, that neither the one nor the other was the
|
|
case; that the whole power of raising armies was lodged in the
|
|
LEGISLATURE, not in the EXECUTIVE; that this legislature was to be
|
|
a popular body, consisting of the representatives of the people
|
|
periodically elected; and that instead of the provision he had
|
|
supposed in favor of standing armies, there was to be found, in
|
|
respect to this object, an important qualification even of the
|
|
legislative discretion, in that clause which forbids the
|
|
appropriation of money for the support of an army for any longer
|
|
period than two years a precaution which, upon a nearer view of it,
|
|
will appear to be a great and real security against the keeping up
|
|
of troops without evident necessity.
|
|
Disappointed in his first surmise, the person I have supposed
|
|
would be apt to pursue his conjectures a little further. He would
|
|
naturally say to himself, it is impossible that all this vehement
|
|
and pathetic declamation can be without some colorable pretext. It
|
|
must needs be that this people, so jealous of their liberties, have,
|
|
in all the preceding models of the constitutions which they have
|
|
established, inserted the most precise and rigid precautions on this
|
|
point, the omission of which, in the new plan, has given birth to
|
|
all this apprehension and clamor.
|
|
If, under this impression, he proceeded to pass in review the
|
|
several State constitutions, how great would be his disappointment
|
|
to find that TWO ONLY of them%n1%n contained an interdiction of
|
|
standing armies in time of peace; that the other eleven had either
|
|
observed a profound silence on the subject, or had in express terms
|
|
admitted the right of the Legislature to authorize their existence.
|
|
Still, however he would be persuaded that there must be some
|
|
plausible foundation for the cry raised on this head. He would
|
|
never be able to imagine, while any source of information remained
|
|
unexplored, that it was nothing more than an experiment upon the
|
|
public credulity, dictated either by a deliberate intention to
|
|
deceive, or by the overflowings of a zeal too intemperate to be
|
|
ingenuous. It would probably occur to him, that he would be likely
|
|
to find the precautions he was in search of in the primitive compact
|
|
between the States. Here, at length, he would expect to meet with a
|
|
solution of the enigma. No doubt, he would observe to himself, the
|
|
existing Confederation must contain the most explicit provisions
|
|
against military establishments in time of peace; and a departure
|
|
from this model, in a favorite point, has occasioned the discontent
|
|
which appears to influence these political champions.
|
|
If he should now apply himself to a careful and critical survey
|
|
of the articles of Confederation, his astonishment would not only be
|
|
increased, but would acquire a mixture of indignation, at the
|
|
unexpected discovery, that these articles, instead of containing the
|
|
prohibition he looked for, and though they had, with jealous
|
|
circumspection, restricted the authority of the State legislatures
|
|
in this particular, had not imposed a single restraint on that of
|
|
the United States. If he happened to be a man of quick sensibility,
|
|
or ardent temper, he could now no longer refrain from regarding
|
|
these clamors as the dishonest artifices of a sinister and
|
|
unprincipled opposition to a plan which ought at least to receive a
|
|
fair and candid examination from all sincere lovers of their
|
|
country! How else, he would say, could the authors of them have
|
|
been tempted to vent such loud censures upon that plan, about a
|
|
point in which it seems to have conformed itself to the general
|
|
sense of America as declared in its different forms of government,
|
|
and in which it has even superadded a new and powerful guard unknown
|
|
to any of them? If, on the contrary, he happened to be a man of
|
|
calm and dispassionate feelings, he would indulge a sigh for the
|
|
frailty of human nature, and would lament, that in a matter so
|
|
interesting to the happiness of millions, the true merits of the
|
|
question should be perplexed and entangled by expedients so
|
|
unfriendly to an impartial and right determination. Even such a man
|
|
could hardly forbear remarking, that a conduct of this kind has too
|
|
much the appearance of an intention to mislead the people by
|
|
alarming their passions, rather than to convince them by arguments
|
|
addressed to their understandings.
|
|
But however little this objection may be countenanced, even by
|
|
precedents among ourselves, it may be satisfactory to take a nearer
|
|
view of its intrinsic merits. From a close examination it will
|
|
appear that restraints upon the discretion of the legislature in
|
|
respect to military establishments in time of peace, would be
|
|
improper to be imposed, and if imposed, from the necessities of
|
|
society, would be unlikely to be observed.
|
|
Though a wide ocean separates the United States from Europe, yet
|
|
there are various considerations that warn us against an excess of
|
|
confidence or security. On one side of us, and stretching far into
|
|
our rear, are growing settlements subject to the dominion of Britain.
|
|
On the other side, and extending to meet the British settlements,
|
|
are colonies and establishments subject to the dominion of Spain.
|
|
This situation and the vicinity of the West India Islands,
|
|
belonging to these two powers create between them, in respect to
|
|
their American possessions and in relation to us, a common interest.
|
|
The savage tribes on our Western frontier ought to be regarded as
|
|
our natural enemies, their natural allies, because they have most to
|
|
fear from us, and most to hope from them. The improvements in the
|
|
art of navigation have, as to the facility of communication,
|
|
rendered distant nations, in a great measure, neighbors. Britain
|
|
and Spain are among the principal maritime powers of Europe. A
|
|
future concert of views between these nations ought not to be
|
|
regarded as improbable. The increasing remoteness of consanguinity
|
|
is every day diminishing the force of the family compact between
|
|
France and Spain. And politicians have ever with great reason
|
|
considered the ties of blood as feeble and precarious links of
|
|
political connection. These circumstances combined, admonish us not
|
|
to be too sanguine in considering ourselves as entirely out of the
|
|
reach of danger.
|
|
Previous to the Revolution, and ever since the peace, there has
|
|
been a constant necessity for keeping small garrisons on our Western
|
|
frontier. No person can doubt that these will continue to be
|
|
indispensable, if it should only be against the ravages and
|
|
depredations of the Indians. These garrisons must either be
|
|
furnished by occasional detachments from the militia, or by
|
|
permanent corps in the pay of the government. The first is
|
|
impracticable; and if practicable, would be pernicious. The
|
|
militia would not long, if at all, submit to be dragged from their
|
|
occupations and families to perform that most disagreeable duty in
|
|
times of profound peace. And if they could be prevailed upon or
|
|
compelled to do it, the increased expense of a frequent rotation of
|
|
service, and the loss of labor and disconcertion of the industrious
|
|
pursuits of individuals, would form conclusive objections to the
|
|
scheme. It would be as burdensome and injurious to the public as
|
|
ruinous to private citizens. The latter resource of permanent corps
|
|
in the pay of the government amounts to a standing army in time of
|
|
peace; a small one, indeed, but not the less real for being small.
|
|
Here is a simple view of the subject, that shows us at once the
|
|
impropriety of a constitutional interdiction of such establishments,
|
|
and the necessity of leaving the matter to the discretion and
|
|
prudence of the legislature.
|
|
In proportion to our increase in strength, it is probable, nay,
|
|
it may be said certain, that Britain and Spain would augment their
|
|
military establishments in our neighborhood. If we should not be
|
|
willing to be exposed, in a naked and defenseless condition, to
|
|
their insults and encroachments, we should find it expedient to
|
|
increase our frontier garrisons in some ratio to the force by which
|
|
our Western settlements might be annoyed. There are, and will be,
|
|
particular posts, the possession of which will include the command
|
|
of large districts of territory, and facilitate future invasions of
|
|
the remainder. It may be added that some of those posts will be
|
|
keys to the trade with the Indian nations. Can any man think it
|
|
would be wise to leave such posts in a situation to be at any
|
|
instant seized by one or the other of two neighboring and formidable
|
|
powers? To act this part would be to desert all the usual maxims of
|
|
prudence and policy.
|
|
If we mean to be a commercial people, or even to be secure on
|
|
our Atlantic side, we must endeavor, as soon as possible, to have a
|
|
navy. To this purpose there must be dock-yards and arsenals; and
|
|
for the defense of these, fortifications, and probably garrisons.
|
|
When a nation has become so powerful by sea that it can protect its
|
|
dock-yards by its fleets, this supersedes the necessity of garrisons
|
|
for that purpose; but where naval establishments are in their
|
|
infancy, moderate garrisons will, in all likelihood, be found an
|
|
indispensable security against descents for the destruction of the
|
|
arsenals and dock-yards, and sometimes of the fleet itself.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
FNA1@@1 This statement of the matter is taken from the printed
|
|
collection of State constitutions. Pennsylvania and North Carolina
|
|
are the two which contain the interdiction in these words: ``As
|
|
standing armies in time of peace are dangerous to liberty, THEY
|
|
OUGHT NOT to be kept up.'' This is, in truth, rather a CAUTION than
|
|
a PROHIBITION. New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Delaware, and Maryland
|
|
have, in each of their bils of rights, a clause to this effect:
|
|
``Standing armies are dangerous to liberty, and ought not to be
|
|
raised or kept up WITHOUT THE CONSENT OF THE LEGISLATURE''; which
|
|
is a formal admission of the authority of the Legislature. New York
|
|
has no bills of rights, and her constitution says not a word about
|
|
the matter. No bills of rights appear annexed to the constitutions
|
|
of the other States, except the foregoing, and their constitutions
|
|
are equally silent. I am told, however that one or two States have
|
|
bills of rights which do not appear in this collection; but that
|
|
those also recognize the right of the legislative authority in this
|
|
respect.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 25
|
|
|
|
The Same Subject Continued
|
|
(The Powers Necessary to the Common Defense Further Considered)
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Friday, December 21, 1787.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
IT MAY perhaps be urged that the objects enumerated in the
|
|
preceding number ought to be provided for by the State governments,
|
|
under the direction of the Union. But this would be, in reality, an
|
|
inversion of the primary principle of our political association, as
|
|
it would in practice transfer the care of the common defense from
|
|
the federal head to the individual members: a project oppressive to
|
|
some States, dangerous to all, and baneful to the Confederacy.
|
|
The territories of Britain, Spain, and of the Indian nations in
|
|
our neighborhood do not border on particular States, but encircle
|
|
the Union from Maine to Georgia. The danger, though in different
|
|
degrees, is therefore common. And the means of guarding against it
|
|
ought, in like manner, to be the objects of common councils and of a
|
|
common treasury. It happens that some States, from local situation,
|
|
are more directly exposed. New York is of this class. Upon the
|
|
plan of separate provisions, New York would have to sustain the
|
|
whole weight of the establishments requisite to her immediate
|
|
safety, and to the mediate or ultimate protection of her neighbors.
|
|
This would neither be equitable as it respected New York nor safe
|
|
as it respected the other States. Various inconveniences would
|
|
attend such a system. The States, to whose lot it might fall to
|
|
support the necessary establishments, would be as little able as
|
|
willing, for a considerable time to come, to bear the burden of
|
|
competent provisions. The security of all would thus be subjected
|
|
to the parsimony, improvidence, or inability of a part. If the
|
|
resources of such part becoming more abundant and extensive, its
|
|
provisions should be proportionally enlarged, the other States would
|
|
quickly take the alarm at seeing the whole military force of the
|
|
Union in the hands of two or three of its members, and those
|
|
probably amongst the most powerful. They would each choose to have
|
|
some counterpoise, and pretenses could easily be contrived. In this
|
|
situation, military establishments, nourished by mutual jealousy,
|
|
would be apt to swell beyond their natural or proper size; and
|
|
being at the separate disposal of the members, they would be engines
|
|
for the abridgment or demolition of the national authcrity.
|
|
Reasons have been already given to induce a supposition that the
|
|
State governments will too naturally be prone to a rivalship with
|
|
that of the Union, the foundation of which will be the love of
|
|
power; and that in any contest between the federal head and one of
|
|
its members the people will be most apt to unite with their local
|
|
government. If, in addition to this immense advantage, the ambition
|
|
of the members should be stimulated by the separate and independent
|
|
possession of military forces, it would afford too strong a
|
|
temptation and too great a facility to them to make enterprises
|
|
upon, and finally to subvert, the constitutional authority of the
|
|
Union. On the other hand, the liberty of the people would be less
|
|
safe in this state of things than in that which left the national
|
|
forces in the hands of the national government. As far as an army
|
|
may be considered as a dangerous weapon of power, it had better be
|
|
in those hands of which the people are most likely to be jealous
|
|
than in those of which they are least likely to be jealous. For it
|
|
is a truth, which the experience of ages has attested, that the
|
|
people are always most in danger when the means of injuring their
|
|
rights are in the possession of those of whom they entertain the
|
|
least suspicion.
|
|
The framers of the existing Confederation, fully aware of the
|
|
danger to the Union from the separate possession of military forces
|
|
by the States, have, in express terms, prohibited them from having
|
|
either ships or troops, unless with the consent of Congress. The
|
|
truth is, that the existence of a federal government and military
|
|
establishments under State authority are not less at variance with
|
|
each other than a due supply of the federal treasury and the system
|
|
of quotas and requisitions.
|
|
There are other lights besides those already taken notice of, in
|
|
which the impropriety of restraints on the discretion of the
|
|
national legislature will be equally manifest. The design of the
|
|
objection, which has been mentioned, is to preclude standing armies
|
|
in time of peace, though we have never been informed how far it is
|
|
designed the prohibition should extend; whether to raising armies
|
|
as well as to KEEPING THEM UP in a season of tranquillity or not.
|
|
If it be confined to the latter it will have no precise
|
|
signification, and it will be ineffectual for the purpose intended.
|
|
When armies are once raised what shall be denominated ``keeping
|
|
them up,'' contrary to the sense of the Constitution? What time
|
|
shall be requisite to ascertain the violation? Shall it be a week,
|
|
a month, a year? Or shall we say they may be continued as long as
|
|
the danger which occasioned their being raised continues? This
|
|
would be to admit that they might be kept up IN TIME OF PEACE,
|
|
against threatening or impending danger, which would be at once to
|
|
deviate from the literal meaning of the prohibition, and to
|
|
introduce an extensive latitude of construction. Who shall judge of
|
|
the continuance of the danger? This must undoubtedly be submitted
|
|
to the national government, and the matter would then be brought to
|
|
this issue, that the national government, to provide against
|
|
apprehended danger, might in the first instance raise troops, and
|
|
might afterwards keep them on foot as long as they supposed the
|
|
peace or safety of the community was in any degree of jeopardy. It
|
|
is easy to perceive that a discretion so latitudinary as this would
|
|
afford ample room for eluding the force of the provision.
|
|
The supposed utility of a provision of this kind can only be
|
|
founded on the supposed probability, or at least possibility, of a
|
|
combination between the executive and the legislative, in some
|
|
scheme of usurpation. Should this at any time happen, how easy
|
|
would it be to fabricate pretenses of approaching danger! Indian
|
|
hostilities, instigated by Spain or Britain, would always be at hand.
|
|
Provocations to produce the desired appearances might even be
|
|
given to some foreign power, and appeased again by timely
|
|
concessions. If we can reasonably presume such a combination to
|
|
have been formed, and that the enterprise is warranted by a
|
|
sufficient prospect of success, the army, when once raised, from
|
|
whatever cause, or on whatever pretext, may be applied to the
|
|
execution of the project.
|
|
If, to obviate this consequence, it should be resolved to extend
|
|
the prohibition to the RAISING of armies in time of peace, the
|
|
United States would then exhibit the most extraordinary spectacle
|
|
which the world has yet seen, that of a nation incapacitated by its
|
|
Constitution to prepare for defense, before it was actually invaded.
|
|
As the ceremony of a formal denunciation of war has of late fallen
|
|
into disuse, the presence of an enemy within our territories must be
|
|
waited for, as the legal warrant to the government to begin its
|
|
levies of men for the protection of the State. We must receive the
|
|
blow, before we could even prepare to return it. All that kind of
|
|
policy by which nations anticipate distant danger, and meet the
|
|
gathering storm, must be abstained from, as contrary to the genuine
|
|
maxims of a free government. We must expose our property and
|
|
liberty to the mercy of foreign invaders, and invite them by our
|
|
weakness to seize the naked and defenseless prey, because we are
|
|
afraid that rulers, created by our choice, dependent on our will,
|
|
might endanger that liberty, by an abuse of the means necessary to
|
|
its preservation.
|
|
Here I expect we shall be told that the militia of the country
|
|
is its natural bulwark, and would be at all times equal to the
|
|
national defense. This doctrine, in substance, had like to have
|
|
lost us our independence. It cost millions to the United States
|
|
that might have been saved. The facts which, from our own
|
|
experience, forbid a reliance of this kind, are too recent to permit
|
|
us to be the dupes of such a suggestion. The steady operations of
|
|
war against a regular and disciplined army can only be successfully
|
|
conducted by a force of the same kind. Considerations of economy,
|
|
not less than of stability and vigor, confirm this position. The
|
|
American militia, in the course of the late war, have, by their
|
|
valor on numerous occasions, erected eternal monuments to their
|
|
fame; but the bravest of them feel and know that the liberty of
|
|
their country could not have been established by their efforts
|
|
alone, however great and valuable they were. War, like most other
|
|
things, is a science to be acquired and perfected by diligence, by
|
|
perserverance, by time, and by practice.
|
|
All violent policy, as it is contrary to the natural and
|
|
experienced course of human affairs, defeats itself. Pennsylvania,
|
|
at this instant, affords an example of the truth of this remark.
|
|
The Bill of Rights of that State declares that standing armies are
|
|
dangerous to liberty, and ought not to be kept up in time of peace.
|
|
Pennsylvania, nevertheless, in a time of profound peace, from the
|
|
existence of partial disorders in one or two of her counties, has
|
|
resolved to raise a body of troops; and in all probability will
|
|
keep them up as long as there is any appearance of danger to the
|
|
public peace. The conduct of Massachusetts affords a lesson on the
|
|
same subject, though on different ground. That State (without
|
|
waiting for the sanction of Congress, as the articles of the
|
|
Confederation require) was compelled to raise troops to quell a
|
|
domestic insurrection, and still keeps a corps in pay to prevent a
|
|
revival of the spirit of revolt. The particular constitution of
|
|
Massachusetts opposed no obstacle to the measure; but the instance
|
|
is still of use to instruct us that cases are likely to occur under
|
|
our government, as well as under those of other nations, which will
|
|
sometimes render a military force in time of peace essential to the
|
|
security of the society, and that it is therefore improper in this
|
|
respect to control the legislative discretion. It also teaches us,
|
|
in its application to the United States, how little the rights of a
|
|
feeble government are likely to be respected, even by its own
|
|
constituents. And it teaches us, in addition to the rest, how
|
|
unequal parchment provisions are to a struggle with public necessity
|
|
.
|
|
It was a fundamental maxim of the Lacedaemonian commonwealth,
|
|
that the post of admiral should not be conferred twice on the same
|
|
person. The Peloponnesian confederates, having suffered a severe
|
|
defeat at sea from the Athenians, demanded Lysander, who had before
|
|
served with success in that capacity, to command the combined fleets.
|
|
The Lacedaemonians, to gratify their allies, and yet preserve the
|
|
semblance of an adherence to their ancient institutions, had
|
|
recourse to the flimsy subterfuge of investing Lysander with the
|
|
real power of admiral, under the nominal title of vice-admiral.
|
|
This instance is selected from among a multitude that might be
|
|
cited to confirm the truth already advanced and illustrated by
|
|
domestic examples; which is, that nations pay little regard to
|
|
rules and maxims calculated in their very nature to run counter to
|
|
the necessities of society. Wise politicians will be cautious about
|
|
fettering the government with restrictions that cannot be observed,
|
|
because they know that every breach of the fundamental laws, though
|
|
dictated by necessity, impairs that sacred reverence which ought to
|
|
be maintained in the breast of rulers towards the constitution of a
|
|
country, and forms a precedent for other breaches where the same
|
|
plea of necessity does not exist at all, or is less urgent and
|
|
palpable.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 26
|
|
|
|
The Idea of Restraining the Legislative Authority in Regard to the
|
|
Common Defense Considered
|
|
For the Independent Journal.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
IT WAS a thing hardly to be expected that in a popular
|
|
revolution the minds of men should stop at that happy mean which
|
|
marks the salutary boundary between POWER and PRIVILEGE, and
|
|
combines the energy of government with the security of private
|
|
rights. A failure in this delicate and important point is the great
|
|
source of the inconveniences we experience, and if we are not
|
|
cautious to avoid a repetition of the error, in our future attempts
|
|
to rectify and ameliorate our system, we may travel from one
|
|
chimerical project to another; we may try change after change; but
|
|
we shall never be likely to make any material change for the better.
|
|
The idea of restraining the legislative authority, in the means
|
|
of providing for the national defense, is one of those refinements
|
|
which owe their origin to a zeal for liberty more ardent than
|
|
enlightened. We have seen, however, that it has not had thus far an
|
|
extensive prevalency; that even in this country, where it made its
|
|
first appearance, Pennsylvania and North Carolina are the only two
|
|
States by which it has been in any degree patronized; and that all
|
|
the others have refused to give it the least countenance; wisely
|
|
judging that confidence must be placed somewhere; that the
|
|
necessity of doing it, is implied in the very act of delegating
|
|
power; and that it is better to hazard the abuse of that confidence
|
|
than to embarrass the government and endanger the public safety by
|
|
impolitic restrictions on the legislative authority. The opponents
|
|
of the proposed Constitution combat, in this respect, the general
|
|
decision of America; and instead of being taught by experience the
|
|
propriety of correcting any extremes into which we may have
|
|
heretofore run, they appear disposed to conduct us into others still
|
|
more dangerous, and more extravagant. As if the tone of government
|
|
had been found too high, or too rigid, the doctrines they teach are
|
|
calculated to induce us to depress or to relax it, by expedients
|
|
which, upon other occasions, have been condemned or forborne. It
|
|
may be affirmed without the imputation of invective, that if the
|
|
principles they inculcate, on various points, could so far obtain as
|
|
to become the popular creed, they would utterly unfit the people of
|
|
this country for any species of government whatever. But a danger
|
|
of this kind is not to be apprehended. The citizens of America have
|
|
too much discernment to be argued into anarchy. And I am much
|
|
mistaken, if experience has not wrought a deep and solemn conviction
|
|
in the public mind, that greater energy of government is essential
|
|
to the welfare and prosperity of the community.
|
|
It may not be amiss in this place concisely to remark the origin
|
|
and progress of the idea, which aims at the exclusion of military
|
|
establishments in time of peace. Though in speculative minds it may
|
|
arise from a contemplation of the nature and tendency of such
|
|
institutions, fortified by the events that have happened in other
|
|
ages and countries, yet as a national sentiment, it must be traced
|
|
to those habits of thinking which we derive from the nation from
|
|
whom the inhabitants of these States have in general sprung.
|
|
In England, for a long time after the Norman Conquest, the
|
|
authority of the monarch was almost unlimited. Inroads were
|
|
gradually made upon the prerogative, in favor of liberty, first by
|
|
the barons, and afterwards by the people, till the greatest part of
|
|
its most formidable pretensions became extinct. But it was not till
|
|
the revolution in 1688, which elevated the Prince of Orange to the
|
|
throne of Great Britain, that English liberty was completely
|
|
triumphant. As incident to the undefined power of making war, an
|
|
acknowledged prerogative of the crown, Charles II. had, by his own
|
|
authority, kept on foot in time of peace a body of 5,000 regular
|
|
troops. And this number James II. increased to 30,000; who were
|
|
paid out of his civil list. At the revolution, to abolish the
|
|
exercise of so dangerous an authority, it became an article of the
|
|
Bill of Rights then framed, that ``the raising or keeping a standing
|
|
army within the kingdom in time of peace, UNLESS WITH THE CONSENT OF
|
|
PARLIAMENT, was against law.''
|
|
In that kingdom, when the pulse of liberty was at its highest
|
|
pitch, no security against the danger of standing armies was thought
|
|
requisite, beyond a prohibition of their being raised or kept up by
|
|
the mere authority of the executive magistrate. The patriots, who
|
|
effected that memorable revolution, were too temperate, too
|
|
wellinformed, to think of any restraint on the legislative
|
|
discretion. They were aware that a certain number of troops for
|
|
guards and garrisons were indispensable; that no precise bounds
|
|
could be set to the national exigencies; that a power equal to
|
|
every possible contingency must exist somewhere in the government:
|
|
and that when they referred the exercise of that power to the
|
|
judgment of the legislature, they had arrived at the ultimate point
|
|
of precaution which was reconcilable with the safety of the
|
|
community.
|
|
From the same source, the people of America may be said to have
|
|
derived an hereditary impression of danger to liberty, from standing
|
|
armies in time of peace. The circumstances of a revolution
|
|
quickened the public sensibility on every point connected with the
|
|
security of popular rights, and in some instances raise the warmth
|
|
of our zeal beyond the degree which consisted with the due
|
|
temperature of the body politic. The attempts of two of the States
|
|
to restrict the authority of the legislature in the article of
|
|
military establishments, are of the number of these instances. The
|
|
principles which had taught us to be jealous of the power of an
|
|
hereditary monarch were by an injudicious excess extended to the
|
|
representatives of the people in their popular assemblies. Even in
|
|
some of the States, where this error was not adopted, we find
|
|
unnecessary declarations that standing armies ought not to be kept
|
|
up, in time of peace, WITHOUT THE CONSENT OF THE LEGISLATURE. I
|
|
call them unnecessary, because the reason which had introduced a
|
|
similar provision into the English Bill of Rights is not applicable
|
|
to any of the State constitutions. The power of raising armies at
|
|
all, under those constitutions, can by no construction be deemed to
|
|
reside anywhere else, than in the legislatures themselves; and it
|
|
was superfluous, if not absurd, to declare that a matter should not
|
|
be done without the consent of a body, which alone had the power of
|
|
doing it. Accordingly, in some of these constitutions, and among
|
|
others, in that of this State of New York, which has been justly
|
|
celebrated, both in Europe and America, as one of the best of the
|
|
forms of government established in this country, there is a total
|
|
silence upon the subject.
|
|
It is remarkable, that even in the two States which seem to have
|
|
meditated an interdiction of military establishments in time of
|
|
peace, the mode of expression made use of is rather cautionary than
|
|
prohibitory. It is not said, that standing armies SHALL NOT BE kept
|
|
up, but that they OUGHT NOT to be kept up, in time of peace. This
|
|
ambiguity of terms appears to have been the result of a conflict
|
|
between jealousy and conviction; between the desire of excluding
|
|
such establishments at all events, and the persuasion that an
|
|
absolute exclusion would be unwise and unsafe.
|
|
Can it be doubted that such a provision, whenever the situation
|
|
of public affairs was understood to require a departure from it,
|
|
would be interpreted by the legislature into a mere admonition, and
|
|
would be made to yield to the necessities or supposed necessities of
|
|
the State? Let the fact already mentioned, with respect to
|
|
Pennsylvania, decide. What then (it may be asked) is the use of
|
|
such a provision, if it cease to operate the moment there is an
|
|
inclination to disregard it?
|
|
Let us examine whether there be any comparison, in point of
|
|
efficacy, between the provision alluded to and that which is
|
|
contained in the new Constitution, for restraining the
|
|
appropriations of money for military purposes to the period of two
|
|
years. The former, by aiming at too much, is calculated to effect
|
|
nothing; the latter, by steering clear of an imprudent extreme, and
|
|
by being perfectly compatible with a proper provision for the
|
|
exigencies of the nation, will have a salutary and powerful
|
|
operation.
|
|
The legislature of the United States will be OBLIGED, by this
|
|
provision, once at least in every two years, to deliberate upon the
|
|
propriety of keeping a military force on foot; to come to a new
|
|
resolution on the point; and to declare their sense of the matter,
|
|
by a formal vote in the face of their constituents. They are not AT
|
|
LIBERTY to vest in the executive department permanent funds for the
|
|
support of an army, if they were even incautious enough to be
|
|
willing to repose in it so improper a confidence. As the spirit of
|
|
party, in different degrees, must be expected to infect all
|
|
political bodies, there will be, no doubt, persons in the national
|
|
legislature willing enough to arraign the measures and criminate the
|
|
views of the majority. The provision for the support of a military
|
|
force will always be a favorable topic for declamation. As often as
|
|
the question comes forward, the public attention will be roused and
|
|
attracted to the subject, by the party in opposition; and if the
|
|
majority should be really disposed to exceed the proper limits, the
|
|
community will be warned of the danger, and will have an opportunity
|
|
of taking measures to guard against it. Independent of parties in
|
|
the national legislature itself, as often as the period of
|
|
discussion arrived, the State legislatures, who will always be not
|
|
only vigilant but suspicious and jealous guardians of the rights of
|
|
the citizens against encroachments from the federal government, will
|
|
constantly have their attention awake to the conduct of the national
|
|
rulers, and will be ready enough, if any thing improper appears, to
|
|
sound the alarm to the people, and not only to be the VOICE, but, if
|
|
necessary, the ARM of their discontent.
|
|
Schemes to subvert the liberties of a great community REQUIRE
|
|
TIME to mature them for execution. An army, so large as seriously
|
|
to menace those liberties, could only be formed by progressive
|
|
augmentations; which would suppose, not merely a temporary
|
|
combination between the legislature and executive, but a continued
|
|
conspiracy for a series of time. Is it probable that such a
|
|
combination would exist at all? Is it probable that it would be
|
|
persevered in, and transmitted along through all the successive
|
|
variations in a representative body, which biennial elections would
|
|
naturally produce in both houses? Is it presumable, that every man,
|
|
the instant he took his seat in the national Senate or House of
|
|
Representatives, would commence a traitor to his constituents and to
|
|
his country? Can it be supposed that there would not be found one
|
|
man, discerning enough to detect so atrocious a conspiracy, or bold
|
|
or honest enough to apprise his constituents of their danger? If
|
|
such presumptions can fairly be made, there ought at once to be an
|
|
end of all delegated authority. The people should resolve to recall
|
|
all the powers they have heretofore parted with out of their own
|
|
hands, and to divide themselves into as many States as there are
|
|
counties, in order that they may be able to manage their own
|
|
concerns in person.
|
|
If such suppositions could even be reasonably made, still the
|
|
concealment of the design, for any duration, would be impracticable.
|
|
It would be announced, by the very circumstance of augmenting the
|
|
army to so great an extent in time of profound peace. What
|
|
colorable reason could be assigned, in a country so situated, for
|
|
such vast augmentations of the military force? It is impossible
|
|
that the people could be long deceived; and the destruction of the
|
|
project, and of the projectors, would quickly follow the discovery.
|
|
It has been said that the provision which limits the
|
|
appropriation of money for the support of an army to the period of
|
|
two years would be unavailing, because the Executive, when once
|
|
possessed of a force large enough to awe the people into submission,
|
|
would find resources in that very force sufficient to enable him to
|
|
dispense with supplies from the acts of the legislature. But the
|
|
question again recurs, upon what pretense could he be put in
|
|
possession of a force of that magnitude in time of peace? If we
|
|
suppose it to have been created in consequence of some domestic
|
|
insurrection or foreign war, then it becomes a case not within the
|
|
principles of the objection; for this is levelled against the power
|
|
of keeping up troops in time of peace. Few persons will be so
|
|
visionary as seriously to contend that military forces ought not to
|
|
be raised to quell a rebellion or resist an invasion; and if the
|
|
defense of the community under such circumstances should make it
|
|
necessary to have an army so numerous as to hazard its liberty, this
|
|
is one of those calamaties for which there is neither preventative
|
|
nor cure. It cannot be provided against by any possible form of
|
|
government; it might even result from a simple league offensive and
|
|
defensive, if it should ever be necessary for the confederates or
|
|
allies to form an army for common defense.
|
|
But it is an evil infinitely less likely to attend us in a
|
|
united than in a disunited state; nay, it may be safely asserted
|
|
that it is an evil altogether unlikely to attend us in the latter
|
|
situation. It is not easy to conceive a possibility that dangers so
|
|
formidable can assail the whole Union, as to demand a force
|
|
considerable enough to place our liberties in the least jeopardy,
|
|
especially if we take into our view the aid to be derived from the
|
|
militia, which ought always to be counted upon as a valuable and
|
|
powerful auxiliary. But in a state of disunion (as has been fully
|
|
shown in another place), the contrary of this supposition would
|
|
become not only probable, but almost unavoidable.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 27
|
|
|
|
The Same Subject Continued
|
|
(The Idea of Restraining the Legislative Authority in Regard to
|
|
the Common Defense Considered)
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Tuesday, December 25, 1787.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
IT HAS been urged, in different shapes, that a Constitution of
|
|
the kind proposed by the convention cannot operate without the aid
|
|
of a military force to execute its laws. This, however, like most
|
|
other things that have been alleged on that side, rests on mere
|
|
general assertion, unsupported by any precise or intelligible
|
|
designation of the reasons upon which it is founded. As far as I
|
|
have been able to divine the latent meaning of the objectors, it
|
|
seems to originate in a presupposition that the people will be
|
|
disinclined to the exercise of federal authority in any matter of an
|
|
internal nature. Waiving any exception that might be taken to the
|
|
inaccuracy or inexplicitness of the distinction between internal and
|
|
external, let us inquire what ground there is to presuppose that
|
|
disinclination in the people. Unless we presume at the same time
|
|
that the powers of the general government will be worse administered
|
|
than those of the State government, there seems to be no room for
|
|
the presumption of ill-will, disaffection, or opposition in the
|
|
people. I believe it may be laid down as a general rule that their
|
|
confidence in and obedience to a government will commonly be
|
|
proportioned to the goodness or badness of its administration. It
|
|
must be admitted that there are exceptions to this rule; but these
|
|
exceptions depend so entirely on accidental causes, that they cannot
|
|
be considered as having any relation to the intrinsic merits or
|
|
demerits of a constitution. These can only be judged of by general
|
|
principles and maxims.
|
|
Various reasons have been suggested, in the course of these
|
|
papers, to induce a probability that the general government will be
|
|
better administered than the particular governments; the principal
|
|
of which reasons are that the extension of the spheres of election
|
|
will present a greater option, or latitude of choice, to the people;
|
|
that through the medium of the State legislatures which are select
|
|
bodies of men, and which are to appoint the members of the national
|
|
Senate there is reason to expect that this branch will generally be
|
|
composed with peculiar care and judgment; that these circumstances
|
|
promise greater knowledge and more extensive information in the
|
|
national councils, and that they will be less apt to be tainted by
|
|
the spirit of faction, and more out of the reach of those occasional
|
|
ill-humors, or temporary prejudices and propensities, which, in
|
|
smaller societies, frequently contaminate the public councils, beget
|
|
injustice and oppression of a part of the community, and engender
|
|
schemes which, though they gratify a momentary inclination or
|
|
desire, terminate in general distress, dissatisfaction, and disgust.
|
|
Several additional reasons of considerable force, to fortify that
|
|
probability, will occur when we come to survey, with a more critical
|
|
eye, the interior structure of the edifice which we are invited to
|
|
erect. It will be sufficient here to remark, that until
|
|
satisfactory reasons can be assigned to justify an opinion, that the
|
|
federal government is likely to be administered in such a manner as
|
|
to render it odious or contemptible to the people, there can be no
|
|
reasonable foundation for the supposition that the laws of the Union
|
|
will meet with any greater obstruction from them, or will stand in
|
|
need of any other methods to enforce their execution, than the laws
|
|
of the particular members.
|
|
The hope of impunity is a strong incitement to sedition; the
|
|
dread of punishment, a proportionably strong discouragement to it.
|
|
Will not the government of the Union, which, if possessed of a due
|
|
degree of power, can call to its aid the collective resources of the
|
|
whole Confederacy, be more likely to repress the FORMER sentiment
|
|
and to inspire the LATTER, than that of a single State, which can
|
|
only command the resources within itself? A turbulent faction in a
|
|
State may easily suppose itself able to contend with the friends to
|
|
the government in that State; but it can hardly be so infatuated as
|
|
to imagine itself a match for the combined efforts of the Union. If
|
|
this reflection be just, there is less danger of resistance from
|
|
irregular combinations of individuals to the authority of the
|
|
Confederacy than to that of a single member.
|
|
I will, in this place, hazard an observation, which will not be
|
|
the less just because to some it may appear new; which is, that the
|
|
more the operations of the national authority are intermingled in
|
|
the ordinary exercise of government, the more the citizens are
|
|
accustomed to meet with it in the common occurrences of their
|
|
political life, the more it is familiarized to their sight and to
|
|
their feelings, the further it enters into those objects which touch
|
|
the most sensible chords and put in motion the most active springs
|
|
of the human heart, the greater will be the probability that it will
|
|
conciliate the respect and attachment of the community. Man is very
|
|
much a creature of habit. A thing that rarely strikes his senses
|
|
will generally have but little influence upon his mind. A
|
|
government continually at a distance and out of sight can hardly be
|
|
expected to interest the sensations of the people. The inference
|
|
is, that the authority of the Union, and the affections of the
|
|
citizens towards it, will be strengthened, rather than weakened, by
|
|
its extension to what are called matters of internal concern; and
|
|
will have less occasion to recur to force, in proportion to the
|
|
familiarity and comprehensiveness of its agency. The more it
|
|
circulates through those channls and currents in which the passions
|
|
of mankind naturally flow, the less will it require the aid of the
|
|
violent and perilous expedients of compulsion.
|
|
One thing, at all events, must be evident, that a government
|
|
like the one proposed would bid much fairer to avoid the necessity
|
|
of using force, than that species of league contend for by most of
|
|
its opponents; the authority of which should only operate upon the
|
|
States in their political or collective capacities. It has been
|
|
shown that in such a Confederacy there can be no sanction for the
|
|
laws but force; that frequent delinquencies in the members are the
|
|
natural offspring of the very frame of the government; and that as
|
|
often as these happen, they can only be redressed, if at all, by war
|
|
and violence.
|
|
The plan reported by the convention, by extending the authority
|
|
of the federal head to the individual citizens of the several
|
|
States, will enable the government to employ the ordinary magistracy
|
|
of each, in the execution of its laws. It is easy to perceive that
|
|
this will tend to destroy, in the common apprehension, all
|
|
distinction between the sources from which they might proceed; and
|
|
will give the federal government the same advantage for securing a
|
|
due obedience to its authority which is enjoyed by the government of
|
|
each State, in addition to the influence on public opinion which
|
|
will result from the important consideration of its having power to
|
|
call to its assistance and support the resources of the whole Union.
|
|
It merits particular attention in this place, that the laws of the
|
|
Confederacy, as to the ENUMERATED and LEGITIMATE objects of its
|
|
jurisdiction, will become the SUPREME LAW of the land; to the
|
|
observance of which all officers, legislative, executive, and
|
|
judicial, in each State, will be bound by the sanctity of an oath.
|
|
Thus the legislatures, courts, and magistrates, of the respective
|
|
members, will be incorporated into the operations of the national
|
|
government AS FAR AS ITS JUST AND CONSTITUTIONAL AUTHORITY EXTENDS;
|
|
and will be rendered auxiliary to the enforcement of its laws.%n1%n
|
|
Any man who will pursue, by his own reflections, the consequences
|
|
of this situation, will perceive that there is good ground to
|
|
calculate upon a regular and peaceable execution of the laws of the
|
|
Union, if its powers are administered with a common share of
|
|
prudence. If we will arbitrarily suppose the contrary, we may
|
|
deduce any inferences we please from the supposition; for it is
|
|
certainly possible, by an injudicious exercise of the authorities of
|
|
the best government that ever was, or ever can be instituted, to
|
|
provoke and precipitate the people into the wildest excesses. But
|
|
though the adversaries of the proposed Constitution should presume
|
|
that the national rulers would be insensible to the motives of
|
|
public good, or to the obligations of duty, I would still ask them
|
|
how the interests of ambition, or the views of encroachment, can be
|
|
promoted by such a conduct?
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
FNA1@@1 The sophistry which has been employed to show that this will
|
|
tend to the destruction of the State governments, will, in its will,
|
|
in its proper place, be fully detected.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 28
|
|
|
|
The Same Subject Continued
|
|
(The Idea of Restraining the Legislative Authority in Regard to
|
|
the Common Defense Considered)
|
|
For the Independent Journal.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THAT there may happen cases in which the national government may
|
|
be necessitated to resort to force, cannot be denied. Our own
|
|
experience has corroborated the lessons taught by the examples of
|
|
other nations; that emergencies of this sort will sometimes arise
|
|
in all societies, however constituted; that seditions and
|
|
insurrections are, unhappily, maladies as inseparable from the body
|
|
politic as tumors and eruptions from the natural body; that the
|
|
idea of governing at all times by the simple force of law (which we
|
|
have been told is the only admissible principle of republican
|
|
government), has no place but in the reveries of those political
|
|
doctors whose sagacity disdains the admonitions of experimental
|
|
instruction.
|
|
Should such emergencies at any time happen under the national
|
|
government, there could be no remedy but force. The means to be
|
|
employed must be proportioned to the extent of the mischief. If it
|
|
should be a slight commotion in a small part of a State, the militia
|
|
of the residue would be adequate to its suppression; and the
|
|
national presumption is that they would be ready to do their duty.
|
|
An insurrection, whatever may be its immediate cause, eventually
|
|
endangers all government. Regard to the public peace, if not to the
|
|
rights of the Union, would engage the citizens to whom the contagion
|
|
had not communicated itself to oppose the insurgents; and if the
|
|
general government should be found in practice conducive to the
|
|
prosperity and felicity of the people, it were irrational to believe
|
|
that they would be disinclined to its support.
|
|
If, on the contrary, the insurrection should pervade a whole
|
|
State, or a principal part of it, the employment of a different kind
|
|
of force might become unavoidable. It appears that Massachusetts
|
|
found it necessary to raise troops for repressing the disorders
|
|
within that State; that Pennsylvania, from the mere apprehension of
|
|
commotions among a part of her citizens, has thought proper to have
|
|
recourse to the same measure. Suppose the State of New York had
|
|
been inclined to re-establish her lost jurisdiction over the
|
|
inhabitants of Vermont, could she have hoped for success in such an
|
|
enterprise from the efforts of the militia alone? Would she not
|
|
have been compelled to raise and to maintain a more regular force
|
|
for the execution of her design? If it must then be admitted that
|
|
the necessity of recurring to a force different from the militia, in
|
|
cases of this extraordinary nature, is applicable to the State
|
|
governments themselves, why should the possibility, that the
|
|
national government might be under a like necessity, in similar
|
|
extremities, be made an objection to its existence? Is it not
|
|
surprising that men who declare an attachment to the Union in the
|
|
abstract, should urge as an objection to the proposed Constitution
|
|
what applies with tenfold weight to the plan for which they contend;
|
|
and what, as far as it has any foundation in truth, is an
|
|
inevitable consequence of civil society upon an enlarged scale? Who
|
|
would not prefer that possibility to the unceasing agitations and
|
|
frequent revolutions which are the continual scourges of petty
|
|
republics?
|
|
Let us pursue this examination in another light. Suppose, in
|
|
lieu of one general system, two, or three, or even four
|
|
Confederacies were to be formed, would not the same difficulty
|
|
oppose itself to the operations of either of these Confederacies?
|
|
Would not each of them be exposed to the same casualties; and when
|
|
these happened, be obliged to have recourse to the same expedients
|
|
for upholding its authority which are objected to in a government
|
|
for all the States? Would the militia, in this supposition, be more
|
|
ready or more able to support the federal authority than in the case
|
|
of a general union? All candid and intelligent men must, upon due
|
|
consideration, acknowledge that the principle of the objection is
|
|
equally applicable to either of the two cases; and that whether we
|
|
have one government for all the States, or different governments for
|
|
different parcels of them, or even if there should be an entire
|
|
separation of the States, there might sometimes be a necessity to
|
|
make use of a force constituted differently from the militia, to
|
|
preserve the peace of the community and to maintain the just
|
|
authority of the laws against those violent invasions of them which
|
|
amount to insurrections and rebellions.
|
|
Independent of all other reasonings upon the subject, it is a
|
|
full answer to those who require a more peremptory provision against
|
|
military establishments in time of peace, to say that the whole
|
|
power of the proposed government is to be in the hands of the
|
|
representatives of the people. This is the essential, and, after
|
|
all, only efficacious security for the rights and privileges of the
|
|
people, which is attainable in civil society.%n1%n
|
|
If the representatives of the people betray their constituents,
|
|
there is then no resource left but in the exertion of that original
|
|
right of self-defense which is paramount to all positive forms of
|
|
government, and which against the usurpations of the national
|
|
rulers, may be exerted with infinitely better prospect of success
|
|
than against those of the rulers of an individual state. In a
|
|
single state, if the persons intrusted with supreme power become
|
|
usurpers, the different parcels, subdivisions, or districts of which
|
|
it consists, having no distinct government in each, can take no
|
|
regular measures for defense. The citizens must rush tumultuously
|
|
to arms, without concert, without system, without resource; except
|
|
in their courage and despair. The usurpers, clothed with the forms
|
|
of legal authority, can too often crush the opposition in embryo.
|
|
The smaller the extent of the territory, the more difficult will it
|
|
be for the people to form a regular or systematic plan of
|
|
opposition, and the more easy will it be to defeat their early
|
|
efforts. Intelligence can be more speedily obtained of their
|
|
preparations and movements, and the military force in the possession
|
|
of the usurpers can be more rapidly directed against the part where
|
|
the opposition has begun. In this situation there must be a
|
|
peculiar coincidence of circumstances to insure success to the
|
|
popular resistance.
|
|
The obstacles to usurpation and the facilities of resistance
|
|
increase with the increased extent of the state, provided the
|
|
citizens understand their rights and are disposed to defend them.
|
|
The natural strength of the people in a large community, in
|
|
proportion to the artificial strength of the government, is greater
|
|
than in a small, and of course more competent to a struggle with the
|
|
attempts of the government to establish a tyranny. But in a
|
|
confederacy the people, without exaggeration, may be said to be
|
|
entirely the masters of their own fate. Power being almost always
|
|
the rival of power, the general government will at all times stand
|
|
ready to check the usurpations of the state governments, and these
|
|
will have the same disposition towards the general government. The
|
|
people, by throwing themselves into either scale, will infallibly
|
|
make it preponderate. If their rights are invaded by either, they
|
|
can make use of the other as the instrument of redress. How wise
|
|
will it be in them by cherishing the union to preserve to themselves
|
|
an advantage which can never be too highly prized!
|
|
It may safely be received as an axiom in our political system,
|
|
that the State governments will, in all possible contingencies,
|
|
afford complete security against invasions of the public liberty by
|
|
the national authority. Projects of usurpation cannot be masked
|
|
under pretenses so likely to escape the penetration of select bodies
|
|
of men, as of the people at large. The legislatures will have
|
|
better means of information. They can discover the danger at a
|
|
distance; and possessing all the organs of civil power, and the
|
|
confidence of the people, they can at once adopt a regular plan of
|
|
opposition, in which they can combine all the resources of the
|
|
community. They can readily communicate with each other in the
|
|
different States, and unite their common forces for the protection
|
|
of their common liberty.
|
|
The great extent of the country is a further security. We have
|
|
already experienced its utility against the attacks of a foreign
|
|
power. And it would have precisely the same effect against the
|
|
enterprises of ambitious rulers in the national councils. If the
|
|
federal army should be able to quell the resistance of one State,
|
|
the distant States would have it in their power to make head with
|
|
fresh forces. The advantages obtained in one place must be
|
|
abandoned to subdue the opposition in others; and the moment the
|
|
part which had been reduced to submission was left to itself, its
|
|
efforts would be renewed, and its resistance revive.
|
|
We should recollect that the extent of the military force must,
|
|
at all events, be regulated by the resources of the country. For a
|
|
long time to come, it will not be possible to maintain a large army;
|
|
and as the means of doing this increase, the population and natural
|
|
strength of the community will proportionably increase. When will
|
|
the time arrive that the federal government can raise and maintain
|
|
an army capable of erecting a despotism over the great body of the
|
|
people of an immense empire, who are in a situation, through the
|
|
medium of their State governments, to take measures for their own
|
|
defense, with all the celerity, regularity, and system of
|
|
independent nations? The apprehension may be considered as a
|
|
disease, for which there can be found no cure in the resources of
|
|
argument and reasoning.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
FNA1@@1 Its full efficacy will be examined hereafter.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 29
|
|
|
|
Concerning the Militia
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|
From the Daily Advertiser.
|
|
Thursday, January 10, 1788
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE power of regulating the militia, and of commanding its
|
|
services in times of insurrection and invasion are natural incidents
|
|
to the duties of superintending the common defense, and of watching
|
|
over the internal peace of the Confederacy.
|
|
It requires no skill in the science of war to discern that
|
|
uniformity in the organization and discipline of the militia would
|
|
be attended with the most beneficial effects, whenever they were
|
|
called into service for the public defense. It would enable them to
|
|
discharge the duties of the camp and of the field with mutual
|
|
intelligence and concert an advantage of peculiar moment in the
|
|
operations of an army; and it would fit them much sooner to acquire
|
|
the degree of proficiency in military functions which would be
|
|
essential to their usefulness. This desirable uniformity can only
|
|
be accomplished by confiding the regulation of the militia to the
|
|
direction of the national authority. It is, therefore, with the
|
|
most evident propriety, that the plan of the convention proposes to
|
|
empower the Union ``to provide for organizing, arming, and
|
|
disciplining the militia, and for governing such part of them as may
|
|
be employed in the service of the United States, RESERVING TO THE
|
|
STATES RESPECTIVELY THE APPOINTMENT OF THE OFFICERS, AND THE
|
|
AUTHORITY OF TRAINING THE MILITIA ACCORDING TO THE DISCIPLINE
|
|
PRESCRIBED BY CONGRESS.''
|
|
Of the different grounds which have been taken in opposition to
|
|
the plan of the convention, there is none that was so little to have
|
|
been expected, or is so untenable in itself, as the one from which
|
|
this particular provision has been attacked. If a well-regulated
|
|
militia be the most natural defense of a free country, it ought
|
|
certainly to be under the regulation and at the disposal of that
|
|
body which is constituted the guardian of the national security. If
|
|
standing armies are dangerous to liberty, an efficacious power over
|
|
the militia, in the body to whose care the protection of the State
|
|
is committed, ought, as far as possible, to take away the inducement
|
|
and the pretext to such unfriendly institutions. If the federal
|
|
government can command the aid of the militia in those emergencies
|
|
which call for the military arm in support of the civil magistrate,
|
|
it can the better dispense with the employment of a different kind
|
|
of force. If it cannot avail itself of the former, it will be
|
|
obliged to recur to the latter. To render an army unnecessary, will
|
|
be a more certain method of preventing its existence than a thousand
|
|
prohibitions upon paper.
|
|
In order to cast an odium upon the power of calling forth the
|
|
militia to execute the laws of the Union, it has been remarked that
|
|
there is nowhere any provision in the proposed Constitution for
|
|
calling out the POSSE COMITATUS, to assist the magistrate in the
|
|
execution of his duty, whence it has been inferred, that military
|
|
force was intended to be his only auxiliary. There is a striking
|
|
incoherence in the objections which have appeared, and sometimes
|
|
even from the same quarter, not much calculated to inspire a very
|
|
favorable opinion of the sincerity or fair dealing of their authors.
|
|
The same persons who tell us in one breath, that the powers of the
|
|
federal government will be despotic and unlimited, inform us in the
|
|
next, that it has not authority sufficient even to call out the
|
|
POSSE COMITATUS. The latter, fortunately, is as much short of the
|
|
truth as the former exceeds it. It would be as absurd to doubt,
|
|
that a right to pass all laws NECESSARY AND PROPER to execute its
|
|
declared powers, would include that of requiring the assistance of
|
|
the citizens to the officers who may be intrusted with the execution
|
|
of those laws, as it would be to believe, that a right to enact laws
|
|
necessary and proper for the imposition and collection of taxes
|
|
would involve that of varying the rules of descent and of the
|
|
alienation of landed property, or of abolishing the trial by jury in
|
|
cases relating to it. It being therefore evident that the
|
|
supposition of a want of power to require the aid of the POSSE
|
|
COMITATUS is entirely destitute of color, it will follow, that the
|
|
conclusion which has been drawn from it, in its application to the
|
|
authority of the federal government over the militia, is as uncandid
|
|
as it is illogical. What reason could there be to infer, that force
|
|
was intended to be the sole instrument of authority, merely because
|
|
there is a power to make use of it when necessary? What shall we
|
|
think of the motives which could induce men of sense to reason in
|
|
this manner? How shall we prevent a conflict between charity and
|
|
judgment?
|
|
By a curious refinement upon the spirit of republican jealousy,
|
|
we are even taught to apprehend danger from the militia itself, in
|
|
the hands of the federal government. It is observed that select
|
|
corps may be formed, composed of the young and ardent, who may be
|
|
rendered subservient to the views of arbitrary power. What plan for
|
|
the regulation of the militia may be pursued by the national
|
|
government, is impossible to be foreseen. But so far from viewing
|
|
the matter in the same light with those who object to select corps
|
|
as dangerous, were the Constitution ratified, and were I to deliver
|
|
my sentiments to a member of the federal legislature from this State
|
|
on the subject of a militia establishment, I should hold to him, in
|
|
substance, the following discourse:
|
|
``The project of disciplining all the militia of the United
|
|
States is as futile as it would be injurious, if it were capable of
|
|
being carried into execution. A tolerable expertness in military
|
|
movements is a business that requires time and practice. It is not
|
|
a day, or even a week, that will suffice for the attainment of it.
|
|
To oblige the great body of the yeomanry, and of the other classes
|
|
of the citizens, to be under arms for the purpose of going through
|
|
military exercises and evolutions, as often as might be necessary to
|
|
acquire the degree of perfection which would entitle them to the
|
|
character of a well-regulated militia, would be a real grievance to
|
|
the people, and a serious public inconvenience and loss. It would
|
|
form an annual deduction from the productive labor of the country,
|
|
to an amount which, calculating upon the present numbers of the
|
|
people, would not fall far short of the whole expense of the civil
|
|
establishments of all the States. To attempt a thing which would
|
|
abridge the mass of labor and industry to so considerable an extent,
|
|
would be unwise: and the experiment, if made, could not succeed,
|
|
because it would not long be endured. Little more can reasonably be
|
|
aimed at, with respect to the people at large, than to have them
|
|
properly armed and equipped; and in order to see that this be not
|
|
neglected, it will be necessary to assemble them once or twice in
|
|
the course of a year.
|
|
``But though the scheme of disciplining the whole nation must be
|
|
abandoned as mischievous or impracticable; yet it is a matter of
|
|
the utmost importance that a well-digested plan should, as soon as
|
|
possible, be adopted for the proper establishment of the militia.
|
|
The attention of the government ought particularly to be directed
|
|
to the formation of a select corps of moderate extent, upon such
|
|
principles as will really fit them for service in case of need. By
|
|
thus circumscribing the plan, it will be possible to have an
|
|
excellent body of well-trained militia, ready to take the field
|
|
whenever the defense of the State shall require it. This will not
|
|
only lessen the call for military establishments, but if
|
|
circumstances should at any time oblige the government to form an
|
|
army of any magnitude that army can never be formidable to the
|
|
liberties of the people while there is a large body of citizens,
|
|
little, if at all, inferior to them in discipline and the use of
|
|
arms, who stand ready to defend their own rights and those of their
|
|
fellow-citizens. This appears to me the only substitute that can be
|
|
devised for a standing army, and the best possible security against
|
|
it, if it should exist.''
|
|
Thus differently from the adversaries of the proposed
|
|
Constitution should I reason on the same subject, deducing arguments
|
|
of safety from the very sources which they represent as fraught with
|
|
danger and perdition. But how the national legislature may reason
|
|
on the point, is a thing which neither they nor I can foresee.
|
|
There is something so far-fetched and so extravagant in the idea
|
|
of danger to liberty from the militia, that one is at a loss whether
|
|
to treat it with gravity or with raillery; whether to consider it
|
|
as a mere trial of skill, like the paradoxes of rhetoricians; as a
|
|
disingenuous artifice to instil prejudices at any price; or as the
|
|
serious offspring of political fanaticism. Where in the name of
|
|
common-sense, are our fears to end if we may not trust our sons, our
|
|
brothers, our neighbors, our fellow-citizens? What shadow of danger
|
|
can there be from men who are daily mingling with the rest of their
|
|
countrymen and who participate with them in the same feelings,
|
|
sentiments, habits and interests? What reasonable cause of
|
|
apprehension can be inferred from a power in the Union to prescribe
|
|
regulations for the militia, and to command its services when
|
|
necessary, while the particular States are to have the SOLE AND
|
|
EXCLUSIVE APPOINTMENT OF THE OFFICERS? If it were possible
|
|
seriously to indulge a jealousy of the militia upon any conceivable
|
|
establishment under the federal government, the circumstance of the
|
|
officers being in the appointment of the States ought at once to
|
|
extinguish it. There can be no doubt that this circumstance will
|
|
always secure to them a preponderating influence over the militia.
|
|
In reading many of the publications against the Constitution, a
|
|
man is apt to imagine that he is perusing some ill-written tale or
|
|
romance, which instead of natural and agreeable images, exhibits to
|
|
the mind nothing but frightful and distorted shapes ``Gorgons, hydras,
|
|
and chimeras dire''; discoloring and disfiguring whatever it represents,
|
|
and transforming everything it touches into a monster.
|
|
A sample of this is to be observed in the exaggerated and
|
|
improbable suggestions which have taken place respecting the power
|
|
of calling for the services of the militia. That of New Hampshire
|
|
is to be marched to Georgia, of Georgia to New Hampshire, of New
|
|
York to Kentucky, and of Kentucky to Lake Champlain. Nay, the debts
|
|
due to the French and Dutch are to be paid in militiamen instead of
|
|
louis d'ors and ducats. At one moment there is to be a large army
|
|
to lay prostrate the liberties of the people; at another moment the
|
|
militia of Virginia are to be dragged from their homes five or six
|
|
hundred miles, to tame the republican contumacy of Massachusetts;
|
|
and that of Massachusetts is to be transported an equal distance to
|
|
subdue the refractory haughtiness of the aristocratic Virginians.
|
|
Do the persons who rave at this rate imagine that their art or
|
|
their eloquence can impose any conceits or absurdities upon the
|
|
people of America for infallible truths?
|
|
If there should be an army to be made use of as the engine of
|
|
despotism, what need of the militia? If there should be no army,
|
|
whither would the militia, irritated by being called upon to
|
|
undertake a distant and hopeless expedition, for the purpose of
|
|
riveting the chains of slavery upon a part of their countrymen,
|
|
direct their course, but to the seat of the tyrants, who had
|
|
meditated so foolish as well as so wicked a project, to crush them
|
|
in their imagined intrenchments of power, and to make them an
|
|
example of the just vengeance of an abused and incensed people? Is
|
|
this the way in which usurpers stride to dominion over a numerous
|
|
and enlightened nation? Do they begin by exciting the detestation
|
|
of the very instruments of their intended usurpations? Do they
|
|
usually commence their career by wanton and disgustful acts of
|
|
power, calculated to answer no end, but to draw upon themselves
|
|
universal hatred and execration? Are suppositions of this sort the
|
|
sober admonitions of discerning patriots to a discerning people? Or
|
|
are they the inflammatory ravings of incendiaries or distempered
|
|
enthusiasts? If we were even to suppose the national rulers
|
|
actuated by the most ungovernable ambition, it is impossible to
|
|
believe that they would employ such preposterous means to accomplish
|
|
their designs.
|
|
In times of insurrection, or invasion, it would be natural and
|
|
proper that the militia of a neighboring State should be marched
|
|
into another, to resist a common enemy, or to guard the republic
|
|
against the violence of faction or sedition. This was frequently
|
|
the case, in respect to the first object, in the course of the late
|
|
war; and this mutual succor is, indeed, a principal end of our
|
|
political association. If the power of affording it be placed under
|
|
the direction of the Union, there will be no danger of a supine and
|
|
listless inattention to the dangers of a neighbor, till its near
|
|
approach had superadded the incitements of selfpreservation to the
|
|
too feeble impulses of duty and sympathy.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 30
|
|
|
|
Concerning the General Power of Taxation
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Friday, December 28, 1787.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
IT HAS been already observed that the federal government ought
|
|
to possess the power of providing for the support of the national
|
|
forces; in which proposition was intended to be included the
|
|
expense of raising troops, of building and equipping fleets, and all
|
|
other expenses in any wise connected with military arrangements and
|
|
operations. But these are not the only objects to which the
|
|
jurisdiction of the Union, in respect to revenue, must necessarily
|
|
be empowered to extend. It must embrace a provision for the support
|
|
of the national civil list; for the payment of the national debts
|
|
contracted, or that may be contracted; and, in general, for all
|
|
those matters which will call for disbursements out of the national
|
|
treasury. The conclusion is, that there must be interwoven, in the
|
|
frame of the government, a general power of taxation, in one shape
|
|
or another.
|
|
Money is, with propriety, considered as the vital principle of
|
|
the body politic; as that which sustains its life and motion, and
|
|
enables it to perform its most essential functions. A complete
|
|
power, therefore, to procure a regular and adequate supply of it, as
|
|
far as the resources of the community will permit, may be regarded
|
|
as an indispensable ingredient in every constitution. From a
|
|
deficiency in this particular, one of two evils must ensue; either
|
|
the people must be subjected to continual plunder, as a substitute
|
|
for a more eligible mode of supplying the public wants, or the
|
|
government must sink into a fatal atrophy, and, in a short course of
|
|
time, perish.
|
|
In the Ottoman or Turkish empire, the sovereign, though in other
|
|
respects absolute master of the lives and fortunes of his subjects,
|
|
has no right to impose a new tax. The consequence is that he
|
|
permits the bashaws or governors of provinces to pillage the people
|
|
without mercy; and, in turn, squeezes out of them the sums of which
|
|
he stands in need, to satisfy his own exigencies and those of the
|
|
state. In America, from a like cause, the government of the Union
|
|
has gradually dwindled into a state of decay, approaching nearly to
|
|
annihilation. Who can doubt, that the happiness of the people in
|
|
both countries would be promoted by competent authorities in the
|
|
proper hands, to provide the revenues which the necessities of the
|
|
public might require?
|
|
The present Confederation, feeble as it is intended to repose in
|
|
the United States, an unlimited power of providing for the pecuniary
|
|
wants of the Union. But proceeding upon an erroneous principle, it
|
|
has been done in such a manner as entirely to have frustrated the
|
|
intention. Congress, by the articles which compose that compact (as
|
|
has already been stated), are authorized to ascertain and call for
|
|
any sums of money necessary, in their judgment, to the service of
|
|
the United States; and their requisitions, if conformable to the
|
|
rule of apportionment, are in every constitutional sense obligatory
|
|
upon the States. These have no right to question the propriety of
|
|
the demand; no discretion beyond that of devising the ways and
|
|
means of furnishing the sums demanded. But though this be strictly
|
|
and truly the case; though the assumption of such a right would be
|
|
an infringement of the articles of Union; though it may seldom or
|
|
never have been avowedly claimed, yet in practice it has been
|
|
constantly exercised, and would continue to be so, as long as the
|
|
revenues of the Confederacy should remain dependent on the
|
|
intermediate agency of its members. What the consequences of this
|
|
system have been, is within the knowledge of every man the least
|
|
conversant in our public affairs, and has been amply unfolded in
|
|
different parts of these inquiries. It is this which has chiefly
|
|
contributed to reduce us to a situation, which affords ample cause
|
|
both of mortification to ourselves, and of triumph to our enemies.
|
|
What remedy can there be for this situation, but in a change of
|
|
the system which has produced it in a change of the fallacious and
|
|
delusive system of quotas and requisitions? What substitute can
|
|
there be imagined for this ignis fatuus in finance, but that of
|
|
permitting the national government to raise its own revenues by the
|
|
ordinary methods of taxation authorized in every well-ordered
|
|
constitution of civil government? Ingenious men may declaim with
|
|
plausibility on any subject; but no human ingenuity can point out
|
|
any other expedient to rescue us from the inconveniences and
|
|
embarrassments naturally resulting from defective supplies of the
|
|
public treasury.
|
|
The more intelligent adversaries of the new Constitution admit
|
|
the force of this reasoning; but they qualify their admission by a
|
|
distinction between what they call INTERNAL and EXTERNAL taxation.
|
|
The former they would reserve to the State governments; the
|
|
latter, which they explain into commercial imposts, or rather duties
|
|
on imported articles, they declare themselves willing to concede to
|
|
the federal head. This distinction, however, would violate the
|
|
maxim of good sense and sound policy, which dictates that every
|
|
POWER ought to be in proportion to its OBJECT; and would still
|
|
leave the general government in a kind of tutelage to the State
|
|
governments, inconsistent with every idea of vigor or efficiency.
|
|
Who can pretend that commercial imposts are, or would be, alone
|
|
equal to the present and future exigencies of the Union? Taking
|
|
into the account the existing debt, foreign and domestic, upon any
|
|
plan of extinguishment which a man moderately impressed with the
|
|
importance of public justice and public credit could approve, in
|
|
addition to the establishments which all parties will acknowledge to
|
|
be necessary, we could not reasonably flatter ourselves, that this
|
|
resource alone, upon the most improved scale, would even suffice for
|
|
its present necessities. Its future necessities admit not of
|
|
calculation or limitation; and upon the principle, more than once
|
|
adverted to, the power of making provision for them as they arise
|
|
ought to be equally unconfined. I believe it may be regarded as a
|
|
position warranted by the history of mankind, that, IN THE USUAL
|
|
PROGRESS OF THINGS, THE NECESSITIES OF A NATION, IN EVERY STAGE OF
|
|
ITS EXISTENCE, WILL BE FOUND AT LEAST EQUAL TO ITS RESOURCES.
|
|
To say that deficiencies may be provided for by requisitions
|
|
upon the States, is on the one hand to acknowledge that this system
|
|
cannot be depended upon, and on the other hand to depend upon it for
|
|
every thing beyond a certain limit. Those who have carefully
|
|
attended to its vices and deformities as they have been exhibited by
|
|
experience or delineated in the course of these papers, must feel
|
|
invincible repugnancy to trusting the national interests in any
|
|
degree to its operation. Its inevitable tendency, whenever it is
|
|
brought into activity, must be to enfeeble the Union, and sow the
|
|
seeds of discord and contention between the federal head and its
|
|
members, and between the members themselves. Can it be expected
|
|
that the deficiencies would be better supplied in this mode than the
|
|
total wants of the Union have heretofore been supplied in the same
|
|
mode? It ought to be recollected that if less will be required from
|
|
the States, they will have proportionably less means to answer the
|
|
demand. If the opinions of those who contend for the distinction
|
|
which has been mentioned were to be received as evidence of truth,
|
|
one would be led to conclude that there was some known point in the
|
|
economy of national affairs at which it would be safe to stop and to
|
|
say: Thus far the ends of public happiness will be promoted by
|
|
supplying the wants of government, and all beyond this is unworthy
|
|
of our care or anxiety. How is it possible that a government half
|
|
supplied and always necessitous, can fulfill the purposes of its
|
|
institution, can provide for the security, advance the prosperity,
|
|
or support the reputation of the commonwealth? How can it ever
|
|
possess either energy or stability, dignity or credit, confidence at
|
|
home or respectability abroad? How can its administration be any
|
|
thing else than a succession of expedients temporizing, impotent,
|
|
disgraceful? How will it be able to avoid a frequent sacrifice of
|
|
its engagements to immediate necessity? How can it undertake or
|
|
execute any liberal or enlarged plans of public good?
|
|
Let us attend to what would be the effects of this situation in
|
|
the very first war in which we should happen to be engaged. We will
|
|
presume, for argument's sake, that the revenue arising from the
|
|
impost duties answers the purposes of a provision for the public
|
|
debt and of a peace establishment for the Union. Thus
|
|
circumstanced, a war breaks out. What would be the probable conduct
|
|
of the government in such an emergency? Taught by experience that
|
|
proper dependence could not be placed on the success of
|
|
requisitions, unable by its own authority to lay hold of fresh
|
|
resources, and urged by considerations of national danger, would it
|
|
not be driven to the expedient of diverting the funds already
|
|
appropriated from their proper objects to the defense of the State?
|
|
It is not easy to see how a step of this kind could be avoided;
|
|
and if it should be taken, it is evident that it would prove the
|
|
destruction of public credit at the very moment that it was becoming
|
|
essential to the public safety. To imagine that at such a crisis
|
|
credit might be dispensed with, would be the extreme of infatuation.
|
|
In the modern system of war, nations the most wealthy are obliged
|
|
to have recourse to large loans. A country so little opulent as
|
|
ours must feel this necessity in a much stronger degree. But who
|
|
would lend to a government that prefaced its overtures for borrowing
|
|
by an act which demonstrated that no reliance could be placed on the
|
|
steadiness of its measures for paying? The loans it might be able
|
|
to procure would be as limited in their extent as burdensome in
|
|
their conditions. They would be made upon the same principles that
|
|
usurers commonly lend to bankrupt and fraudulent debtors, with a
|
|
sparing hand and at enormous premiums.
|
|
It may perhaps be imagined that, from the scantiness of the
|
|
resources of the country, the necessity of diverting the established
|
|
funds in the case supposed would exist, though the national
|
|
government should possess an unrestrained power of taxation. But
|
|
two considerations will serve to quiet all apprehension on this
|
|
head: one is, that we are sure the resources of the community, in
|
|
their full extent, will be brought into activity for the benefit of
|
|
the Union; the other is, that whatever deficiences there may be,
|
|
can without difficulty be supplied by loans.
|
|
The power of creating new funds upon new objects of taxation, by
|
|
its own authority, would enable the national government to borrow as
|
|
far as its necessities might require. Foreigners, as well as the
|
|
citizens of America, could then reasonably repose confidence in its
|
|
engagements; but to depend upon a government that must itself
|
|
depend upon thirteen other governments for the means of fulfilling
|
|
its contracts, when once its situation is clearly understood, would
|
|
require a degree of credulity not often to be met with in the
|
|
pecuniary transactions of mankind, and little reconcilable with the
|
|
usual sharp-sightedness of avarice.
|
|
Reflections of this kind may have trifling weight with men who
|
|
hope to see realized in America the halcyon scenes of the poetic or
|
|
fabulous age; but to those who believe we are likely to experience
|
|
a common portion of the vicissitudes and calamities which have
|
|
fallen to the lot of other nations, they must appear entitled to
|
|
serious attention. Such men must behold the actual situation of
|
|
their country with painful solicitude, and deprecate the evils which
|
|
ambition or revenge might, with too much facility, inflict upon it.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 31
|
|
|
|
The Same Subject Continued
|
|
(Concerning the General Power of Taxation)
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Tuesday, January 1, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
IN DISQUISITIONS of every kind, there are certain primary
|
|
truths, or first principles, upon which all subsequent reasonings
|
|
must depend. These contain an internal evidence which, antecedent
|
|
to all reflection or combination, commands the assent of the mind.
|
|
Where it produces not this effect, it must proceed either from some
|
|
defect or disorder in the organs of perception, or from the
|
|
influence of some strong interest, or passion, or prejudice. Of
|
|
this nature are the maxims in geometry, that ``the whole is greater
|
|
than its part; things equal to the same are equal to one another;
|
|
two straight lines cannot enclose a space; and all right angles
|
|
are equal to each other.'' Of the same nature are these other
|
|
maxims in ethics and politics, that there cannot be an effect
|
|
without a cause; that the means ought to be proportioned to the
|
|
end; that every power ought to be commensurate with its object;
|
|
that there ought to be no limitation of a power destined to effect
|
|
a purpose which is itself incapable of limitation. And there are
|
|
other truths in the two latter sciences which, if they cannot
|
|
pretend to rank in the class of axioms, are yet such direct
|
|
inferences from them, and so obvious in themselves, and so agreeable
|
|
to the natural and unsophisticated dictates of common-sense, that
|
|
they challenge the assent of a sound and unbiased mind, with a
|
|
degree of force and conviction almost equally irresistible.
|
|
The objects of geometrical inquiry are so entirely abstracted
|
|
from those pursuits which stir up and put in motion the unruly
|
|
passions of the human heart, that mankind, without difficulty, adopt
|
|
not only the more simple theorems of the science, but even those
|
|
abstruse paradoxes which, however they may appear susceptible of
|
|
demonstration, are at variance with the natural conceptions which
|
|
the mind, without the aid of philosophy, would be led to entertain
|
|
upon the subject. The INFINITE DIVISIBILITY of matter, or, in other
|
|
words, the INFINITE divisibility of a FINITE thing, extending even
|
|
to the minutest atom, is a point agreed among geometricians, though
|
|
not less incomprehensible to common-sense than any of those
|
|
mysteries in religion, against which the batteries of infidelity
|
|
have been so industriously leveled.
|
|
But in the sciences of morals and politics, men are found far
|
|
less tractable. To a certain degree, it is right and useful that
|
|
this should be the case. Caution and investigation are a necessary
|
|
armor against error and imposition. But this untractableness may be
|
|
carried too far, and may degenerate into obstinacy, perverseness, or
|
|
disingenuity. Though it cannot be pretended that the principles of
|
|
moral and political knowledge have, in general, the same degree of
|
|
certainty with those of the mathematics, yet they have much better
|
|
claims in this respect than, to judge from the conduct of men in
|
|
particular situations, we should be disposed to allow them. The
|
|
obscurity is much oftener in the passions and prejudices of the
|
|
reasoner than in the subject. Men, upon too many occasions, do not
|
|
give their own understandings fair play; but, yielding to some
|
|
untoward bias, they entangle themselves in words and confound
|
|
themselves in subtleties.
|
|
How else could it happen (if we admit the objectors to be
|
|
sincere in their opposition), that positions so clear as those which
|
|
manifest the necessity of a general power of taxation in the
|
|
government of the Union, should have to encounter any adversaries
|
|
among men of discernment? Though these positions have been
|
|
elsewhere fully stated, they will perhaps not be improperly
|
|
recapitulated in this place, as introductory to an examination of
|
|
what may have been offered by way of objection to them. They are in
|
|
substance as follows:
|
|
A government ought to contain in itself every power requisite to
|
|
the full accomplishment of the objects committed to its care, and to
|
|
the complete execution of the trusts for which it is responsible,
|
|
free from every other control but a regard to the public good and to
|
|
the sense of the people.
|
|
As the duties of superintending the national defense and of
|
|
securing the public peace against foreign or domestic violence
|
|
involve a provision for casualties and dangers to which no possible
|
|
limits can be assigned, the power of making that provision ought to
|
|
know no other bounds than the exigencies of the nation and the
|
|
resources of the community.
|
|
As revenue is the essential engine by which the means of
|
|
answering the national exigencies must be procured, the power of
|
|
procuring that article in its full extent must necessarily be
|
|
comprehended in that of providing for those exigencies.
|
|
As theory and practice conspire to prove that the power of
|
|
procuring revenue is unavailing when exercised over the States in
|
|
their collective capacities, the federal government must of
|
|
necessity be invested with an unqualified power of taxation in the
|
|
ordinary modes.
|
|
Did not experience evince the contrary, it would be natural to
|
|
conclude that the propriety of a general power of taxation in the
|
|
national government might safely be permitted to rest on the
|
|
evidence of these propositions, unassisted by any additional
|
|
arguments or illustrations. But we find, in fact, that the
|
|
antagonists of the proposed Constitution, so far from acquiescing in
|
|
their justness or truth, seem to make their principal and most
|
|
zealous effort against this part of the plan. It may therefore be
|
|
satisfactory to analyze the arguments with which they combat it.
|
|
Those of them which have been most labored with that view, seem
|
|
in substance to amount to this: ``It is not true, because the
|
|
exigencies of the Union may not be susceptible of limitation, that
|
|
its power of laying taxes ought to be unconfined. Revenue is as
|
|
requisite to the purposes of the local administrations as to those
|
|
of the Union; and the former are at least of equal importance with
|
|
the latter to the happiness of the people. It is, therefore, as
|
|
necessary that the State governments should be able to command the
|
|
means of supplying their wants, as that the national government
|
|
should possess the like faculty in respect to the wants of the Union.
|
|
But an indefinite power of taxation in the LATTER might, and
|
|
probably would in time, deprive the FORMER of the means of providing
|
|
for their own necessities; and would subject them entirely to the
|
|
mercy of the national legislature. As the laws of the Union are to
|
|
become the supreme law of the land, as it is to have power to pass
|
|
all laws that may be NECESSARY for carrying into execution the
|
|
authorities with which it is proposed to vest it, the national
|
|
government might at any time abolish the taxes imposed for State
|
|
objects upon the pretense of an interference with its own. It might
|
|
allege a necessity of doing this in order to give efficacy to the
|
|
national revenues. And thus all the resources of taxation might by
|
|
degrees become the subjects of federal monopoly, to the entire
|
|
exclusion and destruction of the State governments.''
|
|
This mode of reasoning appears sometimes to turn upon the
|
|
supposition of usurpation in the national government; at other
|
|
times it seems to be designed only as a deduction from the
|
|
constitutional operation of its intended powers. It is only in the
|
|
latter light that it can be admitted to have any pretensions to
|
|
fairness. The moment we launch into conjectures about the
|
|
usurpations of the federal government, we get into an unfathomable
|
|
abyss, and fairly put ourselves out of the reach of all reasoning.
|
|
Imagination may range at pleasure till it gets bewildered amidst
|
|
the labyrinths of an enchanted castle, and knows not on which side
|
|
to turn to extricate itself from the perplexities into which it has
|
|
so rashly adventured. Whatever may be the limits or modifications
|
|
of the powers of the Union, it is easy to imagine an endless train
|
|
of possible dangers; and by indulging an excess of jealousy and
|
|
timidity, we may bring ourselves to a state of absolute scepticism
|
|
and irresolution. I repeat here what I have observed in substance
|
|
in another place, that all observations founded upon the danger of
|
|
usurpation ought to be referred to the composition and structure of
|
|
the government, not to the nature or extent of its powers. The
|
|
State governments, by their original constitutions, are invested
|
|
with complete sovereignty. In what does our security consist
|
|
against usurpation from that quarter? Doubtless in the manner of
|
|
their formation, and in a due dependence of those who are to
|
|
administer them upon the people. If the proposed construction of
|
|
the federal government be found, upon an impartial examination of
|
|
it, to be such as to afford, to a proper extent, the same species of
|
|
security, all apprehensions on the score of usurpation ought to be
|
|
discarded.
|
|
It should not be forgotten that a disposition in the State
|
|
governments to encroach upon the rights of the Union is quite as
|
|
probable as a disposition in the Union to encroach upon the rights
|
|
of the State governments. What side would be likely to prevail in
|
|
such a conflict, must depend on the means which the contending
|
|
parties could employ toward insuring success. As in republics
|
|
strength is always on the side of the people, and as there are
|
|
weighty reasons to induce a belief that the State governments will
|
|
commonly possess most influence over them, the natural conclusion is
|
|
that such contests will be most apt to end to the disadvantage of
|
|
the Union; and that there is greater probability of encroachments
|
|
by the members upon the federal head, than by the federal head upon
|
|
the members. But it is evident that all conjectures of this kind
|
|
must be extremely vague and fallible: and that it is by far the
|
|
safest course to lay them altogether aside, and to confine our
|
|
attention wholly to the nature and extent of the powers as they are
|
|
delineated in the Constitution. Every thing beyond this must be
|
|
left to the prudence and firmness of the people; who, as they will
|
|
hold the scales in their own hands, it is to be hoped, will always
|
|
take care to preserve the constitutional equilibrium between the
|
|
general and the State governments. Upon this ground, which is
|
|
evidently the true one, it will not be difficult to obviate the
|
|
objections which have been made to an indefinite power of taxation
|
|
in the United States.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 32
|
|
|
|
The Same Subject Continued
|
|
(Concerning the General Power of Taxation)
|
|
From the Daily Advertiser.
|
|
Thursday, January 3, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
ALTHOUGH I am of opinion that there would be no real danger of
|
|
the consequences which seem to be apprehended to the State
|
|
governments from a power in the Union to control them in the levies
|
|
of money, because I am persuaded that the sense of the people, the
|
|
extreme hazard of provoking the resentments of the State
|
|
governments, and a conviction of the utility and necessity of local
|
|
administrations for local purposes, would be a complete barrier
|
|
against the oppressive use of such a power; yet I am willing here
|
|
to allow, in its full extent, the justness of the reasoning which
|
|
requires that the individual States should possess an independent
|
|
and uncontrollable authority to raise their own revenues for the
|
|
supply of their own wants. And making this concession, I affirm
|
|
that (with the sole exception of duties on imports and exports) they
|
|
would, under the plan of the convention, retain that authority in
|
|
the most absolute and unqualified sense; and that an attempt on the
|
|
part of the national government to abridge them in the exercise of
|
|
it, would be a violent assumption of power, unwarranted by any
|
|
article or clause of its Constitution.
|
|
An entire consolidation of the States into one complete national
|
|
sovereignty would imply an entire subordination of the parts; and
|
|
whatever powers might remain in them, would be altogether dependent
|
|
on the general will. But as the plan of the convention aims only at
|
|
a partial union or consolidation, the State governments would
|
|
clearly retain all the rights of sovereignty which they before had,
|
|
and which were not, by that act, EXCLUSIVELY delegated to the United
|
|
States. This exclusive delegation, or rather this alienation, of
|
|
State sovereignty, would only exist in three cases: where the
|
|
Constitution in express terms granted an exclusive authority to the
|
|
Union; where it granted in one instance an authority to the Union,
|
|
and in another prohibited the States from exercising the like
|
|
authority; and where it granted an authority to the Union, to which
|
|
a similar authority in the States would be absolutely and totally
|
|
CONTRADICTORY and REPUGNANT. I use these terms to distinguish this
|
|
last case from another which might appear to resemble it, but which
|
|
would, in fact, be essentially different; I mean where the exercise
|
|
of a concurrent jurisdiction might be productive of occasional
|
|
interferences in the POLICY of any branch of administration, but
|
|
would not imply any direct contradiction or repugnancy in point of
|
|
constitutional authority. These three cases of exclusive
|
|
jurisdiction in the federal government may be exemplified by the
|
|
following instances: The last clause but one in the eighth section
|
|
of the first article provides expressly that Congress shall exercise
|
|
``EXCLUSIVE LEGISLATION'' over the district to be appropriated as
|
|
the seat of government. This answers to the first case. The first
|
|
clause of the same section empowers Congress ``TO LAY AND COLLECT
|
|
TAXES, DUTIES, IMPOSTS AND EXCISES''; and the second clause of the
|
|
tenth section of the same article declares that, ``NO STATE SHALL,
|
|
without the consent of Congress, LAY ANY IMPOSTS OR DUTIES ON
|
|
IMPORTS OR EXPORTS, except for the purpose of executing its
|
|
inspection laws.'' Hence would result an exclusive power in the
|
|
Union to lay duties on imports and exports, with the particular
|
|
exception mentioned; but this power is abridged by another clause,
|
|
which declares that no tax or duty shall be laid on articles
|
|
exported from any State; in consequence of which qualification, it
|
|
now only extends to the DUTIES ON IMPORTS. This answers to the
|
|
second case. The third will be found in that clause which declares
|
|
that Congress shall have power ``to establish an UNIFORM RULE of
|
|
naturalization throughout the United States.'' This must
|
|
necessarily be exclusive; because if each State had power to
|
|
prescribe a DISTINCT RULE, there could not be a UNIFORM RULE.
|
|
A case which may perhaps be thought to resemble the latter, but
|
|
which is in fact widely different, affects the question immediately
|
|
under consideration. I mean the power of imposing taxes on all
|
|
articles other than exports and imports. This, I contend, is
|
|
manifestly a concurrent and coequal authority in the United States
|
|
and in the individual States. There is plainly no expression in the
|
|
granting clause which makes that power EXCLUSIVE in the Union.
|
|
There is no independent clause or sentence which prohibits the
|
|
States from exercising it. So far is this from being the case, that
|
|
a plain and conclusive argument to the contrary is to be deduced
|
|
from the restraint laid upon the States in relation to duties on
|
|
imports and exports. This restriction implies an admission that, if
|
|
it were not inserted, the States would possess the power it
|
|
excludes; and it implies a further admission, that as to all other
|
|
taxes, the authority of the States remains undiminished. In any
|
|
other view it would be both unnecessary and dangerous; it would be
|
|
unnecessary, because if the grant to the Union of the power of
|
|
laying such duties implied the exclusion of the States, or even
|
|
their subordination in this particular, there could be no need of
|
|
such a restriction; it would be dangerous, because the introduction
|
|
of it leads directly to the conclusion which has been mentioned, and
|
|
which, if the reasoning of the objectors be just, could not have
|
|
been intended; I mean that the States, in all cases to which the
|
|
restriction did not apply, would have a concurrent power of taxation
|
|
with the Union. The restriction in question amounts to what lawyers
|
|
call a NEGATIVE PREGNANT that is, a NEGATION of one thing, and an
|
|
AFFIRMANCE of another; a negation of the authority of the States to
|
|
impose taxes on imports and exports, and an affirmance of their
|
|
authority to impose them on all other articles. It would be mere
|
|
sophistry to argue that it was meant to exclude them ABSOLUTELY from
|
|
the imposition of taxes of the former kind, and to leave them at
|
|
liberty to lay others SUBJECT TO THE CONTROL of the national
|
|
legislature. The restraining or prohibitory clause only says, that
|
|
they shall not, WITHOUT THE CONSENT OF CONGRESS, lay such duties;
|
|
and if we are to understand this in the sense last mentioned, the
|
|
Constitution would then be made to introduce a formal provision for
|
|
the sake of a very absurd conclusion; which is, that the States,
|
|
WITH THE CONSENT of the national legislature, might tax imports and
|
|
exports; and that they might tax every other article, UNLESS
|
|
CONTROLLED by the same body. If this was the intention, why not
|
|
leave it, in the first instance, to what is alleged to be the
|
|
natural operation of the original clause, conferring a general power
|
|
of taxation upon the Union? It is evident that this could not have
|
|
been the intention, and that it will not bear a construction of the
|
|
kind.
|
|
As to a supposition of repugnancy between the power of taxation
|
|
in the States and in the Union, it cannot be supported in that sense
|
|
which would be requisite to work an exclusion of the States. It is,
|
|
indeed, possible that a tax might be laid on a particular article by
|
|
a State which might render it INEXPEDIENT that thus a further tax
|
|
should be laid on the same article by the Union; but it would not
|
|
imply a constitutional inability to impose a further tax. The
|
|
quantity of the imposition, the expediency or inexpediency of an
|
|
increase on either side, would be mutually questions of prudence;
|
|
but there would be involved no direct contradiction of power. The
|
|
particular policy of the national and of the State systems of
|
|
finance might now and then not exactly coincide, and might require
|
|
reciprocal forbearances. It is not, however a mere possibility of
|
|
inconvenience in the exercise of powers, but an immediate
|
|
constitutional repugnancy that can by implication alienate and
|
|
extinguish a pre-existing right of sovereignty.
|
|
The necessity of a concurrent jurisdiction in certain cases
|
|
results from the division of the sovereign power; and the rule that
|
|
all authorities, of which the States are not explicitly divested in
|
|
favor of the Union, remain with them in full vigor, is not a
|
|
theoretical consequence of that division, but is clearly admitted by
|
|
the whole tenor of the instrument which contains the articles of the
|
|
proposed Constitution. We there find that, notwithstanding the
|
|
affirmative grants of general authorities, there has been the most
|
|
pointed care in those cases where it was deemed improper that the
|
|
like authorities should reside in the States, to insert negative
|
|
clauses prohibiting the exercise of them by the States. The tenth
|
|
section of the first article consists altogether of such provisions.
|
|
This circumstance is a clear indication of the sense of the
|
|
convention, and furnishes a rule of interpretation out of the body
|
|
of the act, which justifies the position I have advanced and refutes
|
|
every hypothesis to the contrary.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 33
|
|
|
|
The Same Subject Continued
|
|
(Concerning the General Power of Taxation)
|
|
From the Daily Advertiser.
|
|
January 3, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE residue of the argument against the provisions of the
|
|
Constitution in respect to taxation is ingrafted upon the following
|
|
clause. The last clause of the eighth section of the first article
|
|
of the plan under consideration authorizes the national legislature
|
|
``to make all laws which shall be NECESSARY and PROPER for carrying
|
|
into execution THE POWERS by that Constitution vested in the
|
|
government of the United States, or in any department or officer
|
|
thereof''; and the second clause of the sixth article declares,
|
|
``that the Constitution and the laws of the United States made IN
|
|
PURSUANCE THEREOF, and the treaties made by their authority shall be
|
|
the SUPREME LAW of the land, any thing in the constitution or laws
|
|
of any State to the contrary notwithstanding.''
|
|
These two clauses have been the source of much virulent
|
|
invective and petulant declamation against the proposed Constitution.
|
|
They have been held up to the people in all the exaggerated colors
|
|
of misrepresentation as the pernicious engines by which their local
|
|
governments were to be destroyed and their liberties exterminated;
|
|
as the hideous monster whose devouring jaws would spare neither sex
|
|
nor age, nor high nor low, nor sacred nor profane; and yet, strange
|
|
as it may appear, after all this clamor, to those who may not have
|
|
happened to contemplate them in the same light, it may be affirmed
|
|
with perfect confidence that the constitutional operation of the
|
|
intended government would be precisely the same, if these clauses
|
|
were entirely obliterated, as if they were repeated in every article.
|
|
They are only declaratory of a truth which would have resulted by
|
|
necessary and unavoidable implication from the very act of
|
|
constituting a federal government, and vesting it with certain
|
|
specified powers. This is so clear a proposition, that moderation
|
|
itself can scarcely listen to the railings which have been so
|
|
copiously vented against this part of the plan, without emotions
|
|
that disturb its equanimity.
|
|
What is a power, but the ability or faculty of doing a thing?
|
|
What is the ability to do a thing, but the power of employing the
|
|
MEANS necessary to its execution? What is a LEGISLATIVE power, but
|
|
a power of making LAWS? What are the MEANS to execute a LEGISLATIVE
|
|
power but LAWS? What is the power of laying and collecting taxes,
|
|
but a LEGISLATIVE POWER, or a power of MAKING LAWS, to lay and
|
|
collect taxes? What are the propermeans of executing such a power,
|
|
but NECESSARY and PROPER laws?
|
|
This simple train of inquiry furnishes us at once with a test by
|
|
which to judge of the true nature of the clause complained of. It
|
|
conducts us to this palpable truth, that a power to lay and collect
|
|
taxes must be a power to pass all laws NECESSARY and PROPER for the
|
|
execution of that power; and what does the unfortunate and
|
|
culumniated provision in question do more than declare the same
|
|
truth, to wit, that the national legislature, to whom the power of
|
|
laying and collecting taxes had been previously given, might, in the
|
|
execution of that power, pass all laws NECESSARY and PROPER to carry
|
|
it into effect? I have applied these observations thus particularly
|
|
to the power of taxation, because it is the immediate subject under
|
|
consideration, and because it is the most important of the
|
|
authorities proposed to be conferred upon the Union. But the same
|
|
process will lead to the same result, in relation to all other
|
|
powers declared in the Constitution. And it is EXPRESSLY to execute
|
|
these powers that the sweeping clause, as it has been affectedly
|
|
called, authorizes the national legislature to pass all NECESSARY
|
|
and PROPER laws. If there is any thing exceptionable, it must be
|
|
sought for in the specific powers upon which this general
|
|
declaration is predicated. The declaration itself, though it may be
|
|
chargeable with tautology or redundancy, is at least perfectly
|
|
harmless.
|
|
But SUSPICION may ask, Why then was it introduced? The answer
|
|
is, that it could only have been done for greater caution, and to
|
|
guard against all cavilling refinements in those who might hereafter
|
|
feel a disposition to curtail and evade the legitimatb authorities
|
|
of the Union. The Convention probably foresaw, what it has been a
|
|
principal aim of these papers to inculcate, that the danger which
|
|
most threatens our political welfare is that the State governments
|
|
will finally sap the foundations of the Union; and might therefore
|
|
think it necessary, in so cardinal a point, to leave nothing to
|
|
construction. Whatever may have been the inducement to it, the
|
|
wisdom of the precaution is evident from the cry which has been
|
|
raised against it; as that very cry betrays a disposition to
|
|
question the great and essential truth which it is manifestly the
|
|
object of that provision to declare.
|
|
But it may be again asked, Who is to judge of the NECESSITY and
|
|
PROPRIETY of the laws to be passed for executing the powers of the
|
|
Union? I answer, first, that this question arises as well and as
|
|
fully upon the simple grant of those powers as upon the declaratory
|
|
clause; and I answer, in the second place, that the national
|
|
government, like every other, must judge, in the first instance, of
|
|
the proper exercise of its powers, and its constituents in the last.
|
|
If the federal government should overpass the just bounds of its
|
|
authority and make a tyrannical use of its powers, the people, whose
|
|
creature it is, must appeal to the standard they have formed, and
|
|
take such measures to redress the injury done to the Constitution as
|
|
the exigency may suggest and prudence justify. The propriety of a
|
|
law, in a constitutional light, must always be determined by the
|
|
nature of the powers upon which it is founded. Suppose, by some
|
|
forced constructions of its authority (which, indeed, cannot easily
|
|
be imagined), the Federal legislature should attempt to vary the law
|
|
of descent in any State, would it not be evident that, in making
|
|
such an attempt, it had exceeded its jurisdiction, and infringed
|
|
upon that of the State? Suppose, again, that upon the pretense of
|
|
an interference with its revenues, it should undertake to abrogate a
|
|
landtax imposed by the authority of a State; would it not be
|
|
equally evident that this was an invasion of that concurrent
|
|
jurisdiction in respect to this species of tax, which its
|
|
Constitution plainly supposes to exist in the State governments? If
|
|
there ever should be a doubt on this head, the credit of it will be
|
|
entirely due to those reasoners who, in the imprudent zeal of their
|
|
animosity to the plan of the convention, have labored to envelop it
|
|
in a cloud calculated to obscure the plainest and simplest truths.
|
|
But it is said that the laws of the Union are to be the SUPREME
|
|
LAW of the land. But what inference can be drawn from this, or what
|
|
would they amount to, if they were not to be supreme? It is evident
|
|
they would amount to nothing. A LAW, by the very meaning of the
|
|
term, includes supremacy. It is a rule which those to whom it is
|
|
prescribed are bound to observe. This results from every political
|
|
association. If individuals enter into a state of society, the laws
|
|
of that society must be the supreme regulator of their conduct. If
|
|
a number of political societies enter into a larger political
|
|
society, the laws which the latter may enact, pursuant to the powers
|
|
intrusted to it by its constitution, must necessarily be supreme
|
|
over those societies, and the individuals of whom they are composed.
|
|
It would otherwise be a mere treaty, dependent on the good faith of
|
|
the parties, and not a goverment, which is only another word for
|
|
POLITICAL POWER AND SUPREMACY. But it will not follow from this
|
|
doctrine that acts of the large society which are NOT PURSUANT to
|
|
its constitutional powers, but which are invasions of the residuary
|
|
authorities of the smaller societies, will become the supreme law of
|
|
the land. These will be merely acts of usurpation, and will deserve
|
|
to be treated as such. Hence we perceive that the clause which
|
|
declares the supremacy of the laws of the Union, like the one we
|
|
have just before considered, only declares a truth, which flows
|
|
immediately and necessarily from the institution of a federal
|
|
government. It will not, I presume, have escaped observation, that
|
|
it EXPRESSLY confines this supremacy to laws made PURSUANT TO THE
|
|
CONSTITUTION; which I mention merely as an instance of caution in
|
|
the convention; since that limitation would have been to be
|
|
understood, though it had not been expressed.
|
|
Though a law, therefore, laying a tax for the use of the United
|
|
States would be supreme in its nature, and could not legally be
|
|
opposed or controlled, yet a law for abrogating or preventing the
|
|
collection of a tax laid by the authority of the State, (unless upon
|
|
imports and exports), would not be the supreme law of the land, but
|
|
a usurpation of power not granted by the Constitution. As far as an
|
|
improper accumulation of taxes on the same object might tend to
|
|
render the collection difficult or precarious, this would be a
|
|
mutual inconvenience, not arising from a superiority or defect of
|
|
power on either side, but from an injudicious exercise of power by
|
|
one or the other, in a manner equally disadvantageous to both. It
|
|
is to be hoped and presumed, however, that mutual interest would
|
|
dictate a concert in this respect which would avoid any material
|
|
inconvenience. The inference from the whole is, that the individual
|
|
States would, under the proposed Constitution, retain an independent
|
|
and uncontrollable authority to raise revenue to any extent of which
|
|
they may stand in need, by every kind of taxation, except duties on
|
|
imports and exports. It will be shown in the next paper that this
|
|
CONCURRENT JURISDICTION in the article of taxation was the only
|
|
admissible substitute for an entire subordination, in respect to
|
|
this branch of power, of the State authority to that of the Union.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 34
|
|
|
|
The Same Subject Continued
|
|
(Concerning the General Power of Taxation)
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Friday, January 4, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
I FLATTER myself it has been clearly shown in my last number
|
|
that the particular States, under the proposed Constitution, would
|
|
have COEQUAL authority with the Union in the article of revenue,
|
|
except as to duties on imports. As this leaves open to the States
|
|
far the greatest part of the resources of the community, there can
|
|
be no color for the assertion that they would not possess means as
|
|
abundant as could be desired for the supply of their own wants,
|
|
independent of all external control. That the field is sufficiently
|
|
wide will more fully appear when we come to advert to the
|
|
inconsiderable share of the public expenses for which it will fall
|
|
to the lot of the State governments to provide.
|
|
To argue upon abstract principles that this co-ordinate
|
|
authority cannot exist, is to set up supposition and theory against
|
|
fact and reality. However proper such reasonings might be to show
|
|
that a thing OUGHT NOT TO EXIST, they are wholly to be rejected when
|
|
they are made use of to prove that it does not exist contrary to the
|
|
evidence of the fact itself. It is well known that in the Roman
|
|
republic the legislative authority, in the last resort, resided for
|
|
ages in two different political bodies not as branches of the same
|
|
legislature, but as distinct and independent legislatures, in each
|
|
of which an opposite interest prevailed: in one the patrician; in
|
|
the other, the plebian. Many arguments might have been adduced to
|
|
prove the unfitness of two such seemingly contradictory authorities,
|
|
each having power to ANNUL or REPEAL the acts of the other. But a
|
|
man would have been regarded as frantic who should have attempted at
|
|
Rome to disprove their existence. It will be readily understood
|
|
that I allude to the COMITIA CENTURIATA and the COMITIA TRIBUTA.
|
|
The former, in which the people voted by centuries, was so arranged
|
|
as to give a superiority to the patrician interest; in the latter,
|
|
in which numbers prevailed, the plebian interest had an entire
|
|
predominancy. And yet these two legislatures coexisted for ages,
|
|
and the Roman republic attained to the utmost height of human
|
|
greatness.
|
|
In the case particularly under consideration, there is no such
|
|
contradiction as appears in the example cited; there is no power on
|
|
either side to annul the acts of the other. And in practice there
|
|
is little reason to apprehend any inconvenience; because, in a
|
|
short course of time, the wants of the States will naturally reduce
|
|
themselves within A VERY NARROW COMPASS; and in the interim, the
|
|
United States will, in all probability, find it convenient to
|
|
abstain wholly from those objects to which the particular States
|
|
would be inclined to resort.
|
|
To form a more precise judgment of the true merits of this
|
|
question, it will be well to advert to the proportion between the
|
|
objects that will require a federal provision in respect to revenue,
|
|
and those which will require a State provision. We shall discover
|
|
that the former are altogether unlimited, and that the latter are
|
|
circumscribed within very moderate bounds. In pursuing this
|
|
inquiry, we must bear in mind that we are not to confine our view to
|
|
the present period, but to look forward to remote futurity.
|
|
Constitutions of civil government are not to be framed upon a
|
|
calculation of existing exigencies, but upon a combination of these
|
|
with the probable exigencies of ages, according to the natural and
|
|
tried course of human affairs. Nothing, therefore, can be more
|
|
fallacious than to infer the extent of any power, proper to be
|
|
lodged in the national government, from an estimate of its immediate
|
|
necessities. There ought to be a CAPACITY to provide for future
|
|
contingencies as they may happen; and as these are illimitable in
|
|
their nature, it is impossible safely to limit that capacity. It is
|
|
true, perhaps, that a computation might be made with sufficient
|
|
accuracy to answer the purpose of the quantity of revenue requisite
|
|
to discharge the subsisting engagements of the Union, and to
|
|
maintain those establishments which, for some time to come, would
|
|
suffice in time of peace. But would it be wise, or would it not
|
|
rather be the extreme of folly, to stop at this point, and to leave
|
|
the government intrusted with the care of the national defense in a
|
|
state of absolute incapacity to provide for the protection of the
|
|
community against future invasions of the public peace, by foreign
|
|
war or domestic convulsions? If, on the contrary, we ought to
|
|
exceed this point, where can we stop, short of an indefinite power
|
|
of providing for emergencies as they may arise? Though it is easy
|
|
to assert, in general terms, the possibility of forming a rational
|
|
judgment of a due provision against probable dangers, yet we may
|
|
safely challenge those who make the assertion to bring forward their
|
|
data, and may affirm that they would be found as vague and uncertain
|
|
as any that could be produced to establish the probable duration of
|
|
the world. Observations confined to the mere prospects of internal
|
|
attacks can deserve no weight; though even these will admit of no
|
|
satisfactory calculation: but if we mean to be a commercial people,
|
|
it must form a part of our policy to be able one day to defend that
|
|
commerce. The support of a navy and of naval wars would involve
|
|
contingencies that must baffle all the efforts of political
|
|
arithmetic.
|
|
Admitting that we ought to try the novel and absurd experiment
|
|
in politics of tying up the hands of government from offensive war
|
|
founded upon reasons of state, yet certainly we ought not to disable
|
|
it from guarding the community against the ambition or enmity of
|
|
other nations. A cloud has been for some time hanging over the
|
|
European world. If it should break forth into a storm, who can
|
|
insure us that in its progress a part of its fury would not be spent
|
|
upon us? No reasonable man would hastily pronounce that we are
|
|
entirely out of its reach. Or if the combustible materials that now
|
|
seem to be collecting should be dissipated without coming to
|
|
maturity, or if a flame should be kindled without extending to us,
|
|
what security can we have that our tranquillity will long remain
|
|
undisturbed from some other cause or from some other quarter? Let
|
|
us recollect that peace or war will not always be left to our
|
|
option; that however moderate or unambitious we may be, we cannot
|
|
count upon the moderation, or hope to extinguish the ambition of
|
|
others. Who could have imagined at the conclusion of the last war
|
|
that France and Britain, wearied and exhausted as they both were,
|
|
would so soon have looked with so hostile an aspect upon each other?
|
|
To judge from the history of mankind, we shall be compelled to
|
|
conclude that the fiery and destructive passions of war reign in the
|
|
human breast with much more powerful sway than the mild and
|
|
beneficent sentiments of peace; and that to model our political
|
|
systems upon speculations of lasting tranquillity, is to calculate
|
|
on the weaker springs of the human character.
|
|
What are the chief sources of expense in every government? What
|
|
has occasioned that enormous accumulation of debts with which
|
|
several of the European nations are oppressed? The answers plainly
|
|
is, wars and rebellions; the support of those institutions which
|
|
are necessary to guard the body politic against these two most
|
|
mortal diseases of society. The expenses arising from those
|
|
institutions which are relative to the mere domestic police of a
|
|
state, to the support of its legislative, executive, and judicial
|
|
departments, with their different appendages, and to the
|
|
encouragement of agriculture and manufactures (which will comprehend
|
|
almost all the objects of state expenditure), are insignificant in
|
|
comparison with those which relate to the national defense.
|
|
In the kingdom of Great Britain, where all the ostentatious
|
|
apparatus of monarchy is to be provided for, not above a fifteenth
|
|
part of the annual income of the nation is appropriated to the class
|
|
of expenses last mentioned; the other fourteen fifteenths are
|
|
absorbed in the payment of the interest of debts contracted for
|
|
carrying on the wars in which that country has been engaged, and in
|
|
the maintenance of fleets and armies. If, on the one hand, it
|
|
should be observed that the expenses incurred in the prosecution of
|
|
the ambitious enterprises and vainglorious pursuits of a monarchy
|
|
are not a proper standard by which to judge of those which might be
|
|
necessary in a republic, it ought, on the other hand, to be remarked
|
|
that there should be as great a disproportion between the profusion
|
|
and extravagance of a wealthy kingdom in its domestic
|
|
administration, and the frugality and economy which in that
|
|
particular become the modest simplicity of republican government.
|
|
If we balance a proper deduction from one side against that which
|
|
it is supposed ought to be made from the other, the proportion may
|
|
still be considered as holding good.
|
|
But let us advert to the large debt which we have ourselves
|
|
contracted in a single war, and let us only calculate on a common
|
|
share of the events which disturb the peace of nations, and we shall
|
|
instantly perceive, without the aid of any elaborate illustration,
|
|
that there must always be an immense disproportion between the
|
|
objects of federal and state expenditures. It is true that several
|
|
of the States, separately, are encumbered with considerable debts,
|
|
which are an excrescence of the late war. But this cannot happen
|
|
again, if the proposed system be adopted; and when these debts are
|
|
discharged, the only call for revenue of any consequence, which the
|
|
State governments will continue to experience, will be for the mere
|
|
support of their respective civil list; to which, if we add all
|
|
contingencies, the total amount in every State ought to fall
|
|
considerably short of two hundred thousand pounds.
|
|
In framing a government for posterity as well as ourselves, we
|
|
ought, in those provisions which are designed to be permanent, to
|
|
calculate, not on temporary, but on permanent causes of expense. If
|
|
this principle be a just one our attention would be directed to a
|
|
provision in favor of the State governments for an annual sum of
|
|
about two hundred thousand pounds; while the exigencies of the
|
|
Union could be susceptible of no limits, even in imagination. In
|
|
this view of the subject, by what logic can it be maintained that
|
|
the local governments ought to command, in perpetuity, an EXCLUSIVE
|
|
source of revenue for any sum beyond the extent of two hundred
|
|
thousand pounds? To extend its power further, in EXCLUSION of the
|
|
authority of the Union, would be to take the resources of the
|
|
community out of those hands which stood in need of them for the
|
|
public welfare, in order to put them into other hands which could
|
|
have no just or proper occasion for them.
|
|
Suppose, then, the convention had been inclined to proceed upon
|
|
the principle of a repartition of the objects of revenue, between
|
|
the Union and its members, in PROPORTION to their comparative
|
|
necessities; what particular fund could have been selected for the
|
|
use of the States, that would not either have been too much or too
|
|
little too little for their present, too much for their future
|
|
wants? As to the line of separation between external and internal
|
|
taxes, this would leave to the States, at a rough computation, the
|
|
command of two thirds of the resources of the community to defray
|
|
from a tenth to a twentieth part of its expenses; and to the Union,
|
|
one third of the resources of the community, to defray from nine
|
|
tenths to nineteen twentieths of its expenses. If we desert this
|
|
boundary and content ourselves with leaving to the States an
|
|
exclusive power of taxing houses and lands, there would still be a
|
|
great disproportion between the MEANS and the END; the possession
|
|
of one third of the resources of the community to supply, at most,
|
|
one tenth of its wants. If any fund could have been selected and
|
|
appropriated, equal to and not greater than the object, it would
|
|
have been inadequate to the discharge of the existing debts of the
|
|
particular States, and would have left them dependent on the Union
|
|
for a provision for this purpose.
|
|
The preceding train of observation will justify the position
|
|
which has been elsewhere laid down, that ``A CONCURRENT JURISDICTION
|
|
in the article of taxation was the only admissible substitute for an
|
|
entire subordination, in respect to this branch of power, of State
|
|
authority to that of the Union.'' Any separation of the objects of
|
|
revenue that could have been fallen upon, would have amounted to a
|
|
sacrifice of the great INTERESTS of the Union to the POWER of the
|
|
individual States. The convention thought the concurrent
|
|
jurisdiction preferable to that subordination; and it is evident
|
|
that it has at least the merit of reconciling an indefinite
|
|
constitutional power of taxation in the Federal government with an
|
|
adequate and independent power in the States to provide for their
|
|
own necessities. There remain a few other lights, in which this
|
|
important subject of taxation will claim a further consideration.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 35
|
|
|
|
The Same Subject Continued
|
|
(Concerning the General Power of Taxation)
|
|
For the Independent Journal.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
BEFORE we proceed to examine any other objections to an
|
|
indefinite power of taxation in the Union, I shall make one general
|
|
remark; which is, that if the jurisdiction of the national
|
|
government, in the article of revenue, should be restricted to
|
|
particular objects, it would naturally occasion an undue proportion
|
|
of the public burdens to fall upon those objects. Two evils would
|
|
spring from this source: the oppression of particular branches of
|
|
industry; and an unequal distribution of the taxes, as well among
|
|
the several States as among the citizens of the same State.
|
|
Suppose, as has been contended for, the federal power of
|
|
taxation were to be confined to duties on imports, it is evident
|
|
that the government, for want of being able to command other
|
|
resources, would frequently be tempted to extend these duties to an
|
|
injurious excess. There are persons who imagine that they can never
|
|
be carried to too great a length; since the higher they are, the
|
|
more it is alleged they will tend to discourage an extravagant
|
|
consumption, to produce a favorable balance of trade, and to promote
|
|
domestic manufactures. But all extremes are pernicious in various
|
|
ways. Exorbitant duties on imported articles would beget a general
|
|
spirit of smuggling; which is always prejudicial to the fair
|
|
trader, and eventually to the revenue itself: they tend to render
|
|
other classes of the community tributary, in an improper degree, to
|
|
the manufacturing classes, to whom they give a premature monopoly of
|
|
the markets; they sometimes force industry out of its more natural
|
|
channels into others in which it flows with less advantage; and in
|
|
the last place, they oppress the merchant, who is often obliged to
|
|
pay them himself without any retribution from the consumer. When
|
|
the demand is equal to the quantity of goods at market, the consumer
|
|
generally pays the duty; but when the markets happen to be
|
|
overstocked, a great proportion falls upon the merchant, and
|
|
sometimes not only exhausts his profits, but breaks in upon his
|
|
capital. I am apt to think that a division of the duty, between the
|
|
seller and the buyer, more often happens than is commonly imagined.
|
|
It is not always possible to raise the price of a commodity in
|
|
exact proportion to every additional imposition laid upon it. The
|
|
merchant, especially in a country of small commercial capital, is
|
|
often under a necessity of keeping prices down in order to a more
|
|
expeditious sale.
|
|
The maxim that the consumer is the payer, is so much oftener
|
|
true than the reverse of the proposition, that it is far more
|
|
equitable that the duties on imports should go into a common stock,
|
|
than that they should redound to the exclusive benefit of the
|
|
importing States. But it is not so generally true as to render it
|
|
equitable, that those duties should form the only national fund.
|
|
When they are paid by the merchant they operate as an additional
|
|
tax upon the importing State, whose citizens pay their proportion of
|
|
them in the character of consumers. In this view they are
|
|
productive of inequality among the States; which inequality would
|
|
be increased with the increased extent of the duties. The
|
|
confinement of the national revenues to this species of imposts
|
|
would be attended with inequality, from a different cause, between
|
|
the manufacturing and the non-manufacturing States. The States
|
|
which can go farthest towards the supply of their own wants, by
|
|
their own manufactures, will not, according to their numbers or
|
|
wealth, consume so great a proportion of imported articles as those
|
|
States which are not in the same favorable situation. They would
|
|
not, therefore, in this mode alone contribute to the public treasury
|
|
in a ratio to their abilities. To make them do this it is necessary
|
|
that recourse be had to excises, the proper objects of which are
|
|
particular kinds of manufactures. New York is more deeply
|
|
interested in these considerations than such of her citizens as
|
|
contend for limiting the power of the Union to external taxation may
|
|
be aware of. New York is an importing State, and is not likely
|
|
speedily to be, to any great extent, a manufacturing State. She
|
|
would, of course, suffer in a double light from restraining the
|
|
jurisdiction of the Union to commercial imposts.
|
|
So far as these observations tend to inculcate a danger of the
|
|
import duties being extended to an injurious extreme it may be
|
|
observed, conformably to a remark made in another part of these
|
|
papers, that the interest of the revenue itself would be a
|
|
sufficient guard against such an extreme. I readily admit that this
|
|
would be the case, as long as other resources were open; but if the
|
|
avenues to them were closed, HOPE, stimulated by necessity, would
|
|
beget experiments, fortified by rigorous precautions and additional
|
|
penalties, which, for a time, would have the intended effect, till
|
|
there had been leisure to contrive expedients to elude these new
|
|
precautions. The first success would be apt to inspire false
|
|
opinions, which it might require a long course of subsequent
|
|
experience to correct. Necessity, especially in politics, often
|
|
occasions false hopes, false reasonings, and a system of measures
|
|
correspondingly erroneous. But even if this supposed excess should
|
|
not be a consequence of the limitation of the federal power of
|
|
taxation, the inequalities spoken of would still ensue, though not
|
|
in the same degree, from the other causes that have been noticed.
|
|
Let us now return to the examination of objections.
|
|
One which, if we may judge from the frequency of its repetition,
|
|
seems most to be relied on, is, that the House of Representatives is
|
|
not sufficiently numerous for the reception of all the different
|
|
classes of citizens, in order to combine the interests and feelings
|
|
of every part of the community, and to produce a due sympathy
|
|
between the representative body and its constituents. This argument
|
|
presents itself under a very specious and seducing form; and is
|
|
well calculated to lay hold of the prejudices of those to whom it is
|
|
addressed. But when we come to dissect it with attention, it will
|
|
appear to be made up of nothing but fair-sounding words. The object
|
|
it seems to aim at is, in the first place, impracticable, and in the
|
|
sense in which it is contended for, is unnecessary. I reserve for
|
|
another place the discussion of the question which relates to the
|
|
sufficiency of the representative body in respect to numbers, and
|
|
shall content myself with examining here the particular use which
|
|
has been made of a contrary supposition, in reference to the
|
|
immediate subject of our inquiries.
|
|
The idea of an actual representation of all classes of the
|
|
people, by persons of each class, is altogether visionary. Unless
|
|
it were expressly provided in the Constitution, that each different
|
|
occupation should send one or more members, the thing would never
|
|
take place in practice. Mechanics and manufacturers will always be
|
|
inclined, with few exceptions, to give their votes to merchants, in
|
|
preference to persons of their own professions or trades. Those
|
|
discerning citizens are well aware that the mechanic and
|
|
manufacturing arts furnish the materials of mercantile enterprise
|
|
and industry. Many of them, indeed, are immediately connected with
|
|
the operations of commerce. They know that the merchant is their
|
|
natural patron and friend; and they are aware, that however great
|
|
the confidence they may justly feel in their own good sense, their
|
|
interests can be more effectually promoted by the merchant than by
|
|
themselves. They are sensible that their habits in life have not
|
|
been such as to give them those acquired endowments, without which,
|
|
in a deliberative assembly, the greatest natural abilities are for
|
|
the most part useless; and that the influence and weight, and
|
|
superior acquirements of the merchants render them more equal to a
|
|
contest with any spirit which might happen to infuse itself into the
|
|
public councils, unfriendly to the manufacturing and trading
|
|
interests. These considerations, and many others that might be
|
|
mentioned prove, and experience confirms it, that artisans and
|
|
manufacturers will commonly be disposed to bestow their votes upon
|
|
merchants and those whom they recommend. We must therefore consider
|
|
merchants as the natural representatives of all these classes of the
|
|
community.
|
|
With regard to the learned professions, little need be observed;
|
|
they truly form no distinct interest in society, and according to
|
|
their situation and talents, will be indiscriminately the objects of
|
|
the confidence and choice of each other, and of other parts of the
|
|
community.
|
|
Nothing remains but the landed interest; and this, in a
|
|
political view, and particularly in relation to taxes, I take to be
|
|
perfectly united, from the wealthiest landlord down to the poorest
|
|
tenant. No tax can be laid on land which will not affect the
|
|
proprietor of millions of acres as well as the proprietor of a
|
|
single acre. Every landholder will therefore have a common interest
|
|
to keep the taxes on land as low as possible; and common interest
|
|
may always be reckoned upon as the surest bond of sympathy. But if
|
|
we even could suppose a distinction of interest between the opulent
|
|
landholder and the middling farmer, what reason is there to
|
|
conclude, that the first would stand a better chance of being
|
|
deputed to the national legislature than the last? If we take fact
|
|
as our guide, and look into our own senate and assembly, we shall
|
|
find that moderate proprietors of land prevail in both; nor is this
|
|
less the case in the senate, which consists of a smaller number,
|
|
than in the assembly, which is composed of a greater number. Where
|
|
the qualifications of the electors are the same, whether they have
|
|
to choose a small or a large number, their votes will fall upon
|
|
those in whom they have most confidence; whether these happen to be
|
|
men of large fortunes, or of moderate property, or of no property at
|
|
all.
|
|
It is said to be necessary, that all classes of citizens should
|
|
have some of their own number in the representative body, in order
|
|
that their feelings and interests may be the better understood and
|
|
attended to. But we have seen that this will never happen under any
|
|
arrangement that leaves the votes of the people free. Where this is
|
|
the case, the representative body, with too few exceptions to have
|
|
any influence on the spirit of the government, will be composed of
|
|
landholders, merchants, and men of the learned professions. But
|
|
where is the danger that the interests and feelings of the different
|
|
classes of citizens will not be understood or attended to by these
|
|
three descriptions of men? Will not the landholder know and feel
|
|
whatever will promote or insure the interest of landed property?
|
|
And will he not, from his own interest in that species of property,
|
|
be sufficiently prone to resist every attempt to prejudice or
|
|
encumber it? Will not the merchant understand and be disposed to
|
|
cultivate, as far as may be proper, the interests of the mechanic
|
|
and manufacturing arts, to which his commerce is so nearly allied?
|
|
Will not the man of the learned profession, who will feel a
|
|
neutrality to the rivalships between the different branches of
|
|
industry, be likely to prove an impartial arbiter between them,
|
|
ready to promote either, so far as it shall appear to him conducive
|
|
to the general interests of the society?
|
|
If we take into the account the momentary humors or dispositions
|
|
which may happen to prevail in particular parts of the society, and
|
|
to which a wise administration will never be inattentive, is the man
|
|
whose situation leads to extensive inquiry and information less
|
|
likely to be a competent judge of their nature, extent, and
|
|
foundation than one whose observation does not travel beyond the
|
|
circle of his neighbors and acquaintances? Is it not natural that a
|
|
man who is a candidate for the favor of the people, and who is
|
|
dependent on the suffrages of his fellow-citizens for the
|
|
continuance of his public honors, should take care to inform himself
|
|
of their dispositions and inclinations, and should be willing to
|
|
allow them their proper degree of influence upon his conduct? This
|
|
dependence, and the necessity of being bound himself, and his
|
|
posterity, by the laws to which he gives his assent, are the true,
|
|
and they are the strong chords of sympathy between the
|
|
representative and the constituent.
|
|
There is no part of the administration of government that
|
|
requires extensive information and a thorough knowledge of the
|
|
principles of political economy, so much as the business of taxation.
|
|
The man who understands those principles best will be least likely
|
|
to resort to oppressive expedients, or sacrifice any particular
|
|
class of citizens to the procurement of revenue. It might be
|
|
demonstrated that the most productive system of finance will always
|
|
be the least burdensome. There can be no doubt that in order to a
|
|
judicious exercise of the power of taxation, it is necessary that
|
|
the person in whose hands it should be acquainted with the general
|
|
genius, habits, and modes of thinking of the people at large, and
|
|
with the resources of the country. And this is all that can be
|
|
reasonably meant by a knowledge of the interests and feelings of the
|
|
people. In any other sense the proposition has either no meaning,
|
|
or an absurd one. And in that sense let every considerate citizen
|
|
judge for himself where the requisite qualification is most likely
|
|
to be found.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 36
|
|
|
|
The Same Subject Continued
|
|
(Concerning the General Power of Taxation)
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Tuesday January 8, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
WE HAVE seen that the result of the observations, to which the
|
|
foregoing number has been principally devoted, is, that from the
|
|
natural operation of the different interests and views of the
|
|
various classes of the community, whether the representation of the
|
|
people be more or less numerous, it will consist almost entirely of
|
|
proprietors of land, of merchants, and of members of the learned
|
|
professions, who will truly represent all those different interests
|
|
and views. If it should be objected that we have seen other
|
|
descriptions of men in the local legislatures, I answer that it is
|
|
admitted there are exceptions to the rule, but not in sufficient
|
|
number to influence the general complexion or character of the
|
|
government. There are strong minds in every walk of life that will
|
|
rise superior to the disadvantages of situation, and will command
|
|
the tribute due to their merit, not only from the classes to which
|
|
they particularly belong, but from the society in general. The door
|
|
ought to be equally open to all; and I trust, for the credit of
|
|
human nature, that we shall see examples of such vigorous plants
|
|
flourishing in the soil of federal as well as of State legislation;
|
|
but occasional instances of this sort will not render the reasoning
|
|
founded upon the general course of things, less conclusive.
|
|
The subject might be placed in several other lights that would
|
|
all lead to the same result; and in particular it might be asked,
|
|
What greater affinity or relation of interest can be conceived
|
|
between the carpenter and blacksmith, and the linen manufacturer or
|
|
stocking weaver, than between the merchant and either of them? It
|
|
is notorious that there are often as great rivalships between
|
|
different branches of the mechanic or manufacturing arts as there
|
|
are between any of the departments of labor and industry; so that,
|
|
unless the representative body were to be far more numerous than
|
|
would be consistent with any idea of regularity or wisdom in its
|
|
deliberations, it is impossible that what seems to be the spirit of
|
|
the objection we have been considering should ever be realized in
|
|
practice. But I forbear to dwell any longer on a matter which has
|
|
hitherto worn too loose a garb to admit even of an accurate
|
|
inspection of its real shape or tendency.
|
|
There is another objection of a somewhat more precise nature
|
|
that claims our attention. It has been asserted that a power of
|
|
internal taxation in the national legislature could never be
|
|
exercised with advantage, as well from the want of a sufficient
|
|
knowledge of local circumstances, as from an interference between
|
|
the revenue laws of the Union and of the particular States. The
|
|
supposition of a want of proper knowledge seems to be entirely
|
|
destitute of foundation. If any question is depending in a State
|
|
legislature respecting one of the counties, which demands a
|
|
knowledge of local details, how is it acquired? No doubt from the
|
|
information of the members of the county. Cannot the like knowledge
|
|
be obtained in the national legislature from the representatives of
|
|
each State? And is it not to be presumed that the men who will
|
|
generally be sent there will be possessed of the necessary degree of
|
|
intelligence to be able to communicate that information? Is the
|
|
knowledge of local circumstances, as applied to taxation, a minute
|
|
topographical acquaintance with all the mountains, rivers, streams,
|
|
highways, and bypaths in each State; or is it a general
|
|
acquaintance with its situation and resources, with the state of its
|
|
agriculture, commerce, manufactures, with the nature of its products
|
|
and consumptions, with the different degrees and kinds of its
|
|
wealth, property, and industry?
|
|
Nations in general, even under governments of the more popular
|
|
kind, usually commit the administration of their finances to single
|
|
men or to boards composed of a few individuals, who digest and
|
|
prepare, in the first instance, the plans of taxation, which are
|
|
afterwards passed into laws by the authority of the sovereign or
|
|
legislature.
|
|
Inquisitive and enlightened statesmen are deemed everywhere best
|
|
qualified to make a judicious selection of the objects proper for
|
|
revenue; which is a clear indication, as far as the sense of
|
|
mankind can have weight in the question, of the species of knowledge
|
|
of local circumstances requisite to the purposes of taxation.
|
|
The taxes intended to be comprised under the general
|
|
denomination of internal taxes may be subdivided into those of the
|
|
DIRECT and those of the INDIRECT kind. Though the objection be made
|
|
to both, yet the reasoning upon it seems to be confined to the
|
|
former branch. And indeed, as to the latter, by which must be
|
|
understood duties and excises on articles of consumption, one is at
|
|
a loss to conceive what can be the nature of the difficulties
|
|
apprehended. The knowledge relating to them must evidently be of a
|
|
kind that will either be suggested by the nature of the article
|
|
itself, or can easily be procured from any well-informed man,
|
|
especially of the mercantile class. The circumstances that may
|
|
distinguish its situation in one State from its situation in another
|
|
must be few, simple, and easy to be comprehended. The principal
|
|
thing to be attended to, would be to avoid those articles which had
|
|
been previously appropriated to the use of a particular State; and
|
|
there could be no difficulty in ascertaining the revenue system of
|
|
each. This could always be known from the respective codes of laws,
|
|
as well as from the information of the members from the several
|
|
States.
|
|
The objection, when applied to real property or to houses and
|
|
lands, appears to have, at first sight, more foundation, but even in
|
|
this view it will not bear a close examination. Land taxes are co
|
|
monly laid in one of two modes, either by ACTUAL valuations,
|
|
permanent or periodical, or by OCCASIONAL assessments, at the
|
|
discretion, or according to the best judgment, of certain officers
|
|
whose duty it is to make them. In either case, the EXECUTION of the
|
|
business, which alone requires the knowledge of local details, must
|
|
be devolved upon discreet persons in the character of commissioners
|
|
or assessors, elected by the people or appointed by the government
|
|
for the purpose. All that the law can do must be to name the
|
|
persons or to prescribe the manner of their election or appointment,
|
|
to fix their numbers and qualifications and to draw the general
|
|
outlines of their powers and duties. And what is there in all this
|
|
that cannot as well be performed by the national legislature as by a
|
|
State legislature? The attention of either can only reach to
|
|
general principles; local details, as already observed, must be
|
|
referred to those who are to execute the plan.
|
|
But there is a simple point of view in which this matter may be
|
|
placed that must be altogether satisfactory. The national
|
|
legislature can make use of the SYSTEM OF EACH STATE WITHIN THAT
|
|
STATE. The method of laying and collecting this species of taxes in
|
|
each State can, in all its parts, be adopted and employed by the
|
|
federal government.
|
|
Let it be recollected that the proportion of these taxes is not
|
|
to be left to the discretion of the national legislature, but is to
|
|
be determined by the numbers of each State, as described in the
|
|
second section of the first article. An actual census or
|
|
enumeration of the people must furnish the rule, a circumstance
|
|
which effectually shuts the door to partiality or oppression. The
|
|
abuse of this power of taxation seems to have been provided against
|
|
with guarded circumspection. In addition to the precaution just
|
|
mentioned, there is a provision that ``all duties, imposts, and
|
|
excises shall be UNIFORM throughout the United States.''
|
|
It has been very properly observed by different speakers and
|
|
writers on the side of the Constitution, that if the exercise of the
|
|
power of internal taxation by the Union should be discovered on
|
|
experiment to be really inconvenient, the federal government may
|
|
then forbear the use of it, and have recourse to requisitions in its
|
|
stead. By way of answer to this, it has been triumphantly asked,
|
|
Why not in the first instance omit that ambiguous power, and rely
|
|
upon the latter resource? Two solid answers may be given. The
|
|
first is, that the exercise of that power, if convenient, will be
|
|
preferable, because it will be more effectual; and it is impossible
|
|
to prove in theory, or otherwise than by the experiment, that it
|
|
cannot be advantageously exercised. The contrary, indeed, appears
|
|
most probable. The second answer is, that the existence of such a
|
|
power in the Constitution will have a strong influence in giving
|
|
efficacy to requisitions. When the States know that the Union can
|
|
apply itself without their agency, it will be a powerful motive for
|
|
exertion on their part.
|
|
As to the interference of the revenue laws of the Union, and of
|
|
its members, we have already seen that there can be no clashing or
|
|
repugnancy of authority. The laws cannot, therefore, in a legal
|
|
sense, interfere with each other; and it is far from impossible to
|
|
avoid an interference even in the policy of their different systems.
|
|
An effectual expedient for this purpose will be, mutually, to
|
|
abstain from those objects which either side may have first had
|
|
recourse to. As neither can CONTROL the other, each will have an
|
|
obvious and sensible interest in this reciprocal forbearance. And
|
|
where there is an IMMEDIATE common interest, we may safely count
|
|
upon its operation. When the particular debts of the States are
|
|
done away, and their expenses come to be limited within their
|
|
natural compass, the possibility almost of interference will vanish.
|
|
A small land tax will answer the purpose of the States, and will be
|
|
their most simple and most fit resource.
|
|
Many spectres have been raised out of this power of internal
|
|
taxation, to excite the apprehensions of the people: double sets of
|
|
revenue officers, a duplication of their burdens by double
|
|
taxations, and the frightful forms of odious and oppressive
|
|
poll-taxes, have been played off with all the ingenious dexterity of
|
|
political legerdemain.
|
|
As to the first point, there are two cases in which there can be
|
|
no room for double sets of officers: one, where the right of
|
|
imposing the tax is exclusively vested in the Union, which applies
|
|
to the duties on imports; the other, where the object has not
|
|
fallen under any State regulation or provision, which may be
|
|
applicable to a variety of objects. In other cases, the probability
|
|
is that the United States will either wholly abstain from the
|
|
objects preoccupied for local purposes, or will make use of the
|
|
State officers and State regulations for collecting the additional
|
|
imposition. This will best answer the views of revenue, because it
|
|
will save expense in the collection, and will best avoid any
|
|
occasion of disgust to the State governments and to the people. At
|
|
all events, here is a practicable expedient for avoiding such an
|
|
inconvenience; and nothing more can be required than to show that
|
|
evils predicted to not necessarily result from the plan.
|
|
As to any argument derived from a supposed system of influence,
|
|
it is a sufficient answer to say that it ought not to be presumed;
|
|
but the supposition is susceptible of a more precise answer. If
|
|
such a spirit should infest the councils of the Union, the most
|
|
certain road to the accomplishment of its aim would be to employ the
|
|
State officers as much as possible, and to attach them to the Union
|
|
by an accumulation of their emoluments. This would serve to turn
|
|
the tide of State influence into the channels of the national
|
|
government, instead of making federal influence flow in an opposite
|
|
and adverse current. But all suppositions of this kind are
|
|
invidious, and ought to be banished from the consideration of the
|
|
great question before the people. They can answer no other end than
|
|
to cast a mist over the truth.
|
|
As to the suggestion of double taxation, the answer is plain.
|
|
The wants of the Union are to be supplied in one way or another;
|
|
if to be done by the authority of the federal government, it will
|
|
not be to be done by that of the State government. The quantity of
|
|
taxes to be paid by the community must be the same in either case;
|
|
with this advantage, if the provision is to be made by the
|
|
Union that the capital resource of commercial imposts, which is the
|
|
most convenient branch of revenue, can be prudently improved to a
|
|
much greater extent under federal than under State regulation, and
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of course will render it less necessary to recur to more
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inconvenient methods; and with this further advantage, that as far
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|
as there may be any real difficulty in the exercise of the power of
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internal taxation, it will impose a disposition to greater care in
|
|
the choice and arrangement of the means; and must naturally tend to
|
|
make it a fixed point of policy in the national administration to go
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|
as far as may be practicable in making the luxury of the rich
|
|
tributary to the public treasury, in order to diminish the necessity
|
|
of those impositions which might create dissatisfaction in the
|
|
poorer and most numerous classes of the society. Happy it is when
|
|
the interest which the government has in the preservation of its own
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|
power, coincides with a proper distribution of the public burdens,
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|
and tends to guard the least wealthy part of the community from
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|
oppression!
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|
As to poll taxes, I, without scruple, confess my disapprobation
|
|
of them; and though they have prevailed from an early period in
|
|
those States%n1%n which have uniformly been the most tenacious of
|
|
their rights, I should lament to see them introduced into practice
|
|
under the national government. But does it follow because there is
|
|
a power to lay them that they will actually be laid? Every State in
|
|
the Union has power to impose taxes of this kind; and yet in
|
|
several of them they are unknown in practice. Are the State
|
|
governments to be stigmatized as tyrannies, because they possess
|
|
this power? If they are not, with what propriety can the like power
|
|
justify such a charge against the national government, or even be
|
|
urged as an obstacle to its adoption? As little friendly as I am to
|
|
the species of imposition, I still feel a thorough conviction that
|
|
the power of having recourse to it ought to exist in the federal
|
|
government. There are certain emergencies of nations, in which
|
|
expedients, that in the ordinary state of things ought to be
|
|
forborne, become essential to the public weal. And the government,
|
|
from the possibility of such emergencies, ought ever to have the
|
|
option of making use of them. The real scarcity of objects in this
|
|
country, which may be considered as productive sources of revenue,
|
|
is a reason peculiar to itself, for not abridging the discretion of
|
|
the national councils in this respect. There may exist certain
|
|
critical and tempestuous conjunctures of the State, in which a poll
|
|
tax may become an inestimable resource. And as I know nothing to
|
|
exempt this portion of the globe from the common calamities that
|
|
have befallen other parts of it, I acknowledge my aversion to every
|
|
project that is calculated to disarm the government of a single
|
|
weapon, which in any possible contingency might be usefully employed
|
|
for the general defense and security.
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|
I have now gone through the examination of such of the powers
|
|
proposed to be vested in the United States, which may be considered
|
|
as having an immediate relation to the energy of the government;
|
|
and have endeavored to answer the principal objections which have
|
|
been made to them. I have passed over in silence those minor
|
|
authorities, which are either too inconsiderable to have been
|
|
thought worthy of the hostilities of the opponents of the
|
|
Constitution, or of too manifest propriety to admit of controversy.
|
|
The mass of judiciary power, however, might have claimed an
|
|
investigation under this head, had it not been for the consideration
|
|
that its organization and its extent may be more advantageously
|
|
considered in connection. This has determined me to refer it to the
|
|
branch of our inquiries upon which we shall next enter.
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|
PUBLIUS.
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|
FNA1@@1 The New England States.
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FEDERALIST No. 37
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|
|
Concerning the Difficulties of the Convention in Devising a Proper
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|
Form of Government
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|
From the Daily Advertiser.
|
|
Friday, January 11, 1788.
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|
MADISON
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|
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|
To the People of the State of New York:
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|
IN REVIEWING the defects of the existing Confederation, and
|
|
showing that they cannot be supplied by a government of less energy
|
|
than that before the public, several of the most important
|
|
principles of the latter fell of course under consideration. But as
|
|
the ultimate object of these papers is to determine clearly and
|
|
fully the merits of this Constitution, and the expediency of
|
|
adopting it, our plan cannot be complete without taking a more
|
|
critical and thorough survey of the work of the convention, without
|
|
examining it on all its sides, comparing it in all its parts, and
|
|
calculating its probable effects.
|
|
That this remaining task may be executed under impressions
|
|
conducive to a just and fair result, some reflections must in this
|
|
place be indulged, which candor previously suggests.
|
|
It is a misfortune, inseparable from human affairs, that public
|
|
measures are rarely investigated with that spirit of moderation
|
|
which is essential to a just estimate of their real tendency to
|
|
advance or obstruct the public good; and that this spirit is more
|
|
apt to be diminished than promoted, by those occasions which require
|
|
an unusual exercise of it. To those who have been led by experience
|
|
to attend to this consideration, it could not appear surprising,
|
|
that the act of the convention, which recommends so many important
|
|
changes and innovations, which may be viewed in so many lights and
|
|
relations, and which touches the springs of so many passions and
|
|
interests, should find or excite dispositions unfriendly, both on
|
|
one side and on the other, to a fair discussion and accurate
|
|
judgment of its merits. In some, it has been too evident from their
|
|
own publications, that they have scanned the proposed Constitution,
|
|
not only with a predisposition to censure, but with a
|
|
predetermination to condemn; as the language held by others betrays
|
|
an opposite predetermination or bias, which must render their
|
|
opinions also of little moment in the question. In placing,
|
|
however, these different characters on a level, with respect to the
|
|
weight of their opinions, I wish not to insinuate that there may not
|
|
be a material difference in the purity of their intentions. It is
|
|
but just to remark in favor of the latter description, that as our
|
|
situation is universally admitted to be peculiarly critical, and to
|
|
require indispensably that something should be done for our relief,
|
|
the predetermined patron of what has been actually done may have
|
|
taken his bias from the weight of these considerations, as well as
|
|
from considerations of a sinister nature. The predetermined
|
|
adversary, on the other hand, can have been governed by no venial
|
|
motive whatever. The intentions of the first may be upright, as
|
|
they may on the contrary be culpable. The views of the last cannot
|
|
be upright, and must be culpable. But the truth is, that these
|
|
papers are not addressed to persons falling under either of these
|
|
characters. They solicit the attention of those only, who add to a
|
|
sincere zeal for the happiness of their country, a temper favorable
|
|
to a just estimate of the means of promoting it.
|
|
Persons of this character will proceed to an examination of the
|
|
plan submitted by the convention, not only without a disposition to
|
|
find or to magnify faults; but will see the propriety of
|
|
reflecting, that a faultless plan was not to be expected. Nor will
|
|
they barely make allowances for the errors which may be chargeable
|
|
on the fallibility to which the convention, as a body of men, were
|
|
liable; but will keep in mind, that they themselves also are but
|
|
men, and ought not to assume an infallibility in rejudging the
|
|
fallible opinions of others.
|
|
With equal readiness will it be perceived, that besides these
|
|
inducements to candor, many allowances ought to be made for the
|
|
difficulties inherent in the very nature of the undertaking referred
|
|
to the convention.
|
|
The novelty of the undertaking immediately strikes us. It has
|
|
been shown in the course of these papers, that the existing
|
|
Confederation is founded on principles which are fallacious; that
|
|
we must consequently change this first foundation, and with it the
|
|
superstructure resting upon it. It has been shown, that the other
|
|
confederacies which could be consulted as precedents have been
|
|
vitiated by the same erroneous principles, and can therefore furnish
|
|
no other light than that of beacons, which give warning of the
|
|
course to be shunned, without pointing out that which ought to be
|
|
pursued. The most that the convention could do in such a situation,
|
|
was to avoid the errors suggested by the past experience of other
|
|
countries, as well as of our own; and to provide a convenient mode
|
|
of rectifying their own errors, as future experiences may unfold
|
|
them.
|
|
Among the difficulties encountered by the convention, a very
|
|
important one must have lain in combining the requisite stability
|
|
and energy in government, with the inviolable attention due to
|
|
liberty and to the republican form. Without substantially
|
|
accomplishing this part of their undertaking, they would have very
|
|
imperfectly fulfilled the object of their appointment, or the
|
|
expectation of the public; yet that it could not be easily
|
|
accomplished, will be denied by no one who is unwilling to betray
|
|
his ignorance of the subject. Energy in government is essential to
|
|
that security against external and internal danger, and to that
|
|
prompt and salutary execution of the laws which enter into the very
|
|
definition of good government. Stability in government is essential
|
|
to national character and to the advantages annexed to it, as well
|
|
as to that repose and confidence in the minds of the people, which
|
|
are among the chief blessings of civil society. An irregular and
|
|
mutable legislation is not more an evil in itself than it is odious
|
|
to the people; and it may be pronounced with assurance that the
|
|
people of this country, enlightened as they are with regard to the
|
|
nature, and interested, as the great body of them are, in the
|
|
effects of good government, will never be satisfied till some remedy
|
|
be applied to the vicissitudes and uncertainties which characterize
|
|
the State administrations. On comparing, however, these valuable
|
|
ingredients with the vital principles of liberty, we must perceive
|
|
at once the difficulty of mingling them together in their due
|
|
proportions. The genius of republican liberty seems to demand on
|
|
one side, not only that all power should be derived from the people,
|
|
but that those intrusted with it should be kept in independence on
|
|
the people, by a short duration of their appointments; and that
|
|
even during this short period the trust should be placed not in a
|
|
few, but a number of hands. Stability, on the contrary, requires
|
|
that the hands in which power is lodged should continue for a length
|
|
of time the same. A frequent change of men will result from a
|
|
frequent return of elections; and a frequent change of measures
|
|
from a frequent change of men: whilst energy in government requires
|
|
not only a certain duration of power, but the execution of it by a
|
|
single hand.
|
|
How far the convention may have succeeded in this part of their
|
|
work, will better appear on a more accurate view of it. From the
|
|
cursory view here taken, it must clearly appear to have been an
|
|
arduous part.
|
|
Not less arduous must have been the task of marking the proper
|
|
line of partition between the authority of the general and that of
|
|
the State governments. Every man will be sensible of this
|
|
difficulty, in proportion as he has been accustomed to contemplate
|
|
and discriminate objects extensive and complicated in their nature.
|
|
The faculties of the mind itself have never yet been distinguished
|
|
and defined, with satisfactory precision, by all the efforts of the
|
|
most acute and metaphysical philosophers. Sense, perception,
|
|
judgment, desire, volition, memory, imagination, are found to be
|
|
separated by such delicate shades and minute gradations that their
|
|
boundaries have eluded the most subtle investigations, and remain a
|
|
pregnant source of ingenious disquisition and controversy. The
|
|
boundaries between the great kingdom of nature, and, still more,
|
|
between the various provinces, and lesser portions, into which they
|
|
are subdivided, afford another illustration of the same important
|
|
truth. The most sagacious and laborious naturalists have never yet
|
|
succeeded in tracing with certainty the line which separates the
|
|
district of vegetable life from the neighboring region of
|
|
unorganized matter, or which marks the ermination of the former and
|
|
the commencement of the animal empire. A still greater obscurity
|
|
lies in the distinctive characters by which the objects in each of
|
|
these great departments of nature have been arranged and assorted.
|
|
When we pass from the works of nature, in which all the
|
|
delineations are perfectly accurate, and appear to be otherwise only
|
|
from the imperfection of the eye which surveys them, to the
|
|
institutions of man, in which the obscurity arises as well from the
|
|
object itself as from the organ by which it is contemplated, we must
|
|
perceive the necessity of moderating still further our expectations
|
|
and hopes from the efforts of human sagacity. Experience has
|
|
instructed us that no skill in the science of government has yet
|
|
been able to discriminate and define, with sufficient certainty, its
|
|
three great provinces the legislative, executive, and judiciary; or
|
|
even the privileges and powers of the different legislative branches.
|
|
Questions daily occur in the course of practice, which prove the
|
|
obscurity which reins in these subjects, and which puzzle the
|
|
greatest adepts in political science.
|
|
The experience of ages, with the continued and combined labors
|
|
of the most enlightened legislatures and jurists, has been equally
|
|
unsuccessful in delineating the several objects and limits of
|
|
different codes of laws and different tribunals of justice. The
|
|
precise extent of the common law, and the statute law, the maritime
|
|
law, the ecclesiastical law, the law of corporations, and other
|
|
local laws and customs, remains still to be clearly and finally
|
|
established in Great Britain, where accuracy in such subjects has
|
|
been more industriously pursued than in any other part of the world.
|
|
The jurisdiction of her several courts, general and local, of law,
|
|
of equity, of admiralty, etc., is not less a source of frequent and
|
|
intricate discussions, sufficiently denoting the indeterminate
|
|
limits by which they are respectively circumscribed. All new laws,
|
|
though penned with the greatest technical skill, and passed on the
|
|
fullest and most mature deliberation, are considered as more or less
|
|
obscure and equivocal, until their meaning be liquidated and
|
|
ascertained by a series of particular discussions and adjudications.
|
|
Besides the obscurity arising from the complexity of objects, and
|
|
the imperfection of the human faculties, the medium through which
|
|
the conceptions of men are conveyed to each other adds a fresh
|
|
embarrassment. The use of words is to express ideas. Perspicuity,
|
|
therefore, requires not only that the ideas should be distinctly
|
|
formed, but that they should be expressed by words distinctly and
|
|
exclusively appropriate to them. But no language is so copious as
|
|
to supply words and phrases for every complex idea, or so correct as
|
|
not to include many equivocally denoting different ideas. Hence it
|
|
must happen that however accurately objects may be discriminated in
|
|
themselves, and however accurately the discrimination may be
|
|
considered, the definition of them may be rendered inaccurate by the
|
|
inaccuracy of the terms in which it is delivered. And this
|
|
unavoidable inaccuracy must be greater or less, according to the
|
|
complexity and novelty of the objects defined. When the Almighty
|
|
himself condescends to address mankind in their own language, his
|
|
meaning, luminous as it must be, is rendered dim and doubtful by the
|
|
cloudy medium through which it is communicated.
|
|
Here, then, are three sources of vague and incorrect
|
|
definitions: indistinctness of the object, imperfection of the
|
|
organ of conception, inadequateness of the vehicle of ideas. Any
|
|
one of these must produce a certain degree of obscurity. The
|
|
convention, in delineating the boundary between the federal and
|
|
State jurisdictions, must have experienced the full effect of them
|
|
all.
|
|
To the difficulties already mentioned may be added the
|
|
interfering pretensions of the larger and smaller States. We cannot
|
|
err in supposing that the former would contend for a participation
|
|
in the government, fully proportioned to their superior wealth and
|
|
importance; and that the latter would not be less tenacious of the
|
|
equality at present enjoyed by them. We may well suppose that
|
|
neither side would entirely yield to the other, and consequently
|
|
that the struggle could be terminated only by compromise. It is
|
|
extremely probable, also, that after the ratio of representation had
|
|
been adjusted, this very compromise must have produced a fresh
|
|
struggle between the same parties, to give such a turn to the
|
|
organization of the government, and to the distribution of its
|
|
powers, as would increase the importance of the branches, in forming
|
|
which they had respectively obtained the greatest share of influence.
|
|
There are features in the Constitution which warrant each of these
|
|
suppositions; and as far as either of them is well founded, it
|
|
shows that the convention must have been compelled to sacrifice
|
|
theoretical propriety to the force of extraneous considerations.
|
|
Nor could it have been the large and small States only, which
|
|
would marshal themselves in opposition to each other on various
|
|
points. Other combinations, resulting from a difference of local
|
|
position and policy, must have created additional difficulties. As
|
|
every State may be divided into different districts, and its
|
|
citizens into different classes, which give birth to contending
|
|
interests and local jealousies, so the different parts of the United
|
|
States are distinguished from each other by a variety of
|
|
circumstances, which produce a like effect on a larger scale. And
|
|
although this variety of interests, for reasons sufficiently
|
|
explained in a former paper, may have a salutary influence on the
|
|
administration of the government when formed, yet every one must be
|
|
sensible of the contrary influence, which must have been experienced
|
|
in the task of forming it.
|
|
Would it be wonderful if, under the pressure of all these
|
|
difficulties, the convention should have been forced into some
|
|
deviations from that artificial structure and regular symmetry which
|
|
an abstract view of the subject might lead an ingenious theorist to
|
|
bestow on a Constitution planned in his closet or in his
|
|
imagination? The real wonder is that so many difficulties should
|
|
have been surmounted, and surmounted with a unanimity almost as
|
|
unprecedented as it must have been unexpected. It is impossible for
|
|
any man of candor to reflect on this circumstance without partaking
|
|
of the astonishment. It is impossible for the man of pious
|
|
reflection not to perceive in it a finger of that Almighty hand
|
|
which has been so frequently and signally extended to our relief in
|
|
the critical stages of the revolution.
|
|
We had occasion, in a former paper, to take notice of the
|
|
repeated trials which have been unsuccessfully made in the United
|
|
Netherlands for reforming the baneful and notorious vices of their
|
|
constitution. The history of almost all the great councils and
|
|
consultations held among mankind for reconciling their discordant
|
|
opinions, assuaging their mutual jealousies, and adjusting their
|
|
respective interests, is a history of factions, contentions, and
|
|
disappointments, and may be classed among the most dark and degraded
|
|
pictures which display the infirmities and depravities of the human
|
|
character. If, in a few scattered instances, a brighter aspect is
|
|
presented, they serve only as exceptions to admonish us of the
|
|
general truth; and by their lustre to darken the gloom of the
|
|
adverse prospect to which they are contrasted. In revolving the
|
|
causes from which these exceptions result, and applying them to the
|
|
particular instances before us, we are necessarily led to two
|
|
important conclusions. The first is, that the convention must have
|
|
enjoyed, in a very singular degree, an exemption from the
|
|
pestilential influence of party animosities the disease most
|
|
incident to deliberative bodies, and most apt to contaminate their
|
|
proceedings. The second conclusion is that all the deputations
|
|
composing the convention were satisfactorily accommodated by the
|
|
final act, or were induced to accede to it by a deep conviction of
|
|
the necessity of sacrificing private opinions and partial interests
|
|
to the public good, and by a despair of seeing this necessity
|
|
diminished by delays or by new experiments.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 38
|
|
|
|
The Same Subject Continued, and the Incoherence of the Objections
|
|
to the New Plan Exposed
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Tuesday, January 15, 1788.
|
|
|
|
MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
IT IS not a little remarkable that in every case reported by
|
|
ancient history, in which government has been established with
|
|
deliberation and consent, the task of framing it has not been
|
|
committed to an assembly of men, but has been performed by some
|
|
individual citizen of preeminent wisdom and approved integrity.
|
|
Minos, we learn, was the primitive founder of the government of
|
|
Crete, as Zaleucus was of that of the Locrians. Theseus first, and
|
|
after him Draco and Solon, instituted the government of Athens.
|
|
Lycurgus was the lawgiver of Sparta. The foundation of the
|
|
original government of Rome was laid by Romulus, and the work
|
|
completed by two of his elective successors, Numa and Tullius
|
|
Hostilius. On the abolition of royalty the consular administration
|
|
was substituted by Brutus, who stepped forward with a project for
|
|
such a reform, which, he alleged, had been prepared by Tullius
|
|
Hostilius, and to which his address obtained the assent and
|
|
ratification of the senate and people. This remark is applicable to
|
|
confederate governments also. Amphictyon, we are told, was the
|
|
author of that which bore his name. The Achaean league received its
|
|
first birth from Achaeus, and its second from Aratus.
|
|
What degree of agency these reputed lawgivers might have in
|
|
their respective establishments, or how far they might be clothed
|
|
with the legitimate authority of the people, cannot in every
|
|
instance be ascertained. In some, however, the proceeding was
|
|
strictly regular. Draco appears to have been intrusted by the
|
|
people of Athens with indefinite powers to reform its government and
|
|
laws. And Solon, according to Plutarch, was in a manner compelled,
|
|
by the universal suffrage of his fellow-citizens, to take upon him
|
|
the sole and absolute power of new-modeling the constitution. The
|
|
proceedings under Lycurgus were less regular; but as far as the
|
|
advocates for a regular reform could prevail, they all turned their
|
|
eyes towards the single efforts of that celebrated patriot and sage,
|
|
instead of seeking to bring about a revolution by the intervention
|
|
of a deliberative body of citizens.
|
|
Whence could it have proceeded, that a people, jealous as the
|
|
Greeks were of their liberty, should so far abandon the rules of
|
|
caution as to place their destiny in the hands of a single citizen?
|
|
Whence could it have proceeded, that the Athenians, a people who
|
|
would not suffer an army to be commanded by fewer than ten generals,
|
|
and who required no other proof of danger to their liberties than
|
|
the illustrious merit of a fellow-citizen, should consider one
|
|
illustrious citizen as a more eligible depositary of the fortunes of
|
|
themselves and their posterity, than a select body of citizens, from
|
|
whose common deliberations more wisdom, as well as more safety,
|
|
might have been expected? These questions cannot be fully answered,
|
|
without supposing that the fears of discord and disunion among a
|
|
number of counsellors exceeded the apprehension of treachery or
|
|
incapacity in a single individual. History informs us, likewise, of
|
|
the difficulties with which these celebrated reformers had to
|
|
contend, as well as the expedients which they were obliged to employ
|
|
in order to carry their reforms into effect. Solon, who seems to
|
|
have indulged a more temporizing policy, confessed that he had not
|
|
given to his countrymen the government best suited to their
|
|
happiness, but most tolerable to their prejudices. And Lycurgus,
|
|
more true to his object, was under the necessity of mixing a portion
|
|
of violence with the authority of superstition, and of securing his
|
|
final success by a voluntary renunciation, first of his country, and
|
|
then of his life. If these lessons teach us, on one hand, to admire
|
|
the improvement made by America on the ancient mode of preparing and
|
|
establishing regular plans of government, they serve not less, on
|
|
the other, to admonish us of the hazards and difficulties incident
|
|
to such experiments, and of the great imprudence of unnecessarily
|
|
multiplying them.
|
|
Is it an unreasonable conjecture, that the errors which may be
|
|
contained in the plan of the convention are such as have resulted
|
|
rather from the defect of antecedent experience on this complicated
|
|
and difficult subject, than from a want of accuracy or care in the
|
|
investigation of it; and, consequently such as will not be
|
|
ascertained until an actual trial shall have pointed them out? This
|
|
conjecture is rendered probable, not only by many considerations of
|
|
a general nature, but by the particular case of the Articles of
|
|
Confederation. It is observable that among the numerous objections
|
|
and amendments suggested by the several States, when these articles
|
|
were submitted for their ratification, not one is found which
|
|
alludes to the great and radical error which on actual trial has
|
|
discovered itself. And if we except the observations which New
|
|
Jersey was led to make, rather by her local situation, than by her
|
|
peculiar foresight, it may be questioned whether a single suggestion
|
|
was of sufficient moment to justify a revision of the system. There
|
|
is abundant reason, nevertheless, to suppose that immaterial as
|
|
these objections were, they would have been adhered to with a very
|
|
dangerous inflexibility, in some States, had not a zeal for their
|
|
opinions and supposed interests been stifled by the more powerful
|
|
sentiment of selfpreservation. One State, we may remember,
|
|
persisted for several years in refusing her concurrence, although
|
|
the enemy remained the whole period at our gates, or rather in the
|
|
very bowels of our country. Nor was her pliancy in the end effected
|
|
by a less motive, than the fear of being chargeable with protracting
|
|
the public calamities, and endangering the event of the contest.
|
|
Every candid reader will make the proper reflections on these
|
|
important facts.
|
|
A patient who finds his disorder daily growing worse, and that
|
|
an efficacious remedy can no longer be delayed without extreme
|
|
danger, after coolly revolving his situation, and the characters of
|
|
different physicians, selects and calls in such of them as he judges
|
|
most capable of administering relief, and best entitled to his
|
|
confidence. The physicians attend; the case of the patient is
|
|
carefully examined; a consultation is held; they are unanimously
|
|
agreed that the symptoms are critical, but that the case, with
|
|
proper and timely relief, is so far from being desperate, that it
|
|
may be made to issue in an improvement of his constitution. They
|
|
are equally unanimous in prescribing the remedy, by which this happy
|
|
effect is to be produced. The prescription is no sooner made known,
|
|
however, than a number of persons interpose, and, without denying
|
|
the reality or danger of the disorder, assure the patient that the
|
|
prescription will be poison to his constitution, and forbid him,
|
|
under pain of certain death, to make use of it. Might not the
|
|
patient reasonably demand, before he ventured to follow this advice,
|
|
that the authors of it should at least agree among themselves on
|
|
some other remedy to be substituted? And if he found them differing
|
|
as much from one another as from his first counsellors, would he not
|
|
act prudently in trying the experiment unanimously recommended by
|
|
the latter, rather than be hearkening to those who could neither
|
|
deny the necessity of a speedy remedy, nor agree in proposing one?
|
|
Such a patient and in such a situation is America at this moment.
|
|
She has been sensible of her malady. She has obtained a regular
|
|
and unanimous advice from men of her own deliberate choice. And she
|
|
is warned by others against following this advice under pain of the
|
|
most fatal consequences. Do the monitors deny the reality of her
|
|
danger? No. Do they deny the necessity of some speedy and powerful
|
|
remedy? No. Are they agreed, are any two of them agreed, in their
|
|
objections to the remedy proposed, or in the proper one to be
|
|
substituted? Let them speak for themselves. This one tells us that
|
|
the proposed Constitution ought to be rejected, because it is not a
|
|
confederation of the States, but a government over individuals.
|
|
Another admits that it ought to be a government over individuals to
|
|
a certain extent, but by no means to the extent proposed. A third
|
|
does not object to the government over individuals, or to the extent
|
|
proposed, but to the want of a bill of rights. A fourth concurs in
|
|
the absolute necessity of a bill of rights, but contends that it
|
|
ought to be declaratory, not of the personal rights of individuals,
|
|
but of the rights reserved to the States in their political capacity.
|
|
A fifth is of opinion that a bill of rights of any sort would be
|
|
superfluous and misplaced, and that the plan would be
|
|
unexceptionable but for the fatal power of regulating the times and
|
|
places of election. An objector in a large State exclaims loudly
|
|
against the unreasonable equality of representation in the Senate.
|
|
An objector in a small State is equally loud against the dangerous
|
|
inequality in the House of Representatives. From this quarter, we
|
|
are alarmed with the amazing expense, from the number of persons who
|
|
are to administer the new government. From another quarter, and
|
|
sometimes from the same quarter, on another occasion, the cry is
|
|
that the Congress will be but a shadow of a representation, and that
|
|
the government would be far less objectionable if the number and the
|
|
expense were doubled. A patriot in a State that does not import or
|
|
export, discerns insuperable objections against the power of direct
|
|
taxation. The patriotic adversary in a State of great exports and
|
|
imports, is not less dissatisfied that the whole burden of taxes may
|
|
be thrown on consumption. This politician discovers in the
|
|
Constitution a direct and irresistible tendency to monarchy; that
|
|
is equally sure it will end in aristocracy. Another is puzzled to
|
|
say which of these shapes it will ultimately assume, but sees
|
|
clearly it must be one or other of them; whilst a fourth is not
|
|
wanting, who with no less confidence affirms that the Constitution
|
|
is so far from having a bias towards either of these dangers, that
|
|
the weight on that side will not be sufficient to keep it upright
|
|
and firm against its opposite propensities. With another class of
|
|
adversaries to the Constitution the language is that the
|
|
legislative, executive, and judiciary departments are intermixed in
|
|
such a manner as to contradict all the ideas of regular government
|
|
and all the requisite precautions in favor of liberty. Whilst this
|
|
objection circulates in vague and general expressions, there are but
|
|
a few who lend their sanction to it. Let each one come forward with
|
|
his particular explanation, and scarce any two are exactly agreed
|
|
upon the subject. In the eyes of one the junction of the Senate
|
|
with the President in the responsible function of appointing to
|
|
offices, instead of vesting this executive power in the Executive
|
|
alone, is the vicious part of the organization. To another, the
|
|
exclusion of the House of Representatives, whose numbers alone could
|
|
be a due security against corruption and partiality in the exercise
|
|
of such a power, is equally obnoxious. With another, the admission
|
|
of the President into any share of a power which ever must be a
|
|
dangerous engine in the hands of the executive magistrate, is an
|
|
unpardonable violation of the maxims of republican jealousy. No
|
|
part of the arrangement, according to some, is more inadmissible
|
|
than the trial of impeachments by the Senate, which is alternately a
|
|
member both of the legislative and executive departments, when this
|
|
power so evidently belonged to the judiciary department. ``We
|
|
concur fully,'' reply others, ``in the objection to this part of the
|
|
plan, but we can never agree that a reference of impeachments to the
|
|
judiciary authority would be an amendment of the error. Our
|
|
principal dislike to the organization arises from the extensive
|
|
powers already lodged in that department.'' Even among the zealous
|
|
patrons of a council of state the most irreconcilable variance is
|
|
discovered concerning the mode in which it ought to be constituted.
|
|
The demand of one gentleman is, that the council should consist of
|
|
a small number to be appointed by the most numerous branch of the
|
|
legislature. Another would prefer a larger number, and considers it
|
|
as a fundamental condition that the appointment should be made by
|
|
the President himself.
|
|
As it can give no umbrage to the writers against the plan of the
|
|
federal Constitution, let us suppose, that as they are the most
|
|
zealous, so they are also the most sagacious, of those who think the
|
|
late convention were unequal to the task assigned them, and that a
|
|
wiser and better plan might and ought to be substituted. Let us
|
|
further suppose that their country should concur, both in this
|
|
favorable opinion of their merits, and in their unfavorable opinion
|
|
of the convention; and should accordingly proceed to form them into
|
|
a second convention, with full powers, and for the express purpose
|
|
of revising and remoulding the work of the first. Were the
|
|
experiment to be seriously made, though it required some effort to
|
|
view it seriously even in fiction, I leave it to be decided by the
|
|
sample of opinions just exhibited, whether, with all their enmity to
|
|
their predecessors, they would, in any one point, depart so widely
|
|
from their example, as in the discord and ferment that would mark
|
|
their own deliberations; and whether the Constitution, now before
|
|
the public, would not stand as fair a chance for immortality, as
|
|
Lycurgus gave to that of Sparta, by making its change to depend on
|
|
his own return from exile and death, if it were to be immediately
|
|
adopted, and were to continue in force, not until a BETTER, but
|
|
until ANOTHER should be agreed upon by this new assembly of
|
|
lawgivers.
|
|
It is a matter both of wonder and regret, that those who raise
|
|
so many objections against the new Constitution should never call to
|
|
mind the defects of that which is to be exchanged for it. It is not
|
|
necessary that the former should be perfect; it is sufficient that
|
|
the latter is more imperfect. No man would refuse to give brass for
|
|
silver or gold, because the latter had some alloy in it. No man
|
|
would refuse to quit a shattered and tottering habitation for a firm
|
|
and commodious building, because the latter had not a porch to it,
|
|
or because some of the rooms might be a little larger or smaller, or
|
|
the ceilings a little higher or lower than his fancy would have
|
|
planned them. But waiving illustrations of this sort, is it not
|
|
manifest that most of the capital objections urged against the new
|
|
system lie with tenfold weight against the existing Confederation?
|
|
Is an indefinite power to raise money dangerous in the hands of the
|
|
federal government? The present Congress can make requisitions to
|
|
any amount they please, and the States are constitutionally bound to
|
|
furnish them; they can emit bills of credit as long as they will
|
|
pay for the paper; they can borrow, both abroad and at home, as
|
|
long as a shilling will be lent. Is an indefinite power to raise
|
|
troops dangerous? The Confederation gives to Congress that power
|
|
also; and they have already begun to make use of it. Is it
|
|
improper and unsafe to intermix the different powers of government
|
|
in the same body of men? Congress, a single body of men, are the
|
|
sole depositary of all the federal powers. Is it particularly
|
|
dangerous to give the keys of the treasury, and the command of the
|
|
army, into the same hands? The Confederation places them both in
|
|
the hands of Congress. Is a bill of rights essential to liberty?
|
|
The Confederation has no bill of rights. Is it an objection
|
|
against the new Constitution, that it empowers the Senate, with the
|
|
concurrence of the Executive, to make treaties which are to be the
|
|
laws of the land? The existing Congress, without any such control,
|
|
can make treaties which they themselves have declared, and most of
|
|
the States have recognized, to be the supreme law of the land. Is
|
|
the importation of slaves permitted by the new Constitution for
|
|
twenty years? By the old it is permitted forever.
|
|
I shall be told, that however dangerous this mixture of powers
|
|
may be in theory, it is rendered harmless by the dependence of
|
|
Congress on the State for the means of carrying them into practice;
|
|
that however large the mass of powers may be, it is in fact a
|
|
lifeless mass. Then, say I, in the first place, that the
|
|
Confederation is chargeable with the still greater folly of
|
|
declaring certain powers in the federal government to be absolutely
|
|
necessary, and at the same time rendering them absolutely nugatory;
|
|
and, in the next place, that if the Union is to continue, and no
|
|
better government be substituted, effective powers must either be
|
|
granted to, or assumed by, the existing Congress; in either of
|
|
which events, the contrast just stated will hold good. But this is
|
|
not all. Out of this lifeless mass has already grown an excrescent
|
|
power, which tends to realize all the dangers that can be
|
|
apprehended from a defective construction of the supreme government
|
|
of the Union. It is now no longer a point of speculation and hope,
|
|
that the Western territory is a mine of vast wealth to the United
|
|
States; and although it is not of such a nature as to extricate
|
|
them from their present distresses, or for some time to come, to
|
|
yield any regular supplies for the public expenses, yet must it
|
|
hereafter be able, under proper management, both to effect a gradual
|
|
discharge of the domestic debt, and to furnish, for a certain
|
|
period, liberal tributes to the federal treasury. A very large
|
|
proportion of this fund has been already surrendered by individual
|
|
States; and it may with reason be expected that the remaining
|
|
States will not persist in withholding similar proofs of their
|
|
equity and generosity. We may calculate, therefore, that a rich and
|
|
fertile country, of an area equal to the inhabited extent of the
|
|
United States, will soon become a national stock. Congress have
|
|
assumed the administration of this stock. They have begun to render
|
|
it productive. Congress have undertaken to do more: they have
|
|
proceeded to form new States, to erect temporary governments, to
|
|
appoint officers for them, and to prescribe the conditions on which
|
|
such States shall be admitted into the Confederacy. All this has
|
|
been done; and done without the least color of constitutional
|
|
authority. Yet no blame has been whispered; no alarm has been
|
|
sounded. A GREAT and INDEPENDENT fund of revenue is passing into
|
|
the hands of a SINGLE BODY of men, who can RAISE TROOPS to an
|
|
INDEFINITE NUMBER, and appropriate money to their support for an
|
|
INDEFINITE PERIOD OF TIME. And yet there are men, who have not only
|
|
been silent spectators of this prospect, but who are advocates for
|
|
the system which exhibits it; and, at the same time, urge against
|
|
the new system the objections which we have heard. Would they not
|
|
act with more consistency, in urging the establishment of the
|
|
latter, as no less necessary to guard the Union against the future
|
|
powers and resources of a body constructed like the existing
|
|
Congress, than to save it from the dangers threatened by the present
|
|
impotency of that Assembly?
|
|
I mean not, by any thing here said, to throw censure on the
|
|
measures which have been pursued by Congress. I am sensible they
|
|
could not have done otherwise. The public interest, the necessity
|
|
of the case, imposed upon them the task of overleaping their
|
|
constitutional limits. But is not the fact an alarming proof of the
|
|
danger resulting from a government which does not possess regular
|
|
powers commensurate to its objects? A dissolution or usurpation is
|
|
the dreadful dilemma to which it is continually exposed.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 39
|
|
|
|
The Conformity of the Plan to Republican Principles
|
|
For the Independent Journal.
|
|
|
|
MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE last paper having concluded the observations which were
|
|
meant to introduce a candid survey of the plan of government
|
|
reported by the convention, we now proceed to the execution of that
|
|
part of our undertaking.
|
|
The first question that offers itself is, whether the general
|
|
form and aspect of the government be strictly republican. It is
|
|
evident that no other form would be reconcilable with the genius of
|
|
the people of America; with the fundamental principles of the
|
|
Revolution; or with that honorable determination which animates
|
|
every votary of freedom, to rest all our political experiments on
|
|
the capacity of mankind for self-government. If the plan of the
|
|
convention, therefore, be found to depart from the republican
|
|
character, its advocates must abandon it as no longer defensible.
|
|
What, then, are the distinctive characters of the republican
|
|
form? Were an answer to this question to be sought, not by
|
|
recurring to principles, but in the application of the term by
|
|
political writers, to the constitution of different States, no
|
|
satisfactory one would ever be found. Holland, in which no particle
|
|
of the supreme authority is derived from the people, has passed
|
|
almost universally under the denomination of a republic. The same
|
|
title has been bestowed on Venice, where absolute power over the
|
|
great body of the people is exercised, in the most absolute manner,
|
|
by a small body of hereditary nobles. Poland, which is a mixture of
|
|
aristocracy and of monarchy in their worst forms, has been dignified
|
|
with the same appellation. The government of England, which has one
|
|
republican branch only, combined with an hereditary aristocracy and
|
|
monarchy, has, with equal impropriety, been frequently placed on the
|
|
list of republics. These examples, which are nearly as dissimilar
|
|
to each other as to a genuine republic, show the extreme inaccuracy
|
|
with which the term has been used in political disquisitions.
|
|
If we resort for a criterion to the different principles on
|
|
which different forms of government are established, we may define a
|
|
republic to be, or at least may bestow that name on, a government
|
|
which derives all its powers directly or indirectly from the great
|
|
body of the people, and is administered by persons holding their
|
|
offices during pleasure, for a limited period, or during good
|
|
behavior. It is ESSENTIAL to such a government that it be derived
|
|
from the great body of the society, not from an inconsiderable
|
|
proportion, or a favored class of it; otherwise a handful of
|
|
tyrannical nobles, exercising their oppressions by a delegation of
|
|
their powers, might aspire to the rank of republicans, and claim for
|
|
their government the honorable title of republic. It is SUFFICIENT
|
|
for such a government that the persons administering it be
|
|
appointed, either directly or indirectly, by the people; and that
|
|
they hold their appointments by either of the tenures just
|
|
specified; otherwise every government in the United States, as well
|
|
as every other popular government that has been or can be well
|
|
organized or well executed, would be degraded from the republican
|
|
character. According to the constitution of every State in the
|
|
Union, some or other of the officers of government are appointed
|
|
indirectly only by the people. According to most of them, the chief
|
|
magistrate himself is so appointed. And according to one, this mode
|
|
of appointment is extended to one of the co-ordinate branches of the
|
|
legislature. According to all the constitutions, also, the tenure
|
|
of the highest offices is extended to a definite period, and in many
|
|
instances, both within the legislative and executive departments, to
|
|
a period of years. According to the provisions of most of the
|
|
constitutions, again, as well as according to the most respectable
|
|
and received opinions on the subject, the members of the judiciary
|
|
department are to retain their offices by the firm tenure of good
|
|
behavior.
|
|
On comparing the Constitution planned by the convention with the
|
|
standard here fixed, we perceive at once that it is, in the most
|
|
rigid sense, conformable to it. The House of Representatives, like
|
|
that of one branch at least of all the State legislatures, is
|
|
elected immediately by the great body of the people. The Senate,
|
|
like the present Congress, and the Senate of Maryland, derives its
|
|
appointment indirectly from the people. The President is indirectly
|
|
derived from the choice of the people, according to the example in
|
|
most of the States. Even the judges, with all other officers of the
|
|
Union, will, as in the several States, be the choice, though a
|
|
remote choice, of the people themselves, the duration of the
|
|
appointments is equally conformable to the republican standard, and
|
|
to the model of State constitutions The House of Representatives is
|
|
periodically elective, as in all the States; and for the period of
|
|
two years, as in the State of South Carolina. The Senate is
|
|
elective, for the period of six years; which is but one year more
|
|
than the period of the Senate of Maryland, and but two more than
|
|
that of the Senates of New York and Virginia. The President is to
|
|
continue in office for the period of four years; as in New York and
|
|
Delaware, the chief magistrate is elected for three years, and in
|
|
South Carolina for two years. In the other States the election is
|
|
annual. In several of the States, however, no constitutional
|
|
provision is made for the impeachment of the chief magistrate. And
|
|
in Delaware and Virginia he is not impeachable till out of office.
|
|
The President of the United States is impeachable at any time
|
|
during his continuance in office. The tenure by which the judges
|
|
are to hold their places, is, as it unquestionably ought to be, that
|
|
of good behavior. The tenure of the ministerial offices generally,
|
|
will be a subject of legal regulation, conformably to the reason of
|
|
the case and the example of the State constitutions.
|
|
Could any further proof be required of the republican complexion
|
|
of this system, the most decisive one might be found in its absolute
|
|
prohibition of titles of nobility, both under the federal and the
|
|
State governments; and in its express guaranty of the republican
|
|
form to each of the latter.
|
|
``But it was not sufficient,'' say the adversaries of the
|
|
proposed Constitution, ``for the convention to adhere to the
|
|
republican form. They ought, with equal care, to have preserved the
|
|
FEDERAL form, which regards the Union as a CONFEDERACY of sovereign
|
|
states; instead of which, they have framed a NATIONAL government,
|
|
which regards the Union as a CONSOLIDATION of the States.'' And it
|
|
is asked by what authority this bold and radical innovation was
|
|
undertaken? The handle which has been made of this objection
|
|
requires that it should be examined with some precision.
|
|
Without inquiring into the accuracy of the distinction on which
|
|
the objection is founded, it will be necessary to a just estimate of
|
|
its force, first, to ascertain the real character of the government
|
|
in question; secondly, to inquire how far the convention were
|
|
authorized to propose such a government; and thirdly, how far the
|
|
duty they owed to their country could supply any defect of regular
|
|
authority.
|
|
First. In order to ascertain the real character of the
|
|
government, it may be considered in relation to the foundation on
|
|
which it is to be established; to the sources from which its
|
|
ordinary powers are to be drawn; to the operation of those powers;
|
|
to the extent of them; and to the authority by which future
|
|
changes in the government are to be introduced.
|
|
On examining the first relation, it appears, on one hand, that
|
|
the Constitution is to be founded on the assent and ratification of
|
|
the people of America, given by deputies elected for the special
|
|
purpose; but, on the other, that this assent and ratification is to
|
|
be given by the people, not as individuals composing one entire
|
|
nation, but as composing the distinct and independent States to
|
|
which they respectively belong. It is to be the assent and
|
|
ratification of the several States, derived from the supreme
|
|
authority in each State, the authority of the people themselves.
|
|
The act, therefore, establishing the Constitution, will not be a
|
|
NATIONAL, but a FEDERAL act.
|
|
That it will be a federal and not a national act, as these terms
|
|
are understood by the objectors; the act of the people, as forming
|
|
so many independent States, not as forming one aggregate nation, is
|
|
obvious from this single consideration, that it is to result neither
|
|
from the decision of a MAJORITY of the people of the Union, nor from
|
|
that of a MAJORITY of the States. It must result from the UNANIMOUS
|
|
assent of the several States that are parties to it, differing no
|
|
otherwise from their ordinary assent than in its being expressed,
|
|
not by the legislative authority, but by that of the people
|
|
themselves. Were the people regarded in this transaction as forming
|
|
one nation, the will of the majority of the whole people of the
|
|
United States would bind the minority, in the same manner as the
|
|
majority in each State must bind the minority; and the will of the
|
|
majority must be determined either by a comparison of the individual
|
|
votes, or by considering the will of the majority of the States as
|
|
evidence of the will of a majority of the people of the United
|
|
States. Neither of these rules have been adopted. Each State, in
|
|
ratifying the Constitution, is considered as a sovereign body,
|
|
independent of all others, and only to be bound by its own voluntary
|
|
act. In this relation, then, the new Constitution will, if
|
|
established, be a FEDERAL, and not a NATIONAL constitution.
|
|
The next relation is, to the sources from which the ordinary
|
|
powers of government are to be derived. The House of
|
|
Representatives will derive its powers from the people of America;
|
|
and the people will be represented in the same proportion, and on
|
|
the same principle, as they are in the legislature of a particular
|
|
State. So far the government is NATIONAL, not FEDERAL. The Senate,
|
|
on the other hand, will derive its powers from the States, as
|
|
political and coequal societies; and these will be represented on
|
|
the principle of equality in the Senate, as they now are in the
|
|
existing Congress. So far the government is FEDERAL, not NATIONAL.
|
|
The executive power will be derived from a very compound source.
|
|
The immediate election of the President is to be made by the States
|
|
in their political characters. The votes allotted to them are in a
|
|
compound ratio, which considers them partly as distinct and coequal
|
|
societies, partly as unequal members of the same society. The
|
|
eventual election, again, is to be made by that branch of the
|
|
legislature which consists of the national representatives; but in
|
|
this particular act they are to be thrown into the form of
|
|
individual delegations, from so many distinct and coequal bodies
|
|
politic. From this aspect of the government it appears to be of a
|
|
mixed character, presenting at least as many FEDERAL as NATIONAL
|
|
features.
|
|
The difference between a federal and national government, as it
|
|
relates to the OPERATION OF THE GOVERNMENT, is supposed to consist
|
|
in this, that in the former the powers operate on the political
|
|
bodies composing the Confederacy, in their political capacities; in
|
|
the latter, on the individual citizens composing the nation, in
|
|
their individual capacities. On trying the Constitution by this
|
|
criterion, it falls under the NATIONAL, not the FEDERAL character;
|
|
though perhaps not so completely as has been understood. In
|
|
several cases, and particularly in the trial of controversies to
|
|
which States may be parties, they must be viewed and proceeded
|
|
against in their collective and political capacities only. So far
|
|
the national countenance of the government on this side seems to be
|
|
disfigured by a few federal features. But this blemish is perhaps
|
|
unavoidable in any plan; and the operation of the government on the
|
|
people, in their individual capacities, in its ordinary and most
|
|
essential proceedings, may, on the whole, designate it, in this
|
|
relation, a NATIONAL government.
|
|
But if the government be national with regard to the OPERATION
|
|
of its powers, it changes its aspect again when we contemplate it in
|
|
relation to the EXTENT of its powers. The idea of a national
|
|
government involves in it, not only an authority over the individual
|
|
citizens, but an indefinite supremacy over all persons and things,
|
|
so far as they are objects of lawful government. Among a people
|
|
consolidated into one nation, this supremacy is completely vested in
|
|
the national legislature. Among communities united for particular
|
|
purposes, it is vested partly in the general and partly in the
|
|
municipal legislatures. In the former case, all local authorities
|
|
are subordinate to the supreme; and may be controlled, directed, or
|
|
abolished by it at pleasure. In the latter, the local or municipal
|
|
authorities form distinct and independent portions of the supremacy,
|
|
no more subject, within their respective spheres, to the general
|
|
authority, than the general authority is subject to them, within its
|
|
own sphere. In this relation, then, the proposed government cannot
|
|
be deemed a NATIONAL one; since its jurisdiction extends to certain
|
|
enumerated objects only, and leaves to the several States a
|
|
residuary and inviolable sovereignty over all other objects. It is
|
|
true that in controversies relating to the boundary between the two
|
|
jurisdictions, the tribunal which is ultimately to decide, is to be
|
|
established under the general government. But this does not change
|
|
the principle of the case. The decision is to be impartially made,
|
|
according to the rules of the Constitution; and all the usual and
|
|
most effectual precautions are taken to secure this impartiality.
|
|
Some such tribunal is clearly essential to prevent an appeal to the
|
|
sword and a dissolution of the compact; and that it ought to be
|
|
established under the general rather than under the local
|
|
governments, or, to speak more properly, that it could be safely
|
|
established under the first alone, is a position not likely to be
|
|
combated.
|
|
If we try the Constitution by its last relation to the authority
|
|
by which amendments are to be made, we find it neither wholly
|
|
NATIONAL nor wholly FEDERAL. Were it wholly national, the supreme
|
|
and ultimate authority would reside in the MAJORITY of the people of
|
|
the Union; and this authority would be competent at all times, like
|
|
that of a majority of every national society, to alter or abolish
|
|
its established government. Were it wholly federal, on the other
|
|
hand, the concurrence of each State in the Union would be essential
|
|
to every alteration that would be binding on all. The mode provided
|
|
by the plan of the convention is not founded on either of these
|
|
principles. In requiring more than a majority, and principles. In
|
|
requiring more than a majority, and particularly in computing the
|
|
proportion by STATES, not by CITIZENS, it departs from the NATIONAL
|
|
and advances towards the FEDERAL character; in rendering the
|
|
concurrence of less than the whole number of States sufficient, it
|
|
loses again the FEDERAL and partakes of the NATIONAL character.
|
|
The proposed Constitution, therefore, is, in strictness, neither
|
|
a national nor a federal Constitution, but a composition of both.
|
|
In its foundation it is federal, not national; in the sources from
|
|
which the ordinary powers of the government are drawn, it is partly
|
|
federal and partly national; in the operation of these powers, it
|
|
is national, not federal; in the extent of them, again, it is
|
|
federal, not national; and, finally, in the authoritative mode of
|
|
introducing amendments, it is neither wholly federal nor wholly
|
|
national.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 40
|
|
The Powers of the Convention to Form a Mixed Government Examined
|
|
and Sustained
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Friday, January 18, 1788.
|
|
|
|
MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE SECOND point to be examined is, whether the convention were
|
|
authorized to frame and propose this mixed Constitution. The
|
|
powers of the convention ought, in strictness, to be determined
|
|
by an inspection of the commissions given to the members by their
|
|
respective constituents. As all of these, however, had reference,
|
|
either to the recommendation from the meeting at Annapolis, in
|
|
September, 1786, or to that from Congress, in February, 1787, it
|
|
will be sufficient to recur to these particular acts. The act
|
|
from Annapolis recommends the ``appointment of commissioners to
|
|
take into consideration the situation of the United States; to
|
|
devise SUCH FURTHER PROVISIONS as shall appear to them necessary
|
|
to render the Constitution of the federal government ADEQUATE TO
|
|
THE EXIGENCIES OF THE UNION; and to report such an act for that
|
|
purpose, to the United States in Congress assembled, as when
|
|
agreed to by them, and afterwards confirmed by the legislature of
|
|
every State, will effectually provide for the same. ''The
|
|
recommendatory act of Congress is in the words
|
|
following:``WHEREAS, There is provision in the articles of
|
|
Confederation and perpetual Union, for making alterations
|
|
therein, by the assent of a Congress of the United States, and of
|
|
the legislatures of the several States; and whereas experience
|
|
hath evinced, that there are defects in the present
|
|
Confederation; as a mean to remedy which, several of the States,
|
|
and PARTICULARLY THE STATE OF NEW YORK, by express instructions
|
|
to their delegates in Congress, have suggested a convention for
|
|
the purposes expressed in the following resolution; and such
|
|
convention appearing to be the most probable mean of establishing
|
|
in these States A FIRM NATIONAL GOVERNMENT:``Resolved, That in
|
|
the opinion of Congress it is expedient, that on the second
|
|
Monday of May next a convention of delegates, who shall have been
|
|
appointed by the several States, be held at Philadelphia, for the
|
|
sole and express purpose OF REVISING THE ARTICLES OF
|
|
CONFEDERATION, and reporting to Congress and the several
|
|
legislatures such ALTERATIONS AND PROVISIONS THEREIN, as shall,
|
|
when agreed to in Congress, and confirmed by the States, render
|
|
the federal Constitution ADEQUATE TO THE EXIGENCIES OF GOVERNMENT
|
|
AND THE PRESERVATION OF THE UNION. ''From these two acts, it
|
|
appears, 1st, that the object of the convention was to establish,
|
|
in these States, A FIRM NATIONAL GOVERNMENT; 2d, that this
|
|
government was to be such as would be ADEQUATE TO THE EXIGENCIES
|
|
OF GOVERNMENT and THE PRESERVATION OF THE UNION; 3d, that these
|
|
purposes were to be effected by ALTERATIONS AND PROVISIONS IN THE
|
|
ARTICLES OF CONFEDERATION, as it is expressed in the act of
|
|
Congress, or by SUCH FURTHER PROVISIONS AS SHOULD APPEAR
|
|
NECESSARY, as it stands in the recommendatory act from Annapolis;
|
|
4th, that the alterations and provisions were to be reported to
|
|
Congress, and to the States, in order to be agreed to by the
|
|
former and confirmed by the latter. From a comparison and fair
|
|
construction of these several modes of expression, is to be
|
|
deduced the authority under which the convention acted. They were
|
|
to frame a NATIONAL GOVERNMENT, adequate to the EXIGENCIES OF
|
|
GOVERNMENT, and OF THE UNION; and to reduce the articles of
|
|
Confederation into such form as to accomplish these purposes.
|
|
There are two rules of construction, dictated by plain reason, as
|
|
well as founded on legal axioms. The one is, that every part of
|
|
the expression ought, if possible, to be allowed some meaning,
|
|
and be made to conspire to some common end. The other is, that
|
|
where the several parts cannot be made to coincide, the less
|
|
important should give way to the more important part; the means
|
|
should be sacrificed to the end, rather than the end to the
|
|
means. Suppose, then, that the expressions defining the
|
|
authority of the convention were irreconcilably at variance with
|
|
each other; that a NATIONAL and ADEQUATE GOVERNMENT could not
|
|
possibly, in the judgment of the convention, be affected by
|
|
ALTERATIONS and PROVISIONS in the ARTICLES OF CONFEDERATION;
|
|
which part of the definition ought to have been embraced, and
|
|
which rejected? Which was the more important, which the less
|
|
important part? Which the end; which the means? Let the most
|
|
scrupulous expositors of delegated powers; let the most
|
|
inveterate objectors against those exercised by the convention,
|
|
answer these questions. Let them declare, whether it was of most
|
|
importance to the happiness of the people of America, that the
|
|
articles of Confederation should be disregarded, and an adequate
|
|
government be provided, and the Union preserved; or that an
|
|
adequate government should be omitted, and the articles of
|
|
Confederation preserved. Let them declare, whether the
|
|
preservation of these articles was the end, for securing which a
|
|
reform of the government was to be introduced as the means; or
|
|
whether the establishment of a government, adequate to the
|
|
national happiness, was the end at which these articles
|
|
themselves originally aimed, and to which they ought, as
|
|
insufficient means, to have been sacrificed. But is it necessary
|
|
to suppose that these expressions are absolutely irreconcilable
|
|
to each other; that no ALTERATIONS or PROVISIONS in THE ARTICLES
|
|
OF THE CONFEDERATION could possibly mould them into a national
|
|
and adequate government; into such a government as has been
|
|
proposed by the convention? No stress, it is presumed, will, in
|
|
this case, be laid on the TITLE; a change of that could never be
|
|
deemed an exercise of ungranted power. ALTERATIONS in the body of
|
|
the instrument are expressly authorized. NEW PROVISIONS therein
|
|
are also expressly authorized. Here then is a power to change the
|
|
title; to insert new articles; to alter old ones. Must it of
|
|
necessity be admitted that this power is infringed, so long as a
|
|
part of the old articles remain? Those who maintain the
|
|
affirmative ought at least to mark the boundary between
|
|
authorized and usurped innovations; between that degree of change
|
|
which lies within the compass of ALTERATIONS AND FURTHER
|
|
PROVISIONS, and that which amounts to a TRANSMUTATION of the
|
|
government. Will it be said that the alterations ought not to
|
|
have touched the substance of the Confederation? The States
|
|
would never have appointed a convention with so much solemnity,
|
|
nor described its objects with so much latitude, if some
|
|
SUBSTANTIAL reform had not been in contemplation. Will it be said
|
|
that the FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES of the Confederation were not
|
|
within the purview of the convention, and ought not to have been
|
|
varied? I ask, What are these principles? Do they require that,
|
|
in the establishment of the Constitution, the States should be
|
|
regarded as distinct and independent sovereigns? They are so
|
|
regarded by the Constitution proposed. Do they require that the
|
|
members of the government should derive their appointment from
|
|
the legislatures, not from the people of the States? One branch
|
|
of the new government is to be appointed by these legislatures;
|
|
and under the Confederation, the delegates to Congress MAY ALL
|
|
be appointed immediately by the people, and in two States1 are
|
|
actually so appointed. Do they require that the powers of the
|
|
government should act on the States, and not immediately on
|
|
individuals? In some instances, as has been shown, the powers of
|
|
the new government will act on the States in their collective
|
|
characters. In some instances, also, those of the existing
|
|
government act immediately on individuals. In cases of capture;
|
|
of piracy; of the post office; of coins, weights, and measures;
|
|
of trade with the Indians; of claims under grants of land by
|
|
different States; and, above all, in the case of trials by
|
|
courts-marshal in the army and navy, by which death may be
|
|
inflicted without the intervention of a jury, or even of a civil
|
|
magistrate; in all these cases the powers of the Confederation
|
|
operate immediately on the persons and interests of individual
|
|
citizens. Do these fundamental principles require, particularly,
|
|
that no tax should be levied without the intermediate agency of
|
|
the States? The Confederation itself authorizes a direct tax, to
|
|
a certain extent, on the post office. The power of coinage has
|
|
been so construed by Congress as to levy a tribute immediately
|
|
from that source also. But pretermitting these instances, was it
|
|
not an acknowledged object of the convention and the universal
|
|
expectation of the people, that the regulation of trade should be
|
|
submitted to the general government in such a form as would
|
|
render it an immediate source of general revenue? Had not
|
|
Congress repeatedly recommended this measure as not inconsistent
|
|
with the fundamental principles of the Confederation? Had not
|
|
every State but one; had not New York herself, so far complied
|
|
with the plan of Congress as to recognize the PRINCIPLE of the
|
|
innovation? Do these principles, in fine, require that the
|
|
powers of the general government should be limited, and that,
|
|
beyond this limit, the States should be left in possession of
|
|
their sovereignty and independence? We have seen that in the new
|
|
government, as in the old, the general powers are limited; and
|
|
that the States, in all unenumerated cases, are left in the
|
|
enjoyment of their sovereign and independent jurisdiction. The
|
|
truth is, that the great principles of the Constitution proposed
|
|
by the convention may be considered less as absolutely new, than
|
|
as the expansion of principles which are found in the articles of
|
|
Confederation. The misfortune under the latter system has been,
|
|
that these principles are so feeble and confined as to justify
|
|
all the charges of inefficiency which have been urged against it,
|
|
and to require a degree of enlargement which gives to the new
|
|
system the aspect of an entire transformation of the old. In one
|
|
particular it is admitted that the convention have departed from
|
|
the tenor of their commission. Instead of reporting a plan
|
|
requiring the confirmation OF THE LEGISLATURES OF ALL THE STATES,
|
|
they have reported a plan which is to be confirmed by the PEOPLE,
|
|
and may be carried into effect by NINE STATES ONLY. It is worthy
|
|
of remark that this objection, though the most plausible, has
|
|
been the least urged in the publications which have swarmed
|
|
against the convention. The forbearance can only have proceeded
|
|
from an irresistible conviction of the absurdity of subjecting
|
|
the fate of twelve States to the perverseness or corruption of a
|
|
thirteenth; from the example of inflexible opposition given by a
|
|
MAJORITY of one sixtieth of the people of America to a measure
|
|
approved and called for by the voice of twelve States, comprising
|
|
fifty-nine sixtieths of the people an example still fresh in the
|
|
memory and indignation of every citizen who has felt for the
|
|
wounded honor and prosperity of his country. As this objection,
|
|
therefore, has been in a manner waived by those who have
|
|
criticised the powers of the convention, I dismiss it without
|
|
further observation. The THIRD point to be inquired into is, how
|
|
far considerations of duty arising out of the case itself could
|
|
have supplied any defect of regular authority. In the preceding
|
|
inquiries the powers of the convention have been analyzed and
|
|
tried with the same rigor, and by the same rules, as if they had
|
|
been real and final powers for the establishment of a
|
|
Constitution for the United States. We have seen in what manner
|
|
they have borne the trial even on that supposition. It is time
|
|
now to recollect that the powers were merely advisory and
|
|
recommendatory; that they were so meant by the States, and so
|
|
understood by the convention; and that the latter have
|
|
accordingly planned and proposed a Constitution which is to be of
|
|
no more consequence than the paper on which it is written, unless
|
|
it be stamped with the approbation of those to whom it is
|
|
addressed. This reflection places the subject in a point of view
|
|
altogether different, and will enable us to judge with propriety
|
|
of the course taken by the convention. Let us view the ground on
|
|
which the convention stood. It may be collected from their
|
|
proceedings, that they were deeply and unanimously impressed with
|
|
the crisis, which had led their country almost with one voice to
|
|
make so singular and solemn an experiment for correcting the
|
|
errors of a system by which this crisis had been produced; that
|
|
they were no less deeply and unanimously convinced that such a
|
|
reform as they have proposed was absolutely necessary to effect
|
|
the purposes of their appointment. It could not be unknown to
|
|
them that the hopes and expectations of the great body of
|
|
citizens, throughout this great empire, were turned with the
|
|
keenest anxiety to the event of their deliberations. They had
|
|
every reason to believe that the contrary sentiments agitated the
|
|
minds and bosoms of every external and internal foe to the
|
|
liberty and prosperity of the United States. They had seen in the
|
|
origin and progress of the experiment, the alacrity with which
|
|
the PROPOSITION, made by a single State (Virginia), towards a
|
|
partial amendment of the Confederation, had been attended to and
|
|
promoted. They had seen the LIBERTY ASSUMED by a VERY FEW
|
|
deputies from a VERY FEW States, convened at Annapolis, of
|
|
recommending a great and critical object, wholly foreign to their
|
|
commission, not only justified by the public opinion, but
|
|
actually carried into effect by twelve out of the thirteen
|
|
States. They had seen, in a variety of instances, assumptions by
|
|
Congress, not only of recommendatory, but of operative, powers,
|
|
warranted, in the public estimation, by occasions and objects
|
|
infinitely less urgent than those by which their conduct was to
|
|
be governed. They must have reflected, that in all great changes
|
|
of established governments, forms ought to give way to substance;
|
|
that a rigid adherence in such cases to the former, would render
|
|
nominal and nugatory the transcendent and precious right of the
|
|
people to ``abolish or alter their governments as to them shall
|
|
seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness,''2 since
|
|
it is impossible for the people spontaneously and universally to
|
|
move in concert towards their object; and it is therefore
|
|
essential that such changes be instituted by some INFORMAL AND
|
|
UNAUTHORIZED PROPOSITIONS, made by some patriotic and respectable
|
|
citizen or number of citizens. They must have recollected that it
|
|
was by this irregular and assumed privilege of proposing to the
|
|
people plans for their safety and happiness, that the States
|
|
were first united against the danger with which they were
|
|
threatened by their ancient government; that committees and
|
|
congresses were formed for concentrating their efforts and
|
|
defending their rights; and that CONVENTIONS were ELECTED in THE
|
|
SEVERAL STATES for establishing the constitutions under which
|
|
they are now governed; nor could it have been forgotten that no
|
|
little ill-timed scruples, no zeal for adhering to ordinary
|
|
forms, were anywhere seen, except in those who wished to indulge,
|
|
under these masks, their secret enmity to the substance contended
|
|
for. They must have borne in mind, that as the plan to be framed
|
|
and proposed was to be submitted TO THE PEOPLE THEMSELVES, the
|
|
disapprobation of this supreme authority would destroy it
|
|
forever; its approbation blot out antecedent errors and
|
|
irregularities. It might even have occurred to them, that where a
|
|
disposition to cavil prevailed, their neglect to execute the
|
|
degree of power vested in them, and still more their
|
|
recommendation of any measure whatever, not warranted by their
|
|
commission, would not less excite animadversion, than a
|
|
recommendation at once of a measure fully commensurate to the
|
|
national exigencies. Had the convention, under all these
|
|
impressions, and in the midst of all these considerations,
|
|
instead of exercising a manly confidence in their country, by
|
|
whose confidence they had been so peculiarly distinguished, and
|
|
of pointing out a system capable, in their judgment, of securing
|
|
its happiness, taken the cold and sullen resolution of
|
|
disappointing its ardent hopes, of sacrificing substance to
|
|
forms, of committing the dearest interests of their country to
|
|
the uncertainties of delay and the hazard of events, let me ask
|
|
the man who can raise his mind to one elevated conception, who
|
|
can awaken in his bosom one patriotic emotion, what judgment
|
|
ought to have been pronounced by the impartial world, by the
|
|
friends of mankind, by every virtuous citizen, on the conduct and
|
|
character of this assembly? Or if there be a man whose
|
|
propensity to condemn is susceptible of no control, let me then
|
|
ask what sentence he has in reserve for the twelve States who
|
|
USURPED THE POWER of sending deputies to the convention, a body
|
|
utterly unknown to their constitutions; for Congress, who
|
|
recommended the appointment of this body, equally unknown to the
|
|
Confederation; and for the State of New York, in particular,
|
|
which first urged and then complied with this unauthorized
|
|
interposition? But that the objectors may be disarmed of every
|
|
pretext, it shall be granted for a moment that the convention
|
|
were neither authorized by their commission, nor justified by
|
|
circumstances in proposing a Constitution for their country: does
|
|
it follow that the Constitution ought, for that reason alone, to
|
|
be rejected? If, according to the noble precept, it be lawful to
|
|
accept good advice even from an enemy, shall we set the ignoble
|
|
example of refusing such advice even when it is offered by our
|
|
friends? The prudent inquiry, in all cases, ought surely to be,
|
|
not so much FROM WHOM the advice comes, as whether the advice be
|
|
GOOD. The sum of what has been here advanced and proved is, that
|
|
the charge against the convention of exceeding their powers,
|
|
except in one instance little urged by the objectors, has no
|
|
foundation to support it; that if they had exceeded their powers,
|
|
they were not only warranted, but required, as the confidential
|
|
servants of their country, by the circumstances in which they
|
|
were placed, to exercise the liberty which they assume; and that
|
|
finally, if they had violated both their powers and their
|
|
obligations, in proposing a Constitution, this ought nevertheless
|
|
to be embraced, if it be calculated to accomplish the views and
|
|
happiness of the people of America. How far this character is due
|
|
to the Constitution, is the subject under investigation. PUBLIUS.
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|
|
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Connecticut and Rhode Island. Declaration of Independence.
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FEDERALIST No. 41
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|
General View of the Powers Conferred by The Constitution
|
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For the Independent Journal.
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|
|
|
MADISON
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|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
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THE Constitution proposed by the convention may be considered
|
|
under two general points of view. The FIRST relates to the sum or
|
|
quantity of power which it vests in the government, including
|
|
the restraints imposed on the States. The SECOND, to the
|
|
particular structure of the government, and the distribution of
|
|
this power among its several branches. Under the FIRST view of
|
|
the subject, two important questions arise: 1. Whether any part
|
|
of the powers transferred to the general government be
|
|
unnecessary or improper? 2. Whether the entire mass of them be
|
|
dangerous to the portion of jurisdiction left in the several
|
|
States? Is the aggregate power of the general government greater
|
|
than ought to have been vested in it? This is the FIRST
|
|
question. It cannot have escaped those who have attended with
|
|
candor to the arguments employed against the extensive powers of
|
|
the government, that the authors of them have very little
|
|
considered how far these powers were necessary means of attaining
|
|
a necessary end. They have chosen rather to dwell on the
|
|
inconveniences which must be unavoidably blended with all
|
|
political advantages; and on the possible abuses which must be
|
|
incident to every power or trust, of which a beneficial use can
|
|
be made. This method of handling the subject cannot impose on the
|
|
good sense of the people of America. It may display the subtlety
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|
of the writer; it may open a boundless field for rhetoric and
|
|
declamation; it may inflame the passions of the unthinking, and
|
|
may confirm the prejudices of the misthinking: but cool and
|
|
candid people will at once reflect, that the purest of human
|
|
blessings must have a portion of alloy in them; that the choice
|
|
must always be made, if not of the lesser evil, at least of the
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|
GREATER, not the PERFECT, good; and that in every political
|
|
institution, a power to advance the public happiness involves a
|
|
discretion which may be misapplied and abused. They will see,
|
|
therefore, that in all cases where power is to be conferred, the
|
|
point first to be decided is, whether such a power be necessary
|
|
to the public good; as the next will be, in case of an
|
|
affirmative decision, to guard as effectually as possible
|
|
against a perversion of the power to the public detriment. That
|
|
we may form a correct judgment on this subject, it will be proper
|
|
to review the several powers conferred on the government of the
|
|
Union; and that this may be the more conveniently done they may
|
|
be reduced into different classes as they relate to the following
|
|
different objects: 1. Security against foreign danger; 2.
|
|
Regulation of the intercourse with foreign nations; 3.
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Maintenance of harmony and proper intercourse among the States;
|
|
4. Certain miscellaneous objects of general utility; 5.
|
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Restraint of the States from certain injurious acts; 6.
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Provisions for giving due efficacy to all these powers. The
|
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powers falling within the FIRST class are those of declaring war
|
|
and granting letters of marque; of providing armies and fleets;
|
|
of regulating and calling forth the militia; of levying and
|
|
borrowing money. Security against foreign danger is one of the
|
|
primitive objects of civil society. It is an avowed and essential
|
|
object of the American Union. The powers requisite for attaining
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it must be effectually confided to the federal councils. Is the
|
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power of declaring war necessary? No man will answer this
|
|
question in the negative. It would be superfluous, therefore, to
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|
enter into a proof of the affirmative. The existing Confederation
|
|
establishes this power in the most ample form. Is the power of
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raising armies and equipping fleets necessary? This is involved
|
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in the foregoing power. It is involved in the power of
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self-defense. But was it necessary to give an INDEFINITE POWER
|
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of raising TROOPS, as well as providing fleets; and of
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|
maintaining both in PEACE, as well as in war? The answer to these
|
|
questions has been too far anticipated in another place to admit
|
|
an extensive discussion of them in this place. The answer indeed
|
|
seems to be so obvious and conclusive as scarcely to justify such
|
|
a discussion in any place. With what color of propriety could the
|
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force necessary for defense be limited by those who cannot limit
|
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the force of offense? If a federal Constitution could chain the
|
|
ambition or set bounds to the exertions of all other nations,
|
|
then indeed might it prudently chain the discretion of its own
|
|
government, and set bounds to the exertions for its own safety.
|
|
How could a readiness for war in time of peace be safely
|
|
prohibited, unless we could prohibit, in like manner, the
|
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preparations and establishments of every hostile nation? The
|
|
means of security can only be regulated by the means and the
|
|
danger of attack. They will, in fact, be ever determined by these
|
|
rules, and by no others. It is in vain to oppose constitutional
|
|
barriers to the impulse of self-preservation. It is worse than in
|
|
vain; because it plants in the Constitution itself necessary
|
|
usurpations of power, every precedent of which is a germ of
|
|
unnecessary and multiplied repetitions. If one nation maintains
|
|
constantly a disciplined army, ready for the service of ambition
|
|
or revenge, it obliges the most pacific nations who may be within
|
|
the reach of its enterprises to take corresponding precautions.
|
|
The fifteenth century was the unhappy epoch of military
|
|
establishments in the time of peace. They were introduced by
|
|
Charles VII. of France. All Europe has followed, or been forced
|
|
into, the example. Had the example not been followed by other
|
|
nations, all Europe must long ago have worn the chains of a
|
|
universal monarch. Were every nation except France now to disband
|
|
its peace establishments, the same event might follow. The
|
|
veteran legions of Rome were an overmatch for the undisciplined
|
|
valor of all other nations and rendered her the mistress of the
|
|
world. Not the less true is it, that the liberties of Rome
|
|
proved the final victim to her military triumphs; and that the
|
|
liberties of Europe, as far as they ever existed, have, with few
|
|
exceptions, been the price of her military establishments. A
|
|
standing force, therefore, is a dangerous, at the same time that
|
|
it may be a necessary, provision. On the smallest scale it has
|
|
its inconveniences. On an extensive scale its consequences may be
|
|
fatal. On any scale it is an object of laudable circumspection
|
|
and precaution. A wise nation will combine all these
|
|
considerations; and, whilst it does not rashly preclude itself
|
|
from any resource which may become essential to its safety, will
|
|
exert all its prudence in diminishing both the necessity and the
|
|
danger of resorting to one which may be inauspicious to its
|
|
liberties. The clearest marks of this prudence are stamped on
|
|
the proposed Constitution. The Union itself, which it cements and
|
|
secures, destroys every pretext for a military establishment
|
|
which could be dangerous. America united, with a handful of
|
|
troops, or without a single soldier, exhibits a more forbidding
|
|
posture to foreign ambition than America disunited, with a
|
|
hundred thousand veterans ready for combat. It was remarked, on a
|
|
former occasion, that the want of this pretext had saved the
|
|
liberties of one nation in Europe. Being rendered by her insular
|
|
situation and her maritime resources impregnable to the armies of
|
|
her neighbors, the rulers of Great Britain have never been able,
|
|
by real or artificial dangers, to cheat the public into an
|
|
extensive peace establishment. The distance of the United States
|
|
from the powerful nations of the world gives them the same happy
|
|
security. A dangerous establishment can never be necessary or
|
|
plausible, so long as they continue a united people. But let it
|
|
never, for a moment, be forgotten that they are indebted for this
|
|
advantage to the Union alone. The moment of its dissolution will
|
|
be the date of a new order of things. The fears of the weaker, or
|
|
the ambition of the stronger States, or Confederacies, will set
|
|
the same example in the New, as Charles VII. did in the Old
|
|
World. The example will be followed here from the same motives
|
|
which produced universal imitation there. Instead of deriving
|
|
from our situation the precious advantage which Great Britain has
|
|
derived from hers, the face of America will be but a copy of that
|
|
of the continent of Europe. It will present liberty everywhere
|
|
crushed between standing armies and perpetual taxes. The fortunes
|
|
of disunited America will be even more disastrous than those of
|
|
Europe. The sources of evil in the latter are confined to her own
|
|
limits. No superior powers of another quarter of the globe
|
|
intrigue among her rival nations, inflame their mutual
|
|
animosities, and render them the instruments of foreign ambition,
|
|
jealousy, and revenge. In America the miseries springing from her
|
|
internal jealousies, contentions, and wars, would form a part
|
|
only of her lot. A plentiful addition of evils would have their
|
|
source in that relation in which Europe stands to this quarter of
|
|
the earth, and which no other quarter of the earth bears to
|
|
Europe. This picture of the consequences of disunion cannot be
|
|
too highly colored, or too often exhibited. Every man who loves
|
|
peace, every man who loves his country, every man who loves
|
|
liberty, ought to have it ever before his eyes, that he may
|
|
cherish in his heart a due attachment to the Union of America,
|
|
and be able to set a due value on the means of preserving it.
|
|
Next to the effectual establishment of the Union, the best
|
|
possible precaution against danger from standing armies is a
|
|
limitation of the term for which revenue may be appropriated to
|
|
their support. This precaution the Constitution has prudently
|
|
added. I will not repeat here the observations which I flatter
|
|
myself have placed this subject in a just and satisfactory
|
|
light. But it may not be improper to take notice of an argument
|
|
against this part of the Constitution, which has been drawn from
|
|
the policy and practice of Great Britain. It is said that the
|
|
continuance of an army in that kingdom requires an annual vote of
|
|
the legislature; whereas the American Constitution has lengthened
|
|
this critical period to two years. This is the form in which the
|
|
comparison is usually stated to the public: but is it a just
|
|
form? Is it a fair comparison? Does the British Constitution
|
|
restrain the parliamentary discretion to one year? Does the
|
|
American impose on the Congress appropriations for two years? On
|
|
the contrary, it cannot be unknown to the authors of the fallacy
|
|
themselves, that the British Constitution fixes no limit whatever
|
|
to the discretion of the legislature, and that the American ties
|
|
down the legislature to two years, as the longest admissible
|
|
term. Had the argument from the British example been truly
|
|
stated, it would have stood thus: The term for which supplies
|
|
may be appropriated to the army establishment, though unlimited
|
|
by the British Constitution, has nevertheless, in practice, been
|
|
limited by parliamentary discretion to a single year. Now, if in
|
|
Great Britain, where the House of Commons is elected for seven
|
|
years; where so great a proportion of the members are elected by
|
|
so small a proportion of the people; where the electors are so
|
|
corrupted by the representatives, and the representatives so
|
|
corrupted by the Crown, the representative body can possess a
|
|
power to make appropriations to the army for an indefinite term,
|
|
without desiring, or without daring, to extend the term beyond a
|
|
single year, ought not suspicion herself to blush, in pretending
|
|
that the representatives of the United States, elected FREELY by
|
|
the WHOLE BODY of the people, every SECOND YEAR, cannot be safely
|
|
intrusted with the discretion over such appropriations, expressly
|
|
limited to the short period of TWO YEARS? A bad cause seldom
|
|
fails to betray itself. Of this truth, the management of the
|
|
opposition to the federal government is an unvaried
|
|
exemplification. But among all the blunders which have been
|
|
committed, none is more striking than the attempt to enlist on
|
|
that side the prudent jealousy entertained by the people, of
|
|
standing armies. The attempt has awakened fully the public
|
|
attention to that important subject; and has led to
|
|
investigations which must terminate in a thorough and universal
|
|
conviction, not only that the constitution has provided the most
|
|
effectual guards against danger from that quarter, but that
|
|
nothing short of a Constitution fully adequate to the national
|
|
defense and the preservation of the Union, can save America from
|
|
as many standing armies as it may be split into States or
|
|
Confederacies, and from such a progressive augmentation, of these
|
|
establishments in each, as will render them as burdensome to the
|
|
properties and ominous to the liberties of the people, as any
|
|
establishment that can become necessary, under a united and
|
|
efficient government, must be tolerable to the former and safe to
|
|
the latter. The palpable necessity of the power to provide and
|
|
maintain a navy has protected that part of the Constitution
|
|
against a spirit of censure, which has spared few other parts. It
|
|
must, indeed, be numbered among the greatest blessings of
|
|
America, that as her Union will be the only source of her
|
|
maritime strength, so this will be a principal source of her
|
|
security against danger from abroad. In this respect our
|
|
situation bears another likeness to the insular advantage of
|
|
Great Britain. The batteries most capable of repelling foreign
|
|
enterprises on our safety, are happily such as can never be
|
|
turned by a perfidious government against our liberties. The
|
|
inhabitants of the Atlantic frontier are all of them deeply
|
|
interested in this provision for naval protection, and if they
|
|
have hitherto been suffered to sleep quietly in their beds; if
|
|
their property has remained safe against the predatory spirit of
|
|
licentious adventurers; if their maritime towns have not yet
|
|
been compelled to ransom themselves from the terrors of a
|
|
conflagration, by yielding to the exactions of daring and sudden
|
|
invaders, these instances of good fortune are not to be ascribed
|
|
to the capacity of the existing government for the protection of
|
|
those from whom it claims allegiance, but to causes that are
|
|
fugitive and fallacious. If we except perhaps Virginia and
|
|
Maryland, which are peculiarly vulnerable on their eastern
|
|
frontiers, no part of the Union ought to feel more anxiety on
|
|
this subject than New York. Her seacoast is extensive. A very
|
|
important district of the State is an island. The State itself is
|
|
penetrated by a large navigable river for more than fifty
|
|
leagues. The great emporium of its commerce, the great reservoir
|
|
of its wealth, lies every moment at the mercy of events, and may
|
|
almost be regarded as a hostage for ignominious compliances with
|
|
the dictates of a foreign enemy, or even with the rapacious
|
|
demands of pirates and barbarians. Should a war be the result of
|
|
the precarious situation of European affairs, and all the unruly
|
|
passions attending it be let loose on the ocean, our escape from
|
|
insults and depredations, not only on that element, but every
|
|
part of the other bordering on it, will be truly miraculous. In
|
|
the present condition of America, the States more immediately
|
|
exposed to these calamities have nothing to hope from the phantom
|
|
of a general government which now exists; and if their single
|
|
resources were equal to the task of fortifying themselves against
|
|
the danger, the object to be protected would be almost consumed
|
|
by the means of protecting them. The power of regulating and
|
|
calling forth the militia has been already sufficiently
|
|
vindicated and explained. The power of levying and borrowing
|
|
money, being the sinew of that which is to be exerted in the
|
|
national defense, is properly thrown into the same class with
|
|
it. This power, also, has been examined already with much
|
|
attention, and has, I trust, been clearly shown to be necessary,
|
|
both in the extent and form given to it by the Constitution. I
|
|
will address one additional reflection only to those who contend
|
|
that the power ought to have been restrained to external
|
|
taxation by which they mean, taxes on articles imported from
|
|
other countries. It cannot be doubted that this will always be a
|
|
valuable source of revenue; that for a considerable time it must
|
|
be a principal source; that at this moment it is an essential
|
|
one. But we may form very mistaken ideas on this subject, if we
|
|
do not call to mind in our calculations, that the extent of
|
|
revenue drawn from foreign commerce must vary with the
|
|
variations, both in the extent and the kind of imports; and that
|
|
these variations do not correspond with the progress of
|
|
population, which must be the general measure of the public
|
|
wants. As long as agriculture continues the sole field of labor,
|
|
the importation of manufactures must increase as the consumers
|
|
multiply. As soon as domestic manufactures are begun by the hands
|
|
not called for by agriculture, the imported manufactures will
|
|
decrease as the numbers of people increase. In a more remote
|
|
stage, the imports may consist in a considerable part of raw
|
|
materials, which will be wrought into articles for exportation,
|
|
and will, therefore, require rather the encouragement of
|
|
bounties, than to be loaded with discouraging duties. A system of
|
|
government, meant for duration, ought to contemplate these
|
|
revolutions, and be able to accommodate itself to them. Some,
|
|
who have not denied the necessity of the power of taxation, have
|
|
grounded a very fierce attack against the Constitution, on the
|
|
language in which it is defined. It has been urged and echoed,
|
|
that the power ``to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts, and
|
|
excises, to pay the debts, and provide for the common defense and
|
|
general welfare of the United States,'' amounts to an unlimited
|
|
commission to exercise every power which may be alleged to be
|
|
necessary for the common defense or general welfare. No stronger
|
|
proof could be given of the distress under which these writers
|
|
labor for objections, than their stooping to such a
|
|
misconstruction. Had no other enumeration or definition of the
|
|
powers of the Congress been found in the Constitution, than the
|
|
general expressions just cited, the authors of the objection
|
|
might have had some color for it; though it would have been
|
|
difficult to find a reason for so awkward a form of describing an
|
|
authority to legislate in all possible cases. A power to destroy
|
|
the freedom of the press, the trial by jury, or even to regulate
|
|
the course of descents, or the forms of conveyances, must be very
|
|
singularly expressed by the terms ``to raise money for the
|
|
general welfare. ''But what color can the objection have, when a
|
|
specification of the objects alluded to by these general terms
|
|
immediately follows, and is not even separated by a longer pause
|
|
than a semicolon? If the different parts of the same instrument
|
|
ought to be so expounded, as to give meaning to every part which
|
|
will bear it, shall one part of the same sentence be excluded
|
|
altogether from a share in the meaning; and shall the more
|
|
doubtful and indefinite terms be retained in their full extent,
|
|
and the clear and precise expressions be denied any signification
|
|
whatsoever? For what purpose could the enumeration of particular
|
|
powers be inserted, if these and all others were meant to be
|
|
included in the preceding general power? Nothing is more natural
|
|
nor common than first to use a general phrase, and then to
|
|
explain and qualify it by a recital of particulars. But the idea
|
|
of an enumeration of particulars which neither explain nor
|
|
qualify the general meaning, and can have no other effect than to
|
|
confound and mislead, is an absurdity, which, as we are reduced
|
|
to the dilemma of charging either on the authors of the objection
|
|
or on the authors of the Constitution, we must take the liberty
|
|
of supposing, had not its origin with the latter. The objection
|
|
here is the more extraordinary, as it appears that the language
|
|
used by the convention is a copy from the articles of
|
|
Confederation. The objects of the Union among the States, as
|
|
described in article third, are ``their common defense, security
|
|
of their liberties, and mutual and general welfare. '' The terms
|
|
of article eighth are still more identical: ``All charges of war
|
|
and all other expenses that shall be incurred for the common
|
|
defense or general welfare, and allowed by the United States in
|
|
Congress, shall be defrayed out of a common treasury,'' etc. A
|
|
similar language again occurs in article ninth. Construe either
|
|
of these articles by the rules which would justify the
|
|
construction put on the new Constitution, and they vest in the
|
|
existing Congress a power to legislate in all cases whatsoever.
|
|
But what would have been thought of that assembly, if, attaching
|
|
themselves to these general expressions, and disregarding the
|
|
specifications which ascertain and limit their import, they had
|
|
exercised an unlimited power of providing for the common defense
|
|
and general welfare? I appeal to the objectors themselves,
|
|
whether they would in that case have employed the same reasoning
|
|
in justification of Congress as they now make use of against the
|
|
convention. How difficult it is for error to escape its own
|
|
condemnation! PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 42
|
|
The Powers Conferred by the Constitution Further Considered
|
|
From the New York Packet. Tuesday, January 22, 1788.
|
|
|
|
MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE SECOND class of powers, lodged in the general government,
|
|
consists of those which regulate the intercourse with foreign
|
|
nations, to wit: to make treaties; to send and receive
|
|
ambassadors, other public ministers, and consuls; to define and
|
|
punish piracies and felonies committed on the high seas, and
|
|
offenses against the law of nations; to regulate foreign
|
|
commerce, including a power to prohibit, after the year 1808, the
|
|
importation of slaves, and to lay an intermediate duty of ten
|
|
dollars per head, as a discouragement to such importations. This
|
|
class of powers forms an obvious and essential branch of the
|
|
federal administration. If we are to be one nation in any
|
|
respect, it clearly ought to be in respect to other nations. The
|
|
powers to make treaties and to send and receive ambassadors,
|
|
speak their own propriety. Both of them are comprised in the
|
|
articles of Confederation, with this difference only, that the
|
|
former is disembarrassed, by the plan of the convention, of an
|
|
exception, under which treaties might be substantially frustrated
|
|
by regulations of the States; and that a power of appointing and
|
|
receiving ``other public ministers and consuls,'' is expressly
|
|
and very properly added to the former provision concerning
|
|
ambassadors. The term ambassador, if taken strictly, as seems to
|
|
be required by the second of the articles of Confederation,
|
|
comprehends the highest grade only of public ministers, and
|
|
excludes the grades which the United States will be most likely
|
|
to prefer, where foreign embassies may be necessary. And under no
|
|
latitude of construction will the term comprehend consuls. Yet it
|
|
has been found expedient, and has been the practice of Congress,
|
|
to employ the inferior grades of public ministers, and to send
|
|
and receive consuls. It is true, that where treaties of commerce
|
|
stipulate for the mutual appointment of consuls, whose functions
|
|
are connected with commerce, the admission of foreign consuls may
|
|
fall within the power of making commercial treaties; and that
|
|
where no such treaties exist, the mission of American consuls
|
|
into foreign countries may PERHAPS be covered under the
|
|
authority, given by the ninth article of the Confederation, to
|
|
appoint all such civil officers as may be necessary for managing
|
|
the general affairs of the United States. But the admission of
|
|
consuls into the United States, where no previous treaty has
|
|
stipulated it, seems to have been nowhere provided for. A supply
|
|
of the omission is one of the lesser instances in which the
|
|
convention have improved on the model before them. But the most
|
|
minute provisions become important when they tend to obviate the
|
|
necessity or the pretext for gradual and unobserved usurpations
|
|
of power. A list of the cases in which Congress have been
|
|
betrayed, or forced by the defects of the Confederation, into
|
|
violations of their chartered authorities, would not a little
|
|
surprise those who have paid no attention to the subject; and
|
|
would be no inconsiderable argument in favor of the new
|
|
Constitution, which seems to have provided no less studiously for
|
|
the lesser, than the more obvious and striking defects of the
|
|
old. The power to define and punish piracies and felonies
|
|
committed on the high seas, and offenses against the law of
|
|
nations, belongs with equal propriety to the general government,
|
|
and is a still greater improvement on the articles of
|
|
Confederation. These articles contain no provision for the case
|
|
of offenses against the law of nations; and consequently leave
|
|
it in the power of any indiscreet member to embroil the
|
|
Confederacy with foreign nations. The provision of the federal
|
|
articles on the subject of piracies and felonies extends no
|
|
further than to the establishment of courts for the trial of
|
|
these offenses. The definition of piracies might, perhaps,
|
|
without inconveniency, be left to the law of nations; though a
|
|
legislative definition of them is found in most municipal codes.
|
|
A definition of felonies on the high seas is evidently
|
|
requisite. Felony is a term of loose signification, even in the
|
|
common law of England; and of various import in the statute law
|
|
of that kingdom. But neither the common nor the statute law of
|
|
that, or of any other nation, ought to be a standard for the
|
|
proceedings of this, unless previously made its own by
|
|
legislative adoption. The meaning of the term, as defined in the
|
|
codes of the several States, would be as impracticable as the
|
|
former would be a dishonorable and illegitimate guide. It is not
|
|
precisely the same in any two of the States; and varies in each
|
|
with every revision of its criminal laws. For the sake of
|
|
certainty and uniformity, therefore, the power of defining
|
|
felonies in this case was in every respect necessary and proper.
|
|
The regulation of foreign commerce, having fallen within several
|
|
views which have been taken of this subject, has been too fully
|
|
discussed to need additional proofs here of its being properly
|
|
submitted to the federal administration. It were doubtless to be
|
|
wished, that the power of prohibiting the importation of slaves
|
|
had not been postponed until the year 1808, or rather that it had
|
|
been suffered to have immediate operation. But it is not
|
|
difficult to account, either for this restriction on the general
|
|
government, or for the manner in which the whole clause is
|
|
expressed. It ought to be considered as a great point gained in
|
|
favor of humanity, that a period of twenty years may terminate
|
|
forever, within these States, a traffic which has so long and so
|
|
loudly upbraided the barbarism of modern policy; that within that
|
|
period, it will receive a considerable discouragement from the
|
|
federal government, and may be totally abolished, by a
|
|
concurrence of the few States which continue the unnatural
|
|
traffic, in the prohibitory example which has been given by so
|
|
great a majority of the Union. Happy would it be for the
|
|
unfortunate Africans, if an equal prospect lay before them of
|
|
being redeemed from the oppressions of their European brethren!
|
|
Attempts have been made to pervert this clause into an objection
|
|
against the Constitution, by representing it on one side as a
|
|
criminal toleration of an illicit practice, and on another as
|
|
calculated to prevent voluntary and beneficial emigrations from
|
|
Europe to America. I mention these misconstructions, not with a
|
|
view to give them an answer, for they deserve none, but as
|
|
specimens of the manner and spirit in which some have thought fit
|
|
to conduct their opposition to the proposed government. The
|
|
powers included in the THIRD class are those which provide for
|
|
the harmony and proper intercourse among the States. Under this
|
|
head might be included the particular restraints imposed on the
|
|
authority of the States, and certain powers of the judicial
|
|
department; but the former are reserved for a distinct class, and
|
|
the latter will be particularly examined when we arrive at the
|
|
structure and organization of the government. I shall confine
|
|
myself to a cursory review of the remaining powers comprehended
|
|
under this third description, to wit: to regulate commerce among
|
|
the several States and the Indian tribes; to coin money, regulate
|
|
the value thereof, and of foreign coin; to provide for the
|
|
punishment of counterfeiting the current coin and secureties of
|
|
the United States; to fix the standard of weights and measures;
|
|
to establish a uniform rule of naturalization, and uniform laws
|
|
of bankruptcy, to prescribe the manner in which the public acts,
|
|
records, and judicial proceedings of each State shall be proved,
|
|
and the effect they shall have in other States; and to establish
|
|
post offices and post roads. The defect of power in the existing
|
|
Confederacy to regulate the commerce between its several members,
|
|
is in the number of those which have been clearly pointed out by
|
|
experience. To the proofs and remarks which former papers have
|
|
brought into view on this subject, it may be added that without
|
|
this supplemental provision, the great and essential power of
|
|
regulating foreign commerce would have been incomplete and
|
|
ineffectual. A very material object of this power was the relief
|
|
of the States which import and export through other States, from
|
|
the improper contributions levied on them by the latter. Were
|
|
these at liberty to regulate the trade between State and State,
|
|
it must be foreseen that ways would be found out to load the
|
|
articles of import and export, during the passage through their
|
|
jurisdiction, with duties which would fall on the makers of the
|
|
latter and the consumers of the former. We may be assured by past
|
|
experience, that such a practice would be introduced by future
|
|
contrivances; and both by that and a common knowledge of human
|
|
affairs, that it would nourish unceasing animosities, and not
|
|
improbably terminate in serious interruptions of the public
|
|
tranquillity. To those who do not view the question through the
|
|
medium of passion or of interest, the desire of the commercial
|
|
States to collect, in any form, an indirect revenue from their
|
|
uncommercial neighbors, must appear not less impolitic than it is
|
|
unfair; since it would stimulate the injured party, by resentment
|
|
as well as interest, to resort to less convenient channels for
|
|
their foreign trade. But the mild voice of reason, pleading the
|
|
cause of an enlarged and permanent interest, is but too often
|
|
drowned, before public bodies as well as individuals, by the
|
|
clamors of an impatient avidity for immediate and immoderate
|
|
gain. The necessity of a superintending authority over the
|
|
reciprocal trade of confederated States, has been illustrated by
|
|
other examples as well as our own. In Switzerland, where the
|
|
Union is so very slight, each canton is obliged to allow to
|
|
merchandises a passage through its jurisdiction into other
|
|
cantons, without an augmentation of the tolls. In Germany it is a
|
|
law of the empire, that the princes and states shall not lay
|
|
tolls or customs on bridges, rivers, or passages, without the
|
|
consent of the emperor and the diet; though it appears from a
|
|
quotation in an antecedent paper, that the practice in this, as
|
|
in many other instances in that confederacy, has not followed the
|
|
law, and has produced there the mischiefs which have been
|
|
foreseen here. Among the restraints imposed by the Union of the
|
|
Netherlands on its members, one is, that they shall not establish
|
|
imposts disadvantageous to their neighbors, without the general
|
|
permission. The regulation of commerce with the Indian tribes is
|
|
very properly unfettered from two limitations in the articles of
|
|
Confederation, which render the provision obscure and
|
|
contradictory. The power is there restrained to Indians, not
|
|
members of any of the States, and is not to violate or infringe
|
|
the legislative right of any State within its own limits. What
|
|
description of Indians are to be deemed members of a State, is
|
|
not yet settled, and has been a question of frequent perplexity
|
|
and contention in the federal councils. And how the trade with
|
|
Indians, though not members of a State, yet residing within its
|
|
legislative jurisdiction, can be regulated by an external
|
|
authority, without so far intruding on the internal rights of
|
|
legislation, is absolutely incomprehensible. This is not the only
|
|
case in which the articles of Confederation have inconsiderately
|
|
endeavored to accomplish impossibilities; to reconcile a partial
|
|
sovereignty in the Union, with complete sovereignty in the
|
|
States; to subvert a mathematical axiom, by taking away a part,
|
|
and letting the whole remain. All that need be remarked on the
|
|
power to coin money, regulate the value thereof, and of foreign
|
|
coin, is, that by providing for this last case, the Constitution
|
|
has supplied a material omission in the articles of
|
|
Confederation. The authority of the existing Congress is
|
|
restrained to the regulation of coin STRUCK by their own
|
|
authority, or that of the respective States. It must be seen at
|
|
once that the proposed uniformity in the VALUE of the current
|
|
coin might be destroyed by subjecting that of foreign coin to the
|
|
different regulations of the different States. The punishment of
|
|
counterfeiting the public securities, as well as the current
|
|
coin, is submitted of course to that authority which is to secure
|
|
the value of both. The regulation of weights and measures is
|
|
transferred from the articles of Confederation, and is founded on
|
|
like considerations with the preceding power of regulating coin.
|
|
The dissimilarity in the rules of naturalization has long been
|
|
remarked as a fault in our system, and as laying a foundation for
|
|
intricate and delicate questions. In the fourth article of the
|
|
Confederation, it is declared ``that the FREE INHABITANTS of each
|
|
of these States, paupers, vagabonds, and fugitives from justice,
|
|
excepted, shall be entitled to all privileges and immunities of
|
|
FREE CITIZENS in the several States; and THE PEOPLE of each State
|
|
shall, in every other, enjoy all the privileges of trade and
|
|
commerce,'' etc. There is a confusion of language here, which is
|
|
remarkable. Why the terms FREE INHABITANTS are used in one part
|
|
of the article, FREE CITIZENS in another, and PEOPLE in another;
|
|
or what was meant by superadding to ``all privileges and
|
|
immunities of free citizens,'' ``all the privileges of trade and
|
|
commerce,''
|
|
cannot easily be determined. It seems to be a construction
|
|
scarcely avoidable, however, that those who come under the
|
|
denomination of FREE INHABITANTS of a State, although not
|
|
citizens of such State, are entitled, in every other State, to
|
|
all the privileges of FREE CITIZENS of the latter; that is, to
|
|
greater privileges than they may be entitled to in their own
|
|
State: so that it may be in the power of a particular State, or
|
|
rather every State is laid under a necessity, not only to confer
|
|
the rights of citizenship in other States upon any whom it may
|
|
admit to such rights within itself, but upon any whom it may
|
|
allow to become inhabitants within its jurisdiction. But were an
|
|
exposition of the term ``inhabitants'' to be admitted which
|
|
would confine the stipulated privileges to citizens alone, the
|
|
difficulty is diminished only, not removed. The very improper
|
|
power would still be retained by each State, of naturalizing
|
|
aliens in every other State. In one State, residence for a short
|
|
term confirms all the rights of citizenship: in another,
|
|
qualifications of greater importance are required. An alien,
|
|
therefore, legally incapacitated for certain rights in the
|
|
latter, may, by previous residence only in the former, elude his
|
|
incapacity; and thus the law of one State be preposterously
|
|
rendered paramount to the law of another, within the jurisdiction
|
|
of the other. We owe it to mere casualty, that very serious
|
|
embarrassments on this subject have been hitherto escaped. By the
|
|
laws of several States, certain descriptions of aliens, who had
|
|
rendered themselves obnoxious, were laid under interdicts
|
|
inconsistent not only with the rights of citizenship but with the
|
|
privilege of residence. What would have been the consequence, if
|
|
such persons, by residence or otherwise, had acquired the
|
|
character of citizens under the laws of another State, and then
|
|
asserted their rights as such, both to residence and citizenship,
|
|
within the State proscribing them? Whatever the legal
|
|
consequences might have been, other consequences would probably
|
|
have resulted, of too serious a nature not to be provided
|
|
against. The new Constitution has accordingly, with great
|
|
propriety, made provision against them, and all others proceeding
|
|
from the defect of the Confederation on this head, by authorizing
|
|
the general government to establish a uniform rule of
|
|
naturalization throughout the United States. The power of
|
|
establishing uniform laws of bankruptcy is so intimately
|
|
connected with the regulation of commerce, and will prevent so
|
|
many frauds where the parties or their property may lie or be
|
|
removed into different States, that the expediency of it seems
|
|
not likely to be drawn into question. The power of prescribing
|
|
by general laws, the manner in which the public acts, records and
|
|
judicial proceedings of each State shall be proved, and the
|
|
effect they shall have in other States, is an evident and
|
|
valuable improvement on the clause relating to this subject in
|
|
the articles of Confederation. The meaning of the latter is
|
|
extremely indeterminate, and can be of little importance under
|
|
any interpretation which it will bear. The power here established
|
|
may be rendered a very convenient instrument of justice, and be
|
|
particularly beneficial on the borders of contiguous States,
|
|
where the effects liable to justice may be suddenly and secretly
|
|
translated, in any stage of the process, within a foreign
|
|
jurisdiction. The power of establishing post roads must, in
|
|
every view, be a harmless power, and may, perhaps, by judicious
|
|
management, become productive of great public conveniency.
|
|
Nothing which tends to facilitate the intercourse between the
|
|
States can be deemed unworthy of the public care. PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 43
|
|
The Same Subject Continued(The Powers Conferred by the
|
|
Constitution Further Considered)
|
|
For the Independent Journal.
|
|
|
|
MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE FOURTH class comprises the following miscellaneous powers:1.
|
|
A power ``to promote the progress of science and useful arts, by
|
|
securing, for a limited time, to authors and inventors, the
|
|
exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries.
|
|
''The utility of this power will scarcely be questioned. The
|
|
copyright of authors has been solemnly adjudged, in Great
|
|
Britain, to be a right of common law. The right to useful
|
|
inventions seems with equal reason to belong to the inventors.
|
|
The public good fully coincides in both cases with the claims of
|
|
individuals. The States cannot separately make effectual
|
|
provisions for either of the cases, and most of them have
|
|
anticipated the decision of this point, by laws passed at the
|
|
instance of Congress. 2. ``To exercise exclusive legislation, in
|
|
all cases whatsoever, over such district (not exceeding ten miles
|
|
square) as may, by cession of particular States and the
|
|
acceptance of Congress, become the seat of the government of the
|
|
United States; and to exercise like authority over all places
|
|
purchased by the consent of the legislatures of the States in
|
|
which the same shall be, for the erection of forts, magazines,
|
|
arsenals, dockyards, and other needful buildings. ''The
|
|
indispensable necessity of complete authority at the seat of
|
|
government, carries its own evidence with it. It is a power
|
|
exercised by every legislature of the Union, I might say of the
|
|
world, by virtue of its general supremacy. Without it, not only
|
|
the public authority might be insulted and its proceedings
|
|
interrupted with impunity; but a dependence of the members of the
|
|
general government on the State comprehending the seat of the
|
|
government, for protection in the exercise of their duty, might
|
|
bring on the national councils an imputation of awe or influence,
|
|
equally dishonorable to the government and dissatisfactory to the
|
|
other members of the Confederacy. This consideration has the more
|
|
weight, as the gradual accumulation of public improvements at the
|
|
stationary residence of the government would be both too great a
|
|
public pledge to be left in the hands of a single State, and
|
|
would create so many obstacles to a removal of the government, as
|
|
still further to abridge its necessary independence. The extent
|
|
of this federal district is sufficiently circumscribed to satisfy
|
|
every jealousy of an opposite nature. And as it is to be
|
|
appropriated to this use with the consent of the State ceding it;
|
|
as the State will no doubt provide in the compact for the rights
|
|
and the consent of the citizens inhabiting it; as the inhabitants
|
|
will find sufficient inducements of interest to become willing
|
|
parties to the cession; as they will have had their voice in the
|
|
election of the government which is to exercise authority over
|
|
them; as a municipal legislature for local purposes, derived from
|
|
their own suffrages, will of course be allowed them; and as the
|
|
authority of the legislature of the State, and of the inhabitants
|
|
of the ceded part of it, to concur in the cession, will be
|
|
derived from the whole people of the State in their adoption of
|
|
the Constitution, every imaginable objection seems to be
|
|
obviated. The necessity of a like authority over forts,
|
|
magazines, etc. , established by the general government, is not
|
|
less evident. The public money expended on such places, and the
|
|
public property deposited in them, requires that they should be
|
|
exempt from the authority of the particular State. Nor would it
|
|
be proper for the places on which the security of the entire
|
|
Union may depend, to be in any degree dependent on a particular
|
|
member of it. All objections and scruples are here also obviated,
|
|
by requiring the concurrence of the States concerned, in every
|
|
such establishment. 3. ``To declare the punishment of treason,
|
|
but no attainder of treason shall work corruption of blood, or
|
|
forfeiture, except during the life of the person attained. ''As
|
|
treason may be committed against the United States, the authority
|
|
of the United States ought to be enabled to punish it. But as
|
|
new-fangled and artificial treasons have been the great engines
|
|
by which violent factions, the natural offspring of free
|
|
government, have usually wreaked their alternate malignity on
|
|
each other, the convention have, with great judgment, opposed a
|
|
barrier to this peculiar danger, by inserting a constitutional
|
|
definition of the crime, fixing the proof necessary for
|
|
conviction of it, and restraining the Congress, even in punishing
|
|
it, from extending the consequences of guilt beyond the person of
|
|
its author. 4. ``To admit new States into the Union; but no new
|
|
State shall be formed or erected within the jurisdiction of any
|
|
other State; nor any State be formed by the junction of two or
|
|
more States, or parts of States, without the consent of the
|
|
legislatures of the States concerned, as well as of the Congress.
|
|
''In the articles of Confederation, no provision is found on this
|
|
important subject. Canada was to be admitted of right, on her
|
|
joining in the measures of the United States; and the other
|
|
COLONIES, by which were evidently meant the other British
|
|
colonies, at the discretion of nine States. The eventual
|
|
establishment of NEW STATES seems to have been overlooked by the
|
|
compilers of that instrument. We have seen the inconvenience of
|
|
this omission, and the assumption of power into which Congress
|
|
have been led by it. With great propriety, therefore, has the new
|
|
system supplied the defect. The general precaution, that no new
|
|
States shall be formed, without the concurrence of the federal
|
|
authority, and that of the States concerned, is consonant to the
|
|
principles which ought to govern such transactions. The
|
|
particular precaution against the erection of new States, by the
|
|
partition of a State without its consent, quiets the jealousy of
|
|
the larger States; as that of the smaller is quieted by a like
|
|
precaution, against a junction of States without their consent.
|
|
5. ``To dispose of and make all needful rules and regulations
|
|
respecting the territory or other property belonging to the
|
|
United States, with a proviso, that nothing in the Constitution
|
|
shall be so construed as to prejudice any claims of the United
|
|
States, or of any particular State. ''This is a power of very
|
|
great importance, and required by considerations similar to those
|
|
which show the propriety of the former. The proviso annexed is
|
|
proper in itself, and was probably rendered absolutely necessary
|
|
by jealousies and questions concerning the Western territory
|
|
sufficiently known to the public. 6. ``To guarantee to every
|
|
State in the Union a republican form of government; to protect
|
|
each of them against invasion; and on application of the
|
|
legislature, or of the executive (when the legislature cannot be
|
|
convened), against domestic violence. ''In a confederacy founded
|
|
on republican principles, and composed of republican members, the
|
|
superintending government ought clearly to possess authority to
|
|
defend the system against aristocratic or monarchial
|
|
innovations. The more intimate the nature of such a union may be,
|
|
the greater interest have the members in the political
|
|
institutions of each other; and the greater right to insist that
|
|
the forms of government under which the compact was entered into
|
|
should be SUBSTANTIALLY maintained. But a right implies a remedy;
|
|
and where else could the remedy be deposited, than where it is
|
|
deposited by the Constitution? Governments of dissimilar
|
|
principles and forms have been found less adapted to a federal
|
|
coalition of any sort, than those of a kindred nature. ``As the
|
|
confederate republic of Germany,'' says Montesquieu, ``consists
|
|
of free cities and petty states, subject to different princes,
|
|
experience shows us that it is more imperfect than that of
|
|
Holland and Switzerland. '' ``Greece was undone,'' he adds, ``as
|
|
soon as the king of Macedon obtained a seat among the
|
|
Amphictyons. '' In the latter case, no doubt, the
|
|
disproportionate force, as well as the monarchical form, of the
|
|
new confederate, had its share of influence on the events. It may
|
|
possibly be asked, what need there could be of such a
|
|
precaution, and whether it may not become a pretext for
|
|
alterations in the State governments, without the concurrence of
|
|
the States themselves. These questions admit of ready answers. If
|
|
the interposition of the general government should not be
|
|
needed, the provision for such an event will be a harmless
|
|
superfluity only in the Constitution. But who can say what
|
|
experiments may be produced by the caprice of particular States,
|
|
by the ambition of enterprising leaders, or by the intrigues and
|
|
influence of foreign powers? To the second question it may be
|
|
answered, that if the general government should interpose by
|
|
virtue of this constitutional authority, it will be, of course,
|
|
bound to pursue the authority. But the authority extends no
|
|
further than to a GUARANTY of a republican form of government,
|
|
which supposes a pre-existing government of the form which is to
|
|
be guaranteed. As long, therefore, as the existing republican
|
|
forms are continued by the States, they are guaranteed by the
|
|
federal Constitution. Whenever the States may choose to
|
|
substitute other republican forms, they have a right to do so,
|
|
and to claim the federal guaranty for the latter. The only
|
|
restriction imposed on them is, that they shall not exchange
|
|
republican for antirepublican Constitutions; a restriction
|
|
which, it is presumed, will hardly be considered as a grievance.
|
|
A protection against invasion is due from every society to the
|
|
parts composing it. The latitude of the expression here used
|
|
seems to secure each State, not only against foreign hostility,
|
|
but against ambitious or vindictive enterprises of its more
|
|
powerful neighbors. The history, both of ancient and modern
|
|
confederacies, proves that the weaker members of the union ought
|
|
not to be insensible to the policy of this article. Protection
|
|
against domestic violence is added with equal propriety. It has
|
|
been remarked, that even among the Swiss cantons, which, properly
|
|
speaking, are not under one government, provision is made for
|
|
this object; and the history of that league informs us that
|
|
mutual aid is frequently claimed and afforded; and as well by
|
|
the most democratic, as the other cantons. A recent and
|
|
well-known event among ourselves has warned us to be prepared for
|
|
emergencies of a like nature. At first view, it might seem not
|
|
to square with the republican theory, to suppose, either that a
|
|
majority have not the right, or that a minority will have the
|
|
force, to subvert a government; and consequently, that the
|
|
federal interposition can never be required, but when it would be
|
|
improper. But theoretic reasoning, in this as in most other
|
|
cases, must be qualified by the lessons of practice. Why may not
|
|
illicit combinations, for purposes of violence, be formed as
|
|
well by a majority of a State, especially a small State as by a
|
|
majority of a county, or a district of the same State; and if
|
|
the authority of the State ought, in the latter case, to protect
|
|
the local magistracy, ought not the federal authority, in the
|
|
former, to support the State authority? Besides, there are
|
|
certain parts of the State constitutions which are so interwoven
|
|
with the federal Constitution, that a violent blow cannot be
|
|
given to the one without communicating the wound to the other.
|
|
Insurrections in a State will rarely induce a federal
|
|
interposition, unless the number concerned in them bear some
|
|
proportion to the friends of government. It will be much better
|
|
that the violence in such cases should be repressed by the
|
|
superintending power, than that the majority should be left to
|
|
maintain their cause by a bloody and obstinate contest. The
|
|
existence of a right to interpose, will generally prevent the
|
|
necessity of exerting it. Is it true that force and right are
|
|
necessarily on the same side in republican governments? May not
|
|
the minor party possess such a superiority of pecuniary
|
|
resources, of military talents and experience, or of secret
|
|
succors from foreign powers, as will render it superior also in
|
|
an appeal to the sword? May not a more compact and advantageous
|
|
position turn the scale on the same side, against a superior
|
|
number so situated as to be less capable of a prompt and
|
|
collected exertion of its strength? Nothing can be more
|
|
chimerical than to imagine that in a trial of actual force,
|
|
victory may be calculated by the rules which prevail in a census
|
|
of the inhabitants, or which determine the event of an election!
|
|
May it not happen, in fine, that the minority of CITIZENS may
|
|
become a majority of PERSONS, by the accession of alien
|
|
residents, of a casual concourse of adventurers, or of those whom
|
|
the constitution of the State has not admitted to the rights of
|
|
suffrage? I take no notice of an unhappy species of population
|
|
abounding in some of the States, who, during the calm of regular
|
|
government, are sunk below the level of men; but who, in the
|
|
tempestuous scenes of civil violence, may emerge into the human
|
|
character, and give a superiority of strength to any party with
|
|
which they may associate themselves. In cases where it may be
|
|
doubtful on which side justice lies, what better umpires could
|
|
be desired by two violent factions, flying to arms, and tearing a
|
|
State to pieces, than the representatives of confederate States,
|
|
not heated by the local flame? To the impartiality of judges,
|
|
they would unite the affection of friends. Happy would it be if
|
|
such a remedy for its infirmities could be enjoyed by all free
|
|
governments; if a project equally effectual could be established
|
|
for the universal peace of mankind! Should it be asked, what is
|
|
to be the redress for an insurrection pervading all the States,
|
|
and comprising a superiority of the entire force, though not a
|
|
constitutional right? the answer must be, that such a case, as
|
|
it would be without the compass of human remedies, so it is
|
|
fortunately not within the compass of human probability; and
|
|
that it is a sufficient recommendation of the federal
|
|
Constitution, that it diminishes the risk of a calamity for which
|
|
no possible constitution can provide a cure. Among the
|
|
advantages of a confederate republic enumerated by Montesquieu,
|
|
an important one is, ``that should a popular insurrection happen
|
|
in one of the States, the others are able to quell it. Should
|
|
abuses creep into one part, they are reformed by those that
|
|
remain sound. ''7. ``To consider all debts contracted, and
|
|
engagements entered into, before the adoption of this
|
|
Constitution, as being no less valid against the United States,
|
|
under this Constitution, than under the Confederation. ''This
|
|
can only be considered as a declaratory proposition; and may have
|
|
been inserted, among other reasons, for the satisfaction of the
|
|
foreign creditors of the United States, who cannot be strangers
|
|
to the pretended doctrine, that a change in the political form of
|
|
civil society has the magical effect of dissolving its moral
|
|
obligations. Among the lesser criticisms which have been
|
|
exercised on the Constitution, it has been remarked that the
|
|
validity of engagements ought to have been asserted in favor of
|
|
the United States, as well as against them; and in the spirit
|
|
which usually characterizes little critics, the omission has been
|
|
transformed and magnified into a plot against the national
|
|
rights. The authors of this discovery may be told, what few
|
|
others need to be informed of, that as engagements are in their
|
|
nature reciprocal, an assertion of their validity on one side,
|
|
necessarily involves a validity on the other side; and that as
|
|
the article is merely declaratory, the establishment of the
|
|
principle in one case is sufficient for every case. They may be
|
|
further told, that every constitution must limit its precautions
|
|
to dangers that are not altogether imaginary; and that no real
|
|
danger can exist that the government would DARE, with, or even
|
|
without, this constitutional declaration before it, to remit the
|
|
debts justly due to the public, on the pretext here condemned. 8.
|
|
``To provide for amendments to be ratified by three fourths of
|
|
the States under two exceptions only. ''That useful alterations
|
|
will be suggested by experience, could not but be foreseen. It
|
|
was requisite, therefore, that a mode for introducing them should
|
|
be provided. The mode preferred by the convention seems to be
|
|
stamped with every mark of propriety. It guards equally against
|
|
that extreme facility, which would render the Constitution too
|
|
mutable; and that extreme difficulty, which might perpetuate its
|
|
discovered faults. It, moreover, equally enables the general and
|
|
the State governments to originate the amendment of errors, as
|
|
they may be pointed out by the experience on one side, or on the
|
|
other. The exception in favor of the equality of suffrage in the
|
|
Senate, was probably meant as a palladium to the residuary
|
|
sovereignty of the States, implied and secured by that principle
|
|
of representation in one branch of the legislature; and was
|
|
probably insisted on by the States particularly attached to that
|
|
equality. The other exception must have been admitted on the same
|
|
considerations which produced the privilege defended by it. 9.
|
|
``The ratification of the conventions of nine States shall be
|
|
sufficient for the establishment of this Constitution between the
|
|
States, ratifying the same. ''This article speaks for itself.
|
|
The express authority of the people alone could give due validity
|
|
to the Constitution. To have required the unanimous ratification
|
|
of the thirteen States, would have subjected the essential
|
|
interests of the whole to the caprice or corruption of a single
|
|
member. It would have marked a want of foresight in the
|
|
convention, which our own experience would have rendered
|
|
inexcusable. Two questions of a very delicate nature present
|
|
themselves on this occasion: 1. On what principle the
|
|
Confederation, which stands in the solemn form of a compact among
|
|
the States, can be superseded without the unanimous consent of
|
|
the parties to it? 2. What relation is to subsist between the
|
|
nine or more States ratifying the Constitution, and the remaining
|
|
few who do not become parties to it? The first question is
|
|
answered at once by recurring to the absolute necessity of the
|
|
case; to the great principle of self-preservation; to the
|
|
transcendent law of nature and of nature's God, which declares
|
|
that the safety and happiness of society are the objects at which
|
|
all political institutions aim, and to which all such
|
|
institutions must be sacrificed. PERHAPS, also, an answer may be
|
|
found without searching beyond the principles of the compact
|
|
itself. It has been heretofore noted among the defects of the
|
|
Confederation, that in many of the States it had received no
|
|
higher sanction than a mere legislative ratification. The
|
|
principle of reciprocality seems to require that its obligation
|
|
on the other States should be reduced to the same standard. A
|
|
compact between independent sovereigns, founded on ordinary acts
|
|
of legislative authority, can pretend to no higher validity than
|
|
a league or treaty between the parties. It is an established
|
|
doctrine on the subject of treaties, that all the articles are
|
|
mutually conditions of each other; that a breach of any one
|
|
article is a breach of the whole treaty; and that a breach,
|
|
committed by either of the parties, absolves the others, and
|
|
authorizes them, if they please, to pronounce the compact
|
|
violated and void. Should it unhappily be necessary to appeal to
|
|
these delicate truths for a justification for dispensing with
|
|
the consent of particular States to a dissolution of the federal
|
|
pact, will not the complaining parties find it a difficult task
|
|
to answer the MULTIPLIED and IMPORTANT infractions with which
|
|
they may be confronted? The time has been when it was incumbent
|
|
on us all to veil the ideas which this paragraph exhibits. The
|
|
scene is now changed, and with it the part which the same motives
|
|
dictate. The second question is not less delicate; and the
|
|
flattering prospect of its being merely hypothetical forbids an
|
|
overcurious discussion of it. It is one of those cases which must
|
|
be left to provide for itself. In general, it may be observed,
|
|
that although no political relation can subsist between the
|
|
assenting and dissenting States, yet the moral relations will
|
|
remain uncancelled. The claims of justice, both on one side and
|
|
on the other, will be in force, and must be fulfilled; the
|
|
rights of humanity must in all cases be duly and mutually
|
|
respected; whilst considerations of a common interest, and,
|
|
above all, the remembrance of the endearing scenes which are
|
|
past, and the anticipation of a speedy triumph over the obstacles
|
|
to reunion, will, it is hoped, not urge in vain MODERATION on one
|
|
side, and PRUDENCE on the other. PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 44
|
|
|
|
Restrictions on the Authority of the Several States
|
|
From the New York Packet. Friday, January 25, 1788.
|
|
|
|
MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
A FIFTH class of provisions in favor of the federal authority
|
|
consists of the following restrictions on the authority of the
|
|
several States:1. ``No State shall enter into any treaty,
|
|
alliance, or confederation; grant letters of marque and reprisal;
|
|
coin money; emit bills of credit; make any thing but gold and
|
|
silver a legal tender in payment of debts; pass any bill of
|
|
attainder, ex-post-facto law, or law impairing the obligation of
|
|
contracts; or grant any title of nobility. ''The prohibition
|
|
against treaties, alliances, and confederations makes a part of
|
|
the existing articles of Union; and for reasons which need no
|
|
explanation, is copied into the new Constitution. The prohibition
|
|
of letters of marque is another part of the old system, but is
|
|
somewhat extended in the new. According to the former, letters of
|
|
marque could be granted by the States after a declaration of war;
|
|
according to the latter, these licenses must be obtained, as well
|
|
during war as previous to its declaration, from the government of
|
|
the United States. This alteration is fully justified by the
|
|
advantage of uniformity in all points which relate to foreign
|
|
powers; and of immediate responsibility to the nation in all
|
|
those for whose conduct the nation itself is to be responsible.
|
|
The right of coining money, which is here taken from the States,
|
|
was left in their hands by the Confederation, as a concurrent
|
|
right with that of Congress, under an exception in favor of the
|
|
exclusive right of Congress to regulate the alloy and value. In
|
|
this instance, also, the new provision is an improvement on the
|
|
old. Whilst the alloy and value depended on the general
|
|
authority, a right of coinage in the particular States could have
|
|
no other effect than to multiply expensive mints and diversify
|
|
the forms and weights of the circulating pieces. The latter
|
|
inconveniency defeats one purpose for which the power was
|
|
originally submitted to the federal head; and as far as the
|
|
former might prevent an inconvenient remittance of gold and
|
|
silver to the central mint for recoinage, the end can be as well
|
|
attained by local mints established under the general authority.
|
|
The extension of the prohibition to bills of credit must give
|
|
pleasure to every citizen, in proportion to his love of justice
|
|
and his knowledge of the true springs of public prosperity. The
|
|
loss which America has sustained since the peace, from the
|
|
pestilent effects of paper money on the necessary confidence
|
|
between man and man, on the necessary confidence in the public
|
|
councils, on the industry and morals of the people, and on the
|
|
character of republican government, constitutes an enormous debt
|
|
against the States chargeable with this unadvised measure, which
|
|
must long remain unsatisfied; or rather an accumulation of guilt,
|
|
which can be expiated no otherwise than by a voluntary sacrifice
|
|
on the altar of justice, of the power which has been the
|
|
instrument of it. In addition to these persuasive
|
|
considerations, it may be observed, that the same reasons which
|
|
show the necessity of denying to the States the power of
|
|
regulating coin, prove with equal force that they ought not to be
|
|
at liberty to substitute a paper medium in the place of coin. Had
|
|
every State a right to regulate the value of its coin, there
|
|
might be as many different currencies as States, and thus the
|
|
intercourse among them would be impeded; retrospective
|
|
alterations in its value might be made, and thus the citizens of
|
|
other States be injured, and animosities be kindled among the
|
|
States themselves. The subjects of foreign powers might suffer
|
|
from the same cause, and hence the Union be discredited and
|
|
embroiled by the indiscretion of a single member. No one of these
|
|
mischiefs is less incident to a power in the States to emit paper
|
|
money, than to coin gold or silver. The power to make any thing
|
|
but gold and silver a tender in payment of debts, is withdrawn
|
|
from the States, on the same principle with that of issuing a
|
|
paper currency. Bills of attainder, ex-post-facto laws, and laws
|
|
impairing the obligation of contracts, are contrary to the first
|
|
principles of the social compact, and to every principle of sound
|
|
legislation. The two former are expressly prohibited by the
|
|
declarations prefixed to some of the State constitutions, and all
|
|
of them are prohibited by the spirit and scope of these
|
|
fundamental charters. Our own experience has taught us,
|
|
nevertheless, that additional fences against these dangers ought
|
|
not to be omitted. Very properly, therefore, have the convention
|
|
added this constitutional bulwark in favor of personal security
|
|
and private rights; and I am much deceived if they have not, in
|
|
so doing, as faithfully consulted the genuine sentiments as the
|
|
undoubted interests of their constituents. The sober people of
|
|
America are weary of the fluctuating policy which has directed
|
|
the public councils. They have seen with regret and indignation
|
|
that sudden changes and legislative interferences, in cases
|
|
affecting personal rights, become jobs in the hands of
|
|
enterprising and influential speculators, and snares to the
|
|
more-industrious and lessinformed part of the community. They
|
|
have seen, too, that one legislative interference is but the
|
|
first link of a long chain of repetitions, every subsequent
|
|
interference being naturally produced by the effects of the
|
|
preceding. They very rightly infer, therefore, that some thorough
|
|
reform is wanting, which will banish speculations on public
|
|
measures, inspire a general prudence and industry, and give a
|
|
regular course to the business of society. The prohibition with
|
|
respect to titles of nobility is copied from the articles of
|
|
Confederation and needs no comment. 2. ``No State shall, without
|
|
the consent of the Congress, lay any imposts or duties on imports
|
|
or exports, except what may be absolutely necessary for executing
|
|
its inspection laws, and the net produce of all duties and
|
|
imposts laid by any State on imports or exports, shall be for the
|
|
use of the treasury of the United States; and all such laws shall
|
|
be subject to the revision and control of the Congress. No State
|
|
shall, without the consent of Congress, lay any duty on tonnage,
|
|
keep troops or ships of war in time of peace, enter into any
|
|
agreement or compact with another State, or with a foreign power,
|
|
or engage in war unless actually invaded, or in such imminent
|
|
danger as will not admit of delay. ''The restraint on the power
|
|
of the States over imports and exports is enforced by all the
|
|
arguments which prove the necessity of submitting the regulation
|
|
of trade to the federal councils. It is needless, therefore, to
|
|
remark further on this head, than that the manner in which the
|
|
restraint is qualified seems well calculated at once to secure to
|
|
the States a reasonable discretion in providing for the
|
|
conveniency of their imports and exports, and to the United
|
|
States a reasonable check against the abuse of this discretion.
|
|
The remaining particulars of this clause fall within reasonings
|
|
which are either so obvious, or have been so fully developed,
|
|
that they may be passed over without remark. The SIXTH and last
|
|
class consists of the several powers and provisions by which
|
|
efficacy is given to all the rest. 1. Of these the first is, the
|
|
``power to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for
|
|
carrying into execution the foregoing powers, and all other
|
|
powers vested by this Constitution in the government of the
|
|
United States, or in any department or officer thereof. ''Few
|
|
parts of the Constitution have been assailed with more
|
|
intemperance than this; yet on a fair investigation of it, no
|
|
part can appear more completely invulnerable. Without the
|
|
SUBSTANCE of this power, the whole Constitution would be a dead
|
|
letter. Those who object to the article, therefore, as a part of
|
|
the Constitution, can only mean that the FORM of the provision is
|
|
improper. But have they considered whether a better form could
|
|
have been substituted? There are four other possible methods
|
|
which the Constitution might have taken on this subject. They
|
|
might have copied the second article of the existing
|
|
Confederation, which would have prohibited the exercise of any
|
|
power not EXPRESSLY delegated; they might have attempted a
|
|
positive enumeration of the powers comprehended under the general
|
|
terms ``necessary and proper''; they might have attempted a
|
|
negative enumeration of them, by specifying the powers excepted
|
|
from the general definition; they might have been altogether
|
|
silent on the subject, leaving these necessary and proper powers
|
|
to construction and inference. Had the convention taken the
|
|
first method of adopting the second article of Confederation, it
|
|
is evident that the new Congress would be continually exposed, as
|
|
their predecessors have been, to the alternative of construing
|
|
the term ``EXPRESSLY'' with so much rigor, as to disarm the
|
|
government of all real authority whatever, or with so much
|
|
latitude as to destroy altogether the force of the restriction.
|
|
It would be easy to show, if it were necessary, that no important
|
|
power, delegated by the articles of Confederation, has been or
|
|
can be executed by Congress, without recurring more or less to
|
|
the doctrine of CONSTRUCTION or IMPLICATION. As the powers
|
|
delegated under the new system are more extensive, the government
|
|
which is to administer it would find itself still more distressed
|
|
with the alternative of betraying the public interests by doing
|
|
nothing, or of violating the Constitution by exercising powers
|
|
indispensably necessary and proper, but, at the same time, not
|
|
EXPRESSLY granted. Had the convention attempted a positive
|
|
enumeration of the powers necessary and proper for carrying their
|
|
other powers into effect, the attempt would have involved a
|
|
complete digest of laws on every subject to which the
|
|
Constitution relates; accommodated too, not only to the existing
|
|
state of things, but to all the possible changes which futurity
|
|
may produce; for in every new application of a general power, the
|
|
PARTICULAR POWERS, which are the means of attaining the OBJECT of
|
|
the general power, must always necessarily vary with that object,
|
|
and be often properly varied whilst the object remains the same.
|
|
Had they attempted to enumerate the particular powers or means
|
|
not necessary or proper for carrying the general powers into
|
|
execution, the task would have been no less chimerical; and would
|
|
have been liable to this further objection, that every defect in
|
|
the enumeration would have been equivalent to a positive grant of
|
|
authority. If, to avoid this consequence, they had attempted a
|
|
partial enumeration of the exceptions, and described the residue
|
|
by the general terms, NOT NECESSARY OR PROPER, it must have
|
|
happened that the enumeration would comprehend a few of the
|
|
excepted powers only; that these would be such as would be least
|
|
likely to be assumed or tolerated, because the enumeration would
|
|
of course select such as would be least necessary or proper; and
|
|
that the unnecessary and improper powers included in the
|
|
residuum, would be less forcibly excepted, than if no partial
|
|
enumeration had been made. Had the Constitution been silent on
|
|
this head, there can be no doubt that all the particular powers
|
|
requisite as means of executing the general powers would have
|
|
resulted to the government, by unavoidable implication. No axiom
|
|
is more clearly established in law, or in reason, than that
|
|
wherever the end is required, the means are authorized; wherever
|
|
a general power to do a thing is given, every particular power
|
|
necessary for doing it is included. Had this last method,
|
|
therefore, been pursued by the convention, every objection now
|
|
urged against their plan would remain in all its plausibility;
|
|
and the real inconveniency would be incurred of not removing a
|
|
pretext which may be seized on critical occasions for drawing
|
|
into question the essential powers of the Union. If it be asked
|
|
what is to be the consequence, in case the Congress shall
|
|
misconstrue this part of the Constitution, and exercise powers
|
|
not warranted by its true meaning, I answer, the same as if they
|
|
should misconstrue or enlarge any other power vested in them; as
|
|
if the general power had been reduced to particulars, and any one
|
|
of these were to be violated; the same, in short, as if the State
|
|
legislatures should violate the irrespective constitutional
|
|
authorities. In the first instance, the success of the usurpation
|
|
will depend on the executive and judiciary departments, which are
|
|
to expound and give effect to the legislative acts; and in the
|
|
last resort a remedy must be obtained from the people who can, by
|
|
the election of more faithful representatives, annul the acts of
|
|
the usurpers. The truth is, that this ultimate redress may be
|
|
more confided in against unconstitutional acts of the federal
|
|
than of the State legislatures, for this plain reason, that as
|
|
every such act of the former will be an invasion of the rights of
|
|
the latter, these will be ever ready to mark the innovation, to
|
|
sound the alarm to the people, and to exert their local influence
|
|
in effecting a change of federal representatives. There being no
|
|
such intermediate body between the State legislatures and the
|
|
people interested in watching the conduct of the former,
|
|
violations of the State constitutions are more likely to remain
|
|
unnoticed and unredressed. 2. ``This Constitution and the laws
|
|
of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof,
|
|
and all treaties made, or which shall be made, under the
|
|
authority of the United States, shall be the supreme law of the
|
|
land, and the judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any
|
|
thing in the constitution or laws of any State to the contrary
|
|
notwithstanding. ''The indiscreet zeal of the adversaries to the
|
|
Constitution has betrayed them into an attack on this part of it
|
|
also, without which it would have been evidently and radically
|
|
defective. To be fully sensible of this, we need only suppose for
|
|
a moment that the supremacy of the State constitutions had been
|
|
left complete by a saving clause in their favor. In the first
|
|
place, as these constitutions invest the State legislatures with
|
|
absolute sovereignty, in all cases not excepted by the existing
|
|
articles of Confederation, all the authorities contained in the
|
|
proposed Constitution, so far as they exceed those enumerated in
|
|
the Confederation, would have been annulled, and the new Congress
|
|
would have been reduced to the same impotent condition with their
|
|
predecessors. In the next place, as the constitutions of some of
|
|
the States do not even expressly and fully recognize the existing
|
|
powers of the Confederacy, an express saving of the supremacy of
|
|
the former would, in such States, have brought into question
|
|
every power contained in the proposed Constitution. In the third
|
|
place, as the constitutions of the States differ much from each
|
|
other, it might happen that a treaty or national law, of great
|
|
and equal importance to the States, would interfere with some and
|
|
not with other constitutions, and would consequently be valid in
|
|
some of the States, at the same time that it would have no effect
|
|
in others. In fine, the world would have seen, for the first
|
|
time, a system of government founded on an inversion of the
|
|
fundamental principles of all government; it would have seen the
|
|
authority of the whole society every where subordinate to the
|
|
authority of the parts; it would have seen a monster, in which
|
|
the head was under the direction of the members. 3. ``The
|
|
Senators and Representatives, and the members of the several
|
|
State legislatures, and all executive and judicial officers, both
|
|
of the United States and the several States, shall be bound by
|
|
oath or affirmation to support this Constitution. ''It has been
|
|
asked why it was thought necessary, that the State magistracy
|
|
should be bound to support the federal Constitution, and
|
|
unnecessary that a like oath should be imposed on the officers of
|
|
the United States, in favor of the State constitutions. Several
|
|
reasons might be assigned for the distinction. I content myself
|
|
with one, which is obvious and conclusive. The members of the
|
|
federal government will have no agency in carrying the State
|
|
constitutions into effect. The members and officers of the State
|
|
governments, on the contrary, will have an essential agency in
|
|
giving effect to the federal Constitution. The election of the
|
|
President and Senate will depend, in all cases, on the
|
|
legislatures of the several States. And the election of the House
|
|
of Representatives will equally depend on the same authority in
|
|
the first instance; and will, probably, forever be conducted by
|
|
the officers, and according to the laws, of the States. 4. Among
|
|
the provisions for giving efficacy to the federal powers might be
|
|
added those which belong to the executive and judiciary
|
|
departments: but as these are reserved for particular examination
|
|
in another place, I pass them over in this. We have now
|
|
reviewed, in detail, all the articles composing the sum or
|
|
quantity of power delegated by the proposed Constitution to the
|
|
federal government, and are brought to this undeniable
|
|
conclusion, that no part of the power is unnecessary or improper
|
|
for accomplishing the necessary objects of the Union. The
|
|
question, therefore, whether this amount of power shall be
|
|
granted or not, resolves itself into another question, whether or
|
|
not a government commensurate to the exigencies of the Union
|
|
shall be established; or, in other words, whether the Union
|
|
itself shall be preserved. PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 45
|
|
|
|
The Alleged Danger From the Powers of the Union to the State
|
|
Governments Considered
|
|
For the Independent Fournal.
|
|
|
|
MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
HAVING shown that no one of the powers transferred to the federal
|
|
government is unnecessary or improper, the next question to be
|
|
considered is, whether the whole mass of them will be dangerous
|
|
to the portion of authority left in the several States. The
|
|
adversaries to the plan of the convention, instead of considering
|
|
in the first place what degree of power was absolutely necessary
|
|
for the purposes of the federal government, have exhausted
|
|
themselves in a secondary inquiry into the possible consequences
|
|
of the proposed degree of power to the governments of the
|
|
particular States. But if the Union, as has been shown, be
|
|
essential to the security of the people of America against
|
|
foreign danger; if it be essential to their security against
|
|
contentions and wars among the different States; if it be
|
|
essential to guard them against those violent and oppressive
|
|
factions which embitter the blessings of liberty, and against
|
|
those military establishments which must gradually poison its
|
|
very fountain; if, in a word, the Union be essential to the
|
|
happiness of the people of America, is it not preposterous, to
|
|
urge as an objection to a government, without which the objects
|
|
of the Union cannot be attained, that such a government may
|
|
derogate from the importance of the governments of the individual
|
|
States? Was, then, the American Revolution effected, was the
|
|
American Confederacy formed, was the precious blood of thousands
|
|
spilt, and the hard-earned substance of millions lavished, not
|
|
that the people of America should enjoy peace, liberty, and
|
|
safety, but that the government of the individual States, that
|
|
particular municipal establishments, might enjoy a certain extent
|
|
of power, and be arrayed with certain dignities and attributes of
|
|
sovereignty? We have heard of the impious doctrine in the Old
|
|
World, that the people were made for kings, not kings for the
|
|
people. Is the same doctrine to be revived in the New, in another
|
|
shape that the solid happiness of the people is to be sacrificed
|
|
to the views of political institutions of a different form? It is
|
|
too early for politicians to presume on our forgetting that the
|
|
public good, the real welfare of the great body of the people, is
|
|
the supreme object to be pursued; and that no form of government
|
|
whatever has any other value than as it may be fitted for the
|
|
attainment of this object. Were the plan of the convention
|
|
adverse to the public happiness, my voice would be, Reject the
|
|
plan. Were the Union itself inconsistent with the public
|
|
happiness, it would be, Abolish the Union. In like manner, as far
|
|
as the sovereignty of the States cannot be reconciled to the
|
|
happiness of the people, the voice of every good citizen must be,
|
|
Let the former be sacrificed to the latter. How far the sacrifice
|
|
is necessary, has been shown. How far the unsacrificed residue
|
|
will be endangered, is the question before us. Several important
|
|
considerations have been touched in the course of these papers,
|
|
which discountenance the supposition that the operation of the
|
|
federal government will by degrees prove fatal to the State
|
|
governments. The more I revolve the subject, the more fully I am
|
|
persuaded that the balance is much more likely to be disturbed by
|
|
the preponderancy of the last than of the first scale. We have
|
|
seen, in all the examples of ancient and modern confederacies,
|
|
the strongest tendency continually betraying itself in the
|
|
members, to despoil the general government of its authorities,
|
|
with a very ineffectual capacity in the latter to defend itself
|
|
against the encroachments. Although, in most of these examples,
|
|
the system has been so dissimilar from that under consideration
|
|
as greatly to weaken any inference concerning the latter from the
|
|
fate of the former, yet, as the States will retain, under the
|
|
proposed Constitution, a very extensive portion of active
|
|
sovereignty, the inference ought not to be wholly disregarded. In
|
|
the Achaean league it is probable that the federal head had a
|
|
degree and species of power, which gave it a considerable
|
|
likeness to the government framed by the convention. The Lycian
|
|
Confederacy, as far as its principles and form are transmitted,
|
|
must have borne a still greater analogy to it. Yet history does
|
|
not inform us that either of them ever degenerated, or tended to
|
|
degenerate, into one consolidated government. On the contrary, we
|
|
know that the ruin of one of them proceeded from the incapacity
|
|
of the federal authority to prevent the dissensions, and finally
|
|
the disunion, of the subordinate authorities. These cases are the
|
|
more worthy of our attention, as the external causes by which the
|
|
component parts were pressed together were much more numerous and
|
|
powerful than in our case; and consequently less powerful
|
|
ligaments within would be sufficient to bind the members to the
|
|
head, and to each other. In the feudal system, we have seen a
|
|
similar propensity exemplified. Notwithstanding the want of
|
|
proper sympathy in every instance between the local sovereigns
|
|
and the people, and the sympathy in some instances between the
|
|
general sovereign and the latter, it usually happened that the
|
|
local sovereigns prevailed in the rivalship for encroachments.
|
|
Had no external dangers enforced internal harmony and
|
|
subordination, and particularly, had the local sovereigns
|
|
possessed the affections of the people, the great kingdoms in
|
|
Europe would at this time consist of as many independent princes
|
|
as there were formerly feudatory barons. The State government
|
|
will have the advantage of the Federal government, whether we
|
|
compare them in respect to the immediate dependence of the one on
|
|
the other; to the weight of personal influence which each side
|
|
will possess; to the powers respectively vested in them; to the
|
|
predilection and probable support of the people; to the
|
|
disposition and faculty of resisting and frustrating the measures
|
|
of each other. The State governments may be regarded as
|
|
constituent and essential parts of the federal government; whilst
|
|
the latter is nowise essential to the operation or organization
|
|
of the former. Without the intervention of the State
|
|
legislatures, the President of the United States cannot be
|
|
elected at all. They must in all cases have a great share in his
|
|
appointment, and will, perhaps, in most cases, of themselves
|
|
determine it. The Senate will be elected absolutely and
|
|
exclusively by the State legislatures. Even the House of
|
|
Representatives, though drawn immediately from the people, will
|
|
be chosen very much under the influence of that class of men,
|
|
whose influence over the people obtains for themselves an
|
|
election into the State legislatures. Thus, each of the principal
|
|
branches of the federal government will owe its existence more or
|
|
less to the favor of the State governments, and must consequently
|
|
feel a dependence, which is much more likely to beget a
|
|
disposition too obsequious than too overbearing towards them. On
|
|
the other side, the component parts of the State governments will
|
|
in no instance be indebted for their appointment to the direct
|
|
agency of the federal government, and very little, if at all, to
|
|
the local influence of its members. The number of individuals
|
|
employed under the Constitution of the United States will be much
|
|
smaller than the number employed under the particular States.
|
|
There will consequently be less of personal influence on the side
|
|
of the former than of the latter. The members of the legislative,
|
|
executive, and judiciary departments of thirteen and more States,
|
|
the justices of peace, officers of militia, ministerial officers
|
|
of justice, with all the county, corporation, and town officers,
|
|
for three millions and more of people, intermixed, and having
|
|
particular acquaintance with every class and circle of people,
|
|
must exceed, beyond all proportion, both in number and influence,
|
|
those of every description who will be employed in the
|
|
administration of the federal system. Compare the members of the
|
|
three great departments of the thirteen States, excluding from
|
|
the judiciary department the justices of peace, with the members
|
|
of the corresponding departments of the single government of the
|
|
Union; compare the militia officers of three millions of people
|
|
with the military and marine officers of any establishment which
|
|
is within the compass of probability, or, I may add, of
|
|
possibility, and in this view alone, we may pronounce the
|
|
advantage of the States to be decisive. If the federal government
|
|
is to have collectors of revenue, the State governments will have
|
|
theirs also. And as those of the former will be principally on
|
|
the seacoast, and not very numerous, whilst those of the latter
|
|
will be spread over the face of the country, and will be very
|
|
numerous, the advantage in this view also lies on the same side.
|
|
It is true, that the Confederacy is to possess, and may exercise,
|
|
the power of collecting internal as well as external taxes
|
|
throughout the States; but it is probable that this power will
|
|
not be resorted to, except for supplemental purposes of revenue;
|
|
that an option will then be given to the States to supply their
|
|
quotas by previous collections of their own; and that the
|
|
eventual collection, under the immediate authority of the Union,
|
|
will generally be made by the officers, and according to the
|
|
rules, appointed by the several States. Indeed it is extremely
|
|
probable, that in other instances, particularly in the
|
|
organization of the judicial power, the officers of the States
|
|
will be clothed with the correspondent authority of the Union.
|
|
Should it happen, however, that separate collectors of internal
|
|
revenue should be appointed under the federal government, the
|
|
influence of the whole number would not bear a comparison with
|
|
that of the multitude of State officers in the opposite scale.
|
|
Within every district to which a federal collector would be
|
|
allotted, there would not be less than thirty or forty, or even
|
|
more, officers of different descriptions, and many of them
|
|
persons of character and weight, whose influence would lie on the
|
|
side of the State. The powers delegated by the proposed
|
|
Constitution to the federal government are few and defined. Those
|
|
which are to remain in the State governments are numerous and
|
|
indefinite. The former will be exercised principally on external
|
|
objects, as war, peace, negotiation, and foreign commerce; with
|
|
which last the power of taxation will, for the most part, be
|
|
connected. The powers reserved to the several States will extend
|
|
to all the objects which, in the ordinary course of affairs,
|
|
concern the lives, liberties, and properties of the people, and
|
|
the internal order, improvement, and prosperity of the State. The
|
|
operations of the federal government will be most extensive and
|
|
important in times of war and danger; those of the State
|
|
governments, in times of peace and security. As the former
|
|
periods will probably bear a small proportion to the latter, the
|
|
State governments will here enjoy another advantage over the
|
|
federal government. The more adequate, indeed, the federal powers
|
|
may be rendered to the national defense, the less frequent will
|
|
be those scenes of danger which might favor their ascendancy over
|
|
the governments of the particular States. If the new Constitution
|
|
be examined with accuracy and candor, it will be found that the
|
|
change which it proposes consists much less in the addition of
|
|
NEW POWERS to the Union, than in the invigoration of its ORIGINAL
|
|
POWERS. The regulation of commerce, it is true, is a new power;
|
|
but that seems to be an addition which few oppose, and from which
|
|
no apprehensions are entertained. The powers relating to war and
|
|
peace, armies and fleets, treaties and finance, with the other
|
|
more considerable powers, are all vested in the existing Congress
|
|
by the articles of Confederation. The proposed change does not
|
|
enlarge these powers; it only substitutes a more effectual mode
|
|
of administering them. The change relating to taxation may be
|
|
regarded as the most important; and yet the present Congress have
|
|
as complete authority to REQUIRE of the States indefinite
|
|
supplies of money for the common defense and general welfare, as
|
|
the future Congress will have to require them of individual
|
|
citizens; and the latter will be no more bound than the States
|
|
themselves have been, to pay the quotas respectively taxed on
|
|
them. Had the States complied punctually with the articles of
|
|
Confederation, or could their compliance have been enforced by as
|
|
peaceable means as may be used with success towards single
|
|
persons, our past experience is very far from countenancing an
|
|
opinion, that the State governments would have lost their
|
|
constitutional powers, and have gradually undergone an entire
|
|
consolidation. To maintain that such an event would have ensued,
|
|
would be to say at once, that the existence of the State
|
|
governments is incompatible with any system whatever that
|
|
accomplishes the essental purposes of the Union. PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 46
|
|
|
|
The Influence of the State and Federal Governments Compared
|
|
From the New York Packet. Tuesday, January 29, 1788.
|
|
|
|
MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
RESUMING the subject of the last paper, I proceed to inquire
|
|
whether the federal government or the State governments will have
|
|
the advantage with regard to the predilection and support of the
|
|
people. Notwithstanding the different modes in which they are
|
|
appointed, we must consider both of them as substantially
|
|
dependent on the great body of the citizens of the United States.
|
|
I assume this position here as it respects the first, reserving
|
|
the proofs for another place. The federal and State governments
|
|
are in fact but different agents and trustees of the people,
|
|
constituted with different powers, and designed for different
|
|
purposes. The adversaries of the Constitution seem to have lost
|
|
sight of the people altogether in their reasonings on this
|
|
subject; and to have viewed these different establishments, not
|
|
only as mutual rivals and enemies, but as uncontrolled by any
|
|
common superior in their efforts to usurp the authorities of each
|
|
other. These gentlemen must here be reminded of their error. They
|
|
must be told that the ultimate authority, wherever the derivative
|
|
may be found, resides in the people alone, and that it will not
|
|
depend merely on the comparative ambition or address of the
|
|
different governments, whether either, or which of them, will be
|
|
able to enlarge its sphere of jurisdiction at the expense of the
|
|
other. Truth, no less than decency, requires that the event in
|
|
every case should be supposed to depend on the sentiments and
|
|
sanction of their common constituents. Many considerations,
|
|
besides those suggested on a former occasion, seem to place it
|
|
beyond doubt that the first and most natural attachment of the
|
|
people will be to the governments of their respective States.
|
|
Into the administration of these a greater number of individuals
|
|
will expect to rise. From the gift of these a greater number of
|
|
offices and emoluments will flow. By the superintending care of
|
|
these, all the more domestic and personal interests of the people
|
|
will be regulated and provided for. With the affairs of these,
|
|
the people will be more familiarly and minutely conversant. And
|
|
with the members of these, will a greater proportion of the
|
|
people have the ties of personal acquaintance and friendship, and
|
|
of family and party attachments; on the side of these,
|
|
therefore, the popular bias may well be expected most strongly to
|
|
incline. Experience speaks the same language in this case. The
|
|
federal administration, though hitherto very defective in
|
|
comparison with what may be hoped under a better system, had,
|
|
during the war, and particularly whilst the independent fund of
|
|
paper emissions was in credit, an activity and importance as
|
|
great as it can well have in any future circumstances whatever.
|
|
It was engaged, too, in a course of measures which had for their
|
|
object the protection of everything that was dear, and the
|
|
acquisition of everything that could be desirable to the people
|
|
at large. It was, nevertheless, invariably found, after the
|
|
transient enthusiasm for the early Congresses was over, that the
|
|
attention and attachment of the people were turned anew to their
|
|
own particular governments; that the federal council was at no
|
|
time the idol of popular favor; and that opposition to proposed
|
|
enlargements of its powers and importance was the side usually
|
|
taken by the men who wished to build their political consequence
|
|
on the prepossessions of their fellow-citizens. If, therefore,
|
|
as has been elsewhere remarked, the people should in future
|
|
become more partial to the federal than to the State governments,
|
|
the change can only result from such manifest and irresistible
|
|
proofs of a better administration, as will overcome all their
|
|
antecedent propensities. And in that case, the people ought not
|
|
surely to be precluded from giving most of their confidence where
|
|
they may discover it to be most due; but even in that case the
|
|
State governments could have little to apprehend, because it is
|
|
only within a certain sphere that the federal power can, in the
|
|
nature of things, be advantageously administered. The remaining
|
|
points on which I propose to compare the federal and State
|
|
governments, are the disposition and the faculty they may
|
|
respectively possess, to resist and frustrate the measures of
|
|
each other. It has been already proved that the members of the
|
|
federal will be more dependent on the members of the State
|
|
governments, than the latter will be on the former. It has
|
|
appeared also, that the prepossessions of the people, on whom
|
|
both will depend, will be more on the side of the State
|
|
governments, than of the federal government. So far as the
|
|
disposition of each towards the other may be influenced by these
|
|
causes, the State governments must clearly have the advantage.
|
|
But in a distinct and very important point of view, the advantage
|
|
will lie on the same side. The prepossessions, which the members
|
|
themselves will carry into the federal government, will generally
|
|
be favorable to the States; whilst it will rarely happen, that
|
|
the members of the State governments will carry into the public
|
|
councils a bias in favor of the general government. A local
|
|
spirit will infallibly prevail much more in the members of
|
|
Congress, than a national spirit will prevail in the legislatures
|
|
of the particular States. Every one knows that a great proportion
|
|
of the errors committed by the State legislatures proceeds from
|
|
the disposition of the members to sacrifice the comprehensive and
|
|
permanent interest of the State, to the particular and separate
|
|
views of the counties or districts in which they reside. And if
|
|
they do not sufficiently enlarge their policy to embrace the
|
|
collective welfare of their particular State, how can it be
|
|
imagined that they will make the aggregate prosperity of the
|
|
Union, and the dignity and respectability of its government, the
|
|
objects of their affections and consultations? For the same
|
|
reason that the members of the State legislatures will be
|
|
unlikely to attach themselves sufficiently to national objects,
|
|
the members of the federal legislature will be likely to attach
|
|
themselves too much to local objects. The States will be to the
|
|
latter what counties and towns are to the former. Measures will
|
|
too often be decided according to their probable effect, not on
|
|
the national prosperity and happiness, but on the prejudices,
|
|
interests, and pursuits of the governments and people of the
|
|
individual States. What is the spirit that has in general
|
|
characterized the proceedings of Congress? A perusal of their
|
|
journals, as well as the candid acknowledgments of such as have
|
|
had a seat in that assembly, will inform us, that the members
|
|
have but too frequently displayed the character, rather of
|
|
partisans of their respective States, than of impartial guardians
|
|
of a common interest; that where on one occasion improper
|
|
sacrifices have been made of local considerations, to the
|
|
aggrandizement of the federal government, the great interests of
|
|
the nation have suffered on a hundred, from an undue attention to
|
|
the local prejudices, interests, and views of the particular
|
|
States. I mean not by these reflections to insinuate, that the
|
|
new federal government will not embrace a more enlarged plan of
|
|
policy than the existing government may have pursued; much less,
|
|
that its views will be as confined as those of the State
|
|
legislatures; but only that it will partake sufficiently of the
|
|
spirit of both, to be disinclined to invade the rights of the
|
|
individual States, or the preorgatives of their governments. The
|
|
motives on the part of the State governments, to augment their
|
|
prerogatives by defalcations from the federal government, will be
|
|
overruled by no reciprocal predispositions in the members. Were
|
|
it admitted, however, that the Federal government may feel an
|
|
equal disposition with the State governments to extend its power
|
|
beyond the due limits, the latter would still have the advantage
|
|
in the means of defeating such encroachments. If an act of a
|
|
particular State, though unfriendly to the national government,
|
|
be generally popular in that State and should not too grossly
|
|
violate the oaths of the State officers, it is executed
|
|
immediately and, of course, by means on the spot and depending on
|
|
the State alone. The opposition of the federal government, or the
|
|
interposition of federal officers, would but inflame the zeal of
|
|
all parties on the side of the State, and the evil could not be
|
|
prevented or repaired, if at all, without the employment of means
|
|
which must always be resorted to with reluctance and difficulty.
|
|
On the other hand, should an unwarrantable measure of the federal
|
|
government be unpopular in particular States, which would seldom
|
|
fail to be the case, or even a warrantable measure be so, which
|
|
may sometimes be the case, the means of opposition to it are
|
|
powerful and at hand. The disquietude of the people; their
|
|
repugnance and, perhaps, refusal to co-operate with the officers
|
|
of the Union; the frowns of the executive magistracy of the
|
|
State; the embarrassments created by legislative devices, which
|
|
would often be added on such occasions, would oppose, in any
|
|
State, difficulties not to be despised; would form, in a large
|
|
State, very serious impediments; and where the sentiments of
|
|
several adjoining States happened to be in unison, would present
|
|
obstructions which the federal government would hardly be willing
|
|
to encounter. But ambitious encroachments of the federal
|
|
government, on the authority of the State governments, would not
|
|
excite the opposition of a single State, or of a few States
|
|
only. They would be signals of general alarm. Every government
|
|
would espouse the common cause. A correspondence would be
|
|
opened. Plans of resistance would be concerted. One spirit would
|
|
animate and conduct the whole. The same combinations, in short,
|
|
would result from an apprehension of the federal, as was produced
|
|
by the dread of a foreign, yoke; and unless the projected
|
|
innovations should be voluntarily renounced, the same appeal to
|
|
a trial of force would be made in the one case as was made in the
|
|
other. But what degree of madness could ever drive the federal
|
|
government to such an extremity. In the contest with Great
|
|
Britain, one part of the empire was employed against the other.
|
|
The more numerous part invaded the rights of the less numerous
|
|
part. The attempt was unjust and unwise; but it was not in
|
|
speculation absolutely chimerical. But what would be the contest
|
|
in the case we are supposing? Who would be the parties? A few
|
|
representatives of the people would be opposed to the people
|
|
themselves; or rather one set of representatives would be
|
|
contending against thirteen sets of representatives, with the
|
|
whole body of their common constituents on the side of the
|
|
latter. The only refuge left for those who prophesy the downfall
|
|
of the State governments is the visionary supposition that the
|
|
federal government may previously accumulate a military force for
|
|
the projects of ambition. The reasonings contained in these
|
|
papers must have been employed to little purpose indeed, if it
|
|
could be necessary now to disprove the reality of this danger.
|
|
That the people and the States should, for a sufficient period of
|
|
time, elect an uninterupted succession of men ready to betray
|
|
both; that the traitors should, throughout this period,
|
|
uniformly and systematically pursue some fixed plan for the
|
|
extension of the military establishment; that the governments
|
|
and the people of the States should silently and patiently behold
|
|
the gathering storm, and continue to supply the materials, until
|
|
it should be prepared to burst on their own heads, must appear to
|
|
every one more like the incoherent dreams of a delirious
|
|
jealousy, or the misjudged exaggerations of a counterfeit zeal,
|
|
than like the sober apprehensions of genuine patriotism.
|
|
Extravagant as the supposition is, let it however be made. Let a
|
|
regular army, fully equal to the resources of the country, be
|
|
formed; and let it be entirely at the devotion of the federal
|
|
government; still it would not be going too far to say, that the
|
|
State governments, with the people on their side, would be able
|
|
to repel the danger. The highest number to which, according to
|
|
the best computation, a standing army can be carried in any
|
|
country, does not exceed one hundredth part of the whole number
|
|
of souls; or one twenty-fifth part of the number able to bear
|
|
arms. This proportion would not yield, in the United States, an
|
|
army of more than twenty-five or thirty thousand men. To these
|
|
would be opposed a militia amounting to near half a million of
|
|
citizens with arms in their hands, officered by men chosen from
|
|
among themselves, fighting for their common liberties, and united
|
|
and conducted by governments possessing their affections and
|
|
confidence. It may well be doubted, whether a militia thus
|
|
circumstanced could ever be conquered by such a proportion of
|
|
regular troops. Those who are best acquainted with the last
|
|
successful resistance of this country against the British arms,
|
|
will be most inclined to deny the possibility of it. Besides the
|
|
advantage of being armed, which the Americans possess over the
|
|
people of almost every other nation, the existence of
|
|
subordinate governments, to which the people are attached, and by
|
|
which the militia officers are appointed, forms a barrier against
|
|
the enterprises of ambition, more insurmountable than any which a
|
|
simple government of any form can admit of. Notwithstanding the
|
|
military establishments in the several kingdoms of Europe, which
|
|
are carried as far as the public resources will bear, the
|
|
governments are afraid to trust the people with arms. And it is
|
|
not certain, that with this aid alone they would not be able to
|
|
shake off their yokes. But were the people to possess the
|
|
additional advantages of local governments chosen by themselves,
|
|
who could collect the national will and direct the national
|
|
force, and of officers appointed out of the militia, by these
|
|
governments, and attached both to them and to the militia, it may
|
|
be affirmed with the greatest assurance, that the throne of every
|
|
tyranny in Europe would be speedily overturned in spite of the
|
|
legions which surround it. Let us not insult the free and gallant
|
|
citizens of America with the suspicion, that they would be less
|
|
able to defend the rights of which they would be in actual
|
|
possession, than the debased subjects of arbitrary power would be
|
|
to rescue theirs from the hands of their oppressors. Let us
|
|
rather no longer insult them with the supposition that they can
|
|
ever reduce themselves to the necessity of making the experiment,
|
|
by a blind and tame submission to the long train of insidious
|
|
measures which must precede and produce it. The argument under
|
|
the present head may be put into a very concise form, which
|
|
appears altogether conclusive. Either the mode in which the
|
|
federal government is to be constructed will render it
|
|
sufficiently dependent on the people, or it will not. On the
|
|
first supposition, it will be restrained by that dependence from
|
|
forming schemes obnoxious to their constituents. On the other
|
|
supposition, it will not possess the confidence of the people,
|
|
and its schemes of usurpation will be easily defeated by the
|
|
State governments, who will be supported by the people. On
|
|
summing up the considerations stated in this and the last paper,
|
|
they seem to amount to the most convincing evidence, that the
|
|
powers proposed to be lodged in the federal government are as
|
|
little formidable to those reserved to the individual States, as
|
|
they are indispensably necessary to accomplish the purposes of
|
|
the Union; and that all those alarms which have been sounded, of
|
|
a meditated and consequential annihilation of the State
|
|
governments, must, on the most favorable interpretation, be
|
|
ascribed to the chimerical fears of the authors of them. PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 47
|
|
|
|
The Particular Structure of the New Government and the
|
|
Distribution of Power Among Its Different Parts
|
|
From the New York Packet. Friday, February 1, 1788.
|
|
|
|
MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
HAVING reviewed the general form of the proposed government and
|
|
the general mass of power allotted to it, I proceed to examine
|
|
the particular structure of this government, and the distribution
|
|
of this mass of power among its constituent parts. One of the
|
|
principal objections inculcated by the more respectable
|
|
adversaries to the Constitution, is its supposed violation of the
|
|
political maxim, that the legislative, executive, and judiciary
|
|
departments ought to be separate and distinct. In the structure
|
|
of the federal government, no regard, it is said, seems to have
|
|
been paid to this essential precaution in favor of liberty. The
|
|
several departments of power are distributed and blended in such
|
|
a manner as at once to destroy all symmetry and beauty of form,
|
|
and to expose some of the essential parts of the edifice to the
|
|
danger of being crushed by the disproportionate weight of other
|
|
parts. No political truth is certainly of greater intrinsic
|
|
value, or is stamped with the authority of more enlightened
|
|
patrons of liberty, than that on which the objection is founded.
|
|
The accumulation of all powers, legislative, executive, and
|
|
judiciary, in the same hands, whether of one, a few, or many, and
|
|
whether hereditary, selfappointed, or elective, may justly be
|
|
pronounced the very definition of tyranny. Were the federal
|
|
Constitution, therefore, really chargeable with the accumulation
|
|
of power, or with a mixture of powers, having a dangerous
|
|
tendency to such an accumulation, no further arguments would be
|
|
necessary to inspire a universal reprobation of the system. I
|
|
persuade myself, however, that it will be made apparent to every
|
|
one, that the charge cannot be supported, and that the maxim on
|
|
which it relies has been totally misconceived and misapplied. In
|
|
order to form correct ideas on this important subject, it will be
|
|
proper to investigate the sense in which the preservation of
|
|
liberty requires that the three great departments of power should
|
|
be separate and distinct. The oracle who is always consulted and
|
|
cited on this subject is the celebrated Montesquieu. If he be not
|
|
the author of this invaluable precept in the science of politics,
|
|
he has the merit at least of displaying and recommending it most
|
|
effectually to the attention of mankind. Let us endeavor, in the
|
|
first place, to ascertain his meaning on this point. The British
|
|
Constitution was to Montesquieu what Homer has been to the
|
|
didactic writers on epic poetry. As the latter have considered
|
|
the work of the immortal bard as the perfect model from which the
|
|
principles and rules of the epic art were to be drawn, and by
|
|
which all similar works were to be judged, so this great
|
|
political critic appears to have viewed the Constitution of
|
|
England as the standard, or to use his own expression, as the
|
|
mirror of political liberty; and to have delivered, in the form
|
|
of elementary truths, the several characteristic principles of
|
|
that particular system. That we may be sure, then, not to mistake
|
|
his meaning in this case, let us recur to the source from which
|
|
the maxim was drawn.
|
|
On the slightest view of the British
|
|
Constitution, we must perceive that the legislative, executive,
|
|
and judiciary departments are by no means totally separate and
|
|
distinct from each other. The executive magistrate forms an
|
|
integral part of the legislative authority. He alone has the
|
|
prerogative of making treaties with foreign sovereigns, which,
|
|
when made, have, under certain limitations, the force of
|
|
legislative acts. All the members of the judiciary department are
|
|
appointed by him, can be removed by him on the address of the two
|
|
Houses of Parliament, and form, when he pleases to consult them,
|
|
one of his constitutional councils. One branch of the legislative
|
|
department forms also a great constitutional council to the
|
|
executive chief, as, on another hand, it is the sole depositary
|
|
of judicial power in cases of impeachment, and is invested with
|
|
the supreme appellate jurisdiction in all other cases. The
|
|
judges, again, are so far connected with the legislative
|
|
department as often to attend and participate in its
|
|
deliberations, though not admitted to a legislative vote. From
|
|
these facts, by which Montesquieu was guided, it may clearly be
|
|
inferred that, in saying ``There can be no liberty where the
|
|
legislative and executive powers are united in the same person,
|
|
or body of magistrates,'' or, ``if the power of judging be not
|
|
separated from the legislative and executive powers,'' he did not
|
|
mean that these departments ought to have no PARTIAL AGENCY in,
|
|
or no CONTROL over, the acts of each other. His meaning, as his
|
|
own words import, and still more conclusively as illustrated by
|
|
the example in his eye, can amount to no more than this, that
|
|
where the WHOLE power of one department is exercised by the same
|
|
hands which possess the WHOLE power of another department, the
|
|
fundamental principles of a free constitution are subverted. This
|
|
would have been the case in the constitution examined by him, if
|
|
the king, who is the sole executive magistrate, had possessed
|
|
also the complete legislative power, or the supreme
|
|
administration of justice; or if the entire legislative body had
|
|
possessed the supreme judiciary, or the supreme executive
|
|
authority. This, however, is not among the vices of that
|
|
constitution. The magistrate in whom the whole executive power
|
|
resides cannot of himself make a law, though he can put a
|
|
negative on every law; nor administer justice in person, though
|
|
he has the appointment of those who do administer it. The judges
|
|
can exercise no executive prerogative, though they are shoots
|
|
from the executive stock; nor any legislative function, though
|
|
they may be advised with by the legislative councils. The entire
|
|
legislature can perform no judiciary act, though by the joint act
|
|
of two of its branches the judges may be removed from their
|
|
offices, and though one of its branches is possessed of the
|
|
judicial power in the last resort. The entire legislature, again,
|
|
can exercise no executive prerogative, though one of its branches
|
|
constitutes the supreme executive magistracy, and another, on the
|
|
impeachment of a third, can try and condemn all the subordinate
|
|
officers in the executive department. The reasons on which
|
|
Montesquieu grounds his maxim are a further demonstration of his
|
|
meaning. ``When the legislative and executive powers are united
|
|
in the same person or body,'' says he, ``there can be no liberty,
|
|
because apprehensions may arise lest THE SAME monarch or senate
|
|
should ENACT tyrannical laws to EXECUTE them in a tyrannical
|
|
manner. '' Again: ``Were the power of judging joined with the
|
|
legislative, the life and liberty of the subject would be exposed
|
|
to arbitrary control, for THE JUDGE would then be THE LEGISLATOR.
|
|
Were it joined to the executive power, THE JUDGE might behave
|
|
with all the violence of AN OPPRESSOR. '' Some of these reasons
|
|
are more fully explained in other passages; but briefly stated as
|
|
they are here, they sufficiently establish the meaning which we
|
|
have put on this celebrated maxim of this celebrated author.
|
|
|
|
If we look into the constitutions of the several States, we find
|
|
that, notwithstanding the emphatical and, in some instances, the
|
|
unqualified terms in which this axiom has been laid down, there
|
|
is not a single instance in which the several departments of
|
|
power have been kept absolutely separate and distinct. New
|
|
Hampshire, whose constitution was the last formed, seems to have
|
|
been fully aware of the impossibility and inexpediency of
|
|
avoiding any mixture whatever of these departments, and has
|
|
qualified the doctrine by declaring ``that the legislative,
|
|
executive, and judiciary powers ought to be kept as separate
|
|
from, and independent of, each other AS THE NATURE OF A FREE
|
|
GOVERNMENT WILL ADMIT; OR AS IS CONSISTENT WITH THAT CHAIN OF
|
|
CONNECTION THAT BINDS THE WHOLE FABRIC OF THE CONSTITUTION IN ONE
|
|
INDISSOLUBLE BOND OF UNITY AND AMITY. '' Her constitution
|
|
accordingly mixes these departments in several respects. The
|
|
Senate, which is a branch of the legislative department, is also
|
|
a judicial tribunal for the trial of impeachments. The
|
|
President, who is the head of the executive department, is the
|
|
presiding member also of the Senate; and, besides an equal vote
|
|
in all cases, has a casting vote in case of a tie. The executive
|
|
head is himself eventually elective every year by the
|
|
legislative department, and his council is every year chosen by
|
|
and from the members of the same department. Several of the
|
|
officers of state are also appointed by the legislature. And the
|
|
members of the judiciary department are appointed by the
|
|
executive department. The constitution of Massachusetts has
|
|
observed a sufficient though less pointed caution, in expressing
|
|
this fundamental article of liberty. It declares ``that the
|
|
legislative department shall never exercise the executive and
|
|
judicial powers, or either of them; the executive shall never
|
|
exercise the legislative and judicial powers, or either of them;
|
|
the judicial shall never exercise the legislative and executive
|
|
powers, or either of them. '' This declaration corresponds
|
|
precisely with the doctrine of Montesquieu, as it has been
|
|
explained, and is not in a single point violated by the plan of
|
|
the convention. It goes no farther than to prohibit any one of
|
|
the entire departments from exercising the powers of another
|
|
department. In the very Constitution to which it is prefixed, a
|
|
partial mixture of powers has been admitted. The executive
|
|
magistrate has a qualified negative on the legislative body, and
|
|
the Senate, which is a part of the legislature, is a court of
|
|
impeachment for members both of the executive and judiciary
|
|
departments. The members of the judiciary department, again, are
|
|
appointable by the executive department, and removable by the
|
|
same authority on the address of the two legislative branches.
|
|
Lastly, a number of the officers of government are annually
|
|
appointed by the legislative department. As the appointment to
|
|
offices, particularly executive offices, is in its nature an
|
|
executive function, the compilers of the Constitution have, in
|
|
this last point at least, violated the rule established by
|
|
themselves. I pass over the constitutions of Rhode Island and
|
|
Connecticut, because they were formed prior to the Revolution,
|
|
and even before the principle under examination had become an
|
|
object of political attention. The constitution of New York
|
|
contains no declaration on this subject; but appears very
|
|
clearly to have been framed with an eye to the danger of
|
|
improperly blending the different departments. It gives,
|
|
nevertheless, to the executive magistrate, a partial control over
|
|
the legislative department; and, what is more, gives a like
|
|
control to the judiciary department; and even blends the
|
|
executive and judiciary departments in the exercise of this
|
|
control. In its council of appointment members of the
|
|
legislative are associated with the executive authority, in the
|
|
appointment of officers, both executive and judiciary. And its
|
|
court for the trial of impeachments and correction of errors is
|
|
to consist of one branch of the legislature and the principal
|
|
members of the judiciary department. The constitution of New
|
|
Jersey has blended the different powers of government more than
|
|
any of the preceding. The governor, who is the executive
|
|
magistrate, is appointed by the legislature; is chancellor and
|
|
ordinary, or surrogate of the State; is a member of the Supreme
|
|
Court of Appeals, and president, with a casting vote, of one of
|
|
the legislative branches. The same legislative branch acts again
|
|
as executive council of the governor, and with him constitutes
|
|
the Court of Appeals. The members of the judiciary department are
|
|
appointed by the legislative department and removable by one
|
|
branch of it, on the impeachment of the other. According to the
|
|
constitution of Pennsylvania, the president, who is the head of
|
|
the executive department, is annually elected by a vote in which
|
|
the legislative department predominates. In conjunction with an
|
|
executive council, he appoints the members of the judiciary
|
|
department, and forms a court of impeachment for trial of all
|
|
officers, judiciary as well as executive. The judges of the
|
|
Supreme Court and justices of the peace seem also to be removable
|
|
by the legislature; and the executive power of pardoning in
|
|
certain cases, to be referred to the same department. The members
|
|
of the executive counoil are made EX-OFFICIO justices of peace
|
|
throughout the State. In Delaware, the chief executive magistrate
|
|
is annually elected by the legislative department. The speakers
|
|
of the two legislative branches are vice-presidents in the
|
|
executive department. The executive chief, with six others,
|
|
appointed, three by each of the legislative branches constitutes
|
|
the Supreme Court of Appeals; he is joined with the legislative
|
|
department in the appointment of the other judges. Throughout the
|
|
States, it appears that the members of the legislature may at the
|
|
same time be justices of the peace; in this State, the members of
|
|
one branch of it are EX-OFFICIO justices of the peace; as are
|
|
also the members of the executive council. The principal officers
|
|
of the executive department are appointed by the legislative; and
|
|
one branch of the latter forms a court of impeachments. All
|
|
officers may be removed on address of the legislature. Maryland
|
|
has adopted the maxim in the most unqualified terms; declaring
|
|
that the legislative, executive, and judicial powers of
|
|
government ought to be forever separate and distinct from each
|
|
other. Her constitution, notwithstanding, makes the executive
|
|
magistrate appointable by the legislative department; and the
|
|
members of the judiciary by the executive department. The
|
|
language of Virginia is still more pointed on this subject. Her
|
|
constitution declares, ``that the legislative, executive, and
|
|
judiciary departments shall be separate and distinct; so that
|
|
neither exercise the powers properly belonging to the other; nor
|
|
shall any person exercise the powers of more than one of them at
|
|
the same time, except that the justices of county courts shall be
|
|
eligible to either House of Assembly. '' Yet we find not only
|
|
this express exception, with respect to the members of the
|
|
irferior courts, but that the chief magistrate, with his
|
|
executive council, are appointable by the legislature; that two
|
|
members of the latter are triennially displaced at the pleasure
|
|
of the legislature; and that all the principal offices, both
|
|
executive and judiciary, are filled by the same department. The
|
|
executive prerogative of pardon, also, is in one case vested in
|
|
the legislative department. The constitution of North Carolina,
|
|
which declares ``that the legislative, executive, and supreme
|
|
judicial powers of government ought to be forever separate and
|
|
distinct from each other,'' refers, at the same time, to the
|
|
legislative department, the appointment not only of the executive
|
|
chief, but all the principal officers within both that and the
|
|
judiciary department. In South Carolina, the constitution makes
|
|
the executive magistracy eligible by the legislative department.
|
|
It gives to the latter, also, the appointment of the members of
|
|
the judiciary department, including even justices of the peace
|
|
and sheriffs; and the appointment of officers in the executive
|
|
department, down to captains in the army and navy of the State.
|
|
In the constitution of Georgia, where it is declared ``that the
|
|
legislative, executive, and judiciary departments shall be
|
|
separate and distinct, so that neither exercise the powers
|
|
properly belonging to the other,'' we find that the executive
|
|
department is to be filled by appointments of the legislature;
|
|
and the executive prerogative of pardon to be finally exercised
|
|
by the same authority. Even justices of the peace are to be
|
|
appointed by the legislature. In citing these cases, in which
|
|
the legislative, executive, and judiciary departments have not
|
|
been kept totally separate and distinct, I wish not to be
|
|
regarded as an advocate for the particular organizations of the
|
|
several State governments. I am fully aware that among the many
|
|
excellent principles which they exemplify, they carry strong
|
|
marks of the haste, and still stronger of the inexperience, under
|
|
which they were framed. It is but too obvious that in some
|
|
instances the fundamental principle under consideration has been
|
|
violated by too great a mixture, and even an actual
|
|
consolidation, of the different powers; and that in no instance
|
|
has a competent provision been made for maintaining in practice
|
|
the separation delineated on paper. What I have wished to evince
|
|
is, that the charge brought against the proposed Constitution, of
|
|
violating the sacred maxim of free government, is warranted
|
|
neither by the real meaning annexed to that maxim by its author,
|
|
nor by the sense in which it has hitherto been understood in
|
|
America. This interesting subject will be resumed in the ensuing
|
|
paper. PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 48
|
|
|
|
These Departments Should Not Be So Far Separated as to Have No
|
|
Constitutional Control Over Each Other
|
|
From the New York Packet. Friday, February 1, 1788.
|
|
|
|
MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
IT WAS shown in the last paper that the political apothegm there
|
|
examined does not require that the legislative, executive, and
|
|
judiciary departments should be wholly unconnected with each
|
|
other. I shall undertake, in the next place, to show that unless
|
|
these departments be so far connected and blended as to give to
|
|
each a constitutional control over the others, the degree of
|
|
separation which the maxim requires, as essential to a free
|
|
government, can never in practice be duly maintained. It is
|
|
agreed on all sides, that the powers properly belonging to one of
|
|
the departments ought not to be directly and completely
|
|
administered by either of the other departments. It is equally
|
|
evident, that none of them ought to possess, directly or
|
|
indirectly, an overruling influence over the others, in the
|
|
administration of their respective powers. It will not be denied,
|
|
that power is of an encroaching nature, and that it ought to be
|
|
effectually restrained from passing the limits assigned to it.
|
|
After discriminating, therefore, in theory, the several classes
|
|
of power, as they may in their nature be legislative, executive,
|
|
or judiciary, the next and most difficult task is to provide some
|
|
practical security for each, against the invasion of the others.
|
|
What this security ought to be, is the great problem to be
|
|
solved. Will it be sufficient to mark, with precision, the
|
|
boundaries of these departments, in the constitution of the
|
|
government, and to trust to these parchment barriers against the
|
|
encroaching spirit of power? This is the security which appears
|
|
to have been principally relied on by the compilers of most of
|
|
the American constitutions. But experience assures us, that the
|
|
efficacy of the provision has been greatly overrated; and that
|
|
some more adequate defense is indispensably necessary for the
|
|
more feeble, against the more powerful, members of the
|
|
government. The legislative department is everywhere extending
|
|
the sphere of its activity, and drawing all power into its
|
|
impetuous vortex. The founders of our republics have so much
|
|
merit for the wisdom which they have displayed, that no task can
|
|
be less pleasing than that of pointing out the errors into which
|
|
they have fallen. A respect for truth, however, obliges us to
|
|
remark, that they seem never for a moment to have turned their
|
|
eyes from the danger to liberty from the overgrown and
|
|
all-grasping prerogative of an hereditary magistrate, supported
|
|
and fortified by an hereditary branch of the legislative
|
|
authority. They seem never to have recollected the danger from
|
|
legislative usurpations, which, by assembling all power in the
|
|
same hands, must lead to the same tyranny as is threatened by
|
|
executive usurpations. In a government where numerous and
|
|
extensive prerogatives are placed in the hands of an hereditary
|
|
monarch, the executive department is very justly regarded as the
|
|
source of danger, and watched with all the jealousy which a zeal
|
|
for liberty ought to inspire. In a democracy, where a multitude
|
|
of people exercise in person the legislative functions, and are
|
|
continually exposed, by their incapacity for regular deliberation
|
|
and concerted measures, to the ambitious intrigues of their
|
|
executive magistrates, tyranny may well be apprehended, on some
|
|
favorable emergency, to start up in the same quarter. But in a
|
|
representative republic, where the executive magistracy is
|
|
carefully limited; both in the extent and the duration of its
|
|
power; and where the legislative power is exercised by an
|
|
assembly, which is inspired, by a supposed influence over the
|
|
people, with an intrepid confidence in its own strength; which is
|
|
sufficiently numerous to feel all the passions which actuate a
|
|
multitude, yet not so numerous as to be incapable of pursuing the
|
|
objects of its passions, by means which reason prescribes; it is
|
|
against the enterprising ambition of this department that the
|
|
people ought to indulge all their jealousy and exhaust all their
|
|
precautions. The legislative department derives a superiority in
|
|
our governments from other circumstances. Its constitutional
|
|
powers being at once more extensive, and less susceptible of
|
|
precise limits, it can, with the greater facility, mask, under
|
|
complicated and indirect measures, the encroachments which it
|
|
makes on the co-ordinate departments. It is not unfrequently a
|
|
question of real nicety in legislative bodies, whether the
|
|
operation of a particular measure will, or will not, extend
|
|
beyond the legislative sphere. On the other side, the executive
|
|
power being restrained within a narrower compass, and being more
|
|
simple in its nature, and the judiciary being described by
|
|
landmarks still less uncertain, projects of usurpation by either
|
|
of these departments would immediately betray and defeat
|
|
themselves. Nor is this all: as the legislative department alone
|
|
has access to the pockets of the people, and has in some
|
|
constitutions full discretion, and in all a prevailing influence,
|
|
over the pecuniary rewards of those who fill the other
|
|
departments, a dependence is thus created in the latter, which
|
|
gives still greater facility to encroachments of the former. I
|
|
have appealed to our own experience for the truth of what I
|
|
advance on this subject. Were it necessary to verify this
|
|
experience by particular proofs, they might be multiplied
|
|
without end. I might find a witness in every citizen who has
|
|
shared in, or been attentive to, the course of public
|
|
administrations. I might collect vouchers in abundance from the
|
|
records and archives of every State in the Union. But as a more
|
|
concise, and at the same time equally satisfactory, evidence, I
|
|
will refer to the example of two States, attested by two
|
|
unexceptionable authorities. The first example is that of
|
|
Virginia, a State which, as we have seen, has expressly declared
|
|
in its constitution, that the three great departments ought not
|
|
to be intermixed. The authority in support of it is Mr.
|
|
Jefferson, who, besides his other advantages for remarking the
|
|
operation of the government, was himself the chief magistrate of
|
|
it. In order to convey fully the ideas with which his experience
|
|
had impressed him on this subject, it will be necessary to quote
|
|
a passage of some length from his very interesting ``Notes on the
|
|
State of Virginia,'' p. 195. ``All the powers of government,
|
|
legislative, executive, and judiciary, result to the legislative
|
|
body. The concentrating these in the same hands, is precisely the
|
|
definition of despotic government. It will be no alleviation,
|
|
that these powers will be exercised by a plurality of hands, and
|
|
not by a single one. One hundred and seventy-three despots would
|
|
surely be as oppressive as one. Let those who doubt it, turn
|
|
their eyes on the republic of Venice. As little will it avail us,
|
|
that they are chosen by ourselves. An ELECTIVE DESPOTISM was not
|
|
the government we fought for; but one which should not only be
|
|
founded on free principles, but in which the powers of government
|
|
should be so divided and balanced among several bodies of
|
|
magistracy, as that no one could transcend their legal limits,
|
|
without being effectually checked and restrained by the others.
|
|
For this reason, that convention which passed the ordinance of
|
|
government, laid its foundation on this basis, that the
|
|
legislative, executive, and judiciary departments should be
|
|
separate and distinct, so that no person should exercise the
|
|
powers of more than one of them at the same time. BUT NO BARRIER
|
|
WAS PROVIDED BETWEEN THESE SEVERAL POWERS. The judiciary and the
|
|
executive members were left dependent on the legislative for
|
|
their subsistence in office, and some of them for their
|
|
continuance in it. If, therefore, the legislature assumes
|
|
executive and judiciary powers, no opposition is likely to be
|
|
made; nor, if made, can be effectual; because in that case they
|
|
may put their proceedings into the form of acts of Assembly,
|
|
which will render them obligatory on the other branches. They
|
|
have accordingly, IN MANY instances, DECIDED RIGHTS which should
|
|
have been left to JUDICIARY CONTROVERSY, and THE DIRECTION OF THE
|
|
EXECUTIVE, DURING THE WHOLE TIME OF THEIR SESSION, IS BECOMING
|
|
HABITUAL AND FAMILIAR. ''The other State which I shall take for
|
|
an example is Pennsylvania; and the other authority, the Council
|
|
of Censors, which assembled in the years 1783 and 1784. A part of
|
|
the duty of this body, as marked out by the constitution, was
|
|
``to inquire whether the constitution had been preserved
|
|
inviolate in every part; and whether the legislative and
|
|
executive branches of government had performed their duty as
|
|
guardians of the people, or assumed to themselves, or exercised,
|
|
other or greater powers than they are entitled to by the
|
|
constitution. '' In the execution of this trust, the council were
|
|
necessarily led to a comparison of both the legislative and
|
|
executive proceedings, with the constitutional powers of these
|
|
departments; and from the facts enumerated, and to the truth of
|
|
most of which both sides in the council subscribed, it appears
|
|
that the constitution had been flagrantly violated by the
|
|
legislature in a variety of important instances. A great number
|
|
of laws had been passed, violating, without any apparent
|
|
necessity, the rule requiring that all bills of a public nature
|
|
shall be previously printed for the consideration of the people;
|
|
although this is one of the precautions chiefly relied on by the
|
|
constitution against improper acts of legislature. The
|
|
constitutional trial by jury had been violated, and powers
|
|
assumed which had not been delegated by the constitution.
|
|
Executive powers had been usurped. The salaries of the judges,
|
|
which the constitution expressly requires to be fixed, had been
|
|
occasionally varied; and cases belonging to the judiciary
|
|
department frequently drawn within legislative cognizance and
|
|
determination. Those who wish to see the several particulars
|
|
falling under each of these heads, may consult the journals of
|
|
the council, which are in print. Some of them, it will be found,
|
|
may be imputable to peculiar circumstances connected with the
|
|
war; but the greater part of them may be considered as the
|
|
spontaneous shoots of an ill-constituted government. It appears,
|
|
also, that the executive department had not been innocent of
|
|
frequent breaches of the constitution. There are three
|
|
observations, however, which ought to be made on this head:
|
|
FIRST, a great proportion of the instances were either
|
|
immediately produced by the necessities of the war, or
|
|
recommended by Congress or the commander-in-chief; SECONDLY, in
|
|
most of the other instances, they conformed either to the
|
|
declared or the known sentiments of the legislative department;
|
|
THIRDLY, the executive department of Pennsylvania is
|
|
distinguished from that of the other States by the number of
|
|
members composing it. In this respect, it has as much affinity
|
|
to a legislative assembly as to an executive council. And being
|
|
at once exempt from the restraint of an individual responsibility
|
|
for the acts of the body, and deriving confidence from mutual
|
|
example and joint influence, unauthorized measures would, of
|
|
course, be more freely hazarded, than where the executive
|
|
department is administered by a single hand, or by a few hands.
|
|
The conclusion which I am warranted in drawing from these
|
|
observations is, that a mere demarcation on parchment of the
|
|
constitutional limits of the several departments, is not a
|
|
sufficient guard against those encroachments which lead to a
|
|
tyrannical concentration of all the powers of government in the
|
|
same hands. PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 49
|
|
|
|
Method of Guarding Against the Encroachments of Any One
|
|
Department of Government by Appealing to the People Through a
|
|
Convention
|
|
From the New York Packet. Tuesday, February 5, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON OR MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE author of the ``Notes on the State of Virginia,'' quoted in
|
|
the last paper, has subjoined to that valuable work the draught
|
|
of a constitution, which had been prepared in order to be laid
|
|
before a convention, expected to be called in 1783, by the
|
|
legislature, for the establishment of a constitution for that
|
|
commonwealth. The plan, like every thing from the same pen, marks
|
|
a turn of thinking, original, comprehensive, and accurate; and is
|
|
the more worthy of attention as it equally displays a fervent
|
|
attachment to republican government and an enlightened view of
|
|
the dangerous propensities against which it ought to be guarded.
|
|
One of the precautions which he proposes, and on which he appears
|
|
ultimately to rely as a palladium to the weaker departments of
|
|
power against the invasions of the stronger, is perhaps
|
|
altogether his own, and as it immediately relates to the subject
|
|
of our present inquiry, ought not to be overlooked. His
|
|
proposition is, ``that whenever any two of the three branches of
|
|
government shall concur in opinion, each by the voices of two
|
|
thirds of their whole number, that a convention is necessary for
|
|
altering the constitution, or CORRECTING BREACHES OF IT, a
|
|
convention shall be called for the purpose. ''As the people are
|
|
the only legitimate fountain of power, and it is from them that
|
|
the constitutional charter, under which the several branches of
|
|
government hold their power, is derived, it seems strictly
|
|
consonant to the republican theory, to recur to the same original
|
|
authority, not only whenever it may be necessary to enlarge,
|
|
diminish, or new-model the powers of the government, but also
|
|
whenever any one of the departments may commit encroachments on
|
|
the chartered authorities of the others. The several departments
|
|
being perfectly co-ordinate by the terms of their common
|
|
commission, none of them, it is evident, can pretend to an
|
|
exclusive or superior right of settling the boundaries between
|
|
their respective powers; and how are the encroachments of the
|
|
stronger to be prevented, or the wrongs of the weaker to be
|
|
redressed, without an appeal to the people themselves, who, as
|
|
the grantors of the commissions, can alone declare its true
|
|
meaning, and enforce its observance? There is certainly great
|
|
force in this reasoning, and it must be allowed to prove that a
|
|
constitutional road to the decision of the people ought to be
|
|
marked out and kept open, for certain great and extraordinary
|
|
occasions. But there appear to be insuperable objections against
|
|
the proposed recurrence to the people, as a provision in all
|
|
cases for keeping the several departments of power within their
|
|
constitutional limits. In the first place, the provision does not
|
|
reach the case of a combination of two of the departments against
|
|
the third. If the legislative authority, which possesses so many
|
|
means of operating on the motives of the other departments,
|
|
should be able to gain to its interest either of the others, or
|
|
even one third of its members, the remaining department could
|
|
derive no advantage from its remedial provision. I do not dwell,
|
|
however, on this objection, because it may be thought to be
|
|
rather against the modification of the principle, than against
|
|
the principle itself. In the next place, it may be considered as
|
|
an objection inherent in the principle, that as every appeal to
|
|
the people would carry an implication of some defect in the
|
|
government, frequent appeals would, in a great measure, deprive
|
|
the government of that veneration which time bestows on every
|
|
thing, and without which perhaps the wisest and freest
|
|
governments would not possess the requisite stability. If it be
|
|
true that all governments rest on opinion, it is no less true
|
|
that the strength of opinion in each individual, and its
|
|
practical influence on his conduct, depend much on the number
|
|
which he supposes to have entertained the same opinion. The
|
|
reason of man, like man himself, is timid and cautious when left
|
|
alone, and acquires firmness and confidence in proportion to the
|
|
number with which it is associated. When the examples which
|
|
fortify opinion are ANCIENT as well as NUMEROUS, they are known
|
|
to have a double effect. In a nation of philosophers, this
|
|
consideration ought to be disregarded. A reverence for the laws
|
|
would be sufficiently inculcated by the voice of an enlightened
|
|
reason. But a nation of philosophers is as little to be expected
|
|
as the philosophical race of kings wished for by Plato. And in
|
|
every other nation, the most rational government will not find it
|
|
a superfluous advantage to have the prejudices of the community
|
|
on its side. The danger of disturbing the public tranquillity by
|
|
interesting too strongly the public passions, is a still more
|
|
serious objection against a frequent reference of constitutional
|
|
questions to the decision of the whole society. Notwithstanding
|
|
the success which has attended the revisions of our established
|
|
forms of government, and which does so much honor to the virtue
|
|
and intelligence of the people of America, it must be confessed
|
|
that the experiments are of too ticklish a nature to be
|
|
unnecessarily multiplied. We are to recollect that all the
|
|
existing constitutions were formed in the midst of a danger which
|
|
repressed the passions most unfriendly to order and concord; of
|
|
an enthusiastic confidence of the people in their patriotic
|
|
leaders, which stifled the ordinary diversity of opinions on
|
|
great national questions; of a universal ardor for new and
|
|
opposite forms, produced by a universal resentment and
|
|
indignation against the ancient government; and whilst no spirit
|
|
of party connected with the changes to be made, or the abuses to
|
|
be reformed, could mingle its leaven in the operation. The future
|
|
situations in which we must expect to be usually placed, do not
|
|
present any equivalent security against the danger which is
|
|
apprehended. But the greatest objection of all is, that the
|
|
decisions which would probably result from such appeals would not
|
|
answer the purpose of maintaining the constitutional equilibrium
|
|
of the government. We have seen that the tendency of republican
|
|
governments is to an aggrandizement of the legislative at the
|
|
expense of the other departments. The appeals to the people,
|
|
therefore, would usually be made by the executive and judiciary
|
|
departments. But whether made by one side or the other, would
|
|
each side enjoy equal advantages on the trial? Let us view their
|
|
different situations. The members of the executive and judiciary
|
|
departments are few in number, and can be personally known to a
|
|
small part only of the people. The latter, by the mode of their
|
|
appointment, as well as by the nature and permanency of it, are
|
|
too far removed from the people to share much in their
|
|
prepossessions. The former are generally the objects of jealousy,
|
|
and their administration is always liable to be discolored and
|
|
rendered unpopular. The members of the legislative department, on
|
|
the other hand, are numberous. They are distributed and dwell
|
|
among the people at large. Their connections of blood, of
|
|
friendship, and of acquaintance embrace a great proportion of the
|
|
most influential part of the society. The nature of their public
|
|
trust implies a personal influence among the people, and that
|
|
they are more immediately the confidential guardians of the
|
|
rights and liberties of the people. With these advantages, it can
|
|
hardly be supposed that the adverse party would have an equal
|
|
chance for a favorable issue. But the legislative party would not
|
|
only be able to plead their cause most successfully with the
|
|
people. They would probably be constituted themselves the judges.
|
|
The same influence which had gained them an election into the
|
|
legislature, would gain them a seat in the convention. If this
|
|
should not be the case with all, it would probably be the case
|
|
with many, and pretty certainly with those leading characters, on
|
|
whom every thing depends in such bodies. The convention, in
|
|
short, would be composed chiefly of men who had been, who
|
|
actually were, or who expected to be, members of the department
|
|
whose conduct was arraigned. They would consequently be parties
|
|
to the very question to be decided by them. It might, however,
|
|
sometimes happen, that appeals would be made under circumstances
|
|
less adverse to the executive and judiciary departments. The
|
|
usurpations of the legislature might be so flagrant and so
|
|
sudden, as to admit of no specious coloring. A strong party
|
|
among themselves might take side with the other branches. The
|
|
executive power might be in the hands of a peculiar favorite of
|
|
the people. In such a posture of things, the public decision
|
|
might be less swayed by prepossessions in favor of the
|
|
legislative party. But still it could never be expected to turn
|
|
on the true merits of the question. It would inevitably be
|
|
connected with the spirit of pre-existing parties, or of parties
|
|
springing out of the question itself. It would be connected with
|
|
persons of distinguished character and extensive influence in the
|
|
community. It would be pronounced by the very men who had been
|
|
agents in, or opponents of, the measures to which the decision
|
|
would relate. The PASSIONS, therefore, not the REASON, of the
|
|
public would sit in judgment. But it is the reason, alone, of the
|
|
public, that ought to control and regulate the government. The
|
|
passions ought to be controlled and regulated by the government.
|
|
We found in the last paper, that mere declarations in the written
|
|
constitution are not sufficient to restrain the several
|
|
departments within their legal rights. It appears in this, that
|
|
occasional appeals to the people would be neither a proper nor an
|
|
effectual provision for that purpose. How far the provisions of a
|
|
different nature contained in the plan above quoted might be
|
|
adequate, I do not examine. Some of them are unquestionably
|
|
founded on sound political principles, and all of them are framed
|
|
with singular ingenuity and precision. PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 50
|
|
|
|
Periodical Appeals to the People Considered
|
|
From the New York Packet. Tuesday, February 5, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON OR MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
IT MAY be contended, perhaps, that instead of OCCASIONAL appeals
|
|
to the people, which are liable to the objections urged against
|
|
them, PERIODICAL appeals are the proper and adequate means of
|
|
PREVENTING AND CORRECTING INFRACTIONS OF THE CONSTITUTION. It
|
|
will be attended to, that in the examination of these expedients,
|
|
I confine myself to their aptitude for ENFORCING the
|
|
Constitution, by keeping the several departments of power within
|
|
their due bounds, without particularly considering them as
|
|
provisions for ALTERING the Constitution itself. In the first
|
|
view, appeals to the people at fixed periods appear to be nearly
|
|
as ineligible as appeals on particular occasions as they emerge.
|
|
If the periods be separated by short intervals, the measures to
|
|
be reviewed and rectified will have been of recent date, and will
|
|
be connected with all the circumstances which tend to vitiate and
|
|
pervert the result of occasional revisions. If the periods be
|
|
distant from each other, the same remark will be applicable to
|
|
all recent measures; and in proportion as the remoteness of the
|
|
others may favor a dispassionate review of them, this advantage
|
|
is inseparable from inconveniences which seem to counterbalance
|
|
it. In the first place, a distant prospect of public censure
|
|
would be a very feeble restraint on power from those excesses to
|
|
which it might be urged by the force of present motives. Is it to
|
|
be imagined that a legislative assembly, consisting of a hundred
|
|
or two hundred members, eagerly bent on some favorite object, and
|
|
breaking through the restraints of the Constitution in pursuit of
|
|
it, would be arrested in their career, by considerations drawn
|
|
from a censorial revision of their conduct at the future distance
|
|
of ten, fifteen, or twenty years? In the next place, the abuses
|
|
would often have completed their mischievous effects before the
|
|
remedial provision would be applied. And in the last place, where
|
|
this might not be the case, they would be of long standing, would
|
|
have taken deep root, and would not easily be extirpated. The
|
|
scheme of revising the constitution, in order to correct recent
|
|
breaches of it, as well as for other purposes, has been actually
|
|
tried in one of the States. One of the objects of the Council of
|
|
Censors which met in Pennsylvania in 1783 and 1784, was, as we
|
|
have seen, to inquire, ``whether the constitution had been
|
|
violated, and whether the legislative and executive departments
|
|
had encroached upon each other. '' This important and novel
|
|
experiment in politics merits, in several points of view, very
|
|
particular attention. In some of them it may, perhaps, as a
|
|
single experiment, made under circumstances somewhat peculiar, be
|
|
thought to be not absolutely conclusive. But as applied to the
|
|
case under consideration, it involves some facts, which I venture
|
|
to remark, as a complete and satisfactory illustration of the
|
|
reasoning which I have employed. First. It appears, from the
|
|
names of the gentlemen who composed the council, that some, at
|
|
least, of its most active members had also been active and
|
|
leading characters in the parties which pre-existed in the State.
|
|
Secondly. It appears that the same active and leading members of
|
|
the council had been active and influential members of the
|
|
legislative and executive branches, within the period to be
|
|
reviewed; and even patrons or opponents of the very measures to
|
|
be thus brought to the test of the constitution. Two of the
|
|
members had been vice-presidents of the State, and several other
|
|
members of the executive council, within the seven preceding
|
|
years. One of them had been speaker, and a number of others
|
|
distinguished members, of the legislative assembly within the
|
|
same period. Thirdly. Every page of their proceedings witnesses
|
|
the effect of all these circumstances on the temper of their
|
|
deliberations. Throughout the continuance of the council, it was
|
|
split into two fixed and violent parties. The fact is
|
|
acknowledged and lamented by themselves. Had this not been the
|
|
case, the face of their proceedings exhibits a proof equally
|
|
satisfactory. In all questions, however unimportant in
|
|
themselves, or unconnected with each other, the same names stand
|
|
invariably contrasted on the opposite columns. Every unbiased
|
|
observer may infer, without danger of mistake, and at the same
|
|
time without meaning to reflect on either party, or any
|
|
individuals of either party, that, unfortunately, PASSION, not
|
|
REASON, must have presided over their decisions. When men
|
|
exercise their reason coolly and freely on a variety of distinct
|
|
questions, they inevitably fall into different opinions on some
|
|
of them. When they are governed by a common passion, their
|
|
opinions, if they are so to be called, will be the same.
|
|
Fourthly. It is at least problematical, whether the decisions of
|
|
this body do not, in several instances, misconstrue the limits
|
|
prescribed for the legislative and executive departments, instead
|
|
of reducing and limiting them within their constitutional places.
|
|
Fifthly. I have never understood that the decisions of the
|
|
council on constitutional questions, whether rightly or
|
|
erroneously formed, have had any effect in varying the practice
|
|
founded on legislative constructions. It even appears, if I
|
|
mistake not, that in one instance the contemporary legislature
|
|
denied the constructions of the council, and actually prevailed
|
|
in the contest. This censorial body, therefore, proves at the
|
|
same time, by its researches, the existence of the disease, and
|
|
by its example, the inefficacy of the remedy. This conclusion
|
|
cannot be invalidated by alleging that the State in which the
|
|
experiment was made was at that crisis, and had been for a long
|
|
time before, violently heated and distracted by the rage of
|
|
party. Is it to be presumed, that at any future septennial epoch
|
|
the same State will be free from parties? Is it to be presumed
|
|
that any other State, at the same or any other given period, will
|
|
be exempt from them? Such an event ought to be neither presumed
|
|
nor desired; because an extinction of parties necessarily implies
|
|
either a universal alarm for the public safety, or an absolute
|
|
extinction of liberty. Were the precaution taken of excluding
|
|
from the assemblies elected by the people, to revise the
|
|
preceding administration of the government, all persons who
|
|
should have been concerned with the government within the given
|
|
period, the difficulties would not be obviated. The important
|
|
task would probably devolve on men, who, with inferior
|
|
capacities, would in other respects be little better qualified.
|
|
Although they might not have been personally concerned in the
|
|
administration, and therefore not immediately agents in the
|
|
measures to be examined, they would probably have been involved
|
|
in the parties connected with these measures, and have been
|
|
elected under their auspices. PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 51
|
|
|
|
The Structure of the Government Must Furnish the Proper Checks
|
|
and Balances Between the Different Departments
|
|
From the New York Packet. Friday, February 8, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON OR MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
TO WHAT expedient, then, shall we finally resort, for maintaining
|
|
in practice the necessary partition of power among the several
|
|
departments, as laid down in the Constitution? The only answer
|
|
that can be given is, that as all these exterior provisions are
|
|
found to be inadequate, the defect must be supplied, by so
|
|
contriving the interior structure of the government as that its
|
|
several constituent parts may, by their mutual relations, be the
|
|
means of keeping each other in their proper places. Without
|
|
presuming to undertake a full development of this important idea,
|
|
I will hazard a few general observations, which may perhaps place
|
|
it in a clearer light, and enable us to form a more correct
|
|
judgment of the principles and structure of the government
|
|
planned by the convention. In order to lay a due foundation for
|
|
that separate and distinct exercise of the different powers of
|
|
government, which to a certain extent is admitted on all hands to
|
|
be essential to the preservation of liberty, it is evident that
|
|
each department should have a will of its own; and consequently
|
|
should be so constituted that the members of each should have as
|
|
little agency as possible in the appointment of the members of
|
|
the others. Were this principle rigorously adhered to, it would
|
|
require that all the appointments for the supreme executive,
|
|
legislative, and judiciary magistracies should be drawn from the
|
|
same fountain of authority, the people, through channels having
|
|
no communication whatever with one another. Perhaps such a plan
|
|
of constructing the several departments would be less difficult
|
|
in practice than it may in contemplation appear. Some
|
|
difficulties, however, and some additional expense would attend
|
|
the execution of it. Some deviations, therefore, from the
|
|
principle must be admitted. In the constitution of the judiciary
|
|
department in particular, it might be inexpedient to insist
|
|
rigorously on the principle: first, because peculiar
|
|
qualifications being essential in the members, the primary
|
|
consideration ought to be to select that mode of choice which
|
|
best secures these qualifications; secondly, because the
|
|
permanent tenure by which the appointments are held in that
|
|
department, must soon destroy all sense of dependence on the
|
|
authority conferring them. It is equally evident, that the
|
|
members of each department should be as little dependent as
|
|
possible on those of the others, for the emoluments annexed to
|
|
their offices. Were the executive magistrate, or the judges, not
|
|
independent of the legislature in this particular, their
|
|
independence in every other would be merely nominal. But the
|
|
great security against a gradual concentration of the several
|
|
powers in the same department, consists in giving to those who
|
|
administer each department the necessary constitutional means and
|
|
personal motives to resist encroachments of the others. The
|
|
provision for defense must in this, as in all other cases, be
|
|
made commensurate to the danger of attack. Ambition must be made
|
|
to counteract ambition. The interest of the man must be
|
|
connected with the constitutional rights of the place. It may be
|
|
a reflection on human nature, that such devices should be
|
|
necessary to control the abuses of government. But what is
|
|
government itself, but the greatest of all reflections on human
|
|
nature? If men were angels, no government would be necessary. If
|
|
angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal
|
|
controls on government would be necessary. In framing a
|
|
government which is to be administered by men over men, the great
|
|
difficulty lies in this: you must first enable the government to
|
|
control the governed; and in the next place oblige it to control
|
|
itself. A dependence on the people is, no doubt, the primary
|
|
control on the government; but experience has taught mankind the
|
|
necessity of auxiliary precautions. This policy of supplying, by
|
|
opposite and rival interests, the defect of better motives, might
|
|
be traced through the whole system of human affairs, private as
|
|
well as public. We see it particularly displayed in all the
|
|
subordinate distributions of power, where the constant aim is to
|
|
divide and arrange the several offices in such a manner as that
|
|
each may be a check on the other that the private interest of
|
|
every individual may be a sentinel over the public rights. These
|
|
inventions of prudence cannot be less requisite in the
|
|
distribution of the supreme powers of the State. But it is not
|
|
possible to give to each department an equal power of
|
|
self-defense. In republican government, the legislative
|
|
authority necessarily predominates. The remedy for this
|
|
inconveniency is to divide the legislature into different
|
|
branches; and to render them, by different modes of election and
|
|
different principles of action, as little connected with each
|
|
other as the nature of their common functions and their common
|
|
dependence on the society will admit. It may even be necessary
|
|
to guard against dangerous encroachments by still further
|
|
precautions. As the weight of the legislative authority requires
|
|
that it should be thus divided, the weakness of the executive may
|
|
require, on the other hand, that it should be fortified. An
|
|
absolute negative on the legislature appears, at first view, to
|
|
be the natural defense with which the executive magistrate should
|
|
be armed. But perhaps it would be neither altogether safe nor
|
|
alone sufficient. On ordinary occasions it might not be exerted
|
|
with the requisite firmness, and on extraordinary occasions it
|
|
might be perfidiously abused. May not this defect of an absolute
|
|
negative be supplied by some qualified connection between this
|
|
weaker department and the weaker branch of the stronger
|
|
department, by which the latter may be led to support the
|
|
constitutional rights of the former, without being too much
|
|
detached from the rights of its own department? If the principles
|
|
on which these observations are founded be just, as I persuade
|
|
myself they are, and they be applied as a criterion to the
|
|
several State constitutions, and to the federal Constitution it
|
|
will be found that if the latter does not perfectly correspond
|
|
with them, the former are infinitely less able to bear such a
|
|
test. There are, moreover, two considerations particularly
|
|
applicable to the federal system of America, which place that
|
|
system in a very interesting point of view. First. In a single
|
|
republic, all the power surrendered by the people is submitted to
|
|
the administration of a single government; and the usurpations
|
|
are guarded against by a division of the government into distinct
|
|
and separate departments. In the compound republic of America,
|
|
the power surrendered by the people is first divided between two
|
|
distinct governments, and then the portion allotted to each
|
|
subdivided among distinct and separate departments. Hence a
|
|
double security arises to the rights of the people. The different
|
|
governments will control each other, at the same time that each
|
|
will be controlled by itself. Second. It is of great importance
|
|
in a republic not only to guard the society against the
|
|
oppression of its rulers, but to guard one part of the society
|
|
against the injustice of the other part. Different interests
|
|
necessarily exist in different classes of citizens. If a
|
|
majority be united by a common interest, the rights of the
|
|
minority will be insecure. There are but two methods of
|
|
providing against this evil: the one by creating a will in the
|
|
community independent of the majority that is, of the society
|
|
itself; the other, by comprehending in the society so many
|
|
separate descriptions of citizens as will render an unjust
|
|
combination of a majority of the whole very improbable, if not
|
|
impracticable. The first method prevails in all governments
|
|
possessing an hereditary or self-appointed authority. This, at
|
|
best, is but a precarious security; because a power independent
|
|
of the society may as well espouse the unjust views of the major,
|
|
as the rightful interests of the minor party, and may possibly be
|
|
turned against both parties. The second method will be
|
|
exemplified in the federal republic of the United States. Whilst
|
|
all authority in it will be derived from and dependent on the
|
|
society, the society itself will be broken into so many parts,
|
|
interests, and classes of citizens, that the rights of
|
|
individuals, or of the minority, will be in little danger from
|
|
interested combinations of the majority. In a free government
|
|
the security for civil rights must be the same as that for
|
|
religious rights. It consists in the one case in the
|
|
multiplicity of interests, and in the other in the multiplicity
|
|
of sects. The degree of security in both cases will depend on
|
|
the number of interests and sects; and this may be presumed to
|
|
depend on the extent of country and number of people comprehended
|
|
under the same government. This view of the subject must
|
|
particularly recommend a proper federal system to all the sincere
|
|
and considerate friends of republican government, since it shows
|
|
that in exact proportion as the territory of the Union may be
|
|
formed into more circumscribed Confederacies, or States
|
|
oppressive combinations of a majority will be facilitated: the
|
|
best security, under the republican forms, for the rights of
|
|
every class of citizens, will be diminished: and consequently the
|
|
stability and independence of some member of the government, the
|
|
only other security, must be proportionately increased. Justice
|
|
is the end of government. It is the end of civil society. It
|
|
ever has been and ever will be pursued until it be obtained, or
|
|
until liberty be lost in the pursuit. In a society under the
|
|
forms of which the stronger faction can readily unite and oppress
|
|
the weaker, anarchy may as truly be said to reign as in a state
|
|
of nature, where the weaker individual is not secured against the
|
|
violence of the stronger; and as, in the latter state, even the
|
|
stronger individuals are prompted, by the uncertainty of their
|
|
condition, to submit to a government which may protect the weak
|
|
as well as themselves; so, in the former state, will the more
|
|
powerful factions or parties be gradnally induced, by a like
|
|
motive, to wish for a government which will protect all parties,
|
|
the weaker as well as the more powerful. It can be little
|
|
doubted that if the State of Rhode Island was separated from the
|
|
Confederacy and left to itself, the insecurity of rights under
|
|
the popular form of government within such narrow limits would be
|
|
displayed by such reiterated oppressions of factious majorities
|
|
that some power altogether independent of the people would soon
|
|
be called for by the voice of the very factions whose misrule had
|
|
proved the necessity of it. In the extended republic of the
|
|
United States, and among the great variety of interests, parties,
|
|
and sects which it embraces, a coalition of a majority of the
|
|
whole society could seldom take place on any other principles
|
|
than those of justice and the general good; whilst there being
|
|
thus less danger to a minor from the will of a major party, there
|
|
must be less pretext, also, to provide for the security of the
|
|
former, by introducing into the government a will not dependent
|
|
on the latter, or, in other words, a will independent of the
|
|
society itself. It is no less certain than it is important,
|
|
notwithstanding the contrary opinions which have been
|
|
entertained, that the larger the society, provided it lie within
|
|
a practical sphere, the more duly capable it will be of
|
|
self-government. And happily for the REPUBLICAN CAUSE, the
|
|
practicable sphere may be carried to a very great extent, by a
|
|
judicious modification and mixture of the FEDERAL PRINCIPLE.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 52
|
|
|
|
The House of Representatives
|
|
From the New York Packet. Friday, February 8, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON OR MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
FROM the more general inquiries pursued in the four last papers,
|
|
I pass on to a more particular examination of the several parts
|
|
of the government. I shall begin with the House of
|
|
Representatives. The first view to be taken of this part of the
|
|
government relates to the qualifications of the electors and the
|
|
elected. Those of the former are to be the same with those of the
|
|
electors of the most numerous branch of the State legislatures.
|
|
The definition of the right of suffrage is very justly regarded
|
|
as a fundamental article of republican government. It was
|
|
incumbent on the convention, therefore, to define and establish
|
|
this right in the Constitution. To have left it open for the
|
|
occasional regulation of the Congress, would have been improper
|
|
for the reason just mentioned. To have submitted it to the
|
|
legislative discretion of the States, would have been improper
|
|
for the same reason; and for the additional reason that it would
|
|
have rendered too dependent on the State governments that branch
|
|
of the federal government which ought to be dependent on the
|
|
people alone. To have reduced the different qualifications in the
|
|
different States to one uniform rule, would probably have been as
|
|
dissatisfactory to some of the States as it would have been
|
|
difficult to the convention. The provision made by the convention
|
|
appears, therefore, to be the best that lay within their option.
|
|
It must be satisfactory to every State, because it is conformable
|
|
to the standard already established, or which may be established,
|
|
by the State itself. It will be safe to the United States,
|
|
because, being fixed by the State constitutions, it is not
|
|
alterable by the State governments, and it cannot be feared that
|
|
the people of the States will alter this part of their
|
|
constitutions in such a manner as to abridge the rights secured
|
|
to them by the federal Constitution. The qualifications of the
|
|
elected, being less carefully and properly defined by the State
|
|
constitutions, and being at the same time more susceptible of
|
|
uniformity, have been very properly considered and regulated by
|
|
the convention. A representative of the United States must be of
|
|
the age of twenty-five years; must have been seven years a
|
|
citizen of the United States; must, at the time of his election,
|
|
be an inhabitant of the State he is to represent; and, during the
|
|
time of his service, must be in no office under the United
|
|
States. Under these reasonable limitations, the door of this part
|
|
of the federal government is open to merit of every description,
|
|
whether native or adoptive, whether young or old, and without
|
|
regard to poverty or wealth, or to any particular profession of
|
|
religious faith. The term for which the representatives are to be
|
|
elected falls under a second view which may be taken of this
|
|
branch. In order to decide on the propriety of this article, two
|
|
questions must be considered: first, whether biennial elections
|
|
will, in this case, be safe; secondly, whether they be necessary
|
|
or useful. First. As it is essential to liberty that the
|
|
government in general should have a common interest with the
|
|
people, so it is particularly essential that the branch of it
|
|
under consideration should have an immediate dependence on, and
|
|
an intimate sympathy with, the people. Frequent elections are
|
|
unquestionably the only policy by which this dependence and
|
|
sympathy can be effectually secured. But what particular degree
|
|
of frequency may be absolutely necessary for the purpose, does
|
|
not appear to be susceptible of any precise calculation, and must
|
|
depend on a variety of circumstances with which it may be
|
|
connected. Let us consult experience, the guide that ought always
|
|
to be followed whenever it can be found. The scheme of
|
|
representation, as a substitute for a meeting of the citizens in
|
|
person, being at most but very imperfectly known to ancient
|
|
polity, it is in more modern times only that we are to expect
|
|
instructive examples. And even here, in order to avoid a research
|
|
too vague and diffusive, it will be proper to confine ourselves
|
|
to the few examples which are best known, and which bear the
|
|
greatest analogy to our particular case. The first to which this
|
|
character ought to be applied, is the House of Commons in Great
|
|
Britain. The history of this branch of the English Constitution,
|
|
anterior to the date of Magna Charta, is too obscure to yield
|
|
instruction. The very existence of it has been made a question
|
|
among political antiquaries. The earliest records of subsequent
|
|
date prove that parliaments were to SIT only every year; not that
|
|
they were to be ELECTED every year. And even these annual
|
|
sessions were left so much at the discretion of the monarch,
|
|
that, under various pretexts, very long and dangerous
|
|
intermissions were often contrived by royal ambition. To remedy
|
|
this grievance, it was provided by a statute in the reign of
|
|
Charles II. , that the intermissions should not be protracted
|
|
beyond a period of three years. On the accession of William III.
|
|
, when a revolution took place in the government, the subject was
|
|
still more seriously resumed, and it was declared to be among the
|
|
fundamental rights of the people that parliaments ought to be
|
|
held FREQUENTLY. By another statute, which passed a few years
|
|
later in the same reign, the term ``frequently,'' which had
|
|
alluded to the triennial period settled in the time of Charles
|
|
II. , is reduced to a precise meaning, it being expressly enacted
|
|
that a new parliament shall be called within three years after
|
|
the termination of the former. The last change, from three to
|
|
seven years, is well known to have been introduced pretty early
|
|
in the present century, under on alarm for the Hanoverian
|
|
succession. From these facts it appears that the greatest
|
|
frequency of elections which has been deemed necessary in that
|
|
kingdom, for binding the representatives to their constituents,
|
|
does not exceed a triennial return of them. And if we may argue
|
|
from the degree of liberty retained even under septennial
|
|
elections, and all the other vicious ingredients in the
|
|
parliamentary constitution, we cannot doubt that a reduction of
|
|
the period from seven to three years, with the other necessary
|
|
reforms, would so far extend the influence of the people over
|
|
their representatives as to satisfy us that biennial elections,
|
|
under the federal system, cannot possibly be dangerous to the
|
|
requisite dependence of the House of Representatives on their
|
|
constituents. Elections in Ireland, till of late, were regulated
|
|
entirely by the discretion of the crown, and were seldom
|
|
repeated, except on the accession of a new prince, or some other
|
|
contingent event. The parliament which commenced with George II.
|
|
was continued throughout his whole reign, a period of about
|
|
thirty-five years. The only dependence of the representatives on
|
|
the people consisted in the right of the latter to supply
|
|
occasional vacancies by the election of new members, and in the
|
|
chance of some event which might produce a general new election.
|
|
The ability also of the Irish parliament to maintain the rights
|
|
of their constituents, so far as the disposition might exist, was
|
|
extremely shackled by the control of the crown over the subjects
|
|
of their deliberation. Of late these shackles, if I mistake not,
|
|
have been broken; and octennial parliaments have besides been
|
|
established. What effect may be produced by this partial reform,
|
|
must be left to further experience. The example of Ireland, from
|
|
this view of it, can throw but little light on the subject. As
|
|
far as we can draw any conclusion from it, it must be that if the
|
|
people of that country have been able under all these
|
|
disadvantages to retain any liberty whatever, the advantage of
|
|
biennial elections would secure to them every degree of liberty,
|
|
which might depend on a due connection between their
|
|
representatives and themselves. Let us bring our inquiries nearer
|
|
home. The example of these States, when British colonies, claims
|
|
particular attention, at the same time that it is so well known
|
|
as to require little to be said on it. The principle of
|
|
representation, in one branch of the legislature at least, was
|
|
established in all of them. But the periods of election were
|
|
different. They varied from one to seven years. Have we any
|
|
reason to infer, from the spirit and conduct of the
|
|
representatives of the people, prior to the Revolution, that
|
|
biennial elections would have been dangerous to the public
|
|
liberties? The spirit which everywhere displayed itself at the
|
|
commencement of the struggle, and which vanquished the obstacles
|
|
to independence, is the best of proofs that a sufficient portion
|
|
of liberty had been everywhere enjoyed to inspire both a sense of
|
|
its worth and a zeal for its proper enlargement This remark holds
|
|
good, as well with regard to the then colonies whose elections
|
|
were least frequent, as to those whose elections were most
|
|
frequent Virginia was the colony which stood first in resisting
|
|
the parliamentary usurpations of Great Britain; it was the first
|
|
also in espousing, by public act, the resolution of independence.
|
|
In Virginia, nevertheless, if I have not been misinformed,
|
|
elections under the former government were septennial. This
|
|
particular example is brought into view, not as a proof of any
|
|
peculiar merit, for the priority in those instances was probably
|
|
accidental; and still less of any advantage in SEPTENNIAL
|
|
elections, for when compared with a greater frequency they are
|
|
inadmissible; but merely as a proof, and I conceive it to be a
|
|
very substantial proof, that the liberties of the people can be
|
|
in no danger from BIENNIAL elections. The conclusion resulting
|
|
from these examples will be not a little strengthened by
|
|
recollecting three circumstances. The first is, that the federal
|
|
legislature will possess a part only of that supreme legislative
|
|
authority which is vested completely in the British Parliament;
|
|
and which, with a few exceptions, was exercised by the colonial
|
|
assemblies and the Irish legislature. It is a received and
|
|
well-founded maxim, that where no other circumstances affect the
|
|
case, the greater the power is, the shorter ought to be its
|
|
duration; and, conversely, the smaller the power, the more safely
|
|
may its duration be protracted. In the second place, it has, on
|
|
another occasion, been shown that the federal legislature will
|
|
not only be restrained by its dependence on its people, as other
|
|
legislative bodies are, but that it will be, moreover, watched
|
|
and controlled by the several collateral legislatures, which
|
|
other legislative bodies are not. And in the third place, no
|
|
comparison can be made between the means that will be possessed
|
|
by the more permanent branches of the federal government for
|
|
seducing, if they should be disposed to seduce, the House of
|
|
Representatives from their duty to the people, and the means of
|
|
influence over the popular branch possessed by the other branches
|
|
of the government above cited. With less power, therefore, to
|
|
abuse, the federal representatives can be less tempted on one
|
|
side, and will be doubly watched on the other. PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 53
|
|
|
|
The Same Subject Continued(The House of Representatives)
|
|
From the New York Packet. Tuesday, February 12, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON OR MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
I SHALL here, perhaps, be reminded of a current observation,
|
|
``that where annual elections end, tyranny begins. '' If it be
|
|
true, as has often been remarked, that sayings which become
|
|
proverbial are generally founded in reason, it is not less true,
|
|
that when once established, they are often applied to cases to
|
|
which the reason of them does not extend. I need not look for a
|
|
proof beyond the case before us. What is the reason on which this
|
|
proverbial observation is founded? No man will subject himself to
|
|
the ridicule of pretending that any natural connection subsists
|
|
between the sun or the seasons, and the period within which human
|
|
virtue can bear the temptations of power. Happily for mankind,
|
|
liberty is not, in this respect, confined to any single point of
|
|
time; but lies within extremes, which afford sufficient latitude
|
|
for all the variations which may be required by the various
|
|
situations and circumstances of civil society. The election of
|
|
magistrates might be, if it were found expedient, as in some
|
|
instances it actually has been, daily, weekly, or monthly, as
|
|
well as annual; and if circumstances may require a deviation from
|
|
the rule on one side, why not also on the other side? Turning our
|
|
attention to the periods established among ourselves, for the
|
|
election of the most numerous branches of the State legislatures,
|
|
we find them by no means coinciding any more in this instance,
|
|
than in the elections of other civil magistrates. In Connecticut
|
|
and Rhode Island, the periods are half-yearly. In the other
|
|
States, South Carolina excepted, they are annual. In South
|
|
Carolina they are biennial as is proposed in the federal
|
|
government. Here is a difference, as four to one, between the
|
|
longest and shortest periods; and yet it would be not easy to
|
|
show, that Connecticut or Rhode Island is better governed, or
|
|
enjoys a greater share of rational liberty, than South Carolina;
|
|
or that either the one or the other of these States is
|
|
distinguished in these respects, and by these causes, from the
|
|
States whose elections are different from both. In searching for
|
|
the grounds of this doctrine, I can discover but one, and that is
|
|
wholly inapplicable to our case. The important distinction so
|
|
well understood in America, between a Constitution established by
|
|
the people and unalterable by the government, and a law
|
|
established by the government and alterable by the government,
|
|
seems to have been little understood and less observed in any
|
|
other country. Wherever the supreme power of legislation has
|
|
resided, has been supposed to reside also a full power to change
|
|
the form of the government. Even in Great Britain, where the
|
|
principles of political and civil liberty have been most
|
|
discussed, and where we hear most of the rights of the
|
|
Constitution, it is maintained that the authority of the
|
|
Parliament is transcendent and uncontrollable, as well with
|
|
regard to the Constitution, as the ordinary objects of
|
|
legislative provision. They have accordingly, in several
|
|
instances, actually changed, by legislative acts, some of the
|
|
most fundamental articles of the government. They have in
|
|
particular, on several occasions, changed the period of election;
|
|
and, on the last occasion, not only introduced septennial in
|
|
place of triennial elections, but by the same act, continued
|
|
themselves in place four years beyond the term for which they
|
|
were elected by the people. An attention to these dangerous
|
|
practices has produced a very natural alarm in the votaries of
|
|
free government, of which frequency of elections is the
|
|
corner-stone; and has led them to seek for some security to
|
|
liberty, against the danger to which it is exposed. Where no
|
|
Constitution, paramount to the government, either existed or
|
|
could be obtained, no constitutional security, similar to that
|
|
established in the United States, was to be attempted. Some
|
|
other security, therefore, was to be sought for; and what better
|
|
security would the case admit, than that of selecting and
|
|
appealing to some simple and familiar portion of time, as a
|
|
standard for measuring the danger of innovations, for fixing the
|
|
national sentiment, and for uniting the patriotic exertions? The
|
|
most simple and familiar portion of time, applicable to the
|
|
subject was that of a year; and hence the doctrine has been
|
|
inculcated by a laudable zeal, to erect some barrier against the
|
|
gradual innovations of an unlimited government, that the advance
|
|
towards tyranny was to be calculated by the distance of departure
|
|
from the fixed point of annual elections. But what necessity can
|
|
there be of applying this expedient to a government limited, as
|
|
the federal government will be, by the authority of a paramount
|
|
Constitution? Or who will pretend that the liberties of the
|
|
people of America will not be more secure under biennial
|
|
elections, unalterably fixed by such a Constitution, than those
|
|
of any other nation would be, where elections were annual, or
|
|
even more frequent, but subject to alterations by the ordinary
|
|
power of the government? The second question stated is, whether
|
|
biennial elections be necessary or useful. The propriety of
|
|
answering this question in the affirmative will appear from
|
|
several very obvious considerations.
|
|
No man can be a
|
|
competent legislator who does not add to an upright intention and
|
|
a sound judgment a certain degree of knowledge of the subjects on
|
|
which he is to legislate. A part of this knowledge may be
|
|
acquired by means of information which lie within the compass of
|
|
men in private as well as public stations. Another part can only
|
|
be attained, or at least thoroughly attained, by actual
|
|
experience in the station which requires the use of it. The
|
|
period of service, ought, therefore, in all such cases, to bear
|
|
some proportion to the extent of practical knowledge requisite to
|
|
the due performance of the service. The period of legislative
|
|
service established in most of the States for the more numerous
|
|
branch is, as we have seen, one year. The question then may be
|
|
put into this simple form: does the period of two years bear no
|
|
greater proportion to the knowledge requisite for federal
|
|
legislation than one year does to the knowledge requisite for
|
|
State legislation? The very statement of the question, in this
|
|
form, suggests the answer that ought to be given to it. In a
|
|
single State, the requisite knowledge relates to the existing
|
|
laws which are uniform throughout the State, and with which all
|
|
the citizens are more or less conversant; and to the general
|
|
affairs of the State, which lie within a small compass, are not
|
|
very diversified, and occupy much of the attention and
|
|
conversation of every class of people. The great theatre of the
|
|
United States presents a very different scene. The laws are so
|
|
far from being uniform, that they vary in every State; whilst the
|
|
public affairs of the Union are spread throughout a very
|
|
extensive region, and are extremely diversified by t e local
|
|
affairs connected with them, and can with difficulty be correctly
|
|
learnt in any other place than in the central councils to which a
|
|
knowledge of them will be brought by the representatives of every
|
|
part of the empire. Yet some knowledge of the affairs, and even
|
|
of the laws, of all the States, ought to be possessed by the
|
|
members from each of the States. How can foreign trade be
|
|
properly regulated by uniform laws, without some acquaintance
|
|
with the commerce, the ports, the usages, and the regulatious of
|
|
the different States? How can the trade between the different
|
|
States be duly regulated, without some knowledge of their
|
|
relative situations in these and other respects? How can taxes
|
|
be judiciously imposed and effectually collected, if they be not
|
|
accommodated to the different laws and local circumstances
|
|
relating to these objects in the different States? How can
|
|
uniform regulations for the militia be duly provided, without a
|
|
similar knowledge of many internal circumstances by which the
|
|
States are distinguished from each other? These are the
|
|
principal objects of federal legislation, and suggest most
|
|
forcibly the extensive information which the representatives
|
|
ought to acquire. The other interior objects will require a
|
|
proportional degree of information with regard to them. It is
|
|
true that all these difficulties will, by degrees, be very much
|
|
diminished. The most laborious task will be the proper
|
|
inauguration of the government and the primeval formation of a
|
|
federal code. Improvements on the first draughts will every year
|
|
become both easier and fewer. Past transactions of the
|
|
government will be a ready and accurate source of information to
|
|
new members. The affairs of the Union will become more and more
|
|
objects of curiosity and conversation among the citizens at
|
|
large. And the increased intercourse among those of different
|
|
States will contribute not a little to diffuse a mutual knowledge
|
|
of their affairs, as this again will contribute to a general
|
|
assimilation of their manners and laws. But with all these
|
|
abatements, the business of federal legislation must continue so
|
|
far to exceed, both in novelty and difficulty, the legislative
|
|
business of a single State, as to justify the longer period of
|
|
service assigned to those who are to transact it. A branch of
|
|
knowledge which belongs to the acquirements of a federal
|
|
representative, and which has not been mentioned is that of
|
|
foreign affairs. In regulating our own commerce he ought to be
|
|
not only acquainted with the treaties between the United States
|
|
and other nations, but also with the commercial policy and laws
|
|
of other nations. He ought not to be altogether ignorant of the
|
|
law of nations; for that, as far as it is a proper object of
|
|
municipal legislation, is submitted to the federal government.
|
|
And although the House of Representatives is not immediately to
|
|
participate in foreign negotiations and arrangements, yet from
|
|
the necessary connection between the several branches of public
|
|
affairs, those particular branches will frequently deserve
|
|
attention in the ordinary course of legislation, and will
|
|
sometimes demand particular legislative sanction and
|
|
co-operation. Some portion of this knowledge may, no doubt, be
|
|
acquired in a man's closet; but some of it also can only be
|
|
derived from the public sources of information; and all of it
|
|
will be acquired to best effect by a practical attention to the
|
|
subject during the period of actual service in the legislature.
|
|
There are other considerations, of less importance, perhaps, but
|
|
which are not unworthy of notice. The distance which many of the
|
|
representatives will be obliged to travel, and the arrangements
|
|
rendered necessary by that circumstance, might be much more
|
|
serious objections with fit men to this service, if limited to a
|
|
single year, than if extended to two years. No argument can be
|
|
drawn on this subject, from the case of the delegates to the
|
|
existing Congress. They are elected annually, it is true; but
|
|
their re-election is considered by the legislative assemblies
|
|
almost as a matter of course. The election of the representatives
|
|
by the people would not be governed by the same principle. A few
|
|
of the members, as happens in all such assemblies, will possess
|
|
superior talents; will, by frequent reelections, become members
|
|
of long standing; will be thoroughly masters of the public
|
|
business, and perhaps not unwilling to avail themselves of those
|
|
advantages. The greater the proportion of new members, and the
|
|
less the information of the bulk of the members the more apt will
|
|
they be to fall into the snares that may be laid for them. This
|
|
remark is no less applicable to the relation which will subsist
|
|
between the House of Representatives and the Senate. It is an
|
|
inconvenience mingled with the advantages of our frequent
|
|
elections even in single States, where they are large, and hold
|
|
but one legislative session in a year, that spurious elections
|
|
cannot be investigated and annulled in time for the decision to
|
|
have its due effect. If a return can be obtained, no matter by
|
|
what unlawful means, the irregular member, who takes his seat of
|
|
course, is sure of holding it a sufficient time to answer his
|
|
purposes. Hence, a very pernicious encouragement is given to the
|
|
use of unlawful means, for obtaining irregular returns. Were
|
|
elections for the federal legislature to be annual, this practice
|
|
might become a very serious abuse, particularly in the more
|
|
distant States. Each house is, as it necessarily must be, the
|
|
judge of the elections, qualifications, and returns of its
|
|
members; and whatever improvements may be suggested by
|
|
experience, for simplifying and accelerating the process in
|
|
disputed cases, so great a portion of a year would unavoidably
|
|
elapse, before an illegitimate member could be dispossessed of
|
|
his seat, that the prospect of such an event would be little
|
|
check to unfair and illicit means of obtaining a seat. All these
|
|
considerations taken together warrant us in affirming, that
|
|
biennial elections will be as useful to the affairs of the public
|
|
as we have seen that they will be safe to the liberty of the
|
|
people. PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 54
|
|
|
|
The Apportionment of Members Among the States
|
|
|
|
From the New York Packet. Tuesday, February 12, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON OR MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE next view which I shall take of the House of Representatives
|
|
relates to the appointment of its members to the several States
|
|
which is to be determined by the same rule with that of direct
|
|
taxes.
|
|
It is not contended that the number of people in each
|
|
State ought not to be the standard for regulating the proportion
|
|
of those who are to represent the people of each State. The
|
|
establishment of the same rule for the appointment of taxes, will
|
|
probably be as little contested; though the rule itself in this
|
|
case, is by no means founded on the same principle. In the former
|
|
case, the rule is understood to refer to the personal rights of
|
|
the people, with which it has a natural and universal connection.
|
|
In the latter, it has reference to the proportion of wealth, of
|
|
which it is in no case a precise measure, and in ordinary cases a
|
|
very unfit one. But notwithstanding the imperfection of the rule
|
|
as applied to the relative wealth and contributions of the
|
|
States, it is evidently the least objectionable among the
|
|
practicable rules, and had too recently obtained the general
|
|
sanction of America, not to have found a ready preference with
|
|
the convention. All this is admitted, it will perhaps be said;
|
|
but does it follow, from an admission of numbers for the measure
|
|
of representation, or of slaves combined with free citizens as a
|
|
ratio of taxation, that slaves ought to be included in the
|
|
numerical rule of representation? Slaves are considered as
|
|
property, not as persons. They ought therefore to be comprehended
|
|
in estimates of taxation which are founded on property, and to be
|
|
excluded from representation which is regulated by a census of
|
|
persons. This is the objection, as I understand it, stated in its
|
|
full force. I shall be equally candid in stating the reasoning
|
|
which may be offered on the opposite side. ``We subscribe to the
|
|
doctrine,'' might one of our Southern brethren observe, ``that
|
|
representation relates more immediately to persons, and taxation
|
|
more immediately to property, and we join in the application of
|
|
this distinction to the case of our slaves. But we must deny the
|
|
fact, that slaves are considered merely as property, and in no
|
|
respect whatever as persons. The true state of the case is, that
|
|
they partake of both these qualities: being considered by our
|
|
laws, in some respects, as persons, and in other respects as
|
|
property. In being compelled to labor, not for himself, but for
|
|
a master; in being vendible by one master to another master; and
|
|
in being subject at all times to be restrained in his liberty and
|
|
chastised in his body, by the capricious will of another, the
|
|
slave may appear to be degraded from the human rank, and classed
|
|
with those irrational animals which fall under the legal
|
|
denomination of property. In being protected, on the other hand,
|
|
in his life and in his limbs, against the violence of all
|
|
others, even the master of his labor and his liberty; and in
|
|
being punishable himself for all violence committed against
|
|
others, the slave is no less evidently regarded by the law as a
|
|
member of the society, not as a part of the irrational creation;
|
|
as a moral person, not as a mere article of property. The
|
|
federal Constitution, therefore, decides with great propriety on
|
|
the case of our slaves, when it views them in the mixed character
|
|
of persons and of property. This is in fact their true
|
|
character. It is the character bestowed on them by the laws
|
|
under which they live; and it will not be denied, that these are
|
|
the proper criterion; because it is only under the pretext that
|
|
the laws have transformed the negroes into subjects of property,
|
|
that a place is disputed them in the computation of numbers; and
|
|
it is admitted, that if the laws were to restore the rights which
|
|
have been taken away, the negroes could no longer be refused an
|
|
equal share of representation with the other inhabitants. ``This
|
|
question may be placed in another light. It is agreed on all
|
|
sides, that numbers are the best scale of wealth and taxation, as
|
|
they are the only proper scale of representation. Would the
|
|
convention have been impartial or consistent, if they had
|
|
rejected the slaves from the list of inhabitants, when the shares
|
|
of representation were to be calculated, and inserted them on the
|
|
lists when the tariff of contributions was to be adjusted? Could
|
|
it be reasonably expected, that the Southern States would concur
|
|
in a system, which considered their slaves in some degree as men,
|
|
when burdens were to be imposed, but refused to consider them in
|
|
the same light, when advantages were to be conferred? Might not
|
|
some surprise also be expressed, that those who reproach the
|
|
Southern States with the barbarous policy of considering as
|
|
property a part of their human brethren, should themselves
|
|
contend, that the government to which all the States are to be
|
|
parties, ought to consider this unfortunate race more completely
|
|
in the unnatural light of property, than the very laws of which
|
|
they complain? ``It may be replied, perhaps, that slaves are not
|
|
included in the estimate of representatives in any of the States
|
|
possessing them. They neither vote themselves nor increase the
|
|
votes of their masters. Upon what principle, then, ought they to
|
|
be taken into the federal estimate of representation? In
|
|
rejecting them altogether, the Constitution would, in this
|
|
respect, have followed the very laws which have been appealed to
|
|
as the proper guide. ``This objection is repelled by a single
|
|
abservation. It is a fundamental principle of the proposed
|
|
Constitution, that as the aggregate number of representatives
|
|
allotted to the several States is to be determined by a federal
|
|
rule, founded on the aggregate number of inhabitants, so the
|
|
right of choosing this allotted number in each State is to be
|
|
exercised by such part of the inhabitants as the State itself may
|
|
designate. The qualifications on which the right of suffrage
|
|
depend are not, perhaps, the same in any two States. In some of
|
|
the States the difference is very material. In every State, a
|
|
certain proportion of inhabitants are deprived of this right by
|
|
the constitution of the State, who will be included in the census
|
|
by which the federal Constitution apportions the representatives.
|
|
In this point of view the Southern States might retort the
|
|
complaint, by insisting that the principle laid down by the
|
|
convention required that no regard should be had to the policy of
|
|
particular States towards their own inhabitants; and
|
|
consequently, that the slaves, as inhabitants, should have been
|
|
admitted into the census according to their full number, in like
|
|
manner with other inhabitants, who, by the policy of other
|
|
States, are not admitted to all the rights of citizens. A
|
|
rigorous adherence, however, to this principle, is waived by
|
|
those who would be gainers by it. All that they ask is that
|
|
equal moderation be shown on the other side. Let the case of the
|
|
slaves be considered, as it is in truth, a peculiar one. Let the
|
|
compromising expedient of the Constitution be mutually adopted,
|
|
which regards them as inhabitants, but as debased by servitude
|
|
below the equal level of free inhabitants, which regards the
|
|
SLAVE as divested of two fifths of the MAN. ``After all, may not
|
|
another ground be taken on which this article of the
|
|
Constitution will admit of a still more ready defense? We have
|
|
hitherto proceeded on the idea that representation related to
|
|
persons only, and not at all to property. But is it a just idea?
|
|
Government is instituted no less for protection of the property,
|
|
than of the persons, of individuals. The one as well as the
|
|
other, therefore, may be considered as represented by those who
|
|
are charged with the government. Upon this principle it is, that
|
|
in several of the States, and particularly in the State of New
|
|
York, one branch of the government is intended more especially to
|
|
be the guardian of property, and is accordingly elected by that
|
|
part of the society which is most interested in this object of
|
|
government. In the federal Constitution, this policy does not
|
|
prevail. The rights of property are committed into the same hands
|
|
with the personal rights. Some attention ought, therefore, to be
|
|
paid to property in the choice of those hands. ``For another
|
|
reason, the votes allowed in the federal legislature to the
|
|
people of each State, ought to bear some proportion to the
|
|
comparative wealth of the States. States have not, like
|
|
individuals, an influence over each other, arising from superior
|
|
advantages of fortune. If the law allows an opulent citizen but a
|
|
single vote in the choice of his representative, the respect and
|
|
consequence which he derives from his fortunate situation very
|
|
frequently guide the votes of others to the objects of his
|
|
choice; and through this imperceptible channel the rights of
|
|
property are conveyed into the public representation. A State
|
|
possesses no such influence over other States. It is not probable
|
|
that the richest State in the Confederacy will ever influence the
|
|
choice of a single representative in any other State. Nor will
|
|
the representatives of the larger and richer States possess any
|
|
other advantage in the federal legislature, over the
|
|
representatives of other States, than what may result from their
|
|
superior number alone. As far, therefore, as their superior
|
|
wealth and weight may justly entitle them to any advantage, it
|
|
ought to be secured to them by a superior share of
|
|
representation. The new Constitution is, in this respect,
|
|
materially different from the existing Confederation, as well as
|
|
from that of the United Netherlands, and other similar
|
|
confederacies. In each of the latter, the efficacy of the
|
|
federal resolutions depends on the subsequent and voluntary
|
|
resolutions of the states composing the union. Hence the states,
|
|
though possessing an equal vote in the public councils, have an
|
|
unequal influence, corresponding with the unequal importance of
|
|
these subsequent and voluntary resolutions. Under the proposed
|
|
Constitution, the federal acts will take effect without the
|
|
necessary intervention of the individual States. They will depend
|
|
merely on the majority of votes in the federal legislature, and
|
|
consequently each vote, whether proceeding from a larger or
|
|
smaller State, or a State more or less wealthy or powerful, will
|
|
have an equal weight and efficacy: in the same manner as the
|
|
votes individually given in a State legislature, by the
|
|
representatives of unequal counties or other districts, have
|
|
each a precise equality of value and effect; or if there be any
|
|
difference in the case, it proceeds from the difference in the
|
|
personal character of the individual representative, rather than
|
|
from any regard to the extent of the district from which he
|
|
comes. ''Such is the reasoning which an advocate for the
|
|
Southern interests might employ on this subject; and although it
|
|
may appear to be a little strained in some points, yet, on the
|
|
whole, I must confess that it fully reconciles me to the scale of
|
|
representation which the convention have established. In one
|
|
respect, the establishment of a common measure for representation
|
|
and taxation will have a very salutary effect. As the accuracy
|
|
of the census to be obtained by the Congress will necessarily
|
|
depend, in a considerable degree on the disposition, if not on
|
|
the co-operation, of the States, it is of great importance that
|
|
the States should feel as little bias as possible, to swell or to
|
|
reduce the amount of their numbers. Were their share of
|
|
representation alone to be governed by this rule, they would have
|
|
an interest in exaggerating their inhabitants. Were the rule to
|
|
decide their share of taxation alone, a contrary temptation would
|
|
prevail. By extending the rule to both objects, the States will
|
|
have opposite interests, which will control and balance each
|
|
other, and produce the requisite impartiality. PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 55
|
|
|
|
The Total Number of the House of Representatives
|
|
From the New York Packet. Friday, February 15, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON OR MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE number of which the House of Representatives is to consist,
|
|
forms another and a very interesting point of view, under which
|
|
this branch of the federal legislature may be contemplated.
|
|
Scarce any article, indeed, in the whole Constitution seems to be
|
|
rendered more worthy of attention, by the weight of character and
|
|
the apparent force of argument with which it has been assailed.
|
|
The charges exhibited against it are, first, that so small a
|
|
number of representatives will be an unsafe depositary of the
|
|
public interests; secondly, that they will not possess a proper
|
|
knowledge of the local circumstances of their numerous
|
|
constituents; thirdly, that they will be taken from that class of
|
|
citizens which will sympathize least with the feelings of the
|
|
mass of the people, and be most likely to aim at a permanent
|
|
elevation of the few on the depression of the many; fourthly,
|
|
that defective as the number will be in the first instance, it
|
|
will be more and more disproportionate, by the increase of the
|
|
people, and the obstacles which will prevent a correspondent
|
|
increase of the representatives. In general it may be remarked on
|
|
this subject, that no political problem is less susceptible of a
|
|
precise solution than that which relates to the number most
|
|
convenient for a representative legislature; nor is there any
|
|
point on which the policy of the several States is more at
|
|
variance, whether we compare their legislative assemblies
|
|
directly with each other, or consider the proportions which they
|
|
respectively bear to the number of their constituents. Passing
|
|
over the difference between the smallest and largest States, as
|
|
Delaware, whose most numerous branch consists of twenty-one
|
|
representatives, and Massachusetts, where it amounts to between
|
|
three and four hundred, a very considerable difference is
|
|
observable among States nearly equal in population. The number of
|
|
representatives in Pennsylvania is not more than one fifth of
|
|
that in the State last mentioned. New York, whose population is
|
|
to that of South Carolina as six to five, has little more than
|
|
one third of the number of representatives. As great a disparity
|
|
prevails between the States of Georgia and Delaware or Rhode
|
|
Island. In Pennsylvania, the representatives do not bear a
|
|
greater proportion to their constituents than of one for every
|
|
four or five thousand. In Rhode Island, they bear a proportion of
|
|
at least one for every thousand. And according to the
|
|
constitution of Georgia, the proportion may be carried to one to
|
|
every ten electors; and must unavoidably far exceed the
|
|
proportion in any of the other States. Another general remark to
|
|
be made is, that the ratio between the representatives and the
|
|
people ought not to be the same where the latter are very
|
|
numerous as where they are very few. Were the representatives in
|
|
Virginia to be regulated by the standard in Rhode Island, they
|
|
would, at this time, amount to between four and five hundred; and
|
|
twenty or thirty years hence, to a thousand. On the other hand,
|
|
the ratio of Pennsylvania, if applied to the State of Delaware,
|
|
would reduce the representative assembly of the latter to seven
|
|
or eight members. Nothing can be more fallacious than to found
|
|
our political calculations on arithmetical principles. Sixty or
|
|
seventy men may be more properly trusted with a given degree of
|
|
power than six or seven. But it does not follow that six or seven
|
|
hundred would be proportionably a better depositary. And if we
|
|
carry on the supposition to six or seven thousand, the whole
|
|
reasoning ought to be reversed. The truth is, that in all cases a
|
|
certain number at least seems to be necessary to secure the
|
|
benefits of free consultation and discussion, and to guard
|
|
against too easy a combination for improper purposes; as, on the
|
|
other hand, the number ought at most to be kept within a certain
|
|
limit, in order to avoid the confusion and intemperance of a
|
|
multitude. In all very numerous assemblies, of whatever character
|
|
composed, passion never fails to wrest the sceptre from reason.
|
|
Had every Athenian citizen been a Socrates, every Athenian
|
|
assembly would still have been a mob.
|
|
It is necessary also to
|
|
recollect here the observations which were applied to the case of
|
|
biennial elections. For the same reason that the limited powers
|
|
of the Congress, and the control of the State legislatures,
|
|
justify less frequent elections than the public safely might
|
|
otherwise require, the members of the Congress need be less
|
|
numerous than if they possessed the whole power of legislation,
|
|
and were under no other than the ordinary restraints of other
|
|
legislative bodies. With these general ideas in our mind, let us
|
|
weigh the objections which have been stated against the number of
|
|
members proposed for the House of Representatives. It is said, in
|
|
the first place, that so small a number cannot be safely trusted
|
|
with so much power. The number of which this branch of the
|
|
legislature is to consist, at the outset of the government, will
|
|
be sixtyfive. Within three years a census is to be taken, when
|
|
the number may be augmented to one for every thirty thousand
|
|
inhabitants; and within every successive period of ten years the
|
|
census is to be renewed, and augmentations may continue to be
|
|
made under the above limitation. It will not be thought an
|
|
extravagant conjecture that the first census will, at the rate of
|
|
one for every thirty thousand, raise the number of
|
|
representatives to at least one hundred. Estimating the negroes
|
|
in the proportion of three fifths, it can scarcely be doubted
|
|
that the population of the United States will by that time, if it
|
|
does not already, amount to three millions. At the expiration of
|
|
twenty-five years, according to the computed rate of increase,
|
|
the number of representatives will amount to two hundred, and of
|
|
fifty years, to four hundred. This is a number which, I presume,
|
|
will put an end to all fears arising from the smallness of the
|
|
body. I take for granted here what I shall, in answering the
|
|
fourth objection, hereafter show, that the number of
|
|
representatives will be augmented from time to time in the
|
|
manner provided by the Constitution. On a contrary supposition, I
|
|
should admit the objection to have very great weight indeed. The
|
|
true question to be decided then is, whether the smallness of the
|
|
number, as a temporary regulation, be dangerous to the public
|
|
liberty? Whether sixty-five members for a few years, and a
|
|
hundred or two hundred for a few more, be a safe depositary for a
|
|
limited and well-guarded power of legislating for the United
|
|
States? I must own that I could not give a negative answer to
|
|
this question, without first obliterating every impression which
|
|
I have received with regard to the present genius of the people
|
|
of America, the spirit which actuates the State legislatures, and
|
|
the principles which are incorporated with the political
|
|
character of every class of citizens I am unable to conceive that
|
|
the people of America, in their present temper, or under any
|
|
circumstances which can speedily happen, will choose, and every
|
|
second year repeat the choice of, sixty-five or a hundred men who
|
|
would be disposed to form and pursue a scheme of tyranny or
|
|
treachery. I am unable to conceive that the State legislatures,
|
|
which must feel so many motives to watch, and which possess so
|
|
many means of counteracting, the federal legislature, would fail
|
|
either to detect or to defeat a conspiracy of the latter against
|
|
the liberties of their common constituents. I am equally unable
|
|
to conceive that there are at this time, or can be in any short
|
|
time, in the United States, any sixty-five or a hundred men
|
|
capable of recommending themselves to the choice of the people at
|
|
large, who would either desire or dare, within the short space of
|
|
two years, to betray the solemn trust committed to them. What
|
|
change of circumstances, time, and a fuller population of our
|
|
country may produce, requires a prophetic spirit to declare,
|
|
which makes no part of my pretensions. But judging from the
|
|
circumstances now before us, and from the probable state of them
|
|
within a moderate period of time, I must pronounce that the
|
|
liberties of America cannot be unsafe in the number of hands
|
|
proposed by the federal Constitution. From what quarter can the
|
|
danger proceed? Are we afraid of foreign gold? If foreign gold
|
|
could so easily corrupt our federal rulers and enable them to
|
|
ensnare and betray their constituents, how has it happened that
|
|
we are at this time a free and independent nation? The Congress
|
|
which conducted us through the Revolution was a less numerous
|
|
body than their successors will be; they were not chosen by, nor
|
|
responsible to, their fellowcitizens at large; though appointed
|
|
from year to year, and recallable at pleasure, they were
|
|
generally continued for three years, and prior to the
|
|
ratification of the federal articles, for a still longer term.
|
|
They held their consultations always under the veil of secrecy;
|
|
they had the sole transaction of our affairs with foreign
|
|
nations; through the whole course of the war they had the fate of
|
|
their country more in their hands than it is to be hoped will
|
|
ever be the case with our future representatives; and from the
|
|
greatness of the prize at stake, and the eagerness of the party
|
|
which lost it, it may well be supposed that the use of other
|
|
means than force would not have been scrupled. Yet we know by
|
|
happy experience that the public trust was not betrayed; nor has
|
|
the purity of our public councils in this particular ever
|
|
suffered, even from the whispers of calumny. Is the danger
|
|
apprehended from the other branches of the federal government?
|
|
But where are the means to be found by the President, or the
|
|
Senate, or both? Their emoluments of office, it is to be
|
|
presumed, will not, and without a previous corruption of the
|
|
House of Representatives cannot, more than suffice for very
|
|
different purposes; their private fortunes, as they must allbe
|
|
American citizens, cannot possibly be sources of danger. The
|
|
only means, then, which they can possess, will be in the
|
|
dispensation of appointments. Is it here that suspicion rests
|
|
her charge? Sometimes we are told that this fund of corruption
|
|
is to be exhausted by the President in subduing the virtue of the
|
|
Senate. Now, the fidelity of the other House is to be the
|
|
victim. The improbability of such a mercenary and perfidious
|
|
combination of the several members of government, standing on as
|
|
different foundations as republican principles will well admit,
|
|
and at the same time accountable to the society over which they
|
|
are placed, ought alone to quiet this apprehension. But,
|
|
fortunately, the Constitution has provided a still further
|
|
safeguard. The members of the Congress are rendered ineligible
|
|
to any civil offices that may be created, or of which the
|
|
emoluments may be increased, during the term of their election.
|
|
No offices therefore can be dealt out to the existing members but
|
|
such as may become vacant by ordinary casualties: and to suppose
|
|
that these would be sufficient to purchase the guardians of the
|
|
people, selected by the people themselves, is to renounce every
|
|
rule by which events ought to be calculated, and to substitute an
|
|
indiscriminate and unbounded jealousy, with which all reasoning
|
|
must be vain. The sincere friends of liberty, who give
|
|
themselves up to the extravagancies of this passion, are not
|
|
aware of the injury they do their own cause. As there is a
|
|
degree of depravity in mankind which requires a certain degree of
|
|
circumspection and distrust, so there are other qualities in
|
|
human nature which justify a certain portion of esteem and
|
|
confidence. Republican government presupposes the existence of
|
|
these qualities in a higher degree than any other form. Were the
|
|
pictures which have been drawn by the political jealousy of some
|
|
among us faithful likenesses of the human character, the
|
|
inference would be, that there is not sufficient virtue among men
|
|
for self-government; and that nothing less than the chains of
|
|
despotism can restrain them from destroying and devouring one
|
|
another. PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 56
|
|
|
|
The Same Subject Continued(The Total Number of the House of
|
|
Representatives)
|
|
From the New York Packet. Tuesday, February 19, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON OR MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE SECOND charge against the House of Representatives is, that
|
|
it will be too small to possess a due knowledge of the interests
|
|
of its constituents. As this objection evidently proceeds from a
|
|
comparison of the proposed number of representatives with the
|
|
great extent of the United States, the number of their
|
|
inhabitants, and the diversity of their interests, without taking
|
|
into view at the same time the circumstances which will
|
|
distinguish the Congress from other legislative bodies, the best
|
|
answer that can be given to it will be a brief explanation of
|
|
these peculiarities. It is a sound and important principle that
|
|
the representative ought to be acquainted with the interests and
|
|
circumstances of his constituents. But this principle can extend
|
|
no further than to those circumstances and interests to which the
|
|
authority and care of the representative relate. An ignorance of
|
|
a variety of minute and particular objects, which do not lie
|
|
within the compass of legislation, is consistent with every
|
|
attribute necessary to a due performance of the legislative
|
|
trust. In determining the extent of information required in the
|
|
exercise of a particular authority, recourse then must be had to
|
|
the objects within the purview of that authority. What are to be
|
|
the objects of federal legislation? Those which are of most
|
|
importance, and which seem most to require local knowledge, are
|
|
commerce, taxation, and the militia. A proper regulation of
|
|
commerce requires much information, as has been elsewhere
|
|
remarked; but as far as this information relates to the laws and
|
|
local situation of each individual State, a very few
|
|
representatives would be very sufficient vehicles of it to the
|
|
federal councils. Taxation will consist, in a great measure, of
|
|
duties which will be involved in the regulation of commerce. So
|
|
far the preceding remark is applicable to this object. As far as
|
|
it may consist of internal collections, a more diffusive
|
|
knowledge of the circumstances of the State may be necessary. But
|
|
will not this also be possessed in sufficient degree by a very
|
|
few intelligent men, diffusively elected within the State? Divide
|
|
the largest State into ten or twelve districts, and it will be
|
|
found that there will be no peculiar local interests in either,
|
|
which will not be within the knowledge of the representative of
|
|
the district. Besides this source of information, the laws of the
|
|
State, framed by representatives from every part of it, will be
|
|
almost of themselves a sufficient guide. In every State there
|
|
have been made, and must continue to be made, regulations on this
|
|
subject which will, in many cases, leave little more to be done
|
|
by the federal legislature, than to review the different laws,
|
|
and reduce them in one general act. A skillful individual in his
|
|
closet with all the local codes before him, might compile a law
|
|
on some subjects of taxation for the whole union, without any aid
|
|
from oral information, and it may be expected that whenever
|
|
internal taxes may be necessary, and particularly in cases
|
|
requiring uniformity throughout the States, the more simple
|
|
objects will be preferred. To be fully sensible of the facility
|
|
which will be given to this branch of federal legislation by the
|
|
assistance of the State codes, we need only suppose for a moment
|
|
that this or any other State were divided into a number of parts,
|
|
each having and exercising within itself a power of local
|
|
legislation. Is it not evident that a degree of local information
|
|
and preparatory labor would be found in the several volumes of
|
|
their proceedings, which would very much shorten the labors of
|
|
the general legislature, and render a much smaller number of
|
|
members sufficient for it? The federal councils will derive great
|
|
advantage from another circumstance. The representatives of each
|
|
State will not only bring with them a considerable knowledge of
|
|
its laws, and a local knowledge of their respective districts,
|
|
but will probably in all cases have been members, and may even at
|
|
the very time be members, of the State legislature, where all the
|
|
local information and interests of the State are assembled, and
|
|
from whence they may easily be conveyed by a very few hands into
|
|
the legislature of the United States. The observations made on
|
|
the subject of taxation apply with greater force to the case of
|
|
the militia. For however different the rules of discipline may be
|
|
in different States, they are the same throughout each particular
|
|
State; and depend on circumstances which can differ but little in
|
|
different parts of the same State. The attentive reader will
|
|
discern that the reasoning here used, to prove the sufficiency of
|
|
a moderate number of representatives, does not in any respect
|
|
contradict what was urged on another occasion with regard to the
|
|
extensive information which the representatives ought to possess,
|
|
and the time that might be necessary for acquiring it. This
|
|
information, so far as it may relate to local objects, is
|
|
rendered necessary and difficult, not by a difference of laws and
|
|
local circumstances within a single State, but of those among
|
|
different States. Taking each State by itself, its laws are the
|
|
same, and its interests but little diversified. A few men,
|
|
therefore, will possess all the knowledge requisite for a proper
|
|
representation of them. Were the interests and affairs of each
|
|
individual State perfectly simple and uniform, a knowledge of
|
|
them in one part would involve a knowledge of them in every
|
|
other, and the whole State might be competently represented by a
|
|
single member taken from any part of it. On a comparison of the
|
|
different States together, we find a great dissimilarity in their
|
|
laws, and in many other circumstances connected with the objects
|
|
of federal legislation, with all of which the federal
|
|
representatives ought to have some acquaintance. Whilst a few
|
|
representatives, therefore, from each State, may bring with them
|
|
a due knowledge of their own State, every representative will
|
|
have much information to acquire concerning all the other States.
|
|
The changes of time, as was formerly remarked, on the comparative
|
|
situation of the different States, will have an assimilating
|
|
effect. The effect of time on the internal affairs of the States,
|
|
taken singly, will be just the contrary. At present some of the
|
|
States are little more than a society of husbandmen. Few of them
|
|
have made much progress in those branches of industry which give
|
|
a variety and complexity to the affairs of a nation. These,
|
|
however, will in all of them be the fruits of a more advanced
|
|
population, and will require, on the part of each State, a fuller
|
|
representation. The foresight of the convention has accordingly
|
|
taken care that the progress of population may be accompanied
|
|
with a proper increase of the representative branch of the
|
|
government. The experience of Great Britain, which presents to
|
|
mankind so many political lessons, both of the monitory and
|
|
exemplary kind, and which has been frequently consulted in the
|
|
course of these inquiries, corroborates the result of the
|
|
reflections which we have just made. The number of inhabitants in
|
|
the two kingdoms of England and Scotland cannot be stated at less
|
|
than eight millions. The representatives of these eight millions
|
|
in the House of Commons amount to five hundred and fifty-eight.
|
|
Of this number, one ninth are elected by three hundred and
|
|
sixty-four persons, and one half, by five thousand seven hundred
|
|
and twenty-three persons. 1 It cannot be supposed that the half
|
|
thus elected, and who do not even reside among the people at
|
|
large, can add any thing either to the security of the people
|
|
against the government, or to the knowledge of their
|
|
circumstances and interests in the legislative councils. On the
|
|
contrary, it is notorious, that they are more frequently the
|
|
representatives and instruments of the executive magistrate, than
|
|
the guardians and advocates of the popular rights. They might
|
|
therefore, with great propriety, be considered as something more
|
|
than a mere deduction from the real representatives of the
|
|
nation. We will, however, consider them in this light alone, and
|
|
will not extend the deduction to a considerable number of
|
|
others, who do not reside among their constitutents, are very
|
|
faintly connected with them, and have very little particular
|
|
knowledge of their affairs. With all these concessions, two
|
|
hundred and seventy-nine persons only will be the depository of
|
|
the safety, interest, and happiness of eight millions that is to
|
|
say, there will be one representative only to maintain the rights
|
|
and explain the situation OF TWENTY-EIGHT THOUSAND SIX HUNDRED
|
|
AND SEVENTY constitutents, in an assembly exposed to the whole
|
|
force of executive influence, and extending its authority to
|
|
every object of legislation within a nation whose affairs are in
|
|
the highest degree diversified and complicated. Yet it is very
|
|
certain, not only that a valuable portion of freedom has been
|
|
preserved under all these circumstances, but that the defects in
|
|
the British code are chargeable, in a very small proportion, on
|
|
the ignorance of the legislature concerning the circumstances of
|
|
the people. Allowing to this case the weight which is due to it,
|
|
and comparing it with that of the House of Representatives as
|
|
above explained it seems to give the fullest assurance, that a
|
|
representative for every THIRTY THOUSAND INHABITANTS will render
|
|
the latter both a safe and competent guardian of the interests
|
|
which will be confided to it. PUBLIUS. Burgh's ``Political
|
|
Disquisitions. ''
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|
|
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FEDERALIST No. 57
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|
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|
The Alleged Tendency of the New Plan to Elevate the Few at the
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|
Expense of the Many Considered in Connection with Representation
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|
From the New York Packet. Tuesday, February 19, 1788.
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|
HAMILTON OR MADISON
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|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
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|
THE THIRD charge against the House of Representatives is, that it
|
|
will be taken from that class of citizens which will have least
|
|
sympathy with the mass of the people, and be most likely to aim
|
|
at an ambitious sacrifice of the many to the aggrandizement of
|
|
the few. Of all the objections which have been framed against the
|
|
federal Constitution, this is perhaps the most extraordinary.
|
|
Whilst the objection itself is levelled against a pretended
|
|
oligarchy, the principle of it strikes at the very root of
|
|
republican government. The aim of every political constitution
|
|
is, or ought to be, first to obtain for rulers men who possess
|
|
most wisdom to discern, and most virtue to pursue, the common
|
|
good of the society; and in the next place, to take the most
|
|
effectual precautions for keeping them virtuous whilst they
|
|
continue to hold their public trust. The elective mode of
|
|
obtaining rulers is the characteristic policy of republican
|
|
government. The means relied on in this form of government for
|
|
preventing their degeneracy are numerous and various. The most
|
|
effectual one, is such a limitation of the term of appointments
|
|
as will maintain a proper responsibility to the people. Let me
|
|
now ask what circumstance there is in the constitution of the
|
|
House of Representatives that violates the principles of
|
|
republican government, or favors the elevation of the few on the
|
|
ruins of the many? Let me ask whether every circumstance is not,
|
|
on the contrary, strictly conformable to these principles, and
|
|
scrupulously impartial to the rights and pretensions of every
|
|
class and description of citizens? Who are to be the electors of
|
|
the federal representatives? Not the rich, more than the poor;
|
|
not the learned, more than the ignorant; not the haughty heirs of
|
|
distinguished names, more than the humble sons of obscurity and
|
|
unpropitious fortune. The electors are to be the great body of
|
|
the people of the United States. They are to be the same who
|
|
exercise the right in every State of electing the corresponding
|
|
branch of the legislature of the State. Who are to be the objects
|
|
of popular choice? Every citizen whose merit may recommend him to
|
|
the esteem and confidence of his country. No qualification of
|
|
wealth, of birth, of religious faith, or of civil profession is
|
|
permitted to fetter the judgement or disappoint the inclination
|
|
of the people. If we consider the situation of the men on whom
|
|
the free suffrages of their fellow-citizens may confer the
|
|
representative trust, we shall find it involving every security
|
|
which can be devised or desired for their fidelity to their
|
|
constituents. In the first place, as they will have been
|
|
distinguished by the preference of their fellow-citizens, we are
|
|
to presume that in general they will be somewhat distinguished
|
|
also by those qualities which entitle them to it, and which
|
|
promise a sincere and scrupulous regard to the nature of their
|
|
engagements. In the second place, they will enter into the public
|
|
service under circumstances which cannot fail to produce a
|
|
temporary affection at least to their constituents. There is in
|
|
every breast a sensibility to marks of honor, of favor, of
|
|
esteem, and of confidence, which, apart from all considerations
|
|
of interest, is some pledge for grateful and benevolent returns.
|
|
Ingratitude is a common topic of declamation against human
|
|
nature; and it must be confessed that instances of it are but too
|
|
frequent and flagrant, both in public and in private life. But
|
|
the universal and extreme indignation which it inspires is itself
|
|
a proof of the energy and prevalence of the contrary sentiment.
|
|
In the third place, those ties which bind the representative to
|
|
his constituents are strengthened by motives of a more selfish
|
|
nature. His pride and vanity attach him to a form of government
|
|
which favors his pretensions and gives him a share in its honors
|
|
and distinctions. Whatever hopes or projects might be entertained
|
|
by a few aspiring characters, it must generally happen that a
|
|
great proportion of the men deriving their advancement from their
|
|
influence with the people, would have more to hope from a
|
|
preservation of the favor, than from innovations in the
|
|
government subversive of the authority of the people. All these
|
|
securities, however, would be found very insufficient without the
|
|
restraint of frequent elections. Hence, in the fourth place, the
|
|
House of Representatives is so constituted as to support in the
|
|
members an habitual recollection of their dependence on the
|
|
people. Before the sentiments impressed on their minds by the
|
|
mode of their elevation can be effaced by the exercise of power,
|
|
they will be compelled to anticipate the moment when their power
|
|
is to cease, when their exercise of it is to be reviewed, and
|
|
when they must descend to the level from which they were raised;
|
|
there forever to remain unless a faithful discharge of their
|
|
trust shall have established their title to a renewal of it. I
|
|
will add, as a fifth circumstance in the situation of the House
|
|
of Representatives, restraining them from oppressive measures,
|
|
that they can make no law which will not have its full operation
|
|
on themselves and their friends, as well as on the great mass of
|
|
the society. This has always been deemed one of the strongest
|
|
bonds by which human policy can connect the rulers and the people
|
|
together. It creates between them that communion of interests and
|
|
sympathy of sentiments, of which few governments have furnished
|
|
examples; but without which every government degenerates into
|
|
tyranny. If it be asked, what is to restrain the House of
|
|
Representatives from making legal discriminations in favor of
|
|
themselves and a particular class of the society? I answer: the
|
|
genius of the whole system; the nature of just and constitutional
|
|
laws; and above all, the vigilant and manly spirit which actuates
|
|
the people of America, a spirit which nourishes freedom, and in
|
|
return is nourished by it. If this spirit shall ever be so far
|
|
debased as to tolerate a law not obligatory on the legislature,
|
|
as well as on the people, the people will be prepared to tolerate
|
|
any thing but liberty. Such will be the relation between the
|
|
House of Representatives and their constituents. Duty, gratitude,
|
|
interest, ambition itself, are the chords by which they will be
|
|
bound to fidelity and sympathy with the great mass of the people.
|
|
It is possible that these may all be insufficient to control the
|
|
caprice and wickedness of man. But are they not all that
|
|
government will admit, and that human prudence can devise? Are
|
|
they not the genuine and the characteristic means by which
|
|
republican government provides for the liberty and happiness of
|
|
the people? Are they not the identical means on which every State
|
|
government in the Union relies for the attainment of these
|
|
important ends? What then are we to understand by the objection
|
|
which this paper has combated? What are we to say to the men who
|
|
profess the most flaming zeal for republican government, yet
|
|
boldly impeach the fundamental principle of it; who pretend to be
|
|
champions for the right and the capacity of the people to choose
|
|
their own rulers, yet maintain that they will prefer those only
|
|
who will immediately and infallibly betray the trust committed to
|
|
them? Were the objection to be read by one who had not seen the
|
|
mode prescribed by the Constitution for the choice of
|
|
representatives, he could suppose nothing less than that some
|
|
unreasonable qualification of property was annexed to the right
|
|
of suffrage; or that the right of eligibility was limited to
|
|
persons of particular families or fortunes; or at least that the
|
|
mode prescribed by the State constitutions was in some respect or
|
|
other, very grossly departed from. We have seen how far such a
|
|
supposition would err, as to the two first points. Nor would it,
|
|
in fact, be less erroneous as to the last. The only difference
|
|
discoverable between the two cases is, that each representative
|
|
of the United States will be elected by five or six thousand
|
|
citizens; whilst in the individual States, the election of a
|
|
representative is left to about as many hundreds. Will it be
|
|
pretended that this difference is sufficient to justify an
|
|
attachment to the State governments, and an abhorrence to the
|
|
federal government? If this be the point on which the objection
|
|
turns, it deserves to be examined. Is it supported by REASON?
|
|
This cannot be said, without maintaining that five or six
|
|
thousand citizens are less capable of choosing a fit
|
|
representative, or more liable to be corrupted by an unfit one,
|
|
than five or six hundred. Reason, on the contrary, assures us,
|
|
that as in so great a number a fit representative would be most
|
|
likely to be found, so the choice would be less likely to be
|
|
diverted from him by the intrigues of the ambitious or the
|
|
ambitious or the bribes of the rich. Is the CONSEQUENCE from
|
|
this doctrine admissible? If we say that five or six hundred
|
|
citizens are as many as can jointly exercise their right of
|
|
suffrage, must we not deprive the people of the immediate choice
|
|
of their public servants, in every instance where the
|
|
administration of the government does not require as many of them
|
|
as will amount to one for that number of citizens? Is the
|
|
doctrine warranted by FACTS? It was shown in the last paper, that
|
|
the real representation in the British House of Commons very
|
|
little exceeds the proportion of one for every thirty thousand
|
|
inhabitants. Besides a variety of powerful causes not existing
|
|
here, and which favor in that country the pretensions of rank and
|
|
wealth, no person is eligible as a representative of a county,
|
|
unless he possess real estate of the clear value of six hundred
|
|
pounds sterling per year; nor of a city or borough, unless he
|
|
possess a like estate of half that annual value. To this
|
|
qualification on the part of the county representatives is added
|
|
another on the part of the county electors, which restrains the
|
|
right of suffrage to persons having a freehold estate of the
|
|
annual value of more than twenty pounds sterling, according to
|
|
the present rate of money. Notwithstanding these unfavorable
|
|
circumstances, and notwithstanding some very unequal laws in the
|
|
British code, it cannot be said that the representatives of the
|
|
nation have elevated the few on the ruins of the many. But we
|
|
need not resort to foreign experience on this subject. Our own
|
|
is explicit and decisive. The districts in New Hampshire in
|
|
which the senators are chosen immediately by the people, are
|
|
nearly as large as will be necessary for her representatives in
|
|
the Congress. Those of Massachusetts are larger than will be
|
|
necessary for that purpose; and those of New York still more so.
|
|
In the last State the members of Assembly for the cities and
|
|
counties of New York and Albany are elected by very nearly as
|
|
many voters as will be entitled to a representative in the
|
|
Congress, calculating on the number of sixty-five representatives
|
|
only. It makes no difference that in these senatorial districts
|
|
and counties a number of representatives are voted for by each
|
|
elector at the same time. If the same electors at the same time
|
|
are capable of choosing four or five representatives, they cannot
|
|
be incapable of choosing one. Pennsylvania is an additional
|
|
example. Some of her counties, which elect her State
|
|
representatives, are almost as large as her districts will be by
|
|
which her federal representatives will be elected. The city of
|
|
Philadelphia is supposed to contain between fifty and sixty
|
|
thousand souls. It will therefore form nearly two districts for
|
|
the choice of federal representatives. It forms, however, but
|
|
one county, in which every elector votes for each of its
|
|
representatives in the State legislature. And what may appear to
|
|
be still more directly to our purpose, the whole city actually
|
|
elects a SINGLE MEMBER for the executive council. This is the
|
|
case in all the other counties of the State. Are not these facts
|
|
the most satisfactory proofs of the fallacy which has been
|
|
employed against the branch of the federal government under
|
|
consideration? Has it appeared on trial that the senators of New
|
|
Hampshire, Massachusetts, and New York, or the executive council
|
|
of Pennsylvania, or the members of the Assembly in the two last
|
|
States, have betrayed any peculiar disposition to sacrifice the
|
|
many to the few, or are in any respect less worthy of their
|
|
places than the representatives and magistrates appointed in
|
|
other States by very small divisions of the people? But there are
|
|
cases of a stronger complexion than any which I have yet quoted.
|
|
One branch of the legislature of Connecticut is so constituted
|
|
that each member of it is elected by the whole State. So is the
|
|
governor of that State, of Massachusetts, and of this State, and
|
|
the president of New Hampshire. I leave every man to decide
|
|
whether the result of any one of these experiments can be said to
|
|
countenance a suspicion, that a diffusive mode of choosing
|
|
representatives of the people tends to elevate traitors and to
|
|
undermine the public liberty. PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 58
|
|
Objection That The Number of Members Will Not Be Augmented as the
|
|
Progress of Population Demands Considered
|
|
|
|
MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE remaining charge against the House of Representatives, which
|
|
I am to examine, is grounded on a supposition that the number of
|
|
members will not be augmented from time to time, as the progress
|
|
of population may demand. It has been admitted, that this
|
|
objection, if well supported, would have great weight. The
|
|
following observations will show that, like most other objections
|
|
against the Constitution, it can only proceed from a partial view
|
|
of the subject, or from a jealousy which discolors and disfigures
|
|
every object which is beheld. 1. Those who urge the objection
|
|
seem not to have recollected that the federal Constitution will
|
|
not suffer by a comparison with the State constitutions, in the
|
|
security provided for a gradual augmentation of the number of
|
|
representatives. The number which is to prevail in the first
|
|
instance is declared to be temporary. Its duration is limited to
|
|
the short term of three years. Within every successive term of
|
|
ten years a census of inhabitants is to be repeated. The
|
|
unequivocal objects of these regulations are, first, to readjust,
|
|
from time to time, the apportionment of representatives to the
|
|
number of inhabitants, under the single exception that each State
|
|
shall have one representative at least; secondly, to augment the
|
|
number of representatives at the same periods, under the sole
|
|
limitation that the whole number shall not exceed one for every
|
|
thirty thousand inhabitants. If we review the constitutions of
|
|
the several States, we shall find that some of them contain no
|
|
determinate regulations on this subject, that others correspond
|
|
pretty much on this point with the federal Constitution, and that
|
|
the most effectual security in any of them is resolvable into a
|
|
mere directory provision. 2. As far as experience has taken place
|
|
on this subject, a gradual increase of representatives under the
|
|
State constitutions has at least kept pace with that of the
|
|
constituents, and it appears that the former have been as ready
|
|
to concur in such measures as the latter have been to call for
|
|
them. 3. There is a peculiarity in the federal Constitution which
|
|
insures a watchful attention in a majority both of the people and
|
|
of their representatives to a constitutional augmentation of the
|
|
latter. The peculiarity lies in this, that one branch of the
|
|
legislature is a representation of citizens, the other of the
|
|
States: in the former, consequently, the larger States will have
|
|
most weight; in the latter, the advantage will be in favor of the
|
|
smaller States. From this circumstance it may with certainty be
|
|
inferred that the larger States will be strenuous advocates for
|
|
increasing the number and weight of that part of the legislature
|
|
in which their influence predominates. And it so happens that
|
|
four only of the largest will have a majority of the whole votes
|
|
in the House of Representatives. Should the representatives or
|
|
people, therefore, of the smaller States oppose at any time a
|
|
reasonable addition of members, a coalition of a very few States
|
|
will be sufficient to overrule the opposition; a coalition which,
|
|
notwithstanding the rivalship and local prejudices which might
|
|
prevent it on ordinary occasions, would not fail to take place,
|
|
when not merely prompted by common interest, but justified by
|
|
equity and the principles of the Constitution. It may be
|
|
alleged, perhaps, that the Senate would be prompted by like
|
|
motives to an adverse coalition; and as their concurrence would
|
|
be indispensable, the just and constitutional views of the other
|
|
branch might be defeated. This is the difficulty which has
|
|
probably created the most serious apprehensions in the jealous
|
|
friends of a numerous representation. Fortunately it is among
|
|
the difficulties which, existing only in appearance, vanish on a
|
|
close and accurate inspection. The following reflections will,
|
|
if I mistake not, be admitted to be conclusive and satisfactory
|
|
on this point. Notwithstanding the equal authority which will
|
|
subsist between the two houses on all legislative subjects,
|
|
except the originating of money bills, it cannot be doubted that
|
|
the House, composed of the greater number of members, when
|
|
supported by the more powerful States, and speaking the known and
|
|
determined sense of a majority of the people, will have no small
|
|
advantage in a question depending on the comparative firmness of
|
|
the two houses. This advantage must be increased by the
|
|
consciousness, felt by the same side of being supported in its
|
|
demands by right, by reason, and by the Constitution; and the
|
|
consciousness, on the opposite side, of contending against the
|
|
force of all these solemn considerations. It is farther to be
|
|
considered, that in the gradation between the smallest and
|
|
largest States, there are several, which, though most likely in
|
|
general to arrange themselves among the former are too little
|
|
removed in extent and population from the latter, to second an
|
|
opposition to their just and legitimate pretensions. Hence it is
|
|
by no means certain that a majority of votes, even in the
|
|
Senate, would be unfriendly to proper augmentations in the number
|
|
of representatives. It will not be looking too far to add, that
|
|
the senators from all the new States may be gained over to the
|
|
just views of the House of Representatives, by an expedient too
|
|
obvious to be overlooked. As these States will, for a great
|
|
length of time, advance in population with peculiar rapidity,
|
|
they will be interested in frequent reapportionments of the
|
|
representatives to the number of inhabitants. The large States,
|
|
therefore, who will prevail in the House of Representatives, will
|
|
have nothing to do but to make reapportionments and augmentations
|
|
mutually conditions of each other; and the senators from all the
|
|
most growing States will be bound to contend for the latter, by
|
|
the interest which their States will feel in the former. These
|
|
considerations seem to afford ample security on this subject, and
|
|
ought alone to satisfy all the doubts and fears which have been
|
|
indulged with regard to it. Admitting, however, that they should
|
|
all be insufficient to subdue the unjust policy of the smaller
|
|
States, or their predominant influence in the councils of the
|
|
Senate, a constitutional and infallible resource still remains
|
|
with the larger States, by which they will be able at all times
|
|
to accomplish their just purposes. The House of Representatives
|
|
cannot only refuse, but they alone can propose, the supplies
|
|
requisite for the support of government. They, in a word, hold
|
|
the purse that powerful instrument by which we behold, in the
|
|
history of the British Constitution, an infant and humble
|
|
representation of the people gradually enlarging the sphere of
|
|
its activity and importance, and finally reducing, as far as it
|
|
seems to have wished, all the overgrown prerogatives of the other
|
|
branches of the government. This power over the purse may, in
|
|
fact, be regarded as the most complete and effectual weapon with
|
|
which any constitution can arm the immediate representatives of
|
|
the people, for obtaining a redress of every grievance, and for
|
|
carrying into effect every just and salutary measure. But will
|
|
not the House of Representatives be as much interested as the
|
|
Senate in maintaining the government in its proper functions, and
|
|
will they not therefore be unwilling to stake its existence or
|
|
its reputation on the pliancy of the Senate? Or, if such a trial
|
|
of firmness between the two branches were hazarded, would not the
|
|
one be as likely first to yield as the other? These questions
|
|
will create no difficulty with those who reflect that in all
|
|
cases the smaller the number, and the more permanent and
|
|
conspicuous the station, of men in power, the stronger must be
|
|
the interest which they will individually feel in whatever
|
|
concerns the government. Those who represent the dignity of their
|
|
country in the eyes of other nations, will be particularly
|
|
sensible to every prospect of public danger, or of dishonorable
|
|
stagnation in public affairs. To those causes we are to ascribe
|
|
the continual triumph of the British House of Commons over the
|
|
other branches of the government, whenever the engine of a money
|
|
bill has been employed. An absolute inflexibility on the side of
|
|
the latter, although it could not have failed to involve every
|
|
department of the state in the general confusion, has neither
|
|
been apprehended nor experienced. The utmost degree of firmness
|
|
that can be displayed by the federal Senate or President, will
|
|
not be more than equal to a resistance in which they will be
|
|
supported by constitutional and patriotic principles. In this
|
|
review of the Constitution of the House of Representatives, I
|
|
have passed over the circumstances of economy, which, in the
|
|
present state of affairs, might have had some effect in lessening
|
|
the temporary number of representatives, and a disregard of which
|
|
would probably have been as rich a theme of declamation against
|
|
the Constitution as has been shown by the smallness of the number
|
|
proposed. I omit also any remarks on the difficulty which might
|
|
be found, under present circumstances, in engaging in the federal
|
|
service a large number of such characters as the people will
|
|
probably elect. One observation, however, I must be permitted to
|
|
add on this subject as claiming, in my judgment, a very serious
|
|
attention. It is, that in all legislative assemblies the greater
|
|
the number composing them may be, the fewer will be the men who
|
|
will in fact direct their proceedings. In the first place, the
|
|
more numerous an assembly may be, of whatever characters
|
|
composed, the greater is known to be the ascendency of passion
|
|
over reason. In the next place, the larger the number, the
|
|
greater will be the proportion of members of limited information
|
|
and of weak capacities. Now, it is precisely on characters of
|
|
this description that the eloquence and address of the few are
|
|
known to act with all their force. In the ancient republics,
|
|
where the whole body of the people assembled in person, a single
|
|
orator, or an artful statesman, was generally seen to rule with
|
|
as complete a sway as if a sceptre had been placed in his single
|
|
hand. On the same principle, the more multitudinous a
|
|
representative assembly may be rendered, the more it will partake
|
|
of the infirmities incident to collective meetings of the people.
|
|
Ignorance will be the dupe of cunning, and passion the slave of
|
|
sophistry and declamation. The people can never err more than in
|
|
supposing that by multiplying their representatives beyond a
|
|
certain limit, they strengthen the barrier against the government
|
|
of a few. Experience will forever admonish them that, on the
|
|
contrary, AFTER SECURING A SUFFICIENT NUMBER FOR THE PURPOSES OF
|
|
SAFETY, OF LOCAL INFORMATION, AND OF DIFFUSIVE SYMPATHY WITH THE
|
|
WHOLE SOCIETY, they will counteract their own views by every
|
|
addition to their representatives. The countenance of the
|
|
government may become more democratic, but the soul that animates
|
|
it will be more oligarchic. The machine will be enlarged, but the
|
|
fewer, and often the more secret, will be the springs by which
|
|
its motions are directed. As connected with the objection against
|
|
the number of representatives, may properly be here noticed, that
|
|
which has been suggested against the number made competent for
|
|
legislative business. It has been said that more than a majority
|
|
ought to have been required for a quorum; and in particular
|
|
cases, if not in all, more than a majority of a quorum for a
|
|
decision. That some advantages might have resulted from such a
|
|
precaution, cannot be denied. It might have been an additional
|
|
shield to some particular interests, and another obstacle
|
|
generally to hasty and partial measures. But these considerations
|
|
are outweighed by the inconveniences in the opposite scale. In
|
|
all cases where justice or the general good might require new
|
|
laws to be passed, or active measures to be pursued, the
|
|
fundamental principle of free government would be reversed. It
|
|
would be no longer the majority that would rule: the power would
|
|
be transferred to the minority. Were the defensive privilege
|
|
limited to particular cases, an interested minority might take
|
|
advantage of it to screen themselves from equitable sacrifices to
|
|
the general weal, or, in particular emergencies, to extort
|
|
unreasonable indulgences. Lastly, it would facilitate and foster
|
|
the baneful practice of secessions; a practice which has shown
|
|
itself even in States where a majority only is required; a
|
|
practice subversive of all the principles of order and regular
|
|
government; a practice which leads more directly to public
|
|
convulsions, and the ruin of popular governments, than any other
|
|
which has yet been displayed among us. PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 59
|
|
|
|
Concerning the Power of Congress to Regulate the Election of
|
|
Members
|
|
From the New York Packet. Friday, February 22, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE natural order of the subject leads us to consider, in this
|
|
place, that provision of the Constitution which authorizes the
|
|
national legislature to regulate, in the last resort, the
|
|
election of its own members. It is in these words: ``The TIMES,
|
|
PLACES, and MANNER of holding elections for senators and
|
|
representatives shall be prescribed in each State by the
|
|
legislature thereof; but the Congress may, at any time, by law,
|
|
make or alter SUCH REGULATIONS, except as to the PLACES of
|
|
choosing senators. ''1 This provision has not only been declaimed
|
|
against by those who condemn the Constitution in the gross, but
|
|
it has been censured by those who have objected with less
|
|
latitude and greater moderation; and, in one instance it has been
|
|
thought exceptionable by a gentleman who has declared himself the
|
|
advocate of every other part of the system. I am greatly
|
|
mistaken, notwithstanding, if there be any article in the whole
|
|
plan more completely defensible than this. Its propriety rests
|
|
upon the evidence of this plain proposition, that EVERY
|
|
GOVERNMENT OUGHT TO CONTAIN IN ITSELF THE MEANS OF ITS OWN
|
|
PRESERVATION. Every just reasoner will, at first sight, approve
|
|
an adherence to this rule, in the work of the convention; and
|
|
will disapprove every deviation from it which may not appear to
|
|
have been dictated by the necessity of incorporating into the
|
|
work some particular ingredient, with which a rigid conformity to
|
|
the rule was incompatible. Even in this case, though he may
|
|
acquiesce in the necessity, yet he will not cease to regard and
|
|
to regret a departure from so fundamental a principle, as a
|
|
portion of imperfection in the system which may prove the seed of
|
|
future weakness, and perhaps anarchy. It will not be alleged,
|
|
that an election law could have been framed and inserted in the
|
|
Constitution, which would have been always applicable to every
|
|
probable change in the situation of the country; and it will
|
|
therefore not be denied, that a discretionary power over
|
|
elections ought to exist somewhere. It will, I presume, be as
|
|
readily conceded, that there were only three ways in which this
|
|
power could have been reasonably modified and disposed: that it
|
|
must either have been lodged wholly in the national legislature,
|
|
or wholly in the State legislatures, or primarily in the latter
|
|
and ultimately in the former. The last mode has, with reason,
|
|
been preferred by the convention. They have submitted the
|
|
regulation of elections for the federal government, in the first
|
|
instance, to the local administrations; which, in ordinary
|
|
cases, and when no improper views prevail, may be both more
|
|
convenient and more satisfactory; but they have reserved to the
|
|
national authority a right to interpose, whenever extraordinary
|
|
circumstances might render that interposition necessary to its
|
|
safety. Nothing can be more evident, than that an exclusive
|
|
power of regulating elections for the national government, in the
|
|
hands of the State legislatures, would leave the existence of the
|
|
Union entirely at their mercy. They could at any moment
|
|
annihilate it, by neglecting to provide for the choice of persons
|
|
to administer its affairs. It is to little purpose to say, that
|
|
a neglect or omission of this kind would not be likely to take
|
|
place. The constitutional possibility of the thing, without an
|
|
equivalent for the risk, is an unanswerable objection. Nor has
|
|
any satisfactory reason been yet assigned for incurring that
|
|
risk. The extravagant surmises of a distempered jealousy can
|
|
never be dignified with that character. If we are in a humor to
|
|
presume abuses of power, it is as fair to presume them on the
|
|
part of the State governments as on the part of the general
|
|
government. And as it is more consonant to the rules of a just
|
|
theory, to trust the Union with the care of its own existence,
|
|
than to transfer that care to any other hands, if abuses of power
|
|
are to be hazarded on the one side or on the other, it is more
|
|
rational to hazard them where the power would naturally be
|
|
placed, than where it would unnaturally be placed. Suppose an
|
|
article had been introduced into the Constitution, empowering the
|
|
United States to regulate the elections for the particular
|
|
States, would any man have hesitated to condemn it, both as an
|
|
unwarrantable transposition of power, and as a premeditated
|
|
engine for the destruction of the State governments? The
|
|
violation of principle, in this case, would have required no
|
|
comment; and, to an unbiased observer, it will not be less
|
|
apparent in the project of subjecting the existence of the
|
|
national government, in a similar respect, to the pleasure of the
|
|
State governments. An impartial view of the matter cannot fail
|
|
to result in a conviction, that each, as far as possible, ought
|
|
to depend on itself for its own preservation. As an objection to
|
|
this position, it may be remarked that the constitution of the
|
|
national Senate would involve, in its full extent, the danger
|
|
which it is suggested might flow from an exclusive power in the
|
|
State legislatures to regulate the federal elections. It may be
|
|
alleged, that by declining the appointment of Senators, they
|
|
might at any time give a fatal blow to the Union; and from this
|
|
it may be inferred, that as its existence would be thus rendered
|
|
dependent upon them in so essential a point, there can be no
|
|
objection to intrusting them with it in the particular case under
|
|
consideration. The interest of each State, it may be added, to
|
|
maintain its representation in the national councils, would be a
|
|
complete security against an abuse of the trust. This argument,
|
|
though specious, will not, upon examination, be found solid. It
|
|
is certainly true that the State legislatures, by forbearing the
|
|
appointment of senators, may destroy the national government. But
|
|
it will not follow that, because they have a power to do this in
|
|
one instance, they ought to have it in every other. There are
|
|
cases in which the pernicious tendency of such a power may be far
|
|
more decisive, without any motive equally cogent with that which
|
|
must have regulated the conduct of the convention in respect to
|
|
the formation of the Senate, to recommend their admission into
|
|
the system. So far as that construction may expose the Union to
|
|
the possibility of injury from the State legislatures, it is an
|
|
evil; but it is an evil which could not have been avoided without
|
|
excluding the States, in their political capacities, wholly from
|
|
a place in the organization of the national government. If this
|
|
had been done, it would doubtless have been interpreted into an
|
|
entire dereliction of the federal principle; and would certainly
|
|
have deprived the State governments of that absolute safeguard
|
|
which they will enjoy under this provision. But however wise it
|
|
may have been to have submitted in this instance to an
|
|
inconvenience, for the attainment of a necessary advantage or a
|
|
greater good, no inference can be drawn from thence to favor an
|
|
accumulation of the evil, where no necessity urges, nor any
|
|
greater good invites. It may be easily discerned also that the
|
|
national government would run a much greater risk from a power in
|
|
the State legislatures over the elections of its House of
|
|
Representatives, than from their power of appointing the members
|
|
of its Senate. The senators are to be chosen for the period of
|
|
six years; there is to be a rotation, by which the seats of a
|
|
third part of them are to be vacated and replenished every two
|
|
years; and no State is to be entitled to more than two senators;
|
|
a quorum of the body is to consist of sixteen members. The joint
|
|
result of these circumstances would be, that a temporary
|
|
combination of a few States to intermit the appointment of
|
|
senators, could neither annul the existence nor impair the
|
|
activity of the body; and it is not from a general and permanent
|
|
combination of the States that we can have any thing to fear. The
|
|
first might proceed from sinister designs in the leading members
|
|
of a few of the State legislatures; the last would suppose a
|
|
fixed and rooted disaffection in the great body of the people,
|
|
which will either never exist at all, or will, in all
|
|
probability, proceed from an experience of the inaptitude of the
|
|
general government to the advancement of their happiness in which
|
|
event no good citizen could desire its continuance. But with
|
|
regard to the federal House of Representatives, there is intended
|
|
to be a general election of members once in two years. If the
|
|
State legislatures were to be invested with an exclusive power of
|
|
regulating these elections, every period of making them would be
|
|
a delicate crisis in the national situation, which might issue in
|
|
a dissolution of the Union, if the leaders of a few of the most
|
|
important States should have entered into a previous conspiracy
|
|
to prevent an election. I shall not deny, that there is a degree
|
|
of weight in the observation, that the interests of each State,
|
|
to be represented in the federal councils, will be a security
|
|
against the abuse of a power over its elections in the hands of
|
|
the State legislatures. But the security will not be considered
|
|
as complete, by those who attend to the force of an obvious
|
|
distinction between the interest of the people in the public
|
|
felicity, and the interest of their local rulers in the power and
|
|
consequence of their offices. The people of America may be
|
|
warmly attached to the government of the Union, at times when the
|
|
particular rulers of particular States, stimulated by the natural
|
|
rivalship of power, and by the hopes of personal aggrandizement,
|
|
and supported by a strong faction in each of those States, may be
|
|
in a very opposite temper. This diversity of sentiment between a
|
|
majority of the people, and the individuals who have the
|
|
greatest credit in their councils, is exemplified in some of the
|
|
States at the present moment, on the present question. The
|
|
scheme of separate confederacies, which will always nultiply the
|
|
chances of ambition, will be a never failing bait to all such
|
|
influential characters in the State administrations as are
|
|
capable of preferring their own emolument and advancement to the
|
|
public weal. With so effectual a weapon in their hands as the
|
|
exclusive power of regulating elections for the national
|
|
government, a combination of a few such men, in a few of the most
|
|
considerable States, where the temptation will always be the
|
|
strongest, might accomplish the destruction of the Union, by
|
|
seizing the opportunity of some casual dissatisfaction among the
|
|
people (and which perhaps they may themselves have excited), to
|
|
discontinue the choice of members for the federal House of
|
|
Representatives. It ought never to be forgotten, that a firm
|
|
union of this country, under an efficient government, will
|
|
probably be an increasing object of jealousy to more than one
|
|
nation of Europe; and that enterprises to subvert it will
|
|
sometimes originate in the intrigues of foreign powers, and will
|
|
seldom fail to be patronized and abetted by some of them. Its
|
|
preservation, therefore ought in no case that can be avoided, to
|
|
be committed to the guardianship of any but those whose situation
|
|
will uniformly beget an immediate interest in the faithful and
|
|
vigilant performance of the trust. PUBLIUS. Ist clause, 4th
|
|
section, of the Ist article.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 60
|
|
|
|
The Same Subject Continued
|
|
(Concerning the Power of Congress to Regulate the Election of
|
|
Members)
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Tuesday, February 26, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
WE HAVE seen, that an uncontrollable power over the elections to
|
|
the federal government could not, without hazard, be committed to
|
|
the State legislatures. Let us now see, what would be the danger on
|
|
the other side; that is, from confiding the ultimate right of
|
|
regulating its own elections to the Union itself. It is not
|
|
pretended, that this right would ever be used for the exclusion of
|
|
any State from its share in the representation. The interest of all
|
|
would, in this respect at least, be the security of all. But it is
|
|
alleged, that it might be employed in such a manner as to promote
|
|
the election of some favorite class of men in exclusion of others,
|
|
by confining the places of election to particular districts, and
|
|
rendering it impracticable to the citizens at large to partake in
|
|
the choice. Of all chimerical suppositions, this seems to be the
|
|
most chimerical. On the one hand, no rational calculation of
|
|
probabilities would lead us to imagine that the disposition which a
|
|
conduct so violent and extraordinary would imply, could ever find
|
|
its way into the national councils; and on the other, it may be
|
|
concluded with certainty, that if so improper a spirit should ever
|
|
gain admittance into them, it would display itself in a form
|
|
altogether different and far more decisive.
|
|
The improbability of the attempt may be satisfactorily inferred
|
|
from this single reflection, that it could never be made without
|
|
causing an immediate revolt of the great body of the people, headed
|
|
and directed by the State governments. It is not difficult to
|
|
conceive that this characteristic right of freedom may, in certain
|
|
turbulent and factious seasons, be violated, in respect to a
|
|
particular class of citizens, by a victorious and overbearing
|
|
majority; but that so fundamental a privilege, in a country so
|
|
situated and enlightened, should be invaded to the prejudice of the
|
|
great mass of the people, by the deliberate policy of the
|
|
government, without occasioning a popular revolution, is altogether
|
|
inconceivable and incredible.
|
|
In addition to this general reflection, there are considerations
|
|
of a more precise nature, which forbid all apprehension on the
|
|
subject. The dissimilarity in the ingredients which will compose
|
|
the national government, and still more in the manner in which they
|
|
will be brought into action in its various branches, must form a
|
|
powerful obstacle to a concert of views in any partial scheme of
|
|
elections. There is sufficient diversity in the state of property,
|
|
in the genius, manners, and habits of the people of the different
|
|
parts of the Union, to occasion a material diversity of disposition
|
|
in their representatives towards the different ranks and conditions
|
|
in society. And though an intimate intercourse under the same
|
|
government will promote a gradual assimilation in some of these
|
|
respects, yet there are causes, as well physical as moral, which
|
|
may, in a greater or less degree, permanently nourish different
|
|
propensities and inclinations in this respect. But the circumstance
|
|
which will be likely to have the greatest influence in the matter,
|
|
will be the dissimilar modes of constituting the several component
|
|
parts of the government. The House of Representatives being to be
|
|
elected immediately by the people, the Senate by the State
|
|
legislatures, the President by electors chosen for that purpose by
|
|
the people, there would be little probability of a common interest
|
|
to cement these different branches in a predilection for any
|
|
particular class of electors.
|
|
As to the Senate, it is impossible that any regulation of ``time
|
|
and manner,'' which is all that is proposed to be submitted to the
|
|
national government in respect to that body, can affect the spirit
|
|
which will direct the choice of its members. The collective sense
|
|
of the State legislatures can never be influenced by extraneous
|
|
circumstances of that sort; a consideration which alone ought to
|
|
satisfy us that the discrimination apprehended would never be
|
|
attempted. For what inducement could the Senate have to concur in a
|
|
preference in which itself would not be included? Or to what
|
|
purpose would it be established, in reference to one branch of the
|
|
legislature, if it could not be extended to the other? The
|
|
composition of the one would in this case counteract that of the
|
|
other. And we can never suppose that it would embrace the
|
|
appointments to the Senate, unless we can at the same time suppose
|
|
the voluntary co-operation of the State legislatures. If we make
|
|
the latter supposition, it then becomes immaterial where the power
|
|
in question is placed whether in their hands or in those of the
|
|
Union.
|
|
But what is to be the object of this capricious partiality in
|
|
the national councils? Is it to be exercised in a discrimination
|
|
between the different departments of industry, or between the
|
|
different kinds of property, or between the different degrees of
|
|
property? Will it lean in favor of the landed interest, or the
|
|
moneyed interest, or the mercantile interest, or the manufacturing
|
|
interest? Or, to speak in the fashionable language of the
|
|
adversaries to the Constitution, will it court the elevation of
|
|
``the wealthy and the well-born,'' to the exclusion and debasement
|
|
of all the rest of the society?
|
|
If this partiality is to be exerted in favor of those who are
|
|
concerned in any particular description of industry or property, I
|
|
presume it will readily be admitted, that the competition for it
|
|
will lie between landed men and merchants. And I scruple not to
|
|
affirm, that it is infinitely less likely that either of them should
|
|
gain an ascendant in the national councils, than that the one or the
|
|
other of them should predominate in all the local councils. The
|
|
inference will be, that a conduct tending to give an undue
|
|
preference to either is much less to be dreaded from the former than
|
|
from the latter.
|
|
The several States are in various degrees addicted to
|
|
agriculture and commerce. In most, if not all of them, agriculture
|
|
is predominant. In a few of them, however, commerce nearly divides
|
|
its empire, and in most of them has a considerable share of
|
|
influence. In proportion as either prevails, it will be conveyed
|
|
into the national representation; and for the very reason, that
|
|
this will be an emanation from a greater variety of interests, and
|
|
in much more various proportions, than are to be found in any single
|
|
State, it will be much less apt to espouse either of them with a
|
|
decided partiality, than the representation of any single State.
|
|
In a country consisting chiefly of the cultivators of land,
|
|
where the rules of an equal representation obtain, the landed
|
|
interest must, upon the whole, preponderate in the government. As
|
|
long as this interest prevails in most of the State legislatures, so
|
|
long it must maintain a correspondent superiority in the national
|
|
Senate, which will generally be a faithful copy of the majorities of
|
|
those assemblies. It cannot therefore be presumed, that a sacrifice
|
|
of the landed to the mercantile class will ever be a favorite object
|
|
of this branch of the federal legislature. In applying thus
|
|
particularly to the Senate a general observation suggested by the
|
|
situation of the country, I am governed by the consideration, that
|
|
the credulous votaries of State power cannot, upon their own
|
|
principles, suspect, that the State legislatures would be warped
|
|
from their duty by any external influence. But in reality the same
|
|
situation must have the same effect, in the primative composition at
|
|
least of the federal House of Representatives: an improper bias
|
|
towards the mercantile class is as little to be expected from this
|
|
quarter as from the other.
|
|
In order, perhaps, to give countenance to the objection at any
|
|
rate, it may be asked, is there not danger of an opposite bias in
|
|
the national government, which may dispose it to endeavor to secure
|
|
a monopoly of the federal administration to the landed class? As
|
|
there is little likelihood that the supposition of such a bias will
|
|
have any terrors for those who would be immediately injured by it, a
|
|
labored answer to this question will be dispensed with. It will be
|
|
sufficient to remark, first, that for the reasons elsewhere
|
|
assigned, it is less likely that any decided partiality should
|
|
prevail in the councils of the Union than in those of any of its
|
|
members. Secondly, that there would be no temptation to violate the
|
|
Constitution in favor of the landed class, because that class would,
|
|
in the natural course of things, enjoy as great a preponderancy as
|
|
itself could desire. And thirdly, that men accustomed to
|
|
investigate the sources of public prosperity upon a large scale,
|
|
must be too well convinced of the utility of commerce, to be
|
|
inclined to inflict upon it so deep a wound as would result from the
|
|
entire exclusion of those who would best understand its interest
|
|
from a share in the management of them. The importance of commerce,
|
|
in the view of revenue alone, must effectually guard it against the
|
|
enmity of a body which would be continually importuned in its favor,
|
|
by the urgent calls of public necessity.
|
|
I the rather consult brevity in discussing the probability of a
|
|
preference founded upon a discrimination between the different kinds
|
|
of industry and property, because, as far as I understand the
|
|
meaning of the objectors, they contemplate a discrimination of
|
|
another kind. They appear to have in view, as the objects of the
|
|
preference with which they endeavor to alarm us, those whom they
|
|
designate by the description of ``the wealthy and the well-born.''
|
|
These, it seems, are to be exalted to an odious pre-eminence over
|
|
the rest of their fellow-citizens. At one time, however, their
|
|
elevation is to be a necessary consequence of the smallness of the
|
|
representative body; at another time it is to be effected by
|
|
depriving the people at large of the opportunity of exercising their
|
|
right of suffrage in the choice of that body.
|
|
But upon what principle is the discrimination of the places of
|
|
election to be made, in order to answer the purpose of the meditated
|
|
preference? Are ``the wealthy and the well-born,'' as they are
|
|
called, confined to particular spots in the several States? Have
|
|
they, by some miraculous instinct or foresight, set apart in each of
|
|
them a common place of residence? Are they only to be met with in
|
|
the towns or cities? Or are they, on the contrary, scattered over
|
|
the face of the country as avarice or chance may have happened to
|
|
cast their own lot or that of their predecessors? If the latter is
|
|
the case, (as every intelligent man knows it to be,1) is it not
|
|
evident that the policy of confining the places of election to
|
|
particular districts would be as subversive of its own aim as it
|
|
would be exceptionable on every other account? The truth is, that
|
|
there is no method of securing to the rich the preference
|
|
apprehended, but by prescribing qualifications of property either
|
|
for those who may elect or be elected. But this forms no part of
|
|
the power to be conferred upon the national government. Its
|
|
authority would be expressly restricted to the regulation of the
|
|
TIMES, the PLACES, the MANNER of elections. The qualifications of
|
|
the persons who may choose or be chosen, as has been remarked upon
|
|
other occasions, are defined and fixed in the Constitution, and are
|
|
unalterable by the legislature.
|
|
Let it, however, be admitted, for argument sake, that the
|
|
expedient suggested might be successful; and let it at the same
|
|
time be equally taken for granted that all the scruples which a
|
|
sense of duty or an apprehension of the danger of the experiment
|
|
might inspire, were overcome in the breasts of the national rulers,
|
|
still I imagine it will hardly be pretended that they could ever
|
|
hope to carry such an enterprise into execution without the aid of a
|
|
military force sufficient to subdue the resistance of the great body
|
|
of the people. The improbability of the existence of a force equal
|
|
to that object has been discussed and demonstrated in different
|
|
parts of these papers; but that the futility of the objection under
|
|
consideration may appear in the strongest light, it shall be
|
|
conceded for a moment that such a force might exist, and the
|
|
national government shall be supposed to be in the actual possession
|
|
of it. What will be the conclusion? With a disposition to invade
|
|
the essential rights of the community, and with the means of
|
|
gratifying that disposition, is it presumable that the persons who
|
|
were actuated by it would amuse themselves in the ridiculous task of
|
|
fabricating election laws for securing a preference to a favorite
|
|
class of men? Would they not be likely to prefer a conduct better
|
|
adapted to their own immediate aggrandizement? Would they not
|
|
rather boldly resolve to perpetuate themselves in office by one
|
|
decisive act of usurpation, than to trust to precarious expedients
|
|
which, in spite of all the precautions that might accompany them,
|
|
might terminate in the dismission, disgrace, and ruin of their
|
|
authors? Would they not fear that citizens, not less tenacious than
|
|
conscious of their rights, would flock from the remote extremes of
|
|
their respective States to the places of election, to voerthrow
|
|
their tyrants, and to substitute men who would be disposed to avenge
|
|
the violated majesty of the people?
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
1 Particularly in the Southern States and in this State.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 61
|
|
|
|
The Same Subject Continued
|
|
(Concerning the Power of Congress to Regulate the Election of
|
|
Members)
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Tuesday, February 26, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE more candid opposers of the provision respecting elections,
|
|
contained in the plan of the convention, when pressed in argument,
|
|
will sometimes concede the propriety of that provision; with this
|
|
qualification, however, that it ought to have been accompanied with
|
|
a declaration, that all elections should be had in the counties
|
|
where the electors resided. This, say they, was a necessary
|
|
precaution against an abuse of the power. A declaration of this
|
|
nature would certainly have been harmless; so far as it would have
|
|
had the effect of quieting apprehensions, it might not have been
|
|
undesirable. But it would, in fact, have afforded little or no
|
|
additional security against the danger apprehended; and the want of
|
|
it will never be considered, by an impartial and judicious examiner,
|
|
as a serious, still less as an insuperable, objection to the plan.
|
|
The different views taken of the subject in the two preceding
|
|
papers must be sufficient to satisfy all dispassionate and
|
|
discerning men, that if the public liberty should ever be the victim
|
|
of the ambition of the national rulers, the power under examination,
|
|
at least, will be guiltless of the sacrifice.
|
|
If those who are inclined to consult their jealousy only, would
|
|
exercise it in a careful inspection of the several State
|
|
constitutions, they would find little less room for disquietude and
|
|
alarm, from the latitude which most of them allow in respect to
|
|
elections, than from the latitude which is proposed to be allowed to
|
|
the national government in the same respect. A review of their
|
|
situation, in this particular, would tend greatly to remove any ill
|
|
impressions which may remain in regard to this matter. But as that
|
|
view would lead into long and tedious details, I shall content
|
|
myself with the single example of the State in which I write. The
|
|
constitution of New York makes no other provision for LOCALITY of
|
|
elections, than that the members of the Assembly shall be elected in
|
|
the COUNTIES; those of the Senate, in the great districts into
|
|
which the State is or may be divided: these at present are four in
|
|
number, and comprehend each from two to six counties. It may
|
|
readily be perceived that it would not be more difficult to the
|
|
legislature of New York to defeat the suffrages of the citizens of
|
|
New York, by confining elections to particular places, than for the
|
|
legislature of the United States to defeat the suffrages of the
|
|
citizens of the Union, by the like expedient. Suppose, for
|
|
instance, the city of Albany was to be appointed the sole place of
|
|
election for the county and district of which it is a part, would
|
|
not the inhabitants of that city speedily become the only electors
|
|
of the members both of the Senate and Assembly for that county and
|
|
district? Can we imagine that the electors who reside in the remote
|
|
subdivisions of the counties of Albany, Saratoga, Cambridge, etc.,
|
|
or in any part of the county of Montgomery, would take the trouble
|
|
to come to the city of Albany, to give their votes for members of
|
|
the Assembly or Senate, sooner than they would repair to the city of
|
|
New York, to participate in the choice of the members of the federal
|
|
House of Representatives? The alarming indifference discoverable in
|
|
the exercise of so invaluable a privilege under the existing laws,
|
|
which afford every facility to it, furnishes a ready answer to this
|
|
question. And, abstracted from any experience on the subject, we
|
|
can be at no loss to determine, that when the place of election is
|
|
at an INCONVENIENT DISTANCE from the elector, the effect upon his
|
|
conduct will be the same whether that distance be twenty miles or
|
|
twenty thousand miles. Hence it must appear, that objections to the
|
|
particular modification of the federal power of regulating elections
|
|
will, in substance, apply with equal force to the modification of
|
|
the like power in the constitution of this State; and for this
|
|
reason it will be impossible to acquit the one, and to condemn the
|
|
other. A similar comparison would lead to the same conclusion in
|
|
respect to the constitutions of most of the other States.
|
|
If it should be said that defects in the State constitutions
|
|
furnish no apology for those which are to be found in the plan
|
|
proposed, I answer, that as the former have never been thought
|
|
chargeable with inattention to the security of liberty, where the
|
|
imputations thrown on the latter can be shown to be applicable to
|
|
them also, the presumption is that they are rather the cavilling
|
|
refinements of a predetermined opposition, than the well-founded
|
|
inferences of a candid research after truth. To those who are
|
|
disposed to consider, as innocent omissions in the State
|
|
constitutions, what they regard as unpardonable blemishes in the
|
|
plan of the convention, nothing can be said; or at most, they can
|
|
only be asked to assign some substantial reason why the
|
|
representatives of the people in a single State should be more
|
|
impregnable to the lust of power, or other sinister motives, than
|
|
the representatives of the people of the United States? If they
|
|
cannot do this, they ought at least to prove to us that it is easier
|
|
to subvert the liberties of three millions of people, with the
|
|
advantage of local governments to head their opposition, than of two
|
|
hundred thousand people who are destitute of that advantage. And in
|
|
relation to the point immediately under consideration, they ought to
|
|
convince us that it is less probable that a predominant faction in a
|
|
single State should, in order to maintain its superiority, incline
|
|
to a preference of a particular class of electors, than that a
|
|
similar spirit should take possession of the representatives of
|
|
thirteen States, spread over a vast region, and in several respects
|
|
distinguishable from each other by a diversity of local
|
|
circumstances, prejudices, and interests.
|
|
Hitherto my observations have only aimed at a vindication of the
|
|
provision in question, on the ground of theoretic propriety, on that
|
|
of the danger of placing the power elsewhere, and on that of the
|
|
safety of placing it in the manner proposed. But there remains to
|
|
be mentioned a positive advantage which will result from this
|
|
disposition, and which could not as well have been obtained from any
|
|
other: I allude to the circumstance of uniformity in the time of
|
|
elections for the federal House of Representatives. It is more than
|
|
possible that this uniformity may be found by experience to be of
|
|
great importance to the public welfare, both as a security against
|
|
the perpetuation of the same spirit in the body, and as a cure for
|
|
the diseases of faction. If each State may choose its own time of
|
|
election, it is possible there may be at least as many different
|
|
periods as there are months in the year. The times of election in
|
|
the several States, as they are now established for local purposes,
|
|
vary between extremes as wide as March and November. The
|
|
consequence of this diversity would be that there could never happen
|
|
a total dissolution or renovation of the body at one time. If an
|
|
improper spirit of any kind should happen to prevail in it, that
|
|
spirit would be apt to infuse itself into the new members, as they
|
|
come forward in succession. The mass would be likely to remain
|
|
nearly the same, assimilating constantly to itself its gradual
|
|
accretions. There is a contagion in example which few men have
|
|
sufficient force of mind to resist. I am inclined to think that
|
|
treble the duration in office, with the condition of a total
|
|
dissolution of the body at the same time, might be less formidable
|
|
to liberty than one third of that duration subject to gradual and
|
|
successive alterations.
|
|
Uniformity in the time of elections seems not less requisite for
|
|
executing the idea of a regular rotation in the Senate, and for
|
|
conveniently assembling the legislature at a stated period in each
|
|
year.
|
|
It may be asked, Why, then, could not a time have been fixed in
|
|
the Constitution? As the most zealous adversaries of the plan of
|
|
the convention in this State are, in general, not less zealous
|
|
admirers of the constitution of the State, the question may be
|
|
retorted, and it may be asked, Why was not a time for the like
|
|
purpose fixed in the constitution of this State? No better answer
|
|
can be given than that it was a matter which might safely be
|
|
entrusted to legislative discretion; and that if a time had been
|
|
appointed, it might, upon experiment, have been found less
|
|
convenient than some other time. The same answer may be given to
|
|
the question put on the other side. And it may be added that the
|
|
supposed danger of a gradual change being merely speculative, it
|
|
would have been hardly advisable upon that speculation to establish,
|
|
as a fundamental point, what would deprive several States of the
|
|
convenience of having the elections for their own governments and
|
|
for the national government at the same epochs.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 62
|
|
|
|
The Senate
|
|
For the Independent Journal.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON OR MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
HAVING examined the constitution of the House of
|
|
Representatives, and answered such of the objections against it as
|
|
seemed to merit notice, I enter next on the examination of the
|
|
Senate.
|
|
The heads into which this member of the government may be
|
|
considered are: I. The qualification of senators; II. The
|
|
appointment of them by the State legislatures; III. The equality of
|
|
representation in the Senate; IV. The number of senators, and the
|
|
term for which they are to be elected; V. The powers vested in the
|
|
Senate.
|
|
I. The qualifications proposed for senators, as distinguished
|
|
from those of representatives, consist in a more advanced age and a
|
|
longer period of citizenship. A senator must be thirty years of age
|
|
at least; as a representative must be twenty-five. And the former
|
|
must have been a citizen nine years; as seven years are required
|
|
for the latter. The propriety of these distinctions is explained by
|
|
the nature of the senatorial trust, which, requiring greater extent
|
|
of information and tability of character, requires at the same time
|
|
that the senator should have reached a period of life most likely to
|
|
supply these advantages; and which, participating immediately in
|
|
transactions with foreign nations, ought to be exercised by none who
|
|
are not thoroughly weaned from the prepossessions and habits
|
|
incident to foreign birth and education. The term of nine years
|
|
appears to be a prudent mediocrity between a total exclusion of
|
|
adopted citizens, whose merits and talents may claim a share in the
|
|
public confidence, and an indiscriminate and hasty admission of
|
|
them, which might create a channel for foreign influence on the
|
|
national councils.
|
|
II. It is equally unnecessary to dilate on the appointment of
|
|
senators by the State legislatures. Among the various modes which
|
|
might have been devised for constituting this branch of the
|
|
government, that which has been proposed by the convention is
|
|
probably the most congenial with the public opinion. It is
|
|
recommended by the double advantage of favoring a select
|
|
appointment, and of giving to the State governments such an agency
|
|
in the formation of the federal government as must secure the
|
|
authority of the former, and may form a convenient link between the
|
|
two systems.
|
|
III. The equality of representation in the Senate is another
|
|
point, which, being evidently the result of compromise between the
|
|
opposite pretensions of the large and the small States, does not
|
|
call for much discussion. If indeed it be right, that among a
|
|
people thoroughly incorporated into one nation, every district ought
|
|
to have a PROPORTIONAL share in the government, and that among
|
|
independent and sovereign States, bound together by a simple league,
|
|
the parties, however unequal in size, ought to have an EQUAL share
|
|
in the common councils, it does not appear to be without some reason
|
|
that in a compound republic, partaking both of the national and
|
|
federal character, the government ought to be founded on a mixture
|
|
of the principles of proportional and equal representation. But it
|
|
is superfluous to try, by the standard of theory, a part of the
|
|
Constitution which is allowed on all hands to be the result, not of
|
|
theory, but ``of a spirit of amity, and that mutual deference and
|
|
concession which the peculiarity of our political situation rendered
|
|
indispensable.'' A common government, with powers equal to its
|
|
objects, is called for by the voice, and still more loudly by the
|
|
political situation, of America. A government founded on principles
|
|
more consonant to the wishes of the larger States, is not likely to
|
|
be obtained from the smaller States. The only option, then, for the
|
|
former, lies between the proposed government and a government still
|
|
more objectionable. Under this alternative, the advice of prudence
|
|
must be to embrace the lesser evil; and, instead of indulging a
|
|
fruitless anticipation of the possible mischiefs which may ensue, to
|
|
contemplate rather the advantageous consequences which may qualify
|
|
the sacrifice.
|
|
In this spirit it may be remarked, that the equal vote allowed
|
|
to each State is at once a constitutional recognition of the portion
|
|
of sovereignty remaining in the individual States, and an instrument
|
|
for preserving that residuary sovereignty. So far the equality
|
|
ought to be no less acceptable to the large than to the small
|
|
States; since they are not less solicitous to guard, by every
|
|
possible expedient, against an improper consolidation of the States
|
|
into one simple republic.
|
|
Another advantage accruing from this ingredient in the
|
|
constitution of the Senate is, the additional impediment it must
|
|
prove against improper acts of legislation. No law or resolution
|
|
can now be passed without the concurrence, first, of a majority of
|
|
the people, and then, of a majority of the States. It must be
|
|
acknowledged that this complicated check on legislation may in some
|
|
instances be injurious as well as beneficial; and that the peculiar
|
|
defense which it involves in favor of the smaller States, would be
|
|
more rational, if any interests common to them, and distinct from
|
|
those of the other States, would otherwise be exposed to peculiar
|
|
danger. But as the larger States will always be able, by their
|
|
power over the supplies, to defeat unreasonable exertions of this
|
|
prerogative of the lesser States, and as the faculty and excess of
|
|
law-making seem to be the diseases to which our governments are most
|
|
liable, it is not impossible that this part of the Constitution may
|
|
be more convenient in practice than it appears to many in
|
|
contemplation.
|
|
IV. The number of senators, and the duration of their
|
|
appointment, come next to be considered. In order to form an
|
|
accurate judgment on both of these points, it will be proper to
|
|
inquire into the purposes which are to be answered by a senate; and
|
|
in order to ascertain these, it will be necessary to review the
|
|
inconveniences which a republic must suffer from the want of such an
|
|
institution.
|
|
First. It is a misfortune incident to republican
|
|
government, though in a less degree than to other governments, that
|
|
those who administer it may forget their obligations to their
|
|
constituents, and prove unfaithful to their important trust. In
|
|
this point of view, a senate, as a second branch of the legislative
|
|
assembly, distinct from, and dividing the power with, a first, must
|
|
be in all cases a salutary check on the government. It doubles the
|
|
security to the people, by requiring the concurrence of two distinct
|
|
bodies in schemes of usurpation or perfidy, where the ambition or
|
|
corruption of one would otherwise be sufficient. This is a
|
|
precaution founded on such clear principles, and now so well
|
|
understood in the United States, that it would be more than
|
|
superfluous to enlarge on it. I will barely remark, that as the
|
|
improbability of sinister combinations will be in proportion to the
|
|
dissimilarity in the genius of the two bodies, it must be politic to
|
|
distinguish them from each other by every circumstance which will
|
|
consist with a due harmony in all proper measures, and with the
|
|
genuine principles of republican government.
|
|
Secondly. The necessity of a senate is not less indicated
|
|
by the propensity of all single and numerous assemblies to yield to
|
|
the impulse of sudden and violent passions, and to be seduced by
|
|
factious leaders into intemperate and pernicious resolutions.
|
|
Examples on this subject might be cited without number; and from
|
|
proceedings within the United States, as well as from the history of
|
|
other nations. But a position that will not be contradicted, need
|
|
not be proved. All that need be remarked is, that a body which is
|
|
to correct this infirmity ought itself to be free from it, and
|
|
consequently ought to be less numerous. It ought, moreover, to
|
|
possess great firmness, and consequently ought to hold its authority
|
|
by a tenure of considerable duration.
|
|
Thirdly. Another defect to be supplied by a senate lies in
|
|
a want of due acquaintance with the objects and principles of
|
|
legislation. It is not possible that an assembly of men called for
|
|
the most part from pursuits of a private nature, continued in
|
|
appointment for a short time, and led by no permanent motive to
|
|
devote the intervals of public occupation to a study of the laws,
|
|
the affairs, and the comprehensive interests of their country,
|
|
should, if left wholly to themselves, escape a variety of important
|
|
errors in the exercise of their legislative trust. It may be
|
|
affirmed, on the best grounds, that no small share of the present
|
|
embarrassments of America is to be charged on the blunders of our
|
|
governments; and that these have proceeded from the heads rather
|
|
than the hearts of most of the authors of them. What indeed are all
|
|
the repealing, explaining, and amending laws, which fill and
|
|
disgrace our voluminous codes, but so many monuments of deficient
|
|
wisdom; so many impeachments exhibited by each succeeding against
|
|
each preceding session; so many admonitions to the people, of the
|
|
value of those aids which may be expected from a well-constituted
|
|
senate?
|
|
A good government implies two things: first, fidelity to the
|
|
object of government, which is the happiness of the people;
|
|
secondly, a knowledge of the means by which that object can be best
|
|
attained. Some governments are deficient in both these qualities;
|
|
most governments are deficient in the first. I scruple not to
|
|
assert, that in American governments too little attention has been
|
|
paid to the last. The federal Constitution avoids this error; and
|
|
what merits particular notice, it provides for the last in a mode
|
|
which increases the security for the first.
|
|
Fourthly. The mutability in the public councils arising
|
|
from a rapid succession of new members, however qualified they may
|
|
be, points out, in the strongest manner, the necessity of some
|
|
stable institution in the government. Every new election in the
|
|
States is found to change one half of the representatives. From
|
|
this change of men must proceed a change of opinions; and from a
|
|
change of opinions, a change of measures. But a continual change
|
|
even of good measures is inconsistent with every rule of prudence
|
|
and every prospect of success. The remark is verified in private
|
|
life, and becomes more just, as well as more important, in national
|
|
transactions.
|
|
To trace the mischievous effects of a mutable government would
|
|
fill a volume. I will hint a few only, each of which will be
|
|
perceived to be a source of innumerable others.
|
|
In the first place, it forfeits the respect and confidence of
|
|
other nations, and all the advantages connected with national
|
|
character. An individual who is observed to be inconstant to his
|
|
plans, or perhaps to carry on his affairs without any plan at all,
|
|
is marked at once, by all prudent people, as a speedy victim to his
|
|
own unsteadiness and folly. His more friendly neighbors may pity
|
|
him, but all will decline to connect their fortunes with his; and
|
|
not a few will seize the opportunity of making their fortunes out of
|
|
his. One nation is to another what one individual is to another;
|
|
with this melancholy distinction perhaps, that the former, with
|
|
fewer of the benevolent emotions than the latter, are under fewer
|
|
restraints also from taking undue advantage from the indiscretions
|
|
of each other. Every nation, consequently, whose affairs betray a
|
|
want of wisdom and stability, may calculate on every loss which can
|
|
be sustained from the more systematic policy of their wiser
|
|
neighbors. But the best instruction on this subject is unhappily
|
|
conveyed to America by the example of her own situation. She finds
|
|
that she is held in no respect by her friends; that she is the
|
|
derision of her enemies; and that she is a prey to every nation
|
|
which has an interest in speculating on her fluctuating councils and
|
|
embarrassed affairs.
|
|
The internal effects of a mutable policy are still more
|
|
calamitous. It poisons the blessing of liberty itself. It will be
|
|
of little avail to the people, that the laws are made by men of
|
|
their own choice, if the laws be so voluminous that they cannot be
|
|
read, or so incoherent that they cannot be understood; if they be
|
|
repealed or revised before they are promulgated, or undergo such
|
|
incessant changes that no man, who knows what the law is to-day, can
|
|
guess what it will be to-morrow. Law is defined to be a rule of
|
|
action; but how can that be a rule, which is little known, and less
|
|
fixed?
|
|
Another effect of public instability is the unreasonable
|
|
advantage it gives to the sagacious, the enterprising, and the
|
|
moneyed few over the industrious and uniformed mass of the people.
|
|
Every new regulation concerning commerce or revenue, or in any way
|
|
affecting the value of the different species of property, presents a
|
|
new harvest to those who watch the change, and can trace its
|
|
consequences; a harvest, reared not by themselves, but by the toils
|
|
and cares of the great body of their fellow-citizens. This is a
|
|
state of things in which it may be said with some truth that laws
|
|
are made for the FEW, not for the MANY.
|
|
In another point of view, great injury results from an unstable
|
|
government. The want of confidence in the public councils damps
|
|
every useful undertaking, the success and profit of which may depend
|
|
on a continuance of existing arrangements. What prudent merchant
|
|
will hazard his fortunes in any new branch of commerce when he knows
|
|
not but that his plans may be rendered unlawful before they can be
|
|
executed? What farmer or manufacturer will lay himself out for the
|
|
encouragement given to any particular cultivation or establishment,
|
|
when he can have no assurance that his preparatory labors and
|
|
advances will not render him a victim to an inconstant government?
|
|
In a word, no great improvement or laudable enterprise can go
|
|
forward which requires the auspices of a steady system of national
|
|
policy.
|
|
But the most deplorable effect of all is that diminution of
|
|
attachment and reverence which steals into the hearts of the people,
|
|
towards a political system which betrays so many marks of infirmity,
|
|
and disappoints so many of their flattering hopes. No government,
|
|
any more than an individual, will long be respected without being
|
|
truly respectable; nor be truly respectable, without possessing a
|
|
certain portion of order and stability.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST. No. 63
|
|
|
|
The Senate Continued
|
|
For the Independent Journal.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON OR MADISON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
A FIFTH desideratum, illustrating the utility of a senate, is
|
|
the want of a due sense of national character. Without a select and
|
|
stable member of the government, the esteem of foreign powers will
|
|
not only be forfeited by an unenlightened and variable policy,
|
|
proceeding from the causes already mentioned, but the national
|
|
councils will not possess that sensibility to the opinion of the
|
|
world, which is perhaps not less necessary in order to merit, than
|
|
it is to obtain, its respect and confidence.
|
|
An attention to the judgment of other nations is important to
|
|
every government for two reasons: the one is, that, independently
|
|
of the merits of any particular plan or measure, it is desirable, on
|
|
various accounts, that it should appear to other nations as the
|
|
offspring of a wise and honorable policy; the second is, that in
|
|
doubtful cases, particularly where the national councils may be
|
|
warped by some strong passion or momentary interest, the presumed or
|
|
known opinion of the impartial world may be the best guide that can
|
|
be followed. What has not America lost by her want of character
|
|
with foreign nations; and how many errors and follies would she not
|
|
have avoided, if the justice and propriety of her measures had, in
|
|
every instance, been previously tried by the light in which they
|
|
would probably appear to the unbiased part of mankind?
|
|
Yet however requisite a sense of national character may be, it
|
|
is evident that it can never be sufficiently possessed by a numerous
|
|
and changeable body. It can only be found in a number so small that
|
|
a sensible degree of the praise and blame of public measures may be
|
|
the portion of each individual; or in an assembly so durably
|
|
invested with public trust, that the pride and consequence of its
|
|
members may be sensibly incorporated with the reputation and
|
|
prosperity of the community. The half-yearly representatives of
|
|
Rhode Island would probably have been little affected in their
|
|
deliberations on the iniquitous measures of that State, by arguments
|
|
drawn from the light in which such measures would be viewed by
|
|
foreign nations, or even by the sister States; whilst it can
|
|
scarcely be doubted that if the concurrence of a select and stable
|
|
body had been necessary, a regard to national character alone would
|
|
have prevented the calamities under which that misguided people is
|
|
now laboring.
|
|
I add, as a SIXTH defect the want, in some important cases, of a
|
|
due responsibility in the government to the people, arising from
|
|
that frequency of elections which in other cases produces this
|
|
responsibility. This remark will, perhaps, appear not only new, but
|
|
paradoxical. It must nevertheless be acknowledged, when explained,
|
|
to be as undeniable as it is important.
|
|
Responsibility, in order to be reasonable, must be limited to
|
|
objects within the power of the responsible party, and in order to
|
|
be effectual, must relate to operations of that power, of which a
|
|
ready and proper judgment can be formed by the constituents. The
|
|
objects of government may be divided into two general classes: the
|
|
one depending on measures which have singly an immediate and
|
|
sensible operation; the other depending on a succession of
|
|
well-chosen and well-connected measures, which have a gradual and
|
|
perhaps unobserved operation. The importance of the latter
|
|
description to the collective and permanent welfare of every
|
|
country, needs no explanation. And yet it is evident that an
|
|
assembly elected for so short a term as to be unable to provide more
|
|
than one or two links in a chain of measures, on which the general
|
|
welfare may essentially depend, ought not to be answerable for the
|
|
final result, any more than a steward or tenant, engaged for one
|
|
year, could be justly made to answer for places or improvements
|
|
which could not be accomplished in less than half a dozen years.
|
|
Nor is it possible for the people to estimate the SHARE of
|
|
influence which their annual assemblies may respectively have on
|
|
events resulting from the mixed transactions of several years. It
|
|
is sufficiently difficult to preserve a personal responsibility in
|
|
the members of a NUMEROUS body, for such acts of the body as have an
|
|
immediate, detached, and palpable operation on its constituents.
|
|
The proper remedy for this defect must be an additional body in
|
|
the legislative department, which, having sufficient permanency to
|
|
provide for such objects as require a continued attention, and a
|
|
train of measures, may be justly and effectually answerable for the
|
|
attainment of those objects.
|
|
Thus far I have considered the circumstances which point out the
|
|
necessity of a well-constructed Senate only as they relate to the
|
|
representatives of the people. To a people as little blinded by
|
|
prejudice or corrupted by flattery as those whom I address, I shall
|
|
not scruple to add, that such an institution may be sometimes
|
|
necessary as a defense to the people against their own temporary
|
|
errors and delusions. As the cool and deliberate sense of the
|
|
community ought, in all governments, and actually will, in all free
|
|
governments, ultimately prevail over the views of its rulers; so
|
|
there are particular moments in public affairs when the people,
|
|
stimulated by some irregular passion, or some illicit advantage, or
|
|
misled by the artful misrepresentations of interested men, may call
|
|
for measures which they themselves will afterwards be the most ready
|
|
to lament and condemn. In these critical moments, how salutary will
|
|
be the interference of some temperate and respectable body of
|
|
citizens, in order to check the misguided career, and to suspend the
|
|
blow meditated by the people against themselves, until reason,
|
|
justice, and truth can regain their authority over the public mind?
|
|
What bitter anguish would not the people of Athens have often
|
|
escaped if their government had contained so provident a safeguard
|
|
against the tyranny of their own passions? Popular liberty might
|
|
then have escaped the indelible reproach of decreeing to the same
|
|
citizens the hemlock on one day and statues on the next.
|
|
It may be suggested, that a people spread over an extensive
|
|
region cannot, like the crowded inhabitants of a small district, be
|
|
subject to the infection of violent passions, or to the danger of
|
|
combining in pursuit of unjust measures. I am far from denying that
|
|
this is a distinction of peculiar importance. I have, on the
|
|
contrary, endeavored in a former paper to show, that it is one of
|
|
the principal recommendations of a confederated republic. At the
|
|
same time, this advantage ought not to be considered as superseding
|
|
the use of auxiliary precautions. It may even be remarked, that the
|
|
same extended situation, which will exempt the people of America
|
|
from some of the dangers incident to lesser republics, will expose
|
|
them to the inconveniency of remaining for a longer time under the
|
|
influence of those misrepresentations which the combined industry of
|
|
interested men may succeed in distributing among them.
|
|
It adds no small weight to all these considerations, to
|
|
recollect that history informs us of no long-lived republic which
|
|
had not a senate. Sparta, Rome, and Carthage are, in fact, the only
|
|
states to whom that character can be applied. In each of the two
|
|
first there was a senate for life. The constitution of the senate
|
|
in the last is less known. Circumstantial evidence makes it
|
|
probable that it was not different in this particular from the two
|
|
others. It is at least certain, that it had some quality or other
|
|
which rendered it an anchor against popular fluctuations; and that
|
|
a smaller council, drawn out of the senate, was appointed not only
|
|
for life, but filled up vacancies itself. These examples, though as
|
|
unfit for the imitation, as they are repugnant to the genius, of
|
|
America, are, notwithstanding, when compared with the fugitive and
|
|
turbulent existence of other ancient republics, very instructive
|
|
proofs of the necessity of some institution that will blend
|
|
stability with liberty. I am not unaware of the circumstances which
|
|
distinguish the American from other popular governments, as well
|
|
ancient as modern; and which render extreme circumspection
|
|
necessary, in reasoning from the one case to the other. But after
|
|
allowing due weight to this consideration, it may still be
|
|
maintained, that there are many points of similitude which render
|
|
these examples not unworthy of our attention. Many of the defects,
|
|
as we have seen, which can only be supplied by a senatorial
|
|
institution, are common to a numerous assembly frequently elected by
|
|
the people, and to the people themselves. There are others peculiar
|
|
to the former, which require the control of such an institution.
|
|
The people can never wilfully betray their own interests; but they
|
|
may possibly be betrayed by the representatives of the people; and
|
|
the danger will be evidently greater where the whole legislative
|
|
trust is lodged in the hands of one body of men, than where the
|
|
concurrence of separate and dissimilar bodies is required in every
|
|
public act.
|
|
The difference most relied on, between the American and other
|
|
republics, consists in the principle of representation; which is
|
|
the pivot on which the former move, and which is supposed to have
|
|
been unknown to the latter, or at least to the ancient part of them.
|
|
The use which has been made of this difference, in reasonings
|
|
contained in former papers, will have shown that I am disposed
|
|
neither to deny its existence nor to undervalue its importance. I
|
|
feel the less restraint, therefore, in observing, that the position
|
|
concerning the ignorance of the ancient governments on the subject
|
|
of representation, is by no means precisely true in the latitude
|
|
commonly given to it. Without entering into a disquisition which
|
|
here would be misplaced, I will refer to a few known facts, in
|
|
support of what I advance.
|
|
In the most pure democracies of Greece, many of the executive
|
|
functions were performed, not by the people themselves, but by
|
|
officers elected by the people, and REPRESENTING the people in their
|
|
EXECUTIVE capacity.
|
|
Prior to the reform of Solon, Athens was governed by nine
|
|
Archons, annually ELECTED BY THE PEOPLE AT LARGE. The degree of
|
|
power delegated to them seems to be left in great obscurity.
|
|
Subsequent to that period, we find an assembly, first of four, and
|
|
afterwards of six hundred members, annually ELECTED BY THE PEOPLE;
|
|
and PARTIALLY representing them in their LEGISLATIVE capacity,
|
|
since they were not only associated with the people in the function
|
|
of making laws, but had the exclusive right of originating
|
|
legislative propositions to the people. The senate of Carthage,
|
|
also, whatever might be its power, or the duration of its
|
|
appointment, appears to have been ELECTIVE by the suffrages of the
|
|
people. Similar instances might be traced in most, if not all the
|
|
popular governments of antiquity.
|
|
Lastly, in Sparta we meet with the Ephori, and in Rome with the
|
|
Tribunes; two bodies, small indeed in numbers, but annually ELECTED
|
|
BY THE WHOLE BODY OF THE PEOPLE, and considered as the
|
|
REPRESENTATIVES of the people, almost in their PLENIPOTENTIARY
|
|
capacity. The Cosmi of Crete were also annually ELECTED BY THE
|
|
PEOPLE, and have been considered by some authors as an institution
|
|
analogous to those of Sparta and Rome, with this difference only,
|
|
that in the election of that representative body the right of
|
|
suffrage was communicated to a part only of the people.
|
|
From these facts, to which many others might be added, it is
|
|
clear that the principle of representation was neither unknown to
|
|
the ancients nor wholly overlooked in their political constitutions.
|
|
The true distinction between these and the American governments,
|
|
lies IN THE TOTAL EXCLUSION OF THE PEOPLE, IN THEIR COLLECTIVE
|
|
CAPACITY, from any share in the LATTER, and not in the TOTAL
|
|
EXCLUSION OF THE REPRESENTATIVES OF THE PEOPLE from the
|
|
administration of the FORMER. The distinction, however, thus
|
|
qualified, must be admitted to leave a most advantageous superiority
|
|
in favor of the United States. But to insure to this advantage its
|
|
full effect, we must be careful not to separate it from the other
|
|
advantage, of an extensive territory. For it cannot be believed,
|
|
that any form of representative government could have succeeded
|
|
within the narrow limits occupied by the democracies of Greece.
|
|
In answer to all these arguments, suggested by reason,
|
|
illustrated by examples, and enforced by our own experience, the
|
|
jealous adversary of the Constitution will probably content himself
|
|
with repeating, that a senate appointed not immediately by the
|
|
people, and for the term of six years, must gradually acquire a
|
|
dangerous pre-eminence in the government, and finally transform it
|
|
into a tyrannical aristocracy.
|
|
To this general answer, the general reply ought to be
|
|
sufficient, that liberty may be endangered by the abuses of liberty
|
|
as well as by the abuses of power; that there are numerous
|
|
instances of the former as well as of the latter; and that the
|
|
former, rather than the latter, are apparently most to be
|
|
apprehended by the United States. But a more particular reply may
|
|
be given.
|
|
Before such a revolution can be effected, the Senate, it is to
|
|
be observed, must in the first place corrupt itself; must next
|
|
corrupt the State legislatures; must then corrupt the House of
|
|
Representatives; and must finally corrupt the people at large. It
|
|
is evident that the Senate must be first corrupted before it can
|
|
attempt an establishment of tyranny. Without corrupting the State
|
|
legislatures, it cannot prosecute the attempt, because the
|
|
periodical change of members would otherwise regenerate the whole
|
|
body. Without exerting the means of corruption with equal success
|
|
on the House of Representatives, the opposition of that coequal
|
|
branch of the government would inevitably defeat the attempt; and
|
|
without corrupting the people themselves, a succession of new
|
|
representatives would speedily restore all things to their pristine
|
|
order. Is there any man who can seriously persuade himself that the
|
|
proposed Senate can, by any possible means within the compass of
|
|
human address, arrive at the object of a lawless ambition, through
|
|
all these obstructions?
|
|
If reason condemns the suspicion, the same sentence is
|
|
pronounced by experience. The constitution of Maryland furnishes
|
|
the most apposite example. The Senate of that State is elected, as
|
|
the federal Senate will be, indirectly by the people, and for a term
|
|
less by one year only than the federal Senate. It is distinguished,
|
|
also, by the remarkable prerogative of filling up its own vacancies
|
|
within the term of its appointment, and, at the same time, is not
|
|
under the control of any such rotation as is provided for the
|
|
federal Senate. There are some other lesser distinctions, which
|
|
would expose the former to colorable objections, that do not lie
|
|
against the latter. If the federal Senate, therefore, really
|
|
contained the danger which has been so loudly proclaimed, some
|
|
symptoms at least of a like danger ought by this time to have been
|
|
betrayed by the Senate of Maryland, but no such symptoms have
|
|
appeared. On the contrary, the jealousies at first entertained by
|
|
men of the same description with those who view with terror the
|
|
correspondent part of the federal Constitution, have been gradually
|
|
extinguished by the progress of the experiment; and the Maryland
|
|
constitution is daily deriving, from the salutary operation of this
|
|
part of it, a reputation in which it will probably not be rivalled
|
|
by that of any State in the Union.
|
|
But if any thing could silence the jealousies on this subject,
|
|
it ought to be the British example. The Senate there instead of
|
|
being elected for a term of six years, and of being unconfined to
|
|
particular families or fortunes, is an hereditary assembly of
|
|
opulent nobles. The House of Representatives, instead of being
|
|
elected for two years, and by the whole body of the people, is
|
|
elected for seven years, and, in very great proportion, by a very
|
|
small proportion of the people. Here, unquestionably, ought to be
|
|
seen in full display the aristocratic usurpations and tyranny which
|
|
are at some future period to be exemplified in the United States.
|
|
Unfortunately, however, for the anti-federal argument, the British
|
|
history informs us that this hereditary assembly has not been able
|
|
to defend itself against the continual encroachments of the House of
|
|
Representatives; and that it no sooner lost the support of the
|
|
monarch, than it was actually crushed by the weight of the popular
|
|
branch.
|
|
As far as antiquity can instruct us on this subject, its
|
|
examples support the reasoning which we have employed. In Sparta,
|
|
the Ephori, the annual representatives of the people, were found an
|
|
overmatch for the senate for life, continually gained on its
|
|
authority and finally drew all power into their own hands. The
|
|
Tribunes of Rome, who were the representatives of the people,
|
|
prevailed, it is well known, in almost every contest with the senate
|
|
for life, and in the end gained the most complete triumph over it.
|
|
The fact is the more remarkable, as unanimity was required in every
|
|
act of the Tribunes, even after their number was augmented to ten.
|
|
It proves the irresistible force possessed by that branch of a free
|
|
government, which has the people on its side. To these examples
|
|
might be added that of Carthage, whose senate, according to the
|
|
testimony of Polybius, instead of drawing all power into its vortex,
|
|
had, at the commencement of the second Punic War, lost almost the
|
|
whole of its original portion.
|
|
Besides the conclusive evidence resulting from this assemblage
|
|
of facts, that the federal Senate will never be able to transform
|
|
itself, by gradual usurpations, into an independent and aristocratic
|
|
body, we are warranted in believing, that if such a revolution
|
|
should ever happen from causes which the foresight of man cannot
|
|
guard against, the House of Representatives, with the people on
|
|
their side, will at all times be able to bring back the Constitution
|
|
to its primitive form and principles. Against the force of the
|
|
immediate representatives of the people, nothing will be able to
|
|
maintain even the constitutional authority of the Senate, but such a
|
|
display of enlightened policy, and attachment to the public good, as
|
|
will divide with that branch of the legislature the affections and
|
|
support of the entire body of the people themselves.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 64
|
|
|
|
The Powers of the Senate
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Friday, March 7, 1788.
|
|
|
|
JAY
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
IT IS a just and not a new observation, that enemies to
|
|
particular persons, and opponents to particular measures, seldom
|
|
confine their censures to such things only in either as are worthy
|
|
of blame. Unless on this principle, it is difficult to explain the
|
|
motives of their conduct, who condemn the proposed Constitution in
|
|
the aggregate, and treat with severity some of the most
|
|
unexceptionable articles in it.
|
|
The second section gives power to the President, ``BY AND WITH
|
|
THE ADVICE AND CONSENT OF THE SENATE, TO MAKE TREATIES, PROVIDED TWO
|
|
THIRDS OF THE SENATORS PRESENT CONCUR.''
|
|
The power of making treaties is an important one, especially as
|
|
it relates to war, peace, and commerce; and it should not be
|
|
delegated but in such a mode, and with such precautions, as will
|
|
afford the highest security that it will be exercised by men the
|
|
best qualified for the purpose, and in the manner most conducive to
|
|
the public good. The convention appears to have been attentive to
|
|
both these points: they have directed the President to be chosen by
|
|
select bodies of electors, to be deputed by the people for that
|
|
express purpose; and they have committed the appointment of
|
|
senators to the State legislatures. This mode has, in such cases,
|
|
vastly the advantage of elections by the people in their collective
|
|
capacity, where the activity of party zeal, taking the advantage of
|
|
the supineness, the ignorance, and the hopes and fears of the unwary
|
|
and interested, often places men in office by the votes of a small
|
|
proportion of the electors.
|
|
As the select assemblies for choosing the President, as well as
|
|
the State legislatures who appoint the senators, will in general be
|
|
composed of the most enlightened and respectable citizens, there is
|
|
reason to presume that their attention and their votes will be
|
|
directed to those men only who have become the most distinguished by
|
|
their abilities and virtue, and in whom the people perceive just
|
|
grounds for confidence. The Constitution manifests very particular
|
|
attention to this object. By excluding men under thirty-five from
|
|
the first office, and those under thirty from the second, it
|
|
confines the electors to men of whom the people have had time to
|
|
form a judgment, and with respect to whom they will not be liable to
|
|
be deceived by those brilliant appearances of genius and patriotism,
|
|
which, like transient meteors, sometimes mislead as well as dazzle.
|
|
If the observation be well founded, that wise kings will always be
|
|
served by able ministers, it is fair to argue, that as an assembly
|
|
of select electors possess, in a greater degree than kings, the
|
|
means of extensive and accurate information relative to men and
|
|
characters, so will their appointments bear at least equal marks of
|
|
discretion and discernment. The inference which naturally results
|
|
from these considerations is this, that the President and senators
|
|
so chosen will always be of the number of those who best understand
|
|
our national interests, whether considered in relation to the
|
|
several States or to foreign nations, who are best able to promote
|
|
those interests, and whose reputation for integrity inspires and
|
|
merits confidence. With such men the power of making treaties may
|
|
be safely lodged.
|
|
Although the absolute necessity of system, in the conduct of any
|
|
business, is universally known and acknowledged, yet the high
|
|
importance of it in national affairs has not yet become sufficiently
|
|
impressed on the public mind. They who wish to commit the power
|
|
under consideration to a popular assembly, composed of members
|
|
constantly coming and going in quick succession, seem not to
|
|
recollect that such a body must necessarily be inadequate to the
|
|
attainment of those great objects, which require to be steadily
|
|
contemplated in all their relations and circumstances, and which can
|
|
only be approached and achieved by measures which not only talents,
|
|
but also exact information, and often much time, are necessary to
|
|
concert and to execute. It was wise, therefore, in the convention
|
|
to provide, not only that the power of making treaties should be
|
|
committed to able and honest men, but also that they should continue
|
|
in place a sufficient time to become perfectly acquainted with our
|
|
national concerns, and to form and introduce a a system for the
|
|
management of them. The duration prescribed is such as will give
|
|
them an opportunity of greatly extending their political
|
|
information, and of rendering their accumulating experience more and
|
|
more beneficial to their country. Nor has the convention discovered
|
|
less prudence in providing for the frequent elections of senators in
|
|
such a way as to obviate the inconvenience of periodically
|
|
transferring those great affairs entirely to new men; for by
|
|
leaving a considerable residue of the old ones in place, uniformity
|
|
and order, as well as a constant succession of official information
|
|
will be preserved.
|
|
There are a few who will not admit that the affairs of trade and
|
|
navigation should be regulated by a system cautiously formed and
|
|
steadily pursued; and that both our treaties and our laws should
|
|
correspond with and be made to promote it. It is of much
|
|
consequence that this correspondence and conformity be carefully
|
|
maintained; and they who assent to the truth of this position will
|
|
see and confess that it is well provided for by making concurrence
|
|
of the Senate necessary both to treaties and to laws.
|
|
It seldom happens in the negotiation of treaties, of whatever
|
|
nature, but that perfect SECRECY and immediate DESPATCH are
|
|
sometimes requisite. These are cases where the most useful
|
|
intelligence may be obtained, if the persons possessing it can be
|
|
relieved from apprehensions of discovery. Those apprehensions will
|
|
operate on those persons whether they are actuated by mercenary or
|
|
friendly motives; and there doubtless are many of both
|
|
descriptions, who would rely on the secrecy of the President, but
|
|
who would not confide in that of the Senate, and still less in that
|
|
of a large popular Assembly. The convention have done well,
|
|
therefore, in so disposing of the power of making treaties, that
|
|
although the President must, in forming them, act by the advice and
|
|
consent of the Senate, yet he will be able to manage the business of
|
|
intelligence in such a manner as prudence may suggest.
|
|
They who have turned their attention to the affairs of men, must
|
|
have perceived that there are tides in them; tides very irregular
|
|
in their duration, strength, and direction, and seldom found to run
|
|
twice exactly in the same manner or measure. To discern and to
|
|
profit by these tides in national affairs is the business of those
|
|
who preside over them; and they who have had much experience on
|
|
this head inform us, that there frequently are occasions when days,
|
|
nay, even when hours, are precious. The loss of a battle, the death
|
|
of a prince, the removal of a minister, or other circumstances
|
|
intervening to change the present posture and aspect of affairs, may
|
|
turn the most favorable tide into a course opposite to our wishes.
|
|
As in the field, so in the cabinet, there are moments to be seized
|
|
as they pass, and they who preside in either should be left in
|
|
capacity to improve them. So often and so essentially have we
|
|
heretofore suffered from the want of secrecy and despatch, that the
|
|
Constitution would have been inexcusably defective, if no attention
|
|
had been paid to those objects. Those matters which in negotiations
|
|
usually require the most secrecy and the most despatch, are those
|
|
preparatory and auxiliary measures which are not otherwise important
|
|
in a national view, than as they tend to facilitate the attainment
|
|
of the objects of the negotiation. For these, the President will
|
|
find no difficulty to provide; and should any circumstance occur
|
|
which requires the advice and consent of the Senate, he may at any
|
|
time convene them. Thus we see that the Constitution provides that
|
|
our negotiations for treaties shall have every advantage which can
|
|
be derived from talents, information, integrity, and deliberate
|
|
investigations, on the one hand, and from secrecy and despatch on
|
|
the other.
|
|
But to this plan, as to most others that have ever appeared,
|
|
objections are contrived and urged.
|
|
Some are displeased with it, not on account of any errors or
|
|
defects in it, but because, as the treaties, when made, are to have
|
|
the force of laws, they should be made only by men invested with
|
|
legislative authority. These gentlemen seem not to consider that
|
|
the judgments of our courts, and the commissions constitutionally
|
|
given by our governor, are as valid and as binding on all persons
|
|
whom they concern, as the laws passed by our legislature. All
|
|
constitutional acts of power, whether in the executive or in the
|
|
judicial department, have as much legal validity and obligation as
|
|
if they proceeded from the legislature; and therefore, whatever
|
|
name be given to the power of making treaties, or however obligatory
|
|
they may be when made, certain it is, that the people may, with much
|
|
propriety, commit the power to a distinct body from the legislature,
|
|
the executive, or the judicial. It surely does not follow, that
|
|
because they have given the power of making laws to the legislature,
|
|
that therefore they should likewise give them the power to do every
|
|
other act of sovereignty by which the citizens are to be bound and
|
|
affected.
|
|
Others, though content that treaties should be made in the mode
|
|
proposed, are averse to their being the SUPREME laws of the land.
|
|
They insist, and profess to believe, that treaties like acts of
|
|
assembly, should be repealable at pleasure. This idea seems to be
|
|
new and peculiar to this country, but new errors, as well as new
|
|
truths, often appear. These gentlemen would do well to reflect that
|
|
a treaty is only another name for a bargain, and that it would be
|
|
impossible to find a nation who would make any bargain with us,
|
|
which should be binding on them ABSOLUTELY, but on us only so long
|
|
and so far as we may think proper to be bound by it. They who make
|
|
laws may, without doubt, amend or repeal them; and it will not be
|
|
disputed that they who make treaties may alter or cancel them; but
|
|
still let us not forget that treaties are made, not by only one of
|
|
the contracting parties, but by both; and consequently, that as the
|
|
consent of both was essential to their formation at first, so must
|
|
it ever afterwards be to alter or cancel them. The proposed
|
|
Constitution, therefore, has not in the least extended the
|
|
obligation of treaties. They are just as binding, and just as far
|
|
beyond the lawful reach of legislative acts now, as they will be at
|
|
any future period, or under any form of government.
|
|
However useful jealousy may be in republics, yet when like bile
|
|
in the natural, it abounds too much in the body politic, the eyes of
|
|
both become very liable to be deceived by the delusive appearances
|
|
which that malady casts on surrounding objects. From this cause,
|
|
probably, proceed the fears and apprehensions of some, that the
|
|
President and Senate may make treaties without an equal eye to the
|
|
interests of all the States. Others suspect that two thirds will
|
|
oppress the remaining third, and ask whether those gentlemen are
|
|
made sufficiently responsible for their conduct; whether, if they
|
|
act corruptly, they can be punished; and if they make
|
|
disadvantageous treaties, how are we to get rid of those treaties?
|
|
As all the States are equally represented in the Senate, and by
|
|
men the most able and the most willing to promote the interests of
|
|
their constituents, they will all have an equal degree of influence
|
|
in that body, especially while they continue to be careful in
|
|
appointing proper persons, and to insist on their punctual
|
|
attendance. In proportion as the United States assume a national
|
|
form and a national character, so will the good of the whole be more
|
|
and more an object of attention, and the government must be a weak
|
|
one indeed, if it should forget that the good of the whole can only
|
|
be promoted by advancing the good of each of the parts or members
|
|
which compose the whole. It will not be in the power of the
|
|
President and Senate to make any treaties by which they and their
|
|
families and estates will not be equally bound and affected with the
|
|
rest of the community; and, having no private interests distinct
|
|
from that of the nation, they will be under no temptations to
|
|
neglect the latter.
|
|
As to corruption, the case is not supposable. He must either
|
|
have been very unfortunate in his intercourse with the world, or
|
|
possess a heart very susceptible of such impressions, who can think
|
|
it probable that the President and two thirds of the Senate will
|
|
ever be capable of such unworthy conduct. The idea is too gross and
|
|
too invidious to be entertained. But in such a case, if it should
|
|
ever happen, the treaty so obtained from us would, like all other
|
|
fraudulent contracts, be null and void by the law of nations.
|
|
With respect to their responsibility, it is difficult to
|
|
conceive how it could be increased. Every consideration that can
|
|
influence the human mind, such as honor, oaths, reputations,
|
|
conscience, the love of country, and family affections and
|
|
attachments, afford security for their fidelity. In short, as the
|
|
Constitution has taken the utmost care that they shall be men of
|
|
talents and integrity, we have reason to be persuaded that the
|
|
treaties they make will be as advantageous as, all circumstances
|
|
considered, could be made; and so far as the fear of punishment and
|
|
disgrace can operate, that motive to good behavior is amply afforded
|
|
by the article on the subject of impeachments.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 65
|
|
|
|
The Powers of the Senate Continued
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Friday, March 7, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE remaining powers which the plan of the convention allots to
|
|
the Senate, in a distinct capacity, are comprised in their
|
|
participation with the executive in the appointment to offices, and
|
|
in their judicial character as a court for the trial of impeachments.
|
|
As in the business of appointments the executive will be the
|
|
principal agent, the provisions relating to it will most properly be
|
|
discussed in the examination of that department. We will,
|
|
therefore, conclude this head with a view of the judicial character
|
|
of the Senate.
|
|
A well-constituted court for the trial of impeachments is an
|
|
object not more to be desired than difficult to be obtained in a
|
|
government wholly elective. The subjects of its jurisdiction are
|
|
those offenses which proceed from the misconduct of public men, or,
|
|
in other words, from the abuse or violation of some public trust.
|
|
They are of a nature which may with peculiar propriety be
|
|
denominated POLITICAL, as they relate chiefly to injuries done
|
|
immediately to the society itself. The prosecution of them, for
|
|
this reason, will seldom fail to agitate the passions of the whole
|
|
community, and to divide it into parties more or less friendly or
|
|
inimical to the accused. In many cases it will connect itself with
|
|
the pre-existing factions, and will enlist all their animosities,
|
|
partialities, influence, and interest on one side or on the other;
|
|
and in such cases there will always be the greatest danger that the
|
|
decision will be regulated more by the comparative strength of
|
|
parties, than by the real demonstrations of innocence or guilt.
|
|
The delicacy and magnitude of a trust which so deeply concerns
|
|
the political reputation and existence of every man engaged in the
|
|
administration of public affairs, speak for themselves. The
|
|
difficulty of placing it rightly, in a government resting entirely
|
|
on the basis of periodical elections, will as readily be perceived,
|
|
when it is considered that the most conspicuous characters in it
|
|
will, from that circumstance, be too often the leaders or the tools
|
|
of the most cunning or the most numerous faction, and on this
|
|
account, can hardly be expected to possess the requisite neutrality
|
|
towards those whose conduct may be the subject of scrutiny.
|
|
The convention, it appears, thought the Senate the most fit
|
|
depositary of this important trust. Those who can best discern the
|
|
intrinsic difficulty of the thing, will be least hasty in condemning
|
|
that opinion, and will be most inclined to allow due weight to the
|
|
arguments which may be supposed to have produced it.
|
|
What, it may be asked, is the true spirit of the institution
|
|
itself? Is it not designed as a method of NATIONAL INQUEST into the
|
|
conduct of public men? If this be the design of it, who can so
|
|
properly be the inquisitors for the nation as the representatives of
|
|
the nation themselves? It is not disputed that the power of
|
|
originating the inquiry, or, in other words, of preferring the
|
|
impeachment, ought to be lodged in the hands of one branch of the
|
|
legislative body. Will not the reasons which indicate the propriety
|
|
of this arrangement strongly plead for an admission of the other
|
|
branch of that body to a share of the inquiry? The model from which
|
|
the idea of this institution has been borrowed, pointed out that
|
|
course to the convention. In Great Britain it is the province of
|
|
the House of Commons to prefer the impeachment, and of the House of
|
|
Lords to decide upon it. Several of the State constitutions have
|
|
followed the example. As well the latter, as the former, seem to
|
|
have regarded the practice of impeachments as a bridle in the hands
|
|
of the legislative body upon the executive servants of the
|
|
government. Is not this the true light in which it ought to be
|
|
regarded?
|
|
Where else than in the Senate could have been found a tribunal
|
|
sufficiently dignified, or sufficiently independent? What other
|
|
body would be likely to feel CONFIDENCE ENOUGH IN ITS OWN SITUATION,
|
|
to preserve, unawed and uninfluenced, the necessary impartiality
|
|
between an INDIVIDUAL accused, and the REPRESENTATIVES OF THE
|
|
PEOPLE, HIS ACCUSERS?
|
|
Could the Supreme Court have been relied upon as answering this
|
|
description? It is much to be doubted, whether the members of that
|
|
tribunal would at all times be endowed with so eminent a portion of
|
|
fortitude, as would be called for in the execution of so difficult a
|
|
task; and it is still more to be doubted, whether they would
|
|
possess the degree of credit and authority, which might, on certain
|
|
occasions, be indispensable towards reconciling the people to a
|
|
decision that should happen to clash with an accusation brought by
|
|
their immediate representatives. A deficiency in the first, would
|
|
be fatal to the accused; in the last, dangerous to the public
|
|
tranquillity. The hazard in both these respects, could only be
|
|
avoided, if at all, by rendering that tribunal more numerous than
|
|
would consist with a reasonable attention to economy. The necessity
|
|
of a numerous court for the trial of impeachments, is equally
|
|
dictated by the nature of the proceeding. This can never be tied
|
|
down by such strict rules, either in the delineation of the offense
|
|
by the prosecutors, or in the construction of it by the judges, as
|
|
in common cases serve to limit the discretion of courts in favor of
|
|
personal security. There will be no jury to stand between the
|
|
judges who are to pronounce the sentence of the law, and the party
|
|
who is to receive or suffer it. The awful discretion which a court
|
|
of impeachments must necessarily have, to doom to honor or to infamy
|
|
the most confidential and the most distinguished characters of the
|
|
community, forbids the commitment of the trust to a small number of
|
|
persons.
|
|
These considerations seem alone sufficient to authorize a
|
|
conclusion, that the Supreme Court would have been an improper
|
|
substitute for the Senate, as a court of impeachments. There
|
|
remains a further consideration, which will not a little strengthen
|
|
this conclusion. It is this: The punishment which may be the
|
|
consequence of conviction upon impeachment, is not to terminate the
|
|
chastisement of the offender. After having been sentenced to a
|
|
prepetual ostracism from the esteem and confidence, and honors and
|
|
emoluments of his country, he will still be liable to prosecution
|
|
and punishment in the ordinary course of law. Would it be proper
|
|
that the persons who had disposed of his fame, and his most valuable
|
|
rights as a citizen in one trial, should, in another trial, for the
|
|
same offense, be also the disposers of his life and his fortune?
|
|
Would there not be the greatest reason to apprehend, that error, in
|
|
the first sentence, would be the parent of error in the second
|
|
sentence? That the strong bias of one decision would be apt to
|
|
overrule the influence of any new lights which might be brought to
|
|
vary the complexion of another decision? Those who know anything of
|
|
human nature, will not hesitate to answer these questions in the
|
|
affirmative; and will be at no loss to perceive, that by making the
|
|
same persons judges in both cases, those who might happen to be the
|
|
objects of prosecution would, in a great measure, be deprived of the
|
|
double security intended them by a double trial. The loss of life
|
|
and estate would often be virtually included in a sentence which, in
|
|
its terms, imported nothing more than dismission from a present, and
|
|
disqualification for a future, office. It may be said, that the
|
|
intervention of a jury, in the second instance, would obviate the
|
|
danger. But juries are frequently influenced by the opinions of
|
|
judges. They are sometimes induced to find special verdicts, which
|
|
refer the main question to the decision of the court. Who would be
|
|
willing to stake his life and his estate upon the verdict of a jury
|
|
acting under the auspices of judges who had predetermined his guilt?
|
|
Would it have been an improvement of the plan, to have united
|
|
the Supreme Court with the Senate, in the formation of the court of
|
|
impeachments? This union would certainly have been attended with
|
|
several advantages; but would they not have been overbalanced by
|
|
the signal disadvantage, already stated, arising from the agency of
|
|
the same judges in the double prosecution to which the offender
|
|
would be liable? To a certain extent, the benefits of that union
|
|
will be obtained from making the chief justice of the Supreme Court
|
|
the president of the court of impeachments, as is proposed to be
|
|
done in the plan of the convention; while the inconveniences of an
|
|
entire incorporation of the former into the latter will be
|
|
substantially avoided. This was perhaps the prudent mean. I
|
|
forbear to remark upon the additional pretext for clamor against the
|
|
judiciary, which so considerable an augmentation of its authority
|
|
would have afforded.
|
|
Would it have been desirable to have composed the court for the
|
|
trial of impeachments, of persons wholly distinct from the other
|
|
departments of the government? There are weighty arguments, as well
|
|
against, as in favor of, such a plan. To some minds it will not
|
|
appear a trivial objection, that it could tend to increase the
|
|
complexity of the political machine, and to add a new spring to the
|
|
government, the utility of which would at best be questionable. But
|
|
an objection which will not be thought by any unworthy of attention,
|
|
is this: a court formed upon such a plan, would either be attended
|
|
with a heavy expense, or might in practice be subject to a variety
|
|
of casualties and inconveniences. It must either consist of
|
|
permanent officers, stationary at the seat of government, and of
|
|
course entitled to fixed and regular stipends, or of certain
|
|
officers of the State governments to be called upon whenever an
|
|
impeachment was actually depending. It will not be easy to imagine
|
|
any third mode materially different, which could rationally be
|
|
proposed. As the court, for reasons already given, ought to be
|
|
numerous, the first scheme will be reprobated by every man who can
|
|
compare the extent of the public wants with the means of supplying
|
|
them. The second will be espoused with caution by those who will
|
|
seriously consider the difficulty of collecting men dispersed over
|
|
the whole Union; the injury to the innocent, from the
|
|
procrastinated determination of the charges which might be brought
|
|
against them; the advantage to the guilty, from the opportunities
|
|
which delay would afford to intrigue and corruption; and in some
|
|
cases the detriment to the State, from the prolonged inaction of men
|
|
whose firm and faithful execution of their duty might have exposed
|
|
them to the persecution of an intemperate or designing majority in
|
|
the House of Representatives. Though this latter supposition may
|
|
seem harsh, and might not be likely often to be verified, yet it
|
|
ought not to be forgotten that the demon of faction will, at certain
|
|
seasons, extend his sceptre over all numerous bodies of men.
|
|
But though one or the other of the substitutes which have been
|
|
examined, or some other that might be devised, should be thought
|
|
preferable to the plan in this respect, reported by the convention,
|
|
it will not follow that the Constitution ought for this reason to be
|
|
rejected. If mankind were to resolve to agree in no institution of
|
|
government, until every part of it had been adjusted to the most
|
|
exact standard of perfection, society would soon become a general
|
|
scene of anarchy, and the world a desert. Where is the standard of
|
|
perfection to be found? Who will undertake to unite the discordant
|
|
opinions of a whole commuity, in the same judgment of it; and to
|
|
prevail upon one conceited projector to renounce his INFALLIBLE
|
|
criterion for the FALLIBLE criterion of his more CONCEITED NEIGHBOR?
|
|
To answer the purpose of the adversaries of the Constitution, they
|
|
ought to prove, not merely that particular provisions in it are not
|
|
the best which might have been imagined, but that the plan upon the
|
|
whole is bad and pernicious.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 66
|
|
|
|
Objections to the Power of the Senate To Set as a Court for
|
|
Impeachments Further Considered
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Tuesday, March 11, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
A REVIEW of the principal objections that have appeared against
|
|
the proposed court for the trial of impeachments, will not
|
|
improbably eradicate the remains of any unfavorable impressions
|
|
which may still exist in regard to this matter.
|
|
The FIRST of these objections is, that the provision in question
|
|
confounds legislative and judiciary authorities in the same body, in
|
|
violation of that important and wellestablished maxim which requires
|
|
a separation between the different departments of power. The true
|
|
meaning of this maxim has been discussed and ascertained in another
|
|
place, and has been shown to be entirely compatible with a partial
|
|
intermixture of those departments for special purposes, preserving
|
|
them, in the main, distinct and unconnected. This partial
|
|
intermixture is even, in some cases, not only proper but necessary
|
|
to the mutual defense of the several members of the government
|
|
against each other. An absolute or qualified negative in the
|
|
executive upon the acts of the legislative body, is admitted, by the
|
|
ablest adepts in political science, to be an indispensable barrier
|
|
against the encroachments of the latter upon the former. And it
|
|
may, perhaps, with no less reason be contended, that the powers
|
|
relating to impeachments are, as before intimated, an essential
|
|
check in the hands of that body upon the encroachments of the
|
|
executive. The division of them between the two branches of the
|
|
legislature, assigning to one the right of accusing, to the other
|
|
the right of judging, avoids the inconvenience of making the same
|
|
persons both accusers and judges; and guards against the danger of
|
|
persecution, from the prevalency of a factious spirit in either of
|
|
those branches. As the concurrence of two thirds of the Senate will
|
|
be requisite to a condemnation, the security to innocence, from this
|
|
additional circumstance, will be as complete as itself can desire.
|
|
It is curious to observe, with what vehemence this part of the
|
|
plan is assailed, on the principle here taken notice of, by men who
|
|
profess to admire, without exception, the constitution of this
|
|
State; while that constitution makes the Senate, together with the
|
|
chancellor and judges of the Supreme Court, not only a court of
|
|
impeachments, but the highest judicatory in the State, in all
|
|
causes, civil and criminal. The proportion, in point of numbers, of
|
|
the chancellor and judges to the senators, is so inconsiderable,
|
|
that the judiciary authority of New York, in the last resort, may,
|
|
with truth, be said to reside in its Senate. If the plan of the
|
|
convention be, in this respect, chargeable with a departure from the
|
|
celebrated maxim which has been so often mentioned, and seems to be
|
|
so little understood, how much more culpable must be the
|
|
constitution of New York?1
|
|
A SECOND objection to the Senate, as a court of impeachments,
|
|
is, that it contributes to an undue accumulation of power in that
|
|
body, tending to give to the government a countenance too
|
|
aristocratic. The Senate, it is observed, is to have concurrent
|
|
authority with the Executive in the formation of treaties and in the
|
|
appointment to offices: if, say the objectors, to these
|
|
prerogatives is added that of deciding in all cases of impeachment,
|
|
it will give a decided predominancy to senatorial influence. To an
|
|
objection so little precise in itself, it is not easy to find a very
|
|
precise answer. Where is the measure or criterion to which we can
|
|
appeal, for determining what will give the Senate too much, too
|
|
little, or barely the proper degree of influence? Will it not be
|
|
more safe, as well as more simple, to dismiss such vague and
|
|
uncertain calculations, to examine each power by itself, and to
|
|
decide, on general principles, where it may be deposited with most
|
|
advantage and least inconvenience?
|
|
If we take this course, it will lead to a more intelligible, if
|
|
not to a more certain result. The disposition of the power of
|
|
making treaties, which has obtained in the plan of the convention,
|
|
will, then, if I mistake not, appear to be fully justified by the
|
|
considerations stated in a former number, and by others which will
|
|
occur under the next head of our inquiries. The expediency of the
|
|
junction of the Senate with the Executive, in the power of
|
|
appointing to offices, will, I trust, be placed in a light not less
|
|
satisfactory, in the disquisitions under the same head. And I
|
|
flatter myself the observations in my last paper must have gone no
|
|
inconsiderable way towards proving that it was not easy, if
|
|
practicable, to find a more fit receptacle for the power of
|
|
determining impeachments, than that which has been chosen. If this
|
|
be truly the case, the hypothetical dread of the too great weight of
|
|
the Senate ought to be discarded from our reasonings.
|
|
But this hypothesis, such as it is, has already been refuted in
|
|
the remarks applied to the duration in office prescribed for the
|
|
senators. It was by them shown, as well on the credit of historical
|
|
examples, as from the reason of the thing, that the most POPULAR
|
|
branch of every government, partaking of the republican genius, by
|
|
being generally the favorite of the people, will be as generally a
|
|
full match, if not an overmatch, for every other member of the
|
|
Government.
|
|
But independent of this most active and operative principle, to
|
|
secure the equilibrium of the national House of Representatives, the
|
|
plan of the convention has provided in its favor several important
|
|
counterpoises to the additional authorities to be conferred upon the
|
|
Senate. The exclusive privilege of originating money bills will
|
|
belong to the House of Representatives. The same house will possess
|
|
the sole right of instituting impeachments: is not this a complete
|
|
counterbalance to that of determining them? The same house will be
|
|
the umpire in all elections of the President, which do not unite the
|
|
suffrages of a majority of the whole number of electors; a case
|
|
which it cannot be doubted will sometimes, if not frequently, happen.
|
|
The constant possibility of the thing must be a fruitful source of
|
|
influence to that body. The more it is contemplated, the more
|
|
important will appear this ultimate though contingent power, of
|
|
deciding the competitions of the most illustrious citizens of the
|
|
Union, for the first office in it. It would not perhaps be rash to
|
|
predict, that as a mean of influence it will be found to outweigh
|
|
all the peculiar attributes of the Senate.
|
|
A THIRD objection to the Senate as a court of impeachments, is
|
|
drawn from the agency they are to have in the appointments to office.
|
|
It is imagined that they would be too indulgent judges of the
|
|
conduct of men, in whose official creation they had participated.
|
|
The principle of this objection would condemn a practice, which is
|
|
to be seen in all the State governments, if not in all the
|
|
governments with which we are acquainted: I mean that of rendering
|
|
those who hold offices during pleasure, dependent on the pleasure of
|
|
those who appoint them. With equal plausibility might it be alleged
|
|
in this case, that the favoritism of the latter would always be an
|
|
asylum for the misbehavior of the former. But that practice, in
|
|
contradiction to this principle, proceeds upon the presumption, that
|
|
the responsibility of those who appoint, for the fitness and
|
|
competency of the persons on whom they bestow their choice, and the
|
|
interest they will have in the respectable and prosperous
|
|
administration of affairs, will inspire a sufficient disposition to
|
|
dismiss from a share in it all such who, by their conduct, shall
|
|
have proved themselves unworthy of the confidence reposed in them.
|
|
Though facts may not always correspond with this presumption, yet
|
|
if it be, in the main, just, it must destroy the supposition that
|
|
the Senate, who will merely sanction the choice of the Executive,
|
|
should feel a bias, towards the objects of that choice, strong
|
|
enough to blind them to the evidences of guilt so extraordinary, as
|
|
to have induced the representatives of the nation to become its
|
|
accusers.
|
|
If any further arguments were necessary to evince the
|
|
improbability of such a bias, it might be found in the nature of the
|
|
agency of the Senate in the business of appointments.
|
|
It will be the office of the President to NOMINATE, and, with
|
|
the advice and consent of the Senate, to APPOINT. There will, of
|
|
course, be no exertion of CHOICE on the part of the Senate. They
|
|
may defeat one choice of the Executive, and oblige him to make
|
|
another; but they cannot themselves CHOOSE, they can only ratify or
|
|
reject the choice of the President. They might even entertain a
|
|
preference to some other person, at the very moment they were
|
|
assenting to the one proposed, because there might be no positive
|
|
ground of opposition to him; and they could not be sure, if they
|
|
withheld their assent, that the subsequent nomination would fall
|
|
upon their own favorite, or upon any other person in their
|
|
estimation more meritorious than the one rejected. Thus it could
|
|
hardly happen, that the majority of the Senate would feel any other
|
|
complacency towards the object of an appointment than such as the
|
|
appearances of merit might inspire, and the proofs of the want of it
|
|
destroy.
|
|
A FOURTH objection to the Senate in the capacity of a court of
|
|
impeachments, is derived from its union with the Executive in the
|
|
power of making treaties. This, it has been said, would constitute
|
|
the senators their own judges, in every case of a corrupt or
|
|
perfidious execution of that trust. After having combined with the
|
|
Executive in betraying the interests of the nation in a ruinous
|
|
treaty, what prospect, it is asked, would there be of their being
|
|
made to suffer the punishment they would deserve, when they were
|
|
themselves to decide upon the accusation brought against them for
|
|
the treachery of which they have been guilty?
|
|
This objection has been circulated with more earnestness and
|
|
with greater show of reason than any other which has appeared
|
|
against this part of the plan; and yet I am deceived if it does not
|
|
rest upon an erroneous foundation.
|
|
The security essentially intended by the Constitution against
|
|
corruption and treachery in the formation of treaties, is to be
|
|
sought for in the numbers and characters of those who are to make
|
|
them. The JOINT AGENCY of the Chief Magistrate of the Union, and of
|
|
two thirds of the members of a body selected by the collective
|
|
wisdom of the legislatures of the several States, is designed to be
|
|
the pledge for the fidelity of the national councils in this
|
|
particular. The convention might with propriety have meditated the
|
|
punishment of the Executive, for a deviation from the instructions
|
|
of the Senate, or a want of integrity in the conduct of the
|
|
negotiations committed to him; they might also have had in view the
|
|
punishment of a few leading individuals in the Senate, who should
|
|
have prostituted their influence in that body as the mercenary
|
|
instruments of foreign corruption: but they could not, with more or
|
|
with equal propriety, have contemplated the impeachment and
|
|
punishment of two thirds of the Senate, consenting to an improper
|
|
treaty, than of a majority of that or of the other branch of the
|
|
national legislature, consenting to a pernicious or unconstitutional
|
|
law, a principle which, I believe, has never been admitted into any
|
|
government. How, in fact, could a majority in the House of
|
|
Representatives impeach themselves? Not better, it is evident, than
|
|
two thirds of the Senate might try themselves. And yet what reason
|
|
is there, that a majority of the House of Representatives,
|
|
sacrificing the interests of the society by an unjust and tyrannical
|
|
act of legislation, should escape with impunity, more than two
|
|
thirds of the Senate, sacrificing the same interests in an injurious
|
|
treaty with a foreign power? The truth is, that in all such cases
|
|
it is essential to the freedom and to the necessary independence of
|
|
the deliberations of the body, that the members of it should be
|
|
exempt from punishment for acts done in a collective capacity; and
|
|
the security to the society must depend on the care which is taken
|
|
to confide the trust to proper hands, to make it their interest to
|
|
execute it with fidelity, and to make it as difficult as possible
|
|
for them to combine in any interest opposite to that of the public
|
|
good.
|
|
So far as might concern the misbehavior of the Executive in
|
|
perverting the instructions or contravening the views of the Senate,
|
|
we need not be apprehensive of the want of a disposition in that
|
|
body to punish the abuse of their confidence or to vindicate their
|
|
own authority. We may thus far count upon their pride, if not upon
|
|
their virtue. And so far even as might concern the corruption of
|
|
leading members, by whose arts and influence the majority may have
|
|
been inveigled into measures odious to the community, if the proofs
|
|
of that corruption should be satisfactory, the usual propensity of
|
|
human nature will warrant us in concluding that there would be
|
|
commonly no defect of inclination in the body to divert the public
|
|
resentment from themselves by a ready sacrifice of the authors of
|
|
their mismanagement and disgrace.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
In that of New Jersey, also, the final judiciary authority is in
|
|
a branch of the legislature. In New Hampshire, Massachusetts,
|
|
Pennsylvanis, and South Carolina, one branch of the legislature is
|
|
the court for the trial of impeachments.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 67
|
|
|
|
The Executive Department
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Tuesday, March 11, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE constitution of the executive department of the proposed
|
|
government, claims next our attention.
|
|
There is hardly any part of the system which could have been
|
|
atten ed with greater difficulty in the arrangement of it than this;
|
|
and there is, perhaps, none which has been inveighed against with
|
|
less candor or criticised with less judgment.
|
|
Here the writers against the Constitution seem to have taken
|
|
pains to signalize their talent of misrepresentation. Calculating
|
|
upon the aversion of the people to monarchy, they have endeavored to
|
|
enlist all their jealousies and apprehensions in opposition to the
|
|
intended President of the United States; not merely as the embryo,
|
|
but as the full-grown progeny, of that detested parent. To
|
|
establish the pretended affinity, they have not scrupled to draw
|
|
resources even from the regions of fiction. The authorities of a
|
|
magistrate, in few instances greater, in some instances less, than
|
|
those of a governor of New York, have been magnified into more than
|
|
royal prerogatives. He has been decorated with attributes superior
|
|
in dignity and splendor to those of a king of Great Britain. He has
|
|
been shown to us with the diadem sparkling on his brow and the
|
|
imperial purple flowing in his train. He has been seated on a
|
|
throne surrounded with minions and mistresses, giving audience to
|
|
the envoys of foreign potentates, in all the supercilious pomp of
|
|
majesty. The images of Asiatic despotism and voluptuousness have
|
|
scarcely been wanting to crown the exaggerated scene. We have been
|
|
taught to tremble at the terrific visages of murdering janizaries,
|
|
and to blush at the unveiled mysteries of a future seraglio.
|
|
Attempts so extravagant as these to disfigure or, it might
|
|
rather be said, to metamorphose the object, render it necessary to
|
|
take an accurate view of its real nature and form: in order as well
|
|
to ascertain its true aspect and genuine appearance, as to unmask
|
|
the disingenuity and expose the fallacy of the counterfeit
|
|
resemblances which have been so insidiously, as well as
|
|
industriously, propagated.
|
|
In the execution of this task, there is no man who would not
|
|
find it an arduous effort either to behold with moderation, or to
|
|
treat with seriousness, the devices, not less weak than wicked,
|
|
which have been contrived to pervert the public opinion in relation
|
|
to the subject. They so far exceed the usual though unjustifiable
|
|
licenses of party artifice, that even in a disposition the most
|
|
candid and tolerant, they must force the sentiments which favor an
|
|
indulgent construction of the conduct of political adversaries to
|
|
give place to a voluntary and unreserved indignation. It is
|
|
impossible not to bestow the imputation of deliberate imposture and
|
|
deception upon the gross pretense of a similitude between a king of
|
|
Great Britain and a magistrate of the character marked out for that
|
|
of the President of the United States. It is still more impossible
|
|
to withhold that imputation from the rash and barefaced expedients
|
|
which have been employed to give success to the attempted imposition.
|
|
In one instance, which I cite as a sample of the general spirit,
|
|
the temerity has proceeded so far as to ascribe to the President of
|
|
the United States a power which by the instrument reported is
|
|
EXPRESSLY allotted to the Executives of the individual States. I
|
|
mean the power of filling casual vacancies in the Senate.
|
|
This bold experiment upon the discernment of his countrymen has
|
|
been hazarded by a writer who (whatever may be his real merit) has
|
|
had no inconsiderable share in the applauses of his party1; and
|
|
who, upon this false and unfounded suggestion, has built a series of
|
|
observations equally false and unfounded. Let him now be confronted
|
|
with the evidence of the fact, and let him, if he be able, justify
|
|
or extenuate the shameful outrage he has offered to the dictates of
|
|
truth and to the rules of fair dealing.
|
|
The second clause of the second section of the second article
|
|
empowers the President of the United States ``to nominate, and by
|
|
and with the advice and consent of the Senate, to appoint
|
|
ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls, judges of the
|
|
Supreme Court, and all other OFFICERS of United States whose
|
|
appointments are NOT in the Constitution OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR, and
|
|
WHICH SHALL BE ESTABLISHED BY LAW.'' Immediately after this clause
|
|
follows another in these words: ``The President shall have power to
|
|
fill up ?? VACANCIES that may happen DURING THE RECESS OF THE
|
|
SENATE, by granting commissions which shall EXPIRE AT THE END OF
|
|
THEIR NEXT SESSION.'' It is from this last provision that the
|
|
pretended power of the President to fill vacancies in the Senate has
|
|
been deduced. A slight attention to the connection of the clauses,
|
|
and to the obvious meaning of the terms, will satisfy us that the
|
|
deduction is not even colorable.
|
|
The first of these two clauses, it is clear, only provides a
|
|
mode for appointing such officers, ``whose appointments are NOT
|
|
OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR in the Constitution, and which SHALL BE
|
|
ESTABLISHED BY LAW''; of course it cannot extend to the
|
|
appointments of senators, whose appointments are OTHERWISE PROVIDED
|
|
FOR in the Constitution2, and who are ESTABLISHED BY THE
|
|
CONSTITUTION, and will not require a future establishment by law.
|
|
This position will hardly be contested.
|
|
The last of these two clauses, it is equally clear, cannot be
|
|
understood to comprehend the power of filling vacancies in the
|
|
Senate, for the following reasons: First. The relation in
|
|
which that clause stands to the other, which declares the general
|
|
mode of appointing officers of the United States, denotes it to be
|
|
nothing more than a supplement to the other, for the purpose of
|
|
establishing an auxiliary method of appointment, in cases to which
|
|
the general method was inadequate. The ordinary power of
|
|
appointment is confined to the President and Senate JOINTLY, and can
|
|
therefore only be exercised during the session of the Senate; but
|
|
as it would have been improper to oblige this body to be continually
|
|
in session for the appointment of officers and as vacancies might
|
|
happen IN THEIR RECESS, which it might be necessary for the public
|
|
service to fill without delay, the succeeding clause is evidently
|
|
intended to authorize the President, SINGLY, to make temporary
|
|
appointments ``during the recess of the Senate, by granting
|
|
commissions which shall expire at the end of their next session.''
|
|
Secondly. If this clause is to be considered as supplementary
|
|
to the one which precedes, the VACANCIES of which it speaks must be
|
|
construed to relate to the ``officers'' described in the preceding
|
|
one; and this, we have seen, excludes from its description the
|
|
members of the Senate. Thirdly. The time within which the
|
|
power is to operate, ``during the recess of the Senate,'' and the
|
|
duration of the appointments, ``to the end of the next session'' of
|
|
that body, conspire to elucidate the sense of the provision, which,
|
|
if it had been intended to comprehend senators, would naturally have
|
|
referred the temporary power of filling vacancies to the recess of
|
|
the State legislatures, who are to make the permanent appointments,
|
|
and not to the recess of the national Senate, who are to have no
|
|
concern in those appointments; and would have extended the duration
|
|
in office of the temporary senators to the next session of the
|
|
legislature of the State, in whose representation the vacancies had
|
|
happened, instead of making it to expire at the end of the ensuing
|
|
session of the national Senate. The circumstances of the body
|
|
authorized to make the permanent appointments would, of course, have
|
|
governed the modification of a power which related to the temporary
|
|
appointments; and as the national Senate is the body, whose
|
|
situation is alone contemplated in the clause upon which the
|
|
suggestion under examination has been founded, the vacancies to
|
|
which it alludes can only be deemed to respect those officers in
|
|
whose appointment that body has a concurrent agency with the
|
|
President. But lastly, the first and second clauses of the
|
|
third section of the first article, not only obviate all possibility
|
|
of doubt, but destroy the pretext of misconception. The former
|
|
provides, that ``the Senate of the United States shall be composed
|
|
of two Senators from each State, chosen BY THE LEGISLATURE THEREOF
|
|
for six years''; and the latter directs, that, ``if vacancies in
|
|
that body should happen by resignation or otherwise, DURING THE
|
|
RECESS OF THE LEGISLATURE OF ANY STATE, the Executive THEREOF may
|
|
make temporary appointments until the NEXT MEETING OF THE
|
|
LEGISLATURE, which shall then fill such vacancies.'' Here is an
|
|
express power given, in clear and unambiguous terms, to the State
|
|
Executives, to fill casual vacancies in the Senate, by temporary
|
|
appointments; which not only invalidates the supposition, that the
|
|
clause before considered could have been intended to confer that
|
|
power upon the President of the United States, but proves that this
|
|
supposition, destitute as it is even of the merit of plausibility,
|
|
must have originated in an intention to deceive the people, too
|
|
palpable to be obscured by sophistry, too atrocious to be palliated
|
|
by hypocrisy.
|
|
I have taken the pains to select this instance of
|
|
misrepresentation, and to place it in a clear and strong light, as
|
|
an unequivocal proof of the unwarrantable arts which are practiced
|
|
to prevent a fair and impartial judgment of the real merits of the
|
|
Constitution submitted to the consideration of the people. Nor have
|
|
I scrupled, in so flagrant a case, to allow myself a severity of
|
|
animadversion little congenial with the general spirit of these
|
|
papers. I hesitate not to submit it to the decision of any candid
|
|
and honest adversary of the proposed government, whether language
|
|
can furnish epithets of too much asperity, for so shameless and so
|
|
prostitute an attempt to impose on the citizens of America.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
1 See CATO, No. V.
|
|
2 Article I, section 3, clause I.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 68
|
|
|
|
The Mode of Electing the President
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Friday, March 14, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE mode of appointment of the Chief Magistrate of the United
|
|
States is almost the only part of the system, of any consequence,
|
|
which has escaped without severe censure, or which has received the
|
|
slightest mark of approbation from its opponents. The most
|
|
plausible of these, who has appeared in print, has even deigned to
|
|
admit that the election of the President is pretty well
|
|
guarded.1 I venture somewhat further, and hesitate not to
|
|
affirm, that if the manner of it be not perfect, it is at least
|
|
excellent. It unites in an eminent degree all the advantages, the
|
|
union of which was to be wished for.
|
|
It was desirable that the sense of the people should operate in
|
|
the choice of the person to whom so important a trust was to be
|
|
confided. This end will be answered by committing the right of
|
|
making it, not to any preestablished body, but to men chosen by the
|
|
people for the special purpose, and at the particular conjuncture.
|
|
It was equally desirable, that the immediate election should be
|
|
made by men most capable of analyzing the qualities adapted to the
|
|
station, and acting under circumstances favorable to deliberation,
|
|
and to a judicious combination of all the reasons and inducements
|
|
which were proper to govern their choice. A small number of
|
|
persons, selected by their fellow-citizens from the general mass,
|
|
will be most likely to possess the information and discernment
|
|
requisite to such complicated investigations.
|
|
It was also peculiarly desirable to afford as little opportunity
|
|
as possible to tumult and disorder. This evil was not least to be
|
|
dreaded in the election of a magistrate, who was to have so
|
|
important an agency in the administration of the government as the
|
|
President of the United States. But the precautions which have been
|
|
so happily concerted in the system under consideration, promise an
|
|
effectual security against this mischief. The choice of SEVERAL, to
|
|
form an intermediate body of electors, will be much less apt to
|
|
convulse the community with any extraordinary or violent movements,
|
|
than the choice of ONE who was himself to be the final object of the
|
|
public wishes. And as the electors, chosen in each State, are to
|
|
assemble and vote in the State in which they are chosen, this
|
|
detached and divided situation will expose them much less to heats
|
|
and ferments, which might be communicated from them to the people,
|
|
than if they were all to be convened at one time, in one place.
|
|
Nothing was more to be desired than that every practicable
|
|
obstacle should be opposed to cabal, intrigue, and corruption.
|
|
These most deadly adversaries of republican government might
|
|
naturally have been expected to make their approaches from more than
|
|
one querter, but chiefly from the desire in foreign powers to gain
|
|
an improper ascendant in our councils. How could they better
|
|
gratify this, than by raising a creature of their own to the chief
|
|
magistracy of the Union? But the convention have guarded against
|
|
all danger of this sort, with the most provident and judicious
|
|
attention. They have not made the appointment of the President to
|
|
depend on any preexisting bodies of men, who might be tampered with
|
|
beforehand to prostitute their votes; but they have referred it in
|
|
the first instance to an immediate act of the people of America, to
|
|
be exerted in the choice of persons for the temporary and sole
|
|
purpose of making the appointment. And they have excluded from
|
|
eligibility to this trust, all those who from situation might be
|
|
suspected of too great devotion to the President in office. No
|
|
senator, representative, or other person holding a place of trust or
|
|
profit under the United States, can be of the numbers of the
|
|
electors. Thus without corrupting the body of the people, the
|
|
immediate agents in the election will at least enter upon the task
|
|
free from any sinister bias. Their transient existence, and their
|
|
detached situation, already taken notice of, afford a satisfactory
|
|
prospect of their continuing so, to the conclusion of it. The
|
|
business of corruption, when it is to embrace so considerable a
|
|
number of men, requires time as well as means. Nor would it be
|
|
found easy suddenly to embark them, dispersed as they would be over
|
|
thirteen States, in any combinations founded upon motives, which
|
|
though they could not properly be denominated corrupt, might yet be
|
|
of a nature to mislead them from their duty.
|
|
Another and no less important desideratum was, that the
|
|
Executive should be independent for his continuance in office on all
|
|
but the people themselves. He might otherwise be tempted to
|
|
sacrifice his duty to his complaisance for those whose favor was
|
|
necessary to the duration of his official consequence. This
|
|
advantage will also be secured, by making his re-election to depend
|
|
on a special body of representatives, deputed by the society for the
|
|
single purpose of making the important choice.
|
|
All these advantages will happily combine in the plan devised by
|
|
the convention; which is, that the people of each State shall
|
|
choose a number of persons as electors, equal to the number of
|
|
senators and representatives of such State in the national
|
|
government, who shall assemble within the State, and vote for some
|
|
fit person as President. Their votes, thus given, are to be
|
|
transmitted to the seat of the national government, and the person
|
|
who may happen to have a majority of the whole number of votes will
|
|
be the President. But as a majority of the votes might not always
|
|
happen to centre in one man, and as it might be unsafe to permit
|
|
less than a majority to be conclusive, it is provided that, in such
|
|
a contingency, the House of Representatives shall select out of the
|
|
candidates who shall have the five highest number of votes, the man
|
|
who in their opinion may be best qualified for the office.
|
|
The process of election affords a moral certainty, that the
|
|
office of President will never fall to the lot of any man who is not
|
|
in an eminent degree endowed with the requisite qualifications.
|
|
Talents for low intrigue, and the little arts of popularity, may
|
|
alone suffice to elevate a man to the first honors in a single
|
|
State; but it will require other talents, and a different kind of
|
|
merit, to establish him in the esteem and confidence of the whole
|
|
Union, or of so considerable a portion of it as would be necessary
|
|
to make him a successful candidate for the distinguished office of
|
|
President of the United States. It will not be too strong to say,
|
|
that there will be a constant probability of seeing the station
|
|
filled by characters pre-eminent for ability and virtue. And this
|
|
will be thought no inconsiderable recommendation of the
|
|
Constitution, by those who are able to estimate the share which the
|
|
executive in every government must necessarily have in its good or
|
|
ill administration. Though we cannot acquiesce in the political
|
|
heresy of the poet who says: ``For forms of government let fools
|
|
contest That which is best administered is best,''
|
|
yet we may safely pronounce, that the true test of a good
|
|
government is its aptitude and tendency to produce a good
|
|
administration.
|
|
The Vice-President is to be chosen in the same manner with the
|
|
President; with this difference, that the Senate is to do, in
|
|
respect to the former, what is to be done by the House of
|
|
Representatives, in respect to the latter.
|
|
The appointment of an extraordinary person, as Vice-President,
|
|
has been objected to as superfluous, if not mischievous. It has
|
|
been alleged, that it would have been preferable to have authorized
|
|
the Senate to elect out of their own body an officer answering that
|
|
description. But two considerations seem to justify the ideas of
|
|
the convention in this respect. One is, that to secure at all times
|
|
the possibility of a definite resolution of the body, it is
|
|
necessary that the President should have only a casting vote. And
|
|
to take the senator of any State from his seat as senator, to place
|
|
him in that of President of the Senate, would be to exchange, in
|
|
regard to the State from which he came, a constant for a contingent
|
|
vote. The other consideration is, that as the Vice-President may
|
|
occasionally become a substitute for the President, in the supreme
|
|
executive magistracy, all the reasons which recommend the mode of
|
|
election prescribed for the one, apply with great if not with equal
|
|
force to the manner of appointing the other. It is remarkable that
|
|
in this, as in most other instances, the objection which is made
|
|
would lie against the constitution of this State. We have a
|
|
Lieutenant-Governor, chosen by the people at large, who presides in
|
|
the Senate, and is the constitutional substitute for the Governor,
|
|
in casualties similar to those which would authorize the
|
|
Vice-President to exercise the authorities and discharge the duties
|
|
of the President.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
1 Vide FEDERAL FARMER.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 69
|
|
|
|
The Real Character of the Executive
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Friday, March 14, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
I PROCEED now to trace the real characters of the proposed
|
|
Executive, as they are marked out in the plan of the convention.
|
|
This will serve to place in a strong light the unfairness of the
|
|
representations which have been made in regard to it.
|
|
The first thing which strikes our attention is, that the
|
|
executive authority, with few exceptions, is to be vested in a
|
|
single magistrate. This will scarcely, however, be considered as a
|
|
point upon which any comparison can be grounded; for if, in this
|
|
particular, there be a resemblance to the king of Great Britain,
|
|
there is not less a resemblance to the Grand Seignior, to the khan
|
|
of Tartary, to the Man of the Seven Mountains, or to the governor of
|
|
New York.
|
|
That magistrate is to be elected for FOUR years; and is to be
|
|
re-eligible as often as the people of the United States shall think
|
|
him worthy of their confidence. In these circumstances there is a
|
|
total dissimilitude between HIM and a king of Great Britain, who is
|
|
an HEREDITARY monarch, possessing the crown as a patrimony
|
|
descendible to his heirs forever; but there is a close analogy
|
|
between HIM and a governor of New York, who is elected for THREE
|
|
years, and is re-eligible without limitation or intermission. If we
|
|
consider how much less time would be requisite for establishing a
|
|
dangerous influence in a single State, than for establishing a like
|
|
influence throughout the United States, we must conclude that a
|
|
duration of FOUR years for the Chief Magistrate of the Union is a
|
|
degree of permanency far less to be dreaded in that office, than a
|
|
duration of THREE years for a corresponding office in a single State.
|
|
The President of the United States would be liable to be
|
|
impeached, tried, and, upon conviction of treason, bribery, or other
|
|
high crimes or misdemeanors, removed from office; and would
|
|
afterwards be liable to prosecution and punishment in the ordinary
|
|
course of law. The person of the king of Great Britain is sacred
|
|
and inviolable; there is no constitutional tribunal to which he is
|
|
amenable; no punishment to which he can be subjected without
|
|
involving the crisis of a national revolution. In this delicate and
|
|
important circumstance of personal responsibility, the President of
|
|
Confederated America would stand upon no better ground than a
|
|
governor of New York, and upon worse ground than the governors of
|
|
Maryland and Delaware.
|
|
The President of the United States is to have power to return a
|
|
bill, which shall have passed the two branches of the legislature,
|
|
for reconsideration; and the bill so returned is to become a law,
|
|
if, upon that reconsideration, it be approved by two thirds of both
|
|
houses. The king of Great Britain, on his part, has an absolute
|
|
negative upon the acts of the two houses of Parliament. The disuse
|
|
of that power for a considerable time past does not affect the
|
|
reality of its existence; and is to be ascribed wholly to the
|
|
crown's having found the means of substituting influence to
|
|
authority, or the art of gaining a majority in one or the other of
|
|
the two houses, to the necessity of exerting a prerogative which
|
|
could seldom be exerted without hazarding some degree of national
|
|
agitation. The qualified negative of the President differs widely
|
|
from this absolute negative of the British sovereign; and tallies
|
|
exactly with the revisionary authority of the council of revision of
|
|
this State, of which the governor is a constituent part. In this
|
|
respect the power of the President would exceed that of the governor
|
|
of New York, because the former would possess, singly, what the
|
|
latter shares with the chancellor and judges; but it would be
|
|
precisely the same with that of the governor of Massachusetts, whose
|
|
constitution, as to this article, seems to have been the original
|
|
from which the convention have copied.
|
|
The President is to be the ``commander-in-chief of the army and
|
|
navy of the United States, and of the militia of the several States,
|
|
when called into the actual service of the United States. He is to
|
|
have power to grant reprieves and pardons for offenses against the
|
|
United States, EXCEPT IN CASES OF IMPEACHMENT; to recommend to the
|
|
consideration of Congress such measures as he shall judge necessary
|
|
and expedient; to convene, on extraordinary occasions, both houses
|
|
of the legislature, or either of them, and, in case of disagreement
|
|
between them WITH RESPECT TO THE TIME OF ADJOURNMENT, to adjourn
|
|
them to such time as he shall think proper; to take care that the
|
|
laws be faithfully executed; and to commission all officers of the
|
|
United States.'' In most of these particulars, the power of the
|
|
President will resemble equally that of the king of Great Britain
|
|
and of the governor of New York. The most material points of
|
|
difference are these: First. The President will have only the
|
|
occasional command of such part of the militia of the nation as by
|
|
legislative provision may be called into the actual service of the
|
|
Union. The king of Great Britain and the governor of New York have
|
|
at all times the entire command of all the militia within their
|
|
several jurisdictions. In this article, therefore, the power of the
|
|
President would be inferior to that of either the monarch or the
|
|
governor. Secondly. The President is to be commander-in-chief
|
|
of the army and navy of the United States. In this respect his
|
|
authority would be nominally the same with that of the king of Great
|
|
Britain, but in substance much inferior to it. It would amount to
|
|
nothing more than the supreme command and direction of the military
|
|
and naval forces, as first General and admiral of the Confederacy;
|
|
while that of the British king extends to the DECLARING of war and
|
|
to the RAISING and REGULATING of fleets and armies, all which, by
|
|
the Constitution under consideration, would appertain to the
|
|
legislature.1 The governor of New York, on the other hand, is
|
|
by the constitution of the State vested only with the command of its
|
|
militia and navy. But the constitutions of several of the States
|
|
expressly declare their governors to be commanders-in-chief, as well
|
|
of the army as navy; and it may well be a question, whether those
|
|
of New Hampshire and Massachusetts, in particular, do not, in this
|
|
instance, confer larger powers upon their respective governors, than
|
|
could be claimed by a President of the United States. Thirdly.
|
|
The power of the President, in respect to pardons, would extend to
|
|
all cases, EXCEPT THOSE OF IMPEACHMENT. The governor of New York
|
|
may pardon in all cases, even in those of impeachment, except for
|
|
treason and murder. Is not the power of the governor, in this
|
|
article, on a calculation of political consequences, greater than
|
|
that of the President? All conspiracies and plots against the
|
|
government, which have not been matured into actual treason, may be
|
|
screened from punishment of every kind, by the interposition of the
|
|
prerogative of pardoning. If a governor of New York, therefore,
|
|
should be at the head of any such conspiracy, until the design had
|
|
been ripened into actual hostility he could insure his accomplices
|
|
and adherents an entire impunity. A President of the Union, on the
|
|
other hand, though he may even pardon treason, when prosecuted in
|
|
the ordinary course of law, could shelter no offender, in any
|
|
degree, from the effects of impeachment and conviction. Would not
|
|
the prospect of a total indemnity for all the preliminary steps be a
|
|
greater temptation to undertake and persevere in an enterprise
|
|
against the public liberty, than the mere prospect of an exemption
|
|
from death and confiscation, if the final execution of the design,
|
|
upon an actual appeal to arms, should miscarry? Would this last
|
|
expectation have any influence at all, when the probability was
|
|
computed, that the person who was to afford that exemption might
|
|
himself be involved in the consequences of the measure, and might be
|
|
incapacitated by his agency in it from affording the desired
|
|
impunity? The better to judge of this matter, it will be necessary
|
|
to recollect, that, by the proposed Constitution, the offense of
|
|
treason is limited ``to levying war upon the United States, and
|
|
adhering to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort''; and that
|
|
by the laws of New York it is confined within similar bounds.
|
|
Fourthly. The President can only adjourn the national legislature
|
|
in the single case of disagreement about the time of adjournment.
|
|
The British monarch may prorogue or even dissolve the Parliament.
|
|
The governor of New York may also prorogue the legislature of this
|
|
State for a limited time; a power which, in certain situations, may
|
|
be employed to very important purposes.
|
|
The President is to have power, with the advice and consent of
|
|
the Senate, to make treaties, provided two thirds of the senators
|
|
present concur. The king of Great Britain is the sole and absolute
|
|
representative of the nation in all foreign transactions. He can of
|
|
his own accord make treaties of peace, commerce, alliance, and of
|
|
every other description. It has been insinuated, that his authority
|
|
in this respect is not conclusive, and that his conventions with
|
|
foreign powers are subject to the revision, and stand in need of the
|
|
ratification, of Parliament. But I believe this doctrine was never
|
|
heard of, until it was broached upon the present occasion. Every
|
|
jurist2 of that kingdom, and every other man acquainted with its
|
|
Constitution, knows, as an established fact, that the prerogative of
|
|
making treaties exists in the crown in its utomst plentitude; and
|
|
that the compacts entered into by the royal authority have the most
|
|
complete legal validity and perfection, independent of any other
|
|
sanction. The Parliament, it is true, is sometimes seen employing
|
|
itself in altering the existing laws to conform them to the
|
|
stipulations in a new treaty; and this may have possibly given
|
|
birth to the imagination, that its co-operation was necessary to the
|
|
obligatory efficacy of the treaty. But this parliamentary
|
|
interposition proceeds from a different cause: from the necessity
|
|
of adjusting a most artificial and intricate system of revenue and
|
|
commercial laws, to the changes made in them by the operation of the
|
|
treaty; and of adapting new provisions and precautions to the new
|
|
state of things, to keep the machine from running into disorder. In
|
|
this respect, therefore, there is no comparison between the intended
|
|
power of the President and the actual power of the British sovereign.
|
|
The one can perform alone what the other can do only with the
|
|
concurrence of a branch of the legislature. It must be admitted,
|
|
that, in this instance, the power of the federal Executive would
|
|
exceed that of any State Executive. But this arises naturally from
|
|
the sovereign power which relates to treaties. If the Confederacy
|
|
were to be dissolved, it would become a question, whether the
|
|
Executives of the several States were not solely invested with that
|
|
delicate and important prerogative.
|
|
The President is also to be authorized to receive ambassadors
|
|
and other public ministers. This, though it has been a rich theme
|
|
of declamation, is more a matter of dignity than of authority. It
|
|
is a circumstance which will be without consequence in the
|
|
administration of the government; and it was far more convenient
|
|
that it should be arranged in this manner, than that there should be
|
|
a necessity of convening the legislature, or one of its branches,
|
|
upon every arrival of a foreign minister, though it were merely to
|
|
take the place of a departed predecessor.
|
|
The President is to nominate, and, WITH THE ADVICE AND CONSENT
|
|
OF THE SENATE, to appoint ambassadors and other public ministers,
|
|
judges of the Supreme Court, and in general all officers of the
|
|
United States established by law, and whose appointments are not
|
|
otherwise provided for by the Constitution. The king of Great
|
|
Britain is emphatically and truly styled the fountain of honor. He
|
|
not only appoints to all offices, but can create offices. He can
|
|
confer titles of nobility at pleasure; and has the disposal of an
|
|
immense number of church preferments. There is evidently a great
|
|
inferiority in the power of the President, in this particular, to
|
|
that of the British king; nor is it equal to that of the governor
|
|
of New York, if we are to interpret the meaning of the constitution
|
|
of the State by the practice which has obtained under it. The power
|
|
of appointment is with us lodged in a council, composed of the
|
|
governor and four members of the Senate, chosen by the Assembly.
|
|
The governor CLAIMS, and has frequently EXERCISED, the right of
|
|
nomination, and is ENTITLED to a casting vote in the appointment.
|
|
If he really has the right of nominating, his authority is in this
|
|
respect equal to that of the President, and exceeds it in the
|
|
article of the casting vote. In the national government, if the
|
|
Senate should be divided, no appointment could be made; in the
|
|
government of New York, if the council should be divided, the
|
|
governor can turn the scale, and confirm his own nomination.3
|
|
If we compare the publicity which must necessarily attend the mode
|
|
of appointment by the President and an entire branch of the national
|
|
legislature, with the privacy in the mode of appointment by the
|
|
governor of New York, closeted in a secret apartment with at most
|
|
four, and frequently with only two persons; and if we at the same
|
|
time consider how much more easy it must be to influence the small
|
|
number of which a council of appointment consists, than the
|
|
considerable number of which the national Senate would consist, we
|
|
cannot hesitate to pronounce that the power of the chief magistrate
|
|
of this State, in the disposition of offices, must, in practice, be
|
|
greatly superior to that of the Chief Magistrate of the Union.
|
|
Hence it appears that, except as to the concurrent authority of
|
|
the President in the article of treaties, it would be difficult to
|
|
determine whether that magistrate would, in the aggregate, possess
|
|
more or less power than the Governor of New York. And it appears
|
|
yet more unequivocally, that there is no pretense for the parallel
|
|
which has been attempted between him and the king of Great Britain.
|
|
But to render the contrast in this respect still more striking, it
|
|
may be of use to throw the principal circumstances of dissimilitude
|
|
into a closer group.
|
|
The President of the United States would be an officer elected
|
|
by the people for FOUR years; the king of Great Britain is a
|
|
perpetual and HEREDITARY prince. The one would be amenable to
|
|
personal punishment and disgrace; the person of the other is sacred
|
|
and inviolable. The one would have a QUALIFIED negative upon the
|
|
acts of the legislative body; the other has an ABSOLUTE negative.
|
|
The one would have a right to command the military and naval forces
|
|
of the nation; the other, in addition to this right, possesses that
|
|
of DECLARING war, and of RAISING and REGULATING fleets and armies by
|
|
his own authority. The one would have a concurrent power with a
|
|
branch of the legislature in the formation of treaties; the other
|
|
is the SOLE POSSESSOR of the power of making treaties. The one
|
|
would have a like concurrent authority in appointing to offices;
|
|
the other is the sole author of all appointments. The one can
|
|
confer no privileges whatever; the other can make denizens of
|
|
aliens, noblemen of commoners; can erect corporations with all the
|
|
rights incident to corporate bodies. The one can prescribe no rules
|
|
concerning the commerce or currency of the nation; the other is in
|
|
several respects the arbiter of commerce, and in this capacity can
|
|
establish markets and fairs, can regulate weights and measures, can
|
|
lay embargoes for a limited time, can coin money, can authorize or
|
|
prohibit the circulation of foreign coin. The one has no particle
|
|
of spiritual jurisdiction; the other is the supreme head and
|
|
governor of the national church! What answer shall we give to those
|
|
who would persuade us that things so unlike resemble each other?
|
|
The same that ought to be given to those who tell us that a
|
|
government, the whole power of which would be in the hands of the
|
|
elective and periodical servants of the people, is an aristocracy, a
|
|
monarchy, and a despotism.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
1 A writer in a &ennsylvania paper, under the signature of
|
|
TAMONY, has asserted that the king of Great Britain oweshis
|
|
prerogative as commander-in-chief to an annual mutiny bill. The
|
|
truth is, on the contrary, that his prerogative, in this respect, is
|
|
immenmorial, and was only disputed, ``contrary to all reason and
|
|
precedent,'' as Blackstone vol. i., page 262, expresses it, by the
|
|
Long Parliament of Charles I. but by the statute the 13th of Charles
|
|
II., chap. 6, it was declared to be in the king alone, for that the
|
|
sole supreme government and command of the militia within his
|
|
Majesty's realms and dominions, and of all forces by sea and land,
|
|
and of all forts and places of strength, EVER WAS AND IS the
|
|
undoubted right of his Majesty and his royal predecessors, kings and
|
|
queens of England, and that both or either house of Parliament
|
|
cannot nor ought to pretend to the same.
|
|
2 Vide Blackstone's ``Commentaries,'' vol i., p. 257.
|
|
3 Candor, however, demands an acknowledgment that I do not think
|
|
the claim of the governor to a right of nomination well founded.
|
|
Yet it is always justifiable to reason from the practice of a
|
|
government, till its propriety has been constitutionally questioned.
|
|
And independent of this claim, when we take into view the other
|
|
considerations, and pursue them through all their consequences, we
|
|
shall be inclined to draw much the same conclusion.
|
|
|
|
*There are two slightly different versions of No. 70 included here.
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 70
|
|
|
|
The Executive Department Further Considered
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Tuesday, March 18, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THERE is an idea, which is not without its advocates, that a
|
|
vigorous Executive is inconsistent with the genius of republican
|
|
government. The enlightened well-wishers to this species of
|
|
government must at least hope that the supposition is destitute of
|
|
foundation; since they can never admit its truth, without at the
|
|
same time admitting the condemnation of their own principles.
|
|
Energy in the Executive is a leading character in the definition of
|
|
good government. It is essential to the protection of the community
|
|
against foreign attacks; it is not less essential to the steady
|
|
administration of the laws; to the protection of property against
|
|
those irregular and high-handed combinations which sometimes
|
|
interrupt the ordinary course of justice; to the security of
|
|
liberty against the enterprises and assaults of ambition, of
|
|
faction, and of anarchy. Every man the least conversant in Roman
|
|
story, knows how often that republic was obliged to take refuge in
|
|
the absolute power of a single man, under the formidable title of
|
|
Dictator, as well against the intrigues of ambitious individuals who
|
|
aspired to the tyranny, and the seditions of whole classes of the
|
|
community whose conduct threatened the existence of all government,
|
|
as against the invasions of external enemies who menaced the
|
|
conquest and destruction of Rome.
|
|
There can be no need, however, to multiply arguments or examples
|
|
on this head. A feeble Executive implies a feeble execution of the
|
|
government. A feeble execution is but another phrase for a bad
|
|
execution; and a government ill executed, whatever it may be in
|
|
theory, must be, in practice, a bad government.
|
|
Taking it for granted, therefore, that all men of sense will
|
|
agree in the necessity of an energetic Executive, it will only
|
|
remain to inquire, what are the ingredients which constitute this
|
|
energy? How far can they be combined with those other ingredients
|
|
which constitute safety in the republican sense? And how far does
|
|
this combination characterize the plan which has been reported by
|
|
the convention?
|
|
The ingredients which constitute energy in the Executive are,
|
|
first, unity; secondly, duration; thirdly, an adequate provision
|
|
for its support; fourthly, competent powers.
|
|
The ingredients which constitute safety in the repub lican sense
|
|
are, first, a due dependence on the people, secondly, a due
|
|
responsibility.
|
|
Those politicians and statesmen who have been the most
|
|
celebrated for the soundness of their principles and for the justice
|
|
of their views, have declared in favor of a single Executive and a
|
|
numerous legislature. They have with great propriety, considered
|
|
energy as the most necessary qualification of the former, and have
|
|
regarded this as most applicable to power in a single hand, while
|
|
they have, with equal propriety, considered the latter as best
|
|
adapted to deliberation and wisdom, and best calculated to
|
|
conciliate the confidence of the people and to secure their
|
|
privileges and interests.
|
|
That unity is conducive to energy will not be disputed.
|
|
Decision, activity, secrecy, and despatch will generally
|
|
characterize the proceedings of one man in a much more eminent
|
|
degree than the proceedings of any greater number; and in
|
|
proportion as the number is increased, these qualities will be
|
|
diminished.
|
|
This unity may be destroyed in two ways: either by vesting the
|
|
power in two or more magistrates of equal dignity and authority; or
|
|
by vesting it ostensibly in one man, subject, in whole or in part,
|
|
to the control and co-operation of others, in the capacity of
|
|
counsellors to him. Of the first, the two Consuls of Rome may serve
|
|
as an example; of the last, we shall find examples in the
|
|
constitutions of several of the States. New York and New Jersey, if
|
|
I recollect right, are the only States which have intrusted the
|
|
executive authority wholly to single men.1 Both these methods
|
|
of destroying the unity of the Executive have their partisans; but
|
|
the votaries of an executive council are the most numerous. They
|
|
are both liable, if not to equal, to similar objections, and may in
|
|
most lights be examined in conjunction.
|
|
The experience of other nations will afford little instruction
|
|
on this head. As far, however, as it teaches any thing, it teaches
|
|
us not to be enamoured of plurality in the Executive. We have seen
|
|
that the Achaeans, on an experiment of two Praetors, were induced to
|
|
abolish one. The Roman history records many instances of mischiefs
|
|
to the republic from the dissensions between the Consuls, and
|
|
between the military Tribunes, who were at times substituted for the
|
|
Consuls. But it gives us no specimens of any peculiar advantages
|
|
derived to the state from the circumstance of the plurality of those
|
|
magistrates. That the dissensions between them were not more
|
|
frequent or more fatal, is a matter of astonishment, until we advert
|
|
to the singular position in which the republic was almost
|
|
continually placed, and to the prudent policy pointed out by the
|
|
circumstances of the state, and pursued by the Consuls, of making a
|
|
division of the government between them. The patricians engaged in
|
|
a perpetual struggle with the plebeians for the preservation of
|
|
their ancient authorities and dignities; the Consuls, who were
|
|
generally chosen out of the former body, were commonly united by the
|
|
personal interest they had in the defense of the privileges of their
|
|
order. In addition to this motive of union, after the arms of the
|
|
republic had considerably expanded the bounds of its empire, it
|
|
became an established custom with the Consuls to divide the
|
|
administration between themselves by lot one of them remaining at
|
|
Rome to govern the city and its environs, the other taking the
|
|
command in the more distant provinces. This expedient must, no
|
|
doubt, have had great influence in preventing those collisions and
|
|
rivalships which might otherwise have embroiled the peace of the
|
|
republic.
|
|
But quitting the dim light of historical research, attaching
|
|
ourselves purely to the dictates of reason and good se se, we shall
|
|
discover much greater cause to reject than to approve the idea of
|
|
plurality in the Executive, under any modification whatever.
|
|
Wherever two or more persons are engaged in any common
|
|
enterprise or pursuit, there is always danger of difference of
|
|
opinion. If it be a public trust or office, in which they are
|
|
clothed with equal dignity and authority, there is peculiar danger
|
|
of personal emulation and even animosity. From either, and
|
|
especially from all these causes, the most bitter dissensions are
|
|
apt to spring. Whenever these happen, they lessen the
|
|
respectability, weaken the authority, and distract the plans and
|
|
operation of those whom they divide. If they should unfortunately
|
|
assail the supreme executive magistracy of a country, consisting of
|
|
a plurality of persons, they might impede or frustrate the most
|
|
important measures of the government, in the most critical
|
|
emergencies of the state. And what is still worse, they might split
|
|
the community into the most violent and irreconcilable factions,
|
|
adhering differently to the different individuals who composed the
|
|
magistracy.
|
|
Men often oppose a thing, merely because they have had no agency
|
|
in planning it, or because it may have been planned by those whom
|
|
they dislike. But if they have been consulted, and have happened to
|
|
disapprove, opposition then becomes, in their estimation, an
|
|
indispensable duty of self-love. They seem to think themselves
|
|
bound in honor, and by all the motives of personal infallibility, to
|
|
defeat the success of what has been resolved upon contrary to their
|
|
sentiments. Men of upright, benevolent tempers have too many
|
|
opportunities of remarking, with horror, to what desperate lengths
|
|
this disposition is sometimes carried, and how often the great
|
|
interests of society are sacrificed to the vanity, to the conceit,
|
|
and to the obstinacy of individuals, who have credit enough to make
|
|
their passions and their caprices interesting to mankind. Perhaps
|
|
the question now before the public may, in its consequences, afford
|
|
melancholy proofs of the effects of this despicable frailty, or
|
|
rather detestable vice, in the human character.
|
|
Upon the principles of a free government, inconveniences from
|
|
the source just mentioned must necessarily be submitted to in the
|
|
formation of the legislature; but it is unnecessary, and therefore
|
|
unwise, to introduce them into the constitution of the Executive.
|
|
It is here too that they may be most pernicious. In the
|
|
legislature, promptitude of decision is oftener an evil than a
|
|
benefit. The differences of opinion, and the jarrings of parties in
|
|
that department of the government, though they may sometimes
|
|
obstruct salutary plans, yet often promote deliberation and
|
|
circumspection, and serve to check excesses in the majority. When a
|
|
resolution too is once taken, the opposition must be at an end.
|
|
That resolution is a law, and resistance to it punishable. But no
|
|
favorable circumstances palliate or atone for the disadvantages of
|
|
dissension in the executive department. Here, they are pure and
|
|
unmixed. There is no point at which they cease to operate. They
|
|
serve to embarrass and weaken the execution of the plan or measure
|
|
to which they relate, from the first step to the final conclusion of
|
|
it. They constantly counteract those qualities in the Executive
|
|
which are the most necessary ingredients in its composition, vigor
|
|
and expedition, and this without anycounterbalancing good. In the
|
|
conduct of war, in which the energy of the Executive is the bulwark
|
|
of the national security, every thing would be to be apprehended
|
|
from its plurality.
|
|
It must be confessed that these observations apply with
|
|
principal weight to the first case supposed that is, to a plurality
|
|
of magistrates of equal dignity and authority a scheme, the
|
|
advocates for which are not likely to form a numerous sect; but
|
|
they apply, though not with equal, yet with considerable weight to
|
|
the project of a council, whose concurrence is made constitutionally
|
|
necessary to the operations of the ostensible Executive. An artful
|
|
cabal in that council would be able to distract and to enervate the
|
|
whole system of administration. If no such cabal should exist, the
|
|
mere diversity of views and opinions would alone be sufficient to
|
|
tincture the exercise of the executive authority with a spirit of
|
|
habitual feebleness and dilatoriness.
|
|
But one of the weightiest objections to a plurality in the
|
|
Executive, and which lies as much against the last as the first
|
|
plan, is, that it tends to conceal faults and destroy responsibility.
|
|
Responsibility is of two kinds to censure and to punishment. The
|
|
first is the more important of the two, especially in an elective
|
|
office. Man, in public trust, will much oftener act in such a
|
|
manner as to render him unworthy of being any longer trusted, than
|
|
in such a manner as to make him obnoxious to legal punishment. But
|
|
the multiplication of the Executive adds to the difficulty of
|
|
detection in either case. It often becomes impossible, amidst
|
|
mutual accusations, to determine on whom the blame or the punishment
|
|
of a pernicious measure, or series of pernicious measures, ought
|
|
really to fall. It is shifted from one to another with so much
|
|
dexterity, and under such plausible appearances, that the public
|
|
opinion is left in suspense about the real author. The
|
|
circumstances which may have led to any national miscarriage or
|
|
misfortune are sometimes so complicated that, where there are a
|
|
number of actors who may have had different degrees and kinds of
|
|
agency, though we may clearly see upon the whole that there has been
|
|
mismanagement, yet it may be impracticable to pronounce to whose
|
|
account the evil which may have been incurred is truly chargeable.
|
|
``I was overruled by my council. The council were so divided in
|
|
their opinions that it was impossible to obtain any better
|
|
resolution on the point.'' These and similar pretexts are
|
|
constantly at hand, whether true or false. And who is there that
|
|
will either take the trouble or incur the odium, of a strict
|
|
scrunity into the secret springs of the transaction? Should there
|
|
be found a citizen zealous enough to undertake the unpromising task,
|
|
if there happen to be collusion between the parties concerned, how
|
|
easy it is to clothe the circumstances with so much ambiguity, as to
|
|
render it uncertain what was the precise conduct of any of those
|
|
parties?
|
|
In the single instance in which the governor of this State is
|
|
coupled with a council that is, in the appointment to offices, we
|
|
have seen the mischiefs of it in the view now under consideration.
|
|
Scandalous appointments to important offices have been made. Some
|
|
cases, indeed, have been so flagrant that ALL PARTIES have agreed in
|
|
the impropriety of the thing. When inquiry has been made, the blame
|
|
has been laid by the governor on the members of the council, who, on
|
|
their part, have charged it upon his nomination; while the people
|
|
remain altogether at a loss to determine, by whose influence their
|
|
interests have been committed to hands so unqualified and so
|
|
manifestly improper. In tenderness to individuals, I forbear to
|
|
descend to particulars.
|
|
It is evident from these considerations, that the plurality of
|
|
the Executive tends to deprive the people of the two greatest
|
|
securities they can have for the faithful exercise of any delegated
|
|
power, first, the restraints of public opinion, which lose their
|
|
efficacy, as well on account of the division of the censure
|
|
attendant on bad measures among a number, as on account of the
|
|
uncertainty on whom it ought to fall; and, secondly, the
|
|
opportunity of discovering with facility and clearness the
|
|
misconduct of the persons they trust, in order either to their
|
|
removal from office or to their actual punishment in cases which
|
|
admit of it.
|
|
In England, the king is a perpetual magistrate; and it is a
|
|
maxim which has obtained for the sake of the pub lic peace, that he
|
|
is unaccountable for his administration, and his person sacred.
|
|
Nothing, therefore, can be wiser in that kingdom, than to annex to
|
|
the king a constitutional council, who may be responsible to the
|
|
nation for the advice they give. Without this, there would be no
|
|
responsibility whatever in the executive department an idea
|
|
inadmissible in a free government. But even there the king is not
|
|
bound by the resolutions of his council, though they are answerable
|
|
for the advice they give. He is the absolute master of his own
|
|
conduct in the exercise of his office, and may observe or disregard
|
|
the counsel given to him at his sole discretion.
|
|
But in a republic, where every magistrate ought to be personally
|
|
responsible for his behavior in office the reason which in the
|
|
British Constitution dictates the propriety of a council, not only
|
|
ceases to apply, but turns against the institution. In the monarchy
|
|
of Great Britain, it furnishes a substitute for the prohibited
|
|
responsibility of the chief magistrate, which serves in some degree
|
|
as a hostage to the national justice for his good behavior. In the
|
|
American republic, it would serve to destroy, or would greatly
|
|
diminish, the intended and necessary responsibility of the Chief
|
|
Magistrate himself.
|
|
The idea of a council to the Executive, which has so generally
|
|
obtained in the State constitutions, has been derived from that
|
|
maxim of republican jealousy which considers power as safer in the
|
|
hands of a number of men than of a single man. If the maxim should
|
|
be admitted to be applicable to the case, I should contend that the
|
|
advantage on that side would not counterbalance the numerous
|
|
disadvantages on the opposite side. But I do not think the rule at
|
|
all applicable to the executive power. I clearly concur in opinion,
|
|
in this particular, with a writer whom the celebrated Junius
|
|
pronounces to be ``deep, solid, and ingenious,'' that ``the
|
|
executive power is more easily confined when it is ONE'';2 that
|
|
it is far more safe there should be a single object for the jealousy
|
|
and watchfulness of the people; and, in a word, that all
|
|
multiplication of the Executive is rather dangerous than friendly to
|
|
liberty.
|
|
A little consideration will satisfy us, that the species of
|
|
security sought for in the multiplication of the Executive, is
|
|
nattainable. Numbers must be so great as to render combination
|
|
difficult, or they are rather a source of danger than of security.
|
|
The united credit and influence of several individuals must be more
|
|
formidable to liberty, than the credit and influence of either of
|
|
them separately. When power, therefore, is placed in the hands of
|
|
so small a number of men, as to admit of their interests and views
|
|
being easily combined in a common enterprise, by an artful leader,
|
|
it becomes more liable to abuse, and more dangerous when abused,
|
|
than if it be lodged in the hands of one man; who, from the very
|
|
circumstance of his being alone, will be more narrowly watched and
|
|
more readily suspected, and who cannot unite so great a mass of
|
|
influence as when he is associated with others. The Decemvirs of
|
|
Rome, whose name denotes their number,3 were more to be dreaded
|
|
in their usurpation than any ONE of them would have been. No person
|
|
would think of proposing an Executive much more numerous than that
|
|
body; from six to a dozen have been suggested for the number of the
|
|
council. The extreme of these numbers, is not too great for an easy
|
|
combination; and from such a combination America would have more to
|
|
fear, than from the ambition of any single individual. A council to
|
|
a magistrate, who is himself responsible for what he does, are
|
|
generally nothing better than a clog upon his good intentions, are
|
|
often the instruments and accomplices of his bad and are almost
|
|
always a cloak to his faults.
|
|
I forbear to dwell upon the subject of expense; though it be
|
|
evident that if the council should be numerous enough to answer the
|
|
principal end aimed at by the institution, the salaries of the
|
|
members, who must be drawn from their homes to reside at the seat of
|
|
government, would form an item in the catalogue of public
|
|
expenditures too serious to be incurred for an object of equivocal
|
|
utility. I will only add that, prior to the appearance of the
|
|
Constitution, I rarely met with an intelligent man from any of the
|
|
States, who did not admit, as the result of experience, that the
|
|
UNITY of the executive of this State was one of the best of the
|
|
distinguishing features of our constitution.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
1 New York has no council except for the single purpose of
|
|
appointing to offices; New Jersey has a council whom the governor
|
|
may consult. But I think, from the terms of the constitution, their
|
|
resolutions do not bind him.
|
|
2 De Lolme.
|
|
3 Ten.
|
|
|
|
*There are two slightly different versions of No. 70 included here.
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 70
|
|
|
|
The Executive Department Further Considered
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Tuesday, March 18, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THERE is an idea, which is not without its advocates, that a
|
|
vigorous Executive is inconsistent with the genius of republican
|
|
government. The enlightened well-wishers to this species of
|
|
government must at least hope that the supposition is destitute of
|
|
foundation; since they can never admit its truth, without at the
|
|
same time admitting the condemnation of their own principles.
|
|
Energy in the Executive is a leading character in the definition of
|
|
good government. It is essential to the protection of the community
|
|
against foreign attacks; it is not less essential to the steady
|
|
administration of the laws; to the protection of property against
|
|
those irregular and high-handed combinations which sometimes
|
|
interrupt the ordinary course of justice; to the security of
|
|
liberty against the enterprises and assaults of ambition, of
|
|
faction, and of anarchy. Every man the least conversant in Roman
|
|
story, knows how often that republic was obliged to take refuge in
|
|
the absolute power of a single man, under the formidable title of
|
|
Dictator, as well against the intrigues of ambitious individuals who
|
|
aspired to the tyranny, and the seditions of whole classes of the
|
|
community whose conduct threatened the existence of all government,
|
|
as against the invasions of external enemies who menaced the
|
|
conquest and destruction of Rome.
|
|
There can be no need, however, to multiply arguments or examples
|
|
on this head. A feeble Executive implies a feeble execution of the
|
|
government. A feeble execution is but another phrase for a bad
|
|
execution; and a government ill executed, whatever it may be in
|
|
theory, must be, in practice, a bad government.
|
|
Taking it for granted, therefore, that all men of sense will
|
|
agree in the necessity of an energetic Executive, it will only
|
|
remain to inquire, what are the ingredients which constitute this
|
|
energy? How far can they be combined with those other ingredients
|
|
which constitute safety in the republican sense? And how far does
|
|
this combination characterize the plan which has been reported by
|
|
the convention?
|
|
The ingredients which constitute energy in the Executive are,
|
|
first, unity; secondly, duration; thirdly, an adequate provision
|
|
for its support; fourthly, competent powers.
|
|
The ingredients which constitute safety in the repub lican sense
|
|
are, first, a due dependence on the people, secondly, a due
|
|
responsibility.
|
|
Those politicians and statesmen who have been the most
|
|
celebrated for the soundness of their principles and for the justice
|
|
of their views, have declared in favor of a single Executive and a
|
|
numerous legislature. They have with great propriety, considered
|
|
energy as the most necessary qualification of the former, and have
|
|
regarded this as most applicable to power in a single hand, while
|
|
they have, with equal propriety, considered the latter as best
|
|
adapted to deliberation and wisdom, and best calculated to
|
|
conciliate the confidence of the people and to secure their
|
|
privileges and interests.
|
|
That unity is conducive to energy will not be disputed.
|
|
Decision, activity, secrecy, and despatch will generally
|
|
characterize the proceedings of one man in a much more eminent
|
|
degree than the proceedings of any greater number; and in
|
|
proportion as the number is increased, these qualities will be
|
|
diminished.
|
|
This unity may be destroyed in two ways: either by vesting the
|
|
power in two or more magistrates of equal dignity and authority; or
|
|
by vesting it ostensibly in one man, subject, in whole or in part,
|
|
to the control and co-operation of others, in the capacity of
|
|
counsellors to him. Of the first, the two Consuls of Rome may serve
|
|
as an example; of the last, we shall find examples in the
|
|
constitutions of several of the States. New York and New Jersey, if
|
|
I recollect right, are the only States which have intrusted the
|
|
executive authority wholly to single men.1 Both these methods
|
|
of destroying the unity of the Executive have their partisans; but
|
|
the votaries of an executive council are the most numerous. They
|
|
are both liable, if not to equal, to similar objections, and may in
|
|
most lights be examined in conjunction.
|
|
The experience of other nations will afford little instruction
|
|
on this head. As far, however, as it teaches any thing, it teaches
|
|
us not to be enamoured of plurality in the Executive. We have seen
|
|
that the Achaeans, on an experiment of two Praetors, were induced to
|
|
abolish one. The Roman history records many instances of mischiefs
|
|
to the republic from the dissensions between the Consuls, and
|
|
between the military Tribunes, who were at times substituted for the
|
|
Consuls. But it gives us no specimens of any peculiar advantages
|
|
derived to the state from the circumstance of the plurality of those
|
|
magistrates. That the dissensions between them were not more
|
|
frequent or more fatal, is a matter of astonishment, until we advert
|
|
to the singular position in which the republic was almost
|
|
continually placed, and to the prudent policy pointed out by the
|
|
circumstances of the state, and pursued by the Consuls, of making a
|
|
division of the government between them. The patricians engaged in
|
|
a perpetual struggle with the plebeians for the preservation of
|
|
their ancient authorities and dignities; the Consuls, who were
|
|
generally chosen out of the former body, were commonly united by the
|
|
personal interest they had in the defense of the privileges of their
|
|
order. In addition to this motive of union, after the arms of the
|
|
republic had considerably expanded the bounds of its empire, it
|
|
became an established custom with the Consuls to divide the
|
|
administration between themselves by lot one of them remaining at
|
|
Rome to govern the city and its environs, the other taking the
|
|
command in the more distant provinces. This expedient must, no
|
|
doubt, have had great influence in preventing those collisions and
|
|
rivalships which might otherwise have embroiled the peace of the
|
|
republic.
|
|
But quitting the dim light of historical research, attaching
|
|
ourselves purely to the dictates of reason and good se se, we shall
|
|
discover much greater cause to reject than to approve the idea of
|
|
plurality in the Executive, under any modification whatever.
|
|
Wherever two or more persons are engaged in any common
|
|
enterprise or pursuit, there is always danger of difference of
|
|
opinion. If it be a public trust or office, in which they are
|
|
clothed with equal dignity and authority, there is peculiar danger
|
|
of personal emulation and even animosity. From either, and
|
|
especially from all these causes, the most bitter dissensions are
|
|
apt to spring. Whenever these happen, they lessen the
|
|
respectability, weaken the authority, and distract the plans and
|
|
operation of those whom they divide. If they should unfortunately
|
|
assail the supreme executive magistracy of a country, consisting of
|
|
a plurality of persons, they might impede or frustrate the most
|
|
important measures of the government, in the most critical
|
|
emergencies of the state. And what is still worse, they might split
|
|
the community into the most violent and irreconcilable factions,
|
|
adhering differently to the different individuals who composed the
|
|
magistracy.
|
|
Men often oppose a thing, merely because they have had no agency
|
|
in planning it, or because it may have been planned by those whom
|
|
they dislike. But if they have been consulted, and have happened to
|
|
disapprove, opposition then becomes, in their estimation, an
|
|
indispensable duty of self-love. They seem to think themselves
|
|
bound in honor, and by all the motives of personal infallibility, to
|
|
defeat the success of what has been resolved upon contrary to their
|
|
sentiments. Men of upright, benevolent tempers have too many
|
|
opportunities of remarking, with horror, to what desperate lengths
|
|
this disposition is sometimes carried, and how often the great
|
|
interests of society are sacrificed to the vanity, to the conceit,
|
|
and to the obstinacy of individuals, who have credit enough to make
|
|
their passions and their caprices interesting to mankind. Perhaps
|
|
the question now before the public may, in its consequences, afford
|
|
melancholy proofs of the effects of this despicable frailty, or
|
|
rather detestable vice, in the human character.
|
|
Upon the principles of a free government, inconveniences from
|
|
the source just mentioned must necessarily be submitted to in the
|
|
formation of the legislature; but it is unnecessary, and therefore
|
|
unwise, to introduce them into the constitution of the Executive.
|
|
It is here too that they may be most pernicious. In the
|
|
legislature, promptitude of decision is oftener an evil than a
|
|
benefit. The differences of opinion, and the jarrings of parties in
|
|
that department of the government, though they may sometimes
|
|
obstruct salutary plans, yet often promote deliberation and
|
|
circumspection, and serve to check excesses in the majority. When a
|
|
resolution too is once taken, the opposition must be at an end.
|
|
That resolution is a law, and resistance to it punishable. But no
|
|
favorable circumstances palliate or atone for the disadvantages of
|
|
dissension in the executive department. Here, they are pure and
|
|
unmixed. There is no point at which they cease to operate. They
|
|
serve to embarrass and weaken the execution of the plan or measure
|
|
to which they relate, from the first step to the final conclusion of
|
|
it. They constantly counteract those qualities in the Executive
|
|
which are the most necessary ingredients in its composition, vigor
|
|
and expedition, and this without anycounterbalancing good. In the
|
|
conduct of war, in which the energy of the Executive is the bulwark
|
|
of the national security, every thing would be to be apprehended
|
|
from its plurality.
|
|
It must be confessed that these observations apply with
|
|
principal weight to the first case supposed that is, to a plurality
|
|
of magistrates of equal dignity and authority a scheme, the
|
|
advocates for which are not likely to form a numerous sect; but
|
|
they apply, though not with equal, yet with considerable weight to
|
|
the project of a council, whose concurrence is made constitutionally
|
|
necessary to the operations of the ostensible Executive. An artful
|
|
cabal in that council would be able to distract and to enervate the
|
|
whole system of administration. If no such cabal should exist, the
|
|
mere diversity of views and opinions would alone be sufficient to
|
|
tincture the exercise of the executive authority with a spirit of
|
|
habitual feebleness and dilatoriness.
|
|
But one of the weightiest objections to a plurality in the
|
|
Executive, and which lies as much against the last as the first
|
|
plan, is, that it tends to conceal faults and destroy responsibility.
|
|
Responsibility is of two kinds to censure and to punishment. The
|
|
first is the more important of the two, especially in an elective
|
|
office. Man, in public trust, will much oftener act in such a
|
|
manner as to render him unworthy of being any longer trusted, than
|
|
in such a manner as to make him obnoxious to legal punishment. But
|
|
the multiplication of the Executive adds to the difficulty of
|
|
detection in either case. It often becomes impossible, amidst
|
|
mutual accusations, to determine on whom the blame or the punishment
|
|
of a pernicious measure, or series of pernicious measures, ought
|
|
really to fall. It is shifted from one to another with so much
|
|
dexterity, and under such plausible appearances, that the public
|
|
opinion is left in suspense about the real author. The
|
|
circumstances which may have led to any national miscarriage or
|
|
misfortune are sometimes so complicated that, where there are a
|
|
number of actors who may have had different degrees and kinds of
|
|
agency, though we may clearly see upon the whole that there has been
|
|
mismanagement, yet it may be impracticable to pronounce to whose
|
|
account the evil which may have been incurred is truly chargeable.
|
|
``I was overruled by my council. The council were so divided in
|
|
their opinions that it was impossible to obtain any better
|
|
resolution on the point.'' These and similar pretexts are
|
|
constantly at hand, whether true or false. And who is there that
|
|
will either take the trouble or incur the odium, of a strict
|
|
scrunity into the secret springs of the transaction? Should there
|
|
be found a citizen zealous enough to undertake the unpromising task,
|
|
if there happen to be collusion between the parties concerned, how
|
|
easy it is to clothe the circumstances with so much ambiguity, as to
|
|
render it uncertain what was the precise conduct of any of those
|
|
parties?
|
|
In the single instance in which the governor of this State is
|
|
coupled with a council that is, in the appointment to offices, we
|
|
have seen the mischiefs of it in the view now under consideration.
|
|
Scandalous appointments to important offices have been made. Some
|
|
cases, indeed, have been so flagrant that ALL PARTIES have agreed in
|
|
the impropriety of the thing. When inquiry has been made, the blame
|
|
has been laid by the governor on the members of the council, who, on
|
|
their part, have charged it upon his nomination; while the people
|
|
remain altogether at a loss to determine, by whose influence their
|
|
interests have been committed to hands so unqualified and so
|
|
manifestly improper. In tenderness to individuals, I forbear to
|
|
descend to particulars.
|
|
It is evident from these considerations, that the plurality of
|
|
the Executive tends to deprive the people of the two greatest
|
|
securities they can have for the faithful exercise of any delegated
|
|
power, first, the restraints of public opinion, which lose their
|
|
efficacy, as well on account of the division of the censure
|
|
attendant on bad measures among a number, as on account of the
|
|
uncertainty on whom it ought to fall; and, secondly, the
|
|
opportunity of discovering with facility and clearness the
|
|
misconduct of the persons they trust, in order either to their
|
|
removal from office or to their actual punishment in cases which
|
|
admit of it.
|
|
In England, the king is a perpetual magistrate; and it is a
|
|
maxim which has obtained for the sake of the pub lic peace, that he
|
|
is unaccountable for his administration, and his person sacred.
|
|
Nothing, therefore, can be wiser in that kingdom, than to annex to
|
|
the king a constitutional council, who may be responsible to the
|
|
nation for the advice they give. Without this, there would be no
|
|
responsibility whatever in the executive department an idea
|
|
inadmissible in a free government. But even there the king is not
|
|
bound by the resolutions of his council, though they are answerable
|
|
for the advice they give. He is the absolute master of his own
|
|
conduct in the exercise of his office, and may observe or disregard
|
|
the counsel given to him at his sole discretion.
|
|
But in a republic, where every magistrate ought to be personally
|
|
responsible for his behavior in office the reason which in the
|
|
British Constitution dictates the propriety of a council, not only
|
|
ceases to apply, but turns against the institution. In the monarchy
|
|
of Great Britain, it furnishes a substitute for the prohibited
|
|
responsibility of the chief magistrate, which serves in some degree
|
|
as a hostage to the national justice for his good behavior. In the
|
|
American republic, it would serve to destroy, or would greatly
|
|
diminish, the intended and necessary responsibility of the Chief
|
|
Magistrate himself.
|
|
The idea of a council to the Executive, which has so generally
|
|
obtained in the State constitutions, has been derived from that
|
|
maxim of republican jealousy which considers power as safer in the
|
|
hands of a number of men than of a single man. If the maxim should
|
|
be admitted to be applicable to the case, I should contend that the
|
|
advantage on that side would not counterbalance the numerous
|
|
disadvantages on the opposite side. But I do not think the rule at
|
|
all applicable to the executive power. I clearly concur in opinion,
|
|
in this particular, with a writer whom the celebrated Junius
|
|
pronounces to be ``deep, solid, and ingenious,'' that ``the
|
|
executive power is more easily confined when it is ONE'';2 that
|
|
it is far more safe there should be a single object for the jealousy
|
|
and watchfulness of the people; and, in a word, that all
|
|
multiplication of the Executive is rather dangerous than friendly to
|
|
liberty.
|
|
A little consideration will satisfy us, that the species of
|
|
security sought for in the multiplication of the Executive, is
|
|
nattainable. Numbers must be so great as to render combination
|
|
difficult, or they are rather a source of danger than of security.
|
|
The united credit and influence of several individuals must be more
|
|
formidable to liberty, than the credit and influence of either of
|
|
them separately. When power, therefore, is placed in the hands of
|
|
so small a number of men, as to admit of their interests and views
|
|
being easily combined in a common enterprise, by an artful leader,
|
|
it becomes more liable to abuse, and more dangerous when abused,
|
|
than if it be lodged in the hands of one man; who, from the very
|
|
circumstance of his being alone, will be more narrowly watched and
|
|
more readily suspected, and who cannot unite so great a mass of
|
|
influence as when he is associated with others. The Decemvirs of
|
|
Rome, whose name denotes their number,3 were more to be dreaded
|
|
in their usurpation than any ONE of them would have been. No person
|
|
would think of proposing an Executive much more numerous than that
|
|
body; from six to a dozen have been suggested for the number of the
|
|
council. The extreme of these numbers, is not too great for an easy
|
|
combination; and from such a combination America would have more to
|
|
fear, than from the ambition of any single individual. A council to
|
|
a magistrate, who is himself responsible for what he does, are
|
|
generally nothing better than a clog upon his good intentions, are
|
|
often the instruments and accomplices of his bad and are almost
|
|
always a cloak to his faults.
|
|
I forbear to dwell upon the subject of expense; though it be
|
|
evident that if the council should be numerous enough to answer the
|
|
principal end aimed at by the institution, the salaries of the
|
|
members, who must be drawn from their homes to reside at the seat of
|
|
government, would form an item in the catalogue of public
|
|
expenditures too serious to be incurred for an object of equivocal
|
|
utility. I will only add that, prior to the appearance of the
|
|
Constitution, I rarely met with an intelligent man from any of the
|
|
States, who did not admit, as the result of experience, that the
|
|
UNITY of the executive of this State was one of the best of the
|
|
distinguishing features of our constitution.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
1 New York has no council except for the single purpose of
|
|
appointing to offices; New Jersey has a council whom the governor
|
|
may consult. But I think, from the terms of the constitution, their
|
|
resolutions do not bind him.
|
|
2 De Lolme.
|
|
3 Ten.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 71
|
|
|
|
The Duration in Office of the Executive
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Tuesday, March 18, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
DURATION in office has been mentioned as the second requisite to
|
|
the energy of the Executive authority. This has relation to two
|
|
objects: to the personal firmness of the executive magistrate, in
|
|
the employment of his constitutional powers; and to the stability
|
|
of the system of administration which may have been adopted under
|
|
his auspices. With regard to the first, it must be evident, that
|
|
the longer the duration in office, the greater will be the
|
|
probability of obtaining so important an advantage. It is a general
|
|
principle of human nature, that a man will be interested in whatever
|
|
he possesses, in proportion to the firmness or precariousness of the
|
|
tenure by which he holds it; will be less attached to what he holds
|
|
by a momentary or uncertain title, than to what he enjoys by a
|
|
durable or certain title; and, of course, will be willing to risk
|
|
more for the sake of the one, than for the sake of the other. This
|
|
remark is not less applicable to a political privilege, or honor, or
|
|
trust, than to any article of ordinary property. The inference from
|
|
it is, that a man acting in the capacity of chief magistrate, under
|
|
a consciousness that in a very short time he MUST lay down his
|
|
office, will be apt to feel himself too little interested in it to
|
|
hazard any material censure or perplexity, from the independent
|
|
exertion of his powers, or from encountering the ill-humors, however
|
|
transient, which may happen to prevail, either in a considerable
|
|
part of the society itself, or even in a predominant faction in the
|
|
legislative body. If the case should only be, that he MIGHT lay it
|
|
down, unless continued by a new choice, and if he should be desirous
|
|
of being continued, his wishes, conspiring with his fears, would
|
|
tend still more powerfully to corrupt his integrity, or debase his
|
|
fortitude. In either case, feebleness and irresolution must be the
|
|
characteristics of the station.
|
|
There are some who would be inclined to regard the servile
|
|
pliancy of the Executive to a prevailing current, either in the
|
|
community or in the legislature, as its best recommendation. But
|
|
such men entertain very crude notions, as well of the purposes for
|
|
which government was instituted, as of the true means by which the
|
|
public happiness may be promoted. The republican principle demands
|
|
that the deliberate sense of the community should govern the conduct
|
|
of those to whom they intrust the management of their affairs; but
|
|
it does not require an unqualified complaisance to every sudden
|
|
breeze of passion, or to every transient impulse which the people
|
|
may receive from the arts of men, who flatter their prejudices to
|
|
betray their interests. It is a just observation, that the people
|
|
commonly INTEND the PUBLIC GOOD. This often applies to their very
|
|
errors. But their good sense would despise the adulator who should
|
|
pretend that they always REASON RIGHT about the MEANS of promoting
|
|
it. They know from experience that they sometimes err; and the
|
|
wonder is that they so seldom err as they do, beset, as they
|
|
continually are, by the wiles of parasites and sycophants, by the
|
|
snares of the ambitious, the avaricious, the desperate, by the
|
|
artifices of men who possess their confidence more than they deserve
|
|
it, and of those who seek to possess rather than to deserve it.
|
|
When occasions present themselves, in which the interests of the
|
|
people are at variance with their inclinations, it is the duty of
|
|
the persons whom they have appointed to be the guardians of those
|
|
interests, to withstand the temporary delusion, in order to give
|
|
them time and opportunity for more cool and sedate reflection.
|
|
Instances might be cited in which a conduct of this kind has saved
|
|
the people from very fatal consequences of their own mistakes, and
|
|
has procured lasting monuments of their gratitude to the men who had
|
|
courage and magnanimity enough to serve them at the peril of their
|
|
displeasure.
|
|
But however inclined we might be to insist upon an unbounded
|
|
complaisance in the Executive to the inclinations of the people, we
|
|
can with no propriety contend for a like complaisance to the humors
|
|
of the legislature. The latter may sometimes stand in opposition to
|
|
the former, and at other times the people may be entirely neutral.
|
|
In either supposition, it is certainly desirable that the Executive
|
|
should be in a situation to dare to act his own opinion with vigor
|
|
and decision.
|
|
The same rule which teaches the propriety of a partition between
|
|
the various branches of power, teaches us likewise that this
|
|
partition ought to be so contrived as to render the one independent
|
|
of the other. To what purpose separate the executive or the
|
|
judiciary from the legislative, if both the executive and the
|
|
judiciary are so constituted as to be at the absolute devotion of
|
|
the legislative? Such a separation must be merely nominal, and
|
|
incapable of producing the ends for which it was established. It is
|
|
one thing to be subordinate to the laws, and another to be dependent
|
|
on the legislative body. The first comports with, the last
|
|
violates, the fundamental principles of good government; and,
|
|
whatever may be the forms of the Constitution, unites all power in
|
|
the same hands. The tendency of the legislative authority to absorb
|
|
every other, has been fully displayed and illustrated by examples in
|
|
some preceding numbers. In governments purely republican, this
|
|
tendency is almost irresistible. The representatives of the people,
|
|
in a popular assembly, seem sometimes to fancy that they are the
|
|
people themselves, and betray strong symptoms of impatience and
|
|
disgust at the least sign of opposition from any other quarter; as
|
|
if the exercise of its rights, by either the executive or judiciary,
|
|
were a breach of their privilege and an outrage to their dignity.
|
|
They often appear disposed to exert an imperious control over the
|
|
other departments; and as they commonly have the people on their
|
|
side, they always act with such momentum as to make it very
|
|
difficult for the other members of the government to maintain the
|
|
balance of the Constitution.
|
|
It may perhaps be asked, how the shortness of the duration in
|
|
office can affect the independence of the Executive on the
|
|
legislature, unless the one were possessed of the power of
|
|
appointing or displacing the other. One answer to this inquiry may
|
|
be drawn from the principle already remarked that is, from the
|
|
slender interest a man is apt to take in a short-lived advantage,
|
|
and the little inducement it affords him to expose himself, on
|
|
account of it, to any considerable inconvenience or hazard. Another
|
|
answer, perhaps more obvious, though not more conclusive, will
|
|
result from the consideration of the influence of the legislative
|
|
body over the people; which might be employed to prevent the
|
|
re-election of a man who, by an upright resistance to any sinister
|
|
project of that body, should have made himself obnoxious to its
|
|
resentment.
|
|
It may be asked also, whether a duration of four years would
|
|
answer the end proposed; and if it would not, whether a less
|
|
period, which would at least be recommended by greater security
|
|
against ambitious designs, would not, for that reason, be preferable
|
|
to a longer period, which was, at the same time, too short for the
|
|
purpose of inspiring the desired firmness and independence of the
|
|
magistrate.
|
|
It cannot be affirmed, that a duration of four years, or any
|
|
other limited duration, would completely answer the end proposed;
|
|
but it would contribute towards it in a degree which would have a
|
|
material influence upon the spirit and character of the government.
|
|
Between the commencement and termination of such a period, there
|
|
would always be a considerable interval, in which the prospect of
|
|
annihilation would be sufficiently remote, not to have an improper
|
|
effect upon the conduct of a man indued with a tolerable portion of
|
|
fortitude; and in which he might reasonably promise himself, that
|
|
there would be time enough before it arrived, to make the community
|
|
sensible of the propriety of the measures he might incline to pursue.
|
|
Though it be probable that, as he approached the moment when the
|
|
public were, by a new election, to signify their sense of his
|
|
conduct, his confidence, and with it his firmness, would decline;
|
|
yet both the one and the other would derive support from the
|
|
opportunities which his previous continuance in the station had
|
|
afforded him, of establishing himself in the esteem and good-will of
|
|
his constituents. He might, then, hazard with safety, in proportion
|
|
to the proofs he had given of his wisdom and integrity, and to the
|
|
title he had acquired to the respect and attachment of his
|
|
fellow-citizens. As, on the one hand, a duration of four years will
|
|
contribute to the firmness of the Executive in a sufficient degree
|
|
to render it a very valuable ingredient in the composition; so, on
|
|
the other, it is not enough to justify any alarm for the public
|
|
liberty. If a British House of Commons, from the most feeble
|
|
beginnings, FROM THE MERE POWER OF ASSENTING OR DISAGREEING TO THE
|
|
IMPOSITION OF A NEW TAX, have, by rapid strides, reduced the
|
|
prerogatives of the crown and the privileges of the nobility within
|
|
the limits they conceived to be compatible with the principles of a
|
|
free government, while they raised themselves to the rank and
|
|
consequence of a coequal branch of the legislature; if they have
|
|
been able, in one instance, to abolish both the royalty and the
|
|
aristocracy, and to overturn all the ancient establishments, as well
|
|
in the Church as State; if they have been able, on a recent
|
|
occasion, to make the monarch tremble at the prospect of an
|
|
innovation1 attempted by them, what would be to be feared from
|
|
an elective magistrate of four years' duration, with the confined
|
|
authorities of a President of the United States? What, but that he
|
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might be unequal to the task which the Constitution assigns him? I
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shall only add, that if his duration be such as to leave a doubt of
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his firmness, that doubt is inconsistent with a jealousy of his
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encroachments.
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PUBLIUS.
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1 This was the case with respect to Mr. Fox's India bill, which
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was carried in the House of Commons, and rejected in the House of
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Lords, to the entire satisfaction, as it is said, of the people.
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FEDERALIST No. 72
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The Same Subject Continued, and Re-Eligibility of the Executive
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Considered
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From the New York Packet.
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Friday, March 21, 1788.
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HAMILTON
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To the People of the State of New York:
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THE administration of government, in its largest sense,
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comprehends all the operations of the body politic, whether
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legislative, executive, or judiciary; but in its most usual, and
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|
perhaps its most precise signification. it is limited to executive
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|
details, and falls peculiarly within the province of the executive
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department. The actual conduct of foreign negotiations, the
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preparatory plans of finance, the application and disbursement of
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the public moneys in conformity to the general appropriations of the
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legislature, the arrangement of the army and navy, the directions of
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the operations of war, these, and other matters of a like nature,
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constitute what seems to be most properly understood by the
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|
administration of government. The persons, therefore, to whose
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immediate management these different matters are committed, ought to
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be considered as the assistants or deputies of the chief magistrate,
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and on this account, they ought to derive their offices from his
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appointment, at least from his nomination, and ought to be subject
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to his superintendence. This view of the subject will at once
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|
suggest to us the intimate connection between the duration of the
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executive magistrate in office and the stability of the system of
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|
administration. To reverse and undo what has been done by a
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predecessor, is very often considered by a successor as the best
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|
proof he can give of his own capacity and desert; and in addition
|
|
to this propensity, where the alteration has been the result of
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|
public choice, the person substituted is warranted in supposing that
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the dismission of his predecessor has proceeded from a dislike to
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his measures; and that the less he resembles him, the more he will
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|
recommend himself to the favor of his constituents. These
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|
considerations, and the influence of personal confidences and
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|
attachments, would be likely to induce every new President to
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promote a change of men to fill the subordinate stations; and these
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causes together could not fail to occasion a disgraceful and ruinous
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mutability in the administration of the government.
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With a positive duration of considerable extent, I connect the
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circumstance of re-eligibility. The first is necessary to give to
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the officer himself the inclination and the resolution to act his
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part well, and to the community time and leisure to observe the
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tendency of his measures, and thence to form an experimental
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|
estimate of their merits. The last is necessary to enable the
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people, when they see reason to approve of his conduct, to continue
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him in his station, in order to prolong the utility of his talents
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and virtues, and to secure to the government the advantage of
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permanency in a wise system of administration.
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Nothing appears more plausible at first sight, nor more
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ill-founded upon close inspection, than a scheme which in relation
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to the present point has had some respectable advocates, I mean that
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of continuing the chief magistrate in office for a certain time, and
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then excluding him from it, either for a limited period or forever
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after. This exclusion, whether temporary or perpetual, would have
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nearly the same effects, and these effects would be for the most
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|
part rather pernicious than salutary.
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One ill effect of the exclusion would be a diminution of the
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inducements to good behavior. There are few men who would not feel
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much less zeal in the discharge of a duty when they were conscious
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that the advantages of the station with which it was connected must
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be relinquished at a determinate period, than when they were
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permitted to entertain a hope of OBTAINING, by MERITING, a
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continuance of them. This position will not be disputed so long as
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it is admitted that the desire of reward is one of the strongest
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incentives of human conduct; or that the best security for the
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fidelity of mankind is to make their interests coincide with their
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duty. Even the love of fame, the ruling passion of the noblest
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minds, which would prompt a man to plan and undertake extensive and
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arduous enterprises for the public benefit, requiring considerable
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time to mature and perfect them, if he could flatter himself with
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the prospect of being allowed to finish what he had begun, would, on
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the contrary, deter him from the undertaking, when he foresaw that
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he must quit the scene before he could accomplish the work, and must
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commit that, together with his own reputation, to hands which might
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be unequal or unfriendly to the task. The most to be expected from
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the generality of men, in such a situation, is the negative merit of
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not doing harm, instead of the positive merit of doing good.
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Another ill effect of the exclusion would be the temptation to
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sordid views, to peculation, and, in some instances, to usurpation.
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An avaricious man, who might happen to fill the office, looking
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forward to a time when he must at all events yield up the emoluments
|
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he enjoyed, would feel a propensity, not easy to be resisted by such
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a man, to make the best use of the opportunity he enjoyed while it
|
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lasted, and might not scruple to have recourse to the most corrupt
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expedients to make the harvest as abundant as it was transitory;
|
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though the same man, probably, with a different prospect before
|
|
him, might content himself with the regular perquisites of his
|
|
situation, and might even be unwilling to risk the consequences of
|
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an abuse of his opportunities. His avarice might be a guard upon
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his avarice. Add to this that the same man might be vain or
|
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ambitious, as well as avaricious. And if he could expect to prolong
|
|
his honors by his good conduct, he might hesitate to sacrifice his
|
|
appetite for them to his appetite for gain. But with the prospect
|
|
before him of approaching an inevitable annihilation, his avarice
|
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would be likely to get the victory over his caution, his vanity, or
|
|
his ambition.
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An ambitious man, too, when he found himself seated on the
|
|
summit of his country's honors, when he looked forward to the time
|
|
at which he must descend from the exalted eminence for ever, and
|
|
reflected that no exertion of merit on his part could save him from
|
|
the unwelcome reverse; such a man, in such a situation, would be
|
|
much more violently tempted to embrace a favorable conjuncture for
|
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attempting the prolongation of his power, at every personal hazard,
|
|
than if he had the probability of answering the same end by doing
|
|
his duty.
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|
Would it promote the peace of the community, or the stability of
|
|
the government to have half a dozen men who had had credit enough to
|
|
be raised to the seat of the supreme magistracy, wandering among the
|
|
people like discontented ghosts, and sighing for a place which they
|
|
were destined never more to possess?
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|
A third ill effect of the exclusion would be, the depriving the
|
|
community of the advantage of the experience gained by the chief
|
|
magistrate in the exercise of his office. That experience is the
|
|
parent of wisdom, is an adage the truth of which is recognized by
|
|
the wisest as well as the simplest of mankind. What more desirable
|
|
or more essential than this quality in the governors of nations?
|
|
Where more desirable or more essential than in the first magistrate
|
|
of a nation? Can it be wise to put this desirable and essential
|
|
quality under the ban of the Constitution, and to declare that the
|
|
moment it is acquired, its possessor shall be compelled to abandon
|
|
the station in which it was acquired, and to which it is adapted?
|
|
This, nevertheless, is the precise import of all those regulations
|
|
which exclude men from serving their country, by the choice of their
|
|
fellowcitizens, after they have by a course of service fitted
|
|
themselves for doing it with a greater degree of utility.
|
|
A fourth ill effect of the exclusion would be the banishing men
|
|
from stations in which, in certain emergencies of the state, their
|
|
presence might be of the greatest moment to the public interest or
|
|
safety. There is no nation which has not, at one period or another,
|
|
experienced an absolute necessity of the services of particular men
|
|
in particular situations; perhaps it would not be too strong to
|
|
say, to the preservation of its political existence. How unwise,
|
|
therefore, must be every such self-denying ordinance as serves to
|
|
prohibit a nation from making use of its own citizens in the manner
|
|
best suited to its exigencies and circumstances! Without supposing
|
|
the personal essentiality of the man, it is evident that a change of
|
|
the chief magistrate, at the breaking out of a war, or at any
|
|
similar crisis, for another, even of equal merit, would at all times
|
|
be detrimental to the community, inasmuch as it would substitute
|
|
inexperience to experience, and would tend to unhinge and set afloat
|
|
the already settled train of the administration.
|
|
A fifth ill effect of the exclusion would be, that it would
|
|
operate as a constitutional interdiction of stability in the
|
|
administration. By NECESSITATING a change of men, in the first
|
|
office of the nation, it would necessitate a mutability of measures.
|
|
It is not generally to be expected, that men will vary and measures
|
|
remain uniform. The contrary is the usual course of things. And we
|
|
need not be apprehensive that there will be too much stability,
|
|
while there is even the option of changing; nor need we desire to
|
|
prohibit the people from continuing their confidence where they
|
|
think it may be safely placed, and where, by constancy on their
|
|
part, they may obviate the fatal inconveniences of fluctuating
|
|
councils and a variable policy.
|
|
These are some of the disadvantages which would flow from the
|
|
principle of exclusion. They apply most forcibly to the scheme of a
|
|
perpetual exclusion; but when we consider that even a partial
|
|
exclusion would always render the readmission of the person a remote
|
|
and precarious object, the observations which have been made will
|
|
apply nearly as fully to one case as to the other.
|
|
What are the advantages promised to counterbalance these
|
|
disadvantages? They are represented to be: 1st, greater
|
|
independence in the magistrate; 2d, greater security to the people.
|
|
Unless the exclusion be perpetual, there will be no pretense to
|
|
infer the first advantage. But even in that case, may he have no
|
|
object beyond his present station, to which he may sacrifice his
|
|
independence? May he have no connections, no friends, for whom he
|
|
may sacrifice it? May he not be less willing by a firm conduct, to
|
|
make personal enemies, when he acts under the impression that a time
|
|
is fast approaching, on the arrival of which he not only MAY, but
|
|
MUST, be exposed to their resentments, upon an equal, perhaps upon
|
|
an inferior, footing? It is not an easy point to determine whether
|
|
his independence would be most promoted or impaired by such an
|
|
arrangement.
|
|
As to the second supposed advantage, there is still greater
|
|
reason to entertain doubts concerning it. If the exclusion were to
|
|
be perpetual, a man of irregular ambition, of whom alone there could
|
|
be reason in any case to entertain apprehension, would, with
|
|
infinite reluctance, yield to the necessity of taking his leave
|
|
forever of a post in which his passion for power and pre-eminence
|
|
had acquired the force of habit. And if he had been fortunate or
|
|
adroit enough to conciliate the good-will of the people, he might
|
|
induce them to consider as a very odious and unjustifiable restraint
|
|
upon themselves, a provision which was calculated to debar them of
|
|
the right of giving a fresh proof of their attachment to a favorite.
|
|
There may be conceived circumstances in which this disgust of the
|
|
people, seconding the thwarted ambition of such a favorite, might
|
|
occasion greater danger to liberty, than could ever reasonably be
|
|
dreaded from the possibility of a perpetuation in office, by the
|
|
voluntary suffrages of the community, exercising a constitutional
|
|
privilege.
|
|
There is an excess of refinement in the idea of disabling the
|
|
people to continue in office men who had entitled themselves, in
|
|
their opinion, to approbation and confidence; the advantages of
|
|
which are at best speculative and equivocal, and are overbalanced by
|
|
disadvantages far more certain and decisive.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 73
|
|
The Provision For The Support of the Executive, and the Veto Power
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Friday, March 21, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE third ingredient towards constituting the vigor of the
|
|
executive authority, is an adequate provision for its support. It
|
|
is evident that, without proper attention to this article, the
|
|
separation of the executive from the legislative department would be
|
|
merely nominal and nugatory. The legislature, with a discretionary
|
|
power over the salary and emoluments of the Chief Magistrate, could
|
|
render him as obsequious to their will as they might think proper to
|
|
make him. They might, in most cases, either reduce him by famine,
|
|
or tempt him by largesses, to surrender at discretion his judgment
|
|
to their inclinations. These expressions, taken in all the latitude
|
|
of the terms, would no doubt convey more than is intended. There
|
|
are men who could neither be distressed nor won into a sacrifice of
|
|
their duty; but this stern virtue is the growth of few soils; and
|
|
in the main it will be found that a power over a man's support is a
|
|
power over his will. If it were necessary to confirm so plain a
|
|
truth by facts, examples would not be wanting, even in this country,
|
|
of the intimidation or seduction of the Executive by the terrors or
|
|
allurements of the pecuniary arrangements of the legislative body.
|
|
It is not easy, therefore, to commend too highly the judicious
|
|
attention which has been paid to this subject in the proposed
|
|
Constitution. It is there provided that ``The President of the
|
|
United States shall, at stated times, receive for his services a
|
|
compensation WHICH SHALL NEITHER BE INCREASED NOR DIMINISHED DURING
|
|
THE PERIOD FOR WHICH HE SHALL HAVE BEEN ELECTED; and he SHALL NOT
|
|
RECEIVE WITHIN THAT PERIOD ANY OTHER EMOLUMENT from the United
|
|
States, or any of them.'' It is impossible to imagine any provision
|
|
which would have been more eligible than this. The legislature, on
|
|
the appointment of a President, is once for all to declare what
|
|
shall be the compensation for his services during the time for which
|
|
he shall have been elected. This done, they will have no power to
|
|
alter it, either by increase or diminution, till a new period of
|
|
service by a new election commences. They can neither weaken his
|
|
fortitude by operating on his necessities, nor corrupt his integrity
|
|
by appealing to his avarice. Neither the Union, nor any of its
|
|
members, will be at liberty to give, nor will he be at liberty to
|
|
receive, any other emolument than that which may have been
|
|
determined by the first act. He can, of course, have no pecuniary
|
|
inducement to renounce or desert the independence intended for him
|
|
by the Constitution.
|
|
The last of the requisites to energy, which have been
|
|
enumerated, are competent powers. Let us proceed to consider those
|
|
which are proposed to be vested in the President of the United
|
|
States.
|
|
The first thing that offers itself to our observation, is the
|
|
qualified negative of the President upon the acts or resolutions of
|
|
the two houses of the legislature; or, in other words, his power of
|
|
returning all bills with objections, to have the effect of
|
|
preventing their becoming laws, unless they should afterwards be
|
|
ratified by two thirds of each of the component members of the
|
|
legislative body.
|
|
The propensity of the legislative department to intrude upon the
|
|
rights, and to absorb the powers, of the other departments, has been
|
|
already suggested and repeated; the insufficiency of a mere
|
|
parchment delineation of the boundaries of each, has also been
|
|
remarked upon; and the necessity of furnishing each with
|
|
constitutional arms for its own defense, has been inferred and
|
|
proved. From these clear and indubitable principles results the
|
|
propriety of a negative, either absolute or qualified, in the
|
|
Executive, upon the acts of the legislative branches. Without the
|
|
one or the other, the former would be absolutely unable to defend
|
|
himself against the depredations of the latter. He might gradually
|
|
be stripped of his authorities by successive resolutions, or
|
|
annihilated by a single vote. And in the one mode or the other, the
|
|
legislative and executive powers might speedily come to be blended
|
|
in the same hands. If even no propensity had ever discovered itself
|
|
in the legislative body to invade the rights of the Executive, the
|
|
rules of just reasoning and theoretic propriety would of themselves
|
|
teach us, that the one ought not to be left to the mercy of the
|
|
other, but ought to possess a constitutional and effectual power of
|
|
selfdefense.
|
|
But the power in question has a further use. It not only serves
|
|
as a shield to the Executive, but it furnishes an additional
|
|
security against the enaction of improper laws. It establishes a
|
|
salutary check upon the legislative body, calculated to guard the
|
|
community against the effects of faction, precipitancy, or of any
|
|
impulse unfriendly to the public good, which may happen to influence
|
|
a majority of that body.
|
|
The propriety of a negative has, upon some occasions, been
|
|
combated by an observation, that it was not to be presumed a single
|
|
man would possess more virtue and wisdom than a number of men; and
|
|
that unless this presumption should be entertained, it would be
|
|
improper to give the executive magistrate any species of control
|
|
over the legislative body.
|
|
But this observation, when examined, will appear rather specious
|
|
than solid. The propriety of the thing does not turn upon the
|
|
supposition of superior wisdom or virtue in the Executive, but upon
|
|
the supposition that the legislature will not be infallible; that
|
|
the love of power may sometimes betray it into a disposition to
|
|
encroach upon the rights of other members of the government; that a
|
|
spirit of faction may sometimes pervert its deliberations; that
|
|
impressions of the moment may sometimes hurry it into measures which
|
|
itself, on maturer reflexion, would condemn. The primary inducement
|
|
to conferring the power in question upon the Executive is, to enable
|
|
him to defend himself; the secondary one is to increase the chances
|
|
in favor of the community against the passing of bad laws, through
|
|
haste, inadvertence, or design. The oftener the measure is brought
|
|
under examination, the greater the diversity in the situations of
|
|
those who are to examine it, the less must be the danger of those
|
|
errors which flow from want of due deliberation, or of those
|
|
missteps which proceed from the contagion of some common passion or
|
|
interest. It is far less probable, that culpable views of any kind
|
|
should infect all the parts of the government at the same moment and
|
|
in relation to the same object, than that they should by turns
|
|
govern and mislead every one of them.
|
|
It may perhaps be said that the power of preventing bad laws
|
|
includes that of preventing good ones; and may be used to the one
|
|
purpose as well as to the other. But this objection will have
|
|
little weight with those who can properly estimate the mischiefs of
|
|
that inconstancy and mutability in the laws, which form the greatest
|
|
blemish in the character and genius of our governments. They will
|
|
consider every institution calculated to restrain the excess of
|
|
law-making, and to keep things in the same state in which they
|
|
happen to be at any given period, as much more likely to do good
|
|
than harm; because it is favorable to greater stability in the
|
|
system of legislation. The injury which may possibly be done by
|
|
defeating a few good laws, will be amply compensated by the
|
|
advantage of preventing a number of bad ones.
|
|
Nor is this all. The superior weight and influence of the
|
|
legislative body in a free government, and the hazard to the
|
|
Executive in a trial of strength with that body, afford a
|
|
satisfactory security that the negative would generally be employed
|
|
with great caution; and there would oftener be room for a charge of
|
|
timidity than of rashness in the exercise of it. A king of Great
|
|
Britain, with all his train of sovereign attributes, and with all
|
|
the influence he draws from a thousand sources, would, at this day,
|
|
hesitate to put a negative upon the joint resolutions of the two
|
|
houses of Parliament. He would not fail to exert the utmost
|
|
resources of that influence to strangle a measure disagreeable to
|
|
him, in its progress to the throne, to avoid being reduced to the
|
|
dilemma of permitting it to take effect, or of risking the
|
|
displeasure of the nation by an opposition to the sense of the
|
|
legislative body. Nor is it probable, that he would ultimately
|
|
venture to exert his prerogatives, but in a case of manifest
|
|
propriety, or extreme necessity. All well-informed men in that
|
|
kingdom will accede to the justness of this remark. A very
|
|
considerable period has elapsed since the negative of the crown has
|
|
been exercised.
|
|
If a magistrate so powerful and so well fortified as a British
|
|
monarch, would have scruples about the exercise of the power under
|
|
consideration, how much greater caution may be reasonably expected
|
|
in a President of the United States, clothed for the short period of
|
|
four years with the executive authority of a government wholly and
|
|
purely republican?
|
|
It is evident that there would be greater danger of his not
|
|
using his power when necessary, than of his using it too often, or
|
|
too much. An argument, indeed, against its expediency, has been
|
|
drawn from this very source. It has been represented, on this
|
|
account, as a power odious in appearance, useless in practice. But
|
|
it will not follow, that because it might be rarely exercised, it
|
|
would never be exercised. In the case for which it is chiefly
|
|
designed, that of an immediate attack upon the constitutional rights
|
|
of the Executive, or in a case in which the public good was
|
|
evidently and palpably sacrificed, a man of tolerable firmness would
|
|
avail himself of his constitutional means of defense, and would
|
|
listen to the admonitions of duty and responsibility. In the former
|
|
supposition, his fortitude would be stimulated by his immediate
|
|
interest in the power of his office; in the latter, by the
|
|
probability of the sanction of his constituents, who, though they
|
|
would naturally incline to the legislative body in a doubtful case,
|
|
would hardly suffer their partiality to delude them in a very plain
|
|
case. I speak now with an eye to a magistrate possessing only a
|
|
common share of firmness. There are men who, under any
|
|
circumstances, will have the courage to do their duty at every
|
|
hazard.
|
|
But the convention have pursued a mean in this business, which
|
|
will both facilitate the exercise of the power vested in this
|
|
respect in the executive magistrate, and make its efficacy to depend
|
|
on the sense of a considerable part of the legislative body.
|
|
Instead of an absolute negative, it is proposed to give the
|
|
Executive the qualified negative already described. This is a power
|
|
which would be much more readily exercised than the other. A man
|
|
who might be afraid to defeat a law by his single VETO, might not
|
|
scruple to return it for reconsideration; subject to being finally
|
|
rejected only in the event of more than one third of each house
|
|
concurring in the sufficiency of his objections. He would be
|
|
encouraged by the reflection, that if his opposition should prevail,
|
|
it would embark in it a very respectable proportion of the
|
|
legislative body, whose influence would be united with his in
|
|
supporting the propriety of his conduct in the public opinion. A
|
|
direct and categorical negative has something in the appearance of
|
|
it more harsh, and more apt to irritate, than the mere suggestion of
|
|
argumentative objections to be approved or disapproved by those to
|
|
whom they are addressed. In proportion as it would be less apt to
|
|
offend, it would be more apt to be exercised; and for this very
|
|
reason, it may in practice be found more effectual. It is to be
|
|
hoped that it will not often happen that improper views will govern
|
|
so large a proportion as two thirds of both branches of the
|
|
legislature at the same time; and this, too, in spite of the
|
|
counterposing weight of the Executive. It is at any rate far less
|
|
probable that this should be the case, than that such views should
|
|
taint the resolutions and conduct of a bare majority. A power of
|
|
this nature in the Executive, will often have a silent and
|
|
unperceived, though forcible, operation. When men, engaged in
|
|
unjustifiable pursuits, are aware that obstructions may come from a
|
|
quarter which they cannot control, they will often be restrained by
|
|
the bare apprehension of opposition, from doing what they would with
|
|
eagerness rush into, if no such external impediments were to be
|
|
feared.
|
|
This qualified negative, as has been elsewhere remarked, is in
|
|
this State vested in a council, consisting of the governor, with the
|
|
chancellor and judges of the Supreme Court, or any two of them. It
|
|
has been freely employed upon a variety of occasions, and frequently
|
|
with success. And its utility has become so apparent, that persons
|
|
who, in compiling the Constitution, were violent opposers of it,
|
|
have from experience become its declared admirers.1
|
|
I have in another place remarked, that the convention, in the
|
|
formation of this part of their plan, had departed from the model of
|
|
the constitution of this State, in favor of that of Massachusetts.
|
|
Two strong reasons may be imagined for this preference. One is
|
|
that the judges, who are to be the interpreters of the law, might
|
|
receive an improper bias, from having given a previous opinion in
|
|
their revisionary capacities; the other is that by being often
|
|
associated with the Executive, they might be induced to embark too
|
|
far in the political views of that magistrate, and thus a dangerous
|
|
combination might by degrees be cemented between the executive and
|
|
judiciary departments. It is impossible to keep the judges too
|
|
distinct from every other avocation than that of expounding the laws.
|
|
It is peculiarly dangerous to place them in a situation to be
|
|
either corrupted or influenced by the Executive.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
1 Mr. Abraham Yates, a warm opponent of the plan of the
|
|
convention is of this number.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 74
|
|
|
|
The Command of the Military and Naval Forces, and the Pardoning
|
|
Power of the Executive
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Tuesday, March 25, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE President of the United States is to be ``commander-in-chief
|
|
of the army and navy of the United States, and of the militia of the
|
|
several States WHEN CALLED INTO THE ACTUAL SERVICE of the United
|
|
States.'' The propriety of this provision is so evident in itself,
|
|
and it is, at the same time, so consonant to the precedents of the
|
|
State constitutions in general, that little need be said to explain
|
|
or enforce it. Even those of them which have, in other respects,
|
|
coupled the chief magistrate with a council, have for the most part
|
|
concentrated the military authority in him alone. Of all the cares
|
|
or concerns of government, the direction of war most peculiarly
|
|
demands those qualities which distinguish the exercise of power by a
|
|
single hand. The direction of war implies the direction of the
|
|
common strength; and the power of directing and employing the
|
|
common strength, forms a usual and essential part in the definition
|
|
of the executive authority.
|
|
``The President may require the opinion, in writing, of the
|
|
principal officer in each of the executive departments, upon any
|
|
subject relating to the duties of their respective officers.'' This
|
|
I consider as a mere redundancy in the plan, as the right for which
|
|
it provides would result of itself from the office.
|
|
He is also to be authorized to grant ``reprieves and pardons for
|
|
offenses against the United States, EXCEPT IN CASES OF
|
|
IMPEACHMENT.'' Humanity and good policy conspire to dictate, that
|
|
the benign prerogative of pardoning should be as little as possible
|
|
fettered or embarrassed. The criminal code of every country
|
|
partakes so much of necessary severity, that without an easy access
|
|
to exceptions in favor of unfortunate guilt, justice would wear a
|
|
countenance too sanguinary and cruel. As the sense of
|
|
responsibility is always strongest, in proportion as it is
|
|
undivided, it may be inferred that a single man would be most ready
|
|
to attend to the force of those motives which might plead for a
|
|
mitigation of the rigor of the law, and least apt to yield to
|
|
considerations which were calculated to shelter a fit object of its
|
|
vengeance. The reflection that the fate of a fellow-creature
|
|
depended on his sole fiat, would naturally inspire
|
|
scrupulousness and caution; the dread of being accused of weakness
|
|
or connivance, would beget equal circumspection, though of a
|
|
different kind. On the other hand, as men generally derive
|
|
confidence from their numbers, they might often encourage each other
|
|
in an act of obduracy, and might be less sensible to the
|
|
apprehension of suspicion or censure for an injudicious or affected
|
|
clemency. On these accounts, one man appears to be a more eligible
|
|
dispenser of the mercy of government, than a body of men.
|
|
The expediency of vesting the power of pardoning in the
|
|
President has, if I mistake not, been only contested in relation to
|
|
the crime of treason. This, it has been urged, ought to have
|
|
depended upon the assent of one, or both, of the branches of the
|
|
legislative body. I shall not deny that there are strong reasons to
|
|
be assigned for requiring in this particular the concurrence of that
|
|
body, or of a part of it. As treason is a crime levelled at the
|
|
immediate being of the society, when the laws have once ascertained
|
|
the guilt of the offender, there seems a fitness in referring the
|
|
expediency of an act of mercy towards him to the judgment of the
|
|
legislature. And this ought the rather to be the case, as the
|
|
supposition of the connivance of the Chief Magistrate ought not to
|
|
be entirely excluded. But there are also strong objections to such
|
|
a plan. It is not to be doubted, that a single man of prudence and
|
|
good sense is better fitted, in delicate conjunctures, to balance
|
|
the motives which may plead for and against the remission of the
|
|
punishment, than any numerous body whatever. It deserves particular
|
|
attention, that treason will often be connected with seditions which
|
|
embrace a large proportion of the community; as lately happened in
|
|
Massachusetts. In every such case, we might expect to see the
|
|
representation of the people tainted with the same spirit which had
|
|
given birth to the offense. And when parties were pretty equally
|
|
matched, the secret sympathy of the friends and favorers of the
|
|
condemned person, availing itself of the good-nature and weakness of
|
|
others, might frequently bestow impunity where the terror of an
|
|
example was necessary. On the other hand, when the sedition had
|
|
proceeded from causes which had inflamed the resentments of the
|
|
major party, they might often be found obstinate and inexorable,
|
|
when policy demanded a conduct of forbearance and clemency. But the
|
|
principal argument for reposing the power of pardoning in this case
|
|
to the Chief Magistrate is this: in seasons of insurrection or
|
|
rebellion, there are often critical moments, when a welltimed offer
|
|
of pardon to the insurgents or rebels may restore the tranquillity
|
|
of the commonwealth; and which, if suffered to pass unimproved, it
|
|
may never be possible afterwards to recall. The dilatory process of
|
|
convening the legislature, or one of its branches, for the purpose
|
|
of obtaining its sanction to the measure, would frequently be the
|
|
occasion of letting slip the golden opportunity. The loss of a
|
|
week, a day, an hour, may sometimes be fatal. If it should be
|
|
observed, that a discretionary power, with a view to such
|
|
contingencies, might be occasionally conferred upon the President,
|
|
it may be answered in the first place, that it is questionable,
|
|
whether, in a limited Constitution, that power could be delegated by
|
|
law; and in the second place, that it would generally be impolitic
|
|
beforehand to take any step which might hold out the prospect of
|
|
impunity. A proceeding of this kind, out of the usual course, would
|
|
be likely to be construed into an argument of timidity or of
|
|
weakness, and would have a tendency to embolden guilt.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 75
|
|
The Treaty-Making Power of the Executive
|
|
For the Independent Journal.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE President is to have power, ``by and with the advice and
|
|
consent of the Senate, to make treaties, provided two thirds of the
|
|
senators present concur.''
|
|
Though this provision has been assailed, on different grounds,
|
|
with no small degree of vehemence, I scruple not to declare my firm
|
|
persuasion, that it is one of the best digested and most
|
|
unexceptionable parts of the plan. One ground of objection is the
|
|
trite topic of the intermixture of powers; some contending that the
|
|
President ought alone to possess the power of making treaties;
|
|
others, that it ought to have been exclusively deposited in the
|
|
Senate. Another source of objection is derived from the small
|
|
number of persons by whom a treaty may be made. Of those who
|
|
espouse this objection, a part are of opinion that the House of
|
|
Representatives ought to have been associated in the business, while
|
|
another part seem to think that nothing more was necessary than to
|
|
have substituted two thirds of ALL the members of the Senate, to two
|
|
thirds of the members PRESENT. As I flatter myself the observations
|
|
made in a preceding number upon this part of the plan must have
|
|
sufficed to place it, to a discerning eye, in a very favorable
|
|
light, I shall here content myself with offering only some
|
|
supplementary remarks, principally with a view to the objections
|
|
which have been just stated.
|
|
With regard to the intermixture of powers, I shall rely upon the
|
|
explanations already given in other places, of the true sense of the
|
|
rule upon which that objection is founded; and shall take it for
|
|
granted, as an inference from them, that the union of the Executive
|
|
with the Senate, in the article of treaties, is no infringement of
|
|
that rule. I venture to add, that the particular nature of the
|
|
power of making treaties indicates a peculiar propriety in that
|
|
union. Though several writers on the subject of government place
|
|
that power in the class of executive authorities, yet this is
|
|
evidently an arbitrary disposition; for if we attend carefully to
|
|
its operation, it will be found to partake more of the legislative
|
|
than of the executive character, though it does not seem strictly to
|
|
fall within the definition of either of them. The essence of the
|
|
legislative authority is to enact laws, or, in other words, to
|
|
prescribe rules for the regulation of the society; while the
|
|
execution of the laws, and the employment of the common strength,
|
|
either for this purpose or for the common defense, seem to comprise
|
|
all the functions of the executive magistrate. The power of making
|
|
treaties is, plainly, neither the one nor the other. It relates
|
|
neither to the execution of the subsisting laws, nor to the enaction
|
|
of new ones; and still less to an exertion of the common strength.
|
|
Its objects are CONTRACTS with foreign nations, which have the
|
|
force of law, but derive it from the obligations of good faith.
|
|
They are not rules prescribed by the sovereign to the subject, but
|
|
agreements between sovereign and sovereign. The power in question
|
|
seems therefore to form a distinct department, and to belong,
|
|
properly, neither to the legislative nor to the executive. The
|
|
qualities elsewhere detailed as indispensable in the management of
|
|
foreign negotiations, point out the Executive as the most fit agent
|
|
in those transactions; while the vast importance of the trust, and
|
|
the operation of treaties as laws, plead strongly for the
|
|
participation of the whole or a portion of the legislative body in
|
|
the office of making them.
|
|
However proper or safe it may be in governments where the
|
|
executive magistrate is an hereditary monarch, to commit to him the
|
|
entire power of making treaties, it would be utterly unsafe and
|
|
improper to intrust that power to an elective magistrate of four
|
|
years' duration. It has been remarked, upon another occasion, and
|
|
the remark is unquestionably just, that an hereditary monarch,
|
|
though often the oppressor of his people, has personally too much
|
|
stake in the government to be in any material danger of being
|
|
corrupted by foreign powers. But a man raised from the station of a
|
|
private citizen to the rank of chief magistrate, possessed of a
|
|
moderate or slender fortune, and looking forward to a period not
|
|
very remote when he may probably be obliged to return to the station
|
|
from which he was taken, might sometimes be under temptations to
|
|
sacrifice his duty to his interest, which it would require
|
|
superlative virtue to withstand. An avaricious man might be tempted
|
|
to betray the interests of the state to the acquisition of wealth.
|
|
An ambitious man might make his own aggrandizement, by the aid of a
|
|
foreign power, the price of his treachery to his constituents. The
|
|
history of human conduct does not warrant that exalted opinion of
|
|
human virtue which would make it wise in a nation to commit
|
|
interests of so delicate and momentous a kind, as those which
|
|
concern its intercourse with the rest of the world, to the sole
|
|
disposal of a magistrate created and circumstanced as would be a
|
|
President of the United States.
|
|
To have intrusted the power of making treaties to the Senate
|
|
alone, would have been to relinquish the benefits of the
|
|
constitutional agency of the President in the conduct of foreign
|
|
negotiations. It is true that the Senate would, in that case, have
|
|
the option of employing him in this capacity, but they would also
|
|
have the option of letting it alone, and pique or cabal might induce
|
|
the latter rather than the former. Besides this, the ministerial
|
|
servant of the Senate could not be expected to enjoy the confidence
|
|
and respect of foreign powers in the same degree with the
|
|
constitutional representatives of the nation, and, of course, would
|
|
not be able to act with an equal degree of weight or efficacy.
|
|
While the Union would, from this cause, lose a considerable
|
|
advantage in the management of its external concerns, the people
|
|
would lose the additional security which would result from the
|
|
co-operation of the Executive. Though it would be imprudent to
|
|
confide in him solely so important a trust, yet it cannot be doubted
|
|
that his participation would materially add to the safety of the
|
|
society. It must indeed be clear to a demonstration that the joint
|
|
possession of the power in question, by the President and Senate,
|
|
would afford a greater prospect of security, than the separate
|
|
possession of it by either of them. And whoever has maturely
|
|
weighed the circumstances which must concur in the appointment of a
|
|
President, will be satisfied that the office will always bid fair to
|
|
be filled by men of such characters as to render their concurrence
|
|
in the formation of treaties peculiarly desirable, as well on the
|
|
score of wisdom, as on that of integrity.
|
|
The remarks made in a former number, which have been alluded to
|
|
in another part of this paper, will apply with conclusive force
|
|
against the admission of the House of Representatives to a share in
|
|
the formation of treaties. The fluctuating and, taking its future
|
|
increase into the account, the multitudinous composition of that
|
|
body, forbid us to expect in it those qualities which are essential
|
|
to the proper execution of such a trust. Accurate and comprehensive
|
|
knowledge of foreign politics; a steady and systematic adherence to
|
|
the same views; a nice and uniform sensibility to national
|
|
character; decision, SECRECY, and despatch, are incompatible with
|
|
the genius of a body so variable and so numerous. The very
|
|
complication of the business, by introducing a necessity of the
|
|
concurrence of so many different bodies, would of itself afford a
|
|
solid objection. The greater frequency of the calls upon the House
|
|
of Representatives, and the greater length of time which it would
|
|
often be necessary to keep them together when convened, to obtain
|
|
their sanction in the progressive stages of a treaty, would be a
|
|
source of so great inconvenience and expense as alone ought to
|
|
condemn the project.
|
|
The only objection which remains to be canvassed, is that which
|
|
would substitute the proportion of two thirds of all the members
|
|
composing the senatorial body, to that of two thirds of the members
|
|
PRESENT. It has been shown, under the second head of our inquiries,
|
|
that all provisions which require more than the majority of any body
|
|
to its resolutions, have a direct tendency to embarrass the
|
|
operations of the government, and an indirect one to subject the
|
|
sense of the majority to that of the minority. This consideration
|
|
seems sufficient to determine our opinion, that the convention have
|
|
gone as far in the endeavor to secure the advantage of numbers in
|
|
the formation of treaties as could have been reconciled either with
|
|
the activity of the public councils or with a reasonable regard to
|
|
the major sense of the community. If two thirds of the whole number
|
|
of members had been required, it would, in many cases, from the
|
|
non-attendance of a part, amount in practice to a necessity of
|
|
unanimity. And the history of every political establishment in
|
|
which this principle has prevailed, is a history of impotence,
|
|
perplexity, and disorder. Proofs of this position might be adduced
|
|
from the examples of the Roman Tribuneship, the Polish Diet, and the
|
|
States-General of the Netherlands, did not an example at home render
|
|
foreign precedents unnecessary.
|
|
To require a fixed proportion of the whole body would not, in
|
|
all probability, contribute to the advantages of a numerous agency,
|
|
better then merely to require a proportion of the attending members.
|
|
The former, by making a determinate number at all times requisite
|
|
to a resolution, diminishes the motives to punctual attendance. The
|
|
latter, by making the capacity of the body to depend on a PROPORTION
|
|
which may be varied by the absence or presence of a single member,
|
|
has the contrary effect. And as, by promoting punctuality, it tends
|
|
to keep the body complete, there is great likelihood that its
|
|
resolutions would generally be dictated by as great a number in this
|
|
case as in the other; while there would be much fewer occasions of
|
|
delay. It ought not to be forgotten that, under the existing
|
|
Confederation, two members MAY, and usually DO, represent a State;
|
|
whence it happens that Congress, who now are solely invested with
|
|
ALL THE POWERS of the Union, rarely consist of a greater number of
|
|
persons than would compose the intended Senate. If we add to this,
|
|
that as the members vote by States, and that where there is only a
|
|
single member present from a State, his vote is lost, it will
|
|
justify a supposition that the active voices in the Senate, where
|
|
the members are to vote individually, would rarely fall short in
|
|
number of the active voices in the existing Congress. When, in
|
|
addition to these considerations, we take into view the co-operation
|
|
of the President, we shall not hesitate to infer that the people of
|
|
America would have greater security against an improper use of the
|
|
power of making treaties, under the new Constitution, than they now
|
|
enjoy under the Confederation. And when we proceed still one step
|
|
further, and look forward to the probable augmentation of the
|
|
Senate, by the erection of new States, we shall not only perceive
|
|
ample ground of confidence in the sufficiency of the members to
|
|
whose agency that power will be intrusted, but we shall probably be
|
|
led to conclude that a body more numerous than the Senate would be
|
|
likely to become, would be very little fit for the proper discharge
|
|
of the trust.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 76
|
|
The Appointing Power of the Executive
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Tuesday, April 1, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE President is ``to NOMINATE, and, by and with the advice and
|
|
consent of the Senate, to appoint ambassadors, other public
|
|
ministers and consuls, judges of the Supreme Court, and all other
|
|
officers of the United States whose appointments are not otherwise
|
|
provided for in the Constitution. But the Congress may by law vest
|
|
the appointment of such inferior officers as they think proper, in
|
|
the President alone, or in the courts of law, or in the heads of
|
|
departments. The President shall have power to fill up ALL
|
|
VACANCIES which may happen DURING THE RECESS OF THE SENATE, by
|
|
granting commissions which shall EXPIRE at the end of their next
|
|
session.''
|
|
It has been observed in a former paper, that ``the true test of
|
|
a good government is its aptitude and tendency to produce a good
|
|
administration.'' If the justness of this observation be admitted,
|
|
the mode of appointing the officers of the United States contained
|
|
in the foregoing clauses, must, when examined, be allowed to be
|
|
entitled to particular commendation. It is not easy to conceive a
|
|
plan better calculated than this to promote a judicious choice of
|
|
men for filling the offices of the Union; and it will not need
|
|
proof, that on this point must essentially depend the character of
|
|
its administration.
|
|
It will be agreed on all hands, that the power of appointment,
|
|
in ordinary cases, ought to be modified in one of three ways. It
|
|
ought either to be vested in a single man, or in a SELECT assembly
|
|
of a moderate number; or in a single man, with the concurrence of
|
|
such an assembly. The exercise of it by the people at large will be
|
|
readily admitted to be impracticable; as waiving every other
|
|
consideration, it would leave them little time to do anything else.
|
|
When, therefore, mention is made in the subsequent reasonings of an
|
|
assembly or body of men, what is said must be understood to relate
|
|
to a select body or assembly, of the description already given. The
|
|
people collectively, from their number and from their dispersed
|
|
situation, cannot be regulated in their movements by that systematic
|
|
spirit of cabal and intrigue, which will be urged as the chief
|
|
objections to reposing the power in question in a body of men.
|
|
Those who have themselves reflected upon the subject, or who
|
|
have attended to the observations made in other parts of these
|
|
papers, in relation to the appointment of the President, will, I
|
|
presume, agree to the position, that there would always be great
|
|
probability of having the place supplied by a man of abilities, at
|
|
least respectable. Premising this, I proceed to lay it down as a
|
|
rule, that one man of discernment is better fitted to analyze and
|
|
estimate the peculiar qualities adapted to particular offices, than
|
|
a body of men of equal or perhaps even of superior discernment.
|
|
The sole and undivided responsibility of one man will naturally
|
|
beget a livelier sense of duty and a more exact regard to reputation.
|
|
He will, on this account, feel himself under stronger obligations,
|
|
and more interested to investigate with care the qualities requisite
|
|
to the stations to be filled, and to prefer with impartiality the
|
|
persons who may have the fairest pretensions to them. He will have
|
|
FEWER personal attachments to gratify, than a body of men who may
|
|
each be supposed to have an equal number; and will be so much the
|
|
less liable to be misled by the sentiments of friendship and of
|
|
affection. A single well-directed man, by a single understanding,
|
|
cannot be distracted and warped by that diversity of views,
|
|
feelings, and interests, which frequently distract and warp the
|
|
resolutions of a collective body. There is nothing so apt to
|
|
agitate the passions of mankind as personal considerations whether
|
|
they relate to ourselves or to others, who are to be the objects of
|
|
our choice or preference. Hence, in every exercise of the power of
|
|
appointing to offices, by an assembly of men, we must expect to see
|
|
a full display of all the private and party likings and dislikes,
|
|
partialities and antipathies, attachments and animosities, which are
|
|
felt by those who compose the assembly. The choice which may at any
|
|
time happen to be made under such circumstances, will of course be
|
|
the result either of a victory gained by one party over the other,
|
|
or of a compromise between the parties. In either case, the
|
|
intrinsic merit of the candidate will be too often out of sight. In
|
|
the first, the qualifications best adapted to uniting the suffrages
|
|
of the party, will be more considered than those which fit the
|
|
person for the station. In the last, the coalition will commonly
|
|
turn upon some interested equivalent: ``Give us the man we wish for
|
|
this office, and you shall have the one you wish for that.'' This
|
|
will be the usual condition of the bargain. And it will rarely
|
|
happen that the advancement of the public service will be the
|
|
primary object either of party victories or of party negotiations.
|
|
The truth of the principles here advanced seems to have been
|
|
felt by the most intelligent of those who have found fault with the
|
|
provision made, in this respect, by the convention. They contend
|
|
that the President ought solely to have been authorized to make the
|
|
appointments under the federal government. But it is easy to show,
|
|
that every advantage to be expected from such an arrangement would,
|
|
in substance, be derived from the power of NOMINATION, which is
|
|
proposed to be conferred upon him; while several disadvantages
|
|
which might attend the absolute power of appointment in the hands of
|
|
that officer would be avoided. In the act of nomination, his
|
|
judgment alone would be exercised; and as it would be his sole duty
|
|
to point out the man who, with the approbation of the Senate, should
|
|
fill an office, his responsibility would be as complete as if he
|
|
were to make the final appointment. There can, in this view, be no
|
|
difference others, who are to be the objects of our choice or
|
|
preference. Hence, in every exercise of the power of appointing to
|
|
offices, by an assembly of men, we must expect to see a full display
|
|
of all the private and party likings and dislikes, partialities and
|
|
antipathies, attachments and animosities, which are felt by those
|
|
who compose the assembly. The choice which may at any time happen
|
|
to be made under such circumstances, will of course be the result
|
|
either of a victory gained by one party over the other, or of a
|
|
compromise between the parties. In either case, the intrinsic merit
|
|
of the candidate will be too often out of sight. In the first, the
|
|
qualifications best adapted to uniting the suffrages of the party,
|
|
will be more considered than those which fit the person for the
|
|
station. In the last, the coalition will commonly turn upon some
|
|
interested equivalent: ``Give us the man we wish for this office,
|
|
and you shall have the one you wish for that.'' This will be the
|
|
usual condition of the bargain. And it will rarely happen that the
|
|
advancement of the public service will be the primary object either
|
|
of party victories or of party negotiations.
|
|
The truth of the principles here advanced seems to have been
|
|
felt by the most intelligent of those who have found fault with the
|
|
provision made, in this respect, by the convention. They contend
|
|
that the President ought solely to have been authorized to make the
|
|
appointments under the federal government. But it is easy to show,
|
|
that every advantage to be expected from such an arrangement would,
|
|
in substance, be derived from the power of NOMINATION, which is
|
|
proposed to be conferred upon him; while several disadvantages
|
|
which might attend the absolute power of appointment in the hands of
|
|
that officer would be avoided. In the act of nomination, his
|
|
judgment alone would be exercised; and as it would be his sole duty
|
|
to point out the man who, with the approbation of the Senate, should
|
|
fill an office, his responsibility would be as complete as if he
|
|
were to make the final appointment. There can, in this view, be no
|
|
difference between nominating and appointing. The same motives
|
|
which would influence a proper discharge of his duty in one case,
|
|
would exist in the other. And as no man could be appointed but on
|
|
his previous nomination, every man who might be appointed would be,
|
|
in fact, his choice.
|
|
But might not his nomination be overruled? I grant it might,
|
|
yet this could only be to make place for another nomination by
|
|
himself. The person ultimately appointed must be the object of his
|
|
preference, though perhaps not in the first degree. It is also not
|
|
very probable that his nomination would often be overruled. The
|
|
Senate could not be tempted, by the preference they might feel to
|
|
another, to reject the one proposed; because they could not assure
|
|
themselves, that the person they might wish would be brought forward
|
|
by a second or by any subsequent nomination. They could not even be
|
|
certain, that a future nomination would present a candidate in any
|
|
degree more acceptable to them; and as their dissent might cast a
|
|
kind of stigma upon the individual rejected, and might have the
|
|
appearance of a reflection upon the judgment of the chief
|
|
magistrate, it is not likely that their sanction would often be
|
|
refused, where there were not special and strong reasons for the
|
|
refusal.
|
|
To what purpose then require the co-operation of the Senate? I
|
|
answer, that the necessity of their concurrence would have a
|
|
powerful, though, in general, a silent operation. It would be an
|
|
excellent check upon a spirit of favoritism in the President, and
|
|
would tend greatly to prevent the appointment of unfit characters
|
|
from State prejudice, from family connection, from personal
|
|
attachment, or from a view to popularity. In addition to this, it
|
|
would be an efficacious source of stability in the administration.
|
|
It will readily be comprehended, that a man who had himself the
|
|
sole disposition of offices, would be governed much more by his
|
|
private inclinations and interests, than when he was bound to submit
|
|
the propriety of his choice to the discussion and determination of a
|
|
different and independent body, and that body an entier branch of
|
|
the legislature. The possibility of rejection would be a strong
|
|
motive to care in proposing. The danger to his own reputation, and,
|
|
in the case of an elective magistrate, to his political existence,
|
|
from betraying a spirit of favoritism, or an unbecoming pursuit of
|
|
popularity, to the observation of a body whose opinion would have
|
|
great weight in forming that of the public, could not fail to
|
|
operate as a barrier to the one and to the other. He would be both
|
|
ashamed and afraid to bring forward, for the most distinguished or
|
|
lucrative stations, candidates who had no other merit than that of
|
|
coming from the same State to which he particularly belonged, or of
|
|
being in some way or other personally allied to him, or of
|
|
possessing the necessary insignificance and pliancy to render them
|
|
the obsequious instruments of his pleasure.
|
|
To this reasoning it has been objected that the President, by
|
|
the influence of the power of nomination, may secure the
|
|
complaisance of the Senate to his views. This supposition of
|
|
universal venalty in human nature is little less an error in
|
|
political reasoning, than the supposition of universal rectitude.
|
|
The institution of delegated power implies, that there is a portion
|
|
of virtue and honor among mankind, which may be a reasonable
|
|
foundation of confidence; and experience justifies the theory. It
|
|
has been found to exist in the most corrupt periods of the most
|
|
corrupt governments. The venalty of the British House of Commons
|
|
has been long a topic of accusation against that body, in the
|
|
country to which they belong as well as in this; and it cannot be
|
|
doubted that the charge is, to a considerable extent, well founded.
|
|
But it is as little to be doubted, that there is always a large
|
|
proportion of the body, which consists of independent and
|
|
public-spirited men, who have an influential weight in the councils
|
|
of the nation. Hence it is (the present reign not excepted) that
|
|
the sense of that body is often seen to control the inclinations of
|
|
the monarch, both with regard to men and to measures. Though it
|
|
might therefore be allowable to suppose that the Executive might
|
|
occasionally influence some individuals in the Senate, yet the
|
|
supposition, that he could in general purchase the integrity of the
|
|
whole body, would be forced and improbable. A man disposed to view
|
|
human nature as it is, without either flattering its virtues or
|
|
exaggerating its vices, will see sufficient ground of confidence in
|
|
the probity of the Senate, to rest satisfied, not only that it will
|
|
be impracticable to the Executive to corrupt or seduce a majority of
|
|
its members, but that the necessity of its co-operation, in the
|
|
business of appointments, will be a considerable and salutary
|
|
restraint upon the conduct of that magistrate. Nor is the integrity
|
|
of the Senate the only reliance. The Constitution has provided some
|
|
important guards against the danger of executive influence upon the
|
|
legislative body: it declares that ``No senator or representative
|
|
shall during the time FOR WHICH HE WAS ELECTED, be appointed to any
|
|
civil office under the United States, which shall have been created,
|
|
or the emoluments whereof shall have been increased, during such
|
|
time; and no person, holding any office under the United States,
|
|
shall be a member of either house during his continuance in
|
|
office.''
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 77
|
|
|
|
The Appointing Power Continued and Other Powers of the Executive
|
|
Considered
|
|
From the New York Packet.
|
|
Friday, April 4, 1788.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
IT HAS been mentioned as one of the advantages to be expected
|
|
from the co-operation of the Senate, in the business of
|
|
appointments, that it would contribute to the stability of the
|
|
administration. The consent of that body would be necessary to
|
|
displace as well as to appoint. A change of the Chief Magistrate,
|
|
therefore, would not occasion so violent or so general a revolution
|
|
in the officers of the government as might be expected, if he were
|
|
the sole disposer of offices. Where a man in any station had given
|
|
satisfactory evidence of his fitness for it, a new President would
|
|
be restrained from attempting a change in favor of a person more
|
|
agreeable to him, by the apprehension that a discountenance of the
|
|
Senate might frustrate the attempt, and bring some degree of
|
|
discredit upon himself. Those who can best estimate the value of a
|
|
steady administration, will be most disposed to prize a provision
|
|
which connects the official existence of public men with the
|
|
approbation or disapprobation of that body which, from the greater
|
|
permanency of its own composition, will in all probability be less
|
|
subject to inconstancy than any other member of the government.
|
|
To this union of the Senate with the President, in the article
|
|
of appointments, it has in some cases been suggested that it would
|
|
serve to give the President an undue influence over the Senate, and
|
|
in others that it would have an opposite tendency, a strong proof
|
|
that neither suggestion is true.
|
|
To state the first in its proper form, is to refute it. It
|
|
amounts to this: the President would have an improper INFLUENCE
|
|
OVER the Senate, because the Senate would have the power of
|
|
RESTRAINING him. This is an absurdity in terms. It cannot admit of
|
|
a doubt that the entire power of appointment would enable him much
|
|
more effectually to establish a dangerous empire over that body,
|
|
than a mere power of nomination subject to their control.
|
|
Let us take a view of the converse of the proposition: ``the
|
|
Senate would influence the Executive.'' As I have had occasion to
|
|
remark in several other instances, the indistinctness of the
|
|
objection forbids a precise answer. In what manner is this
|
|
influence to be exerted? In relation to what objects? The power of
|
|
influencing a person, in the sense in which it is here used, must
|
|
imply a power of conferring a benefit upon him. How could the
|
|
Senate confer a benefit upon the President by the manner of
|
|
employing their right of negative upon his nominations? If it be
|
|
said they might sometimes gratify him by an acquiescence in a
|
|
favorite choice, when public motives might dictate a different
|
|
conduct, I answer, that the instances in which the President could
|
|
be personally interested in the result, would be too few to admit of
|
|
his being materially affected by the compliances of the Senate. The
|
|
POWER which can ORIGINATE the disposition of honors and emoluments,
|
|
is more likely to attract than to be attracted by the POWER which
|
|
can merely obstruct their course. If by influencing the President
|
|
be meant RESTRAINING him, this is precisely what must have been
|
|
intended. And it has been shown that the restraint would be
|
|
salutary, at the same time that it would not be such as to destroy a
|
|
single advantage to be looked for from the uncontrolled agency of
|
|
that Magistrate. The right of nomination would produce all the good
|
|
of that of appointment, and would in a great measure avoid its evils.
|
|
Upon a comparison of the plan for the appointment of the
|
|
officers of the proposed government with that which is established
|
|
by the constitution of this State, a decided preference must be
|
|
given to the former. In that plan the power of nomination is
|
|
unequivocally vested in the Executive. And as there would be a
|
|
necessity for submitting each nomination to the judgment of an
|
|
entire branch of the legislature, the circumstances attending an
|
|
appointment, from the mode of conducting it, would naturally become
|
|
matters of notoriety; and the public would be at no loss to
|
|
determine what part had been performed by the different actors. The
|
|
blame of a bad nomination would fall upon the President singly and
|
|
absolutely. The censure of rejecting a good one would lie entirely
|
|
at the door of the Senate; aggravated by the consideration of their
|
|
having counteracted the good intentions of the Executive. If an ill
|
|
appointment should be made, the Executive for nominating, and the
|
|
Senate for approving, would participate, though in different
|
|
degrees, in the opprobrium and disgrace.
|
|
The reverse of all this characterizes the manner of appointment
|
|
in this State. The council of appointment consists of from three to
|
|
five persons, of whom the governor is always one. This small body,
|
|
shut up in a private apartment, impenetrable to the public eye,
|
|
proceed to the execution of the trust committed to them. It is
|
|
known that the governor claims the right of nomination, upon the
|
|
strength of some ambiguous expressions in the constitution; but it
|
|
is not known to what extent, or in what manner he exercises it; nor
|
|
upon what occasions he is contradicted or opposed. The censure of a
|
|
bad appointment, on account of the uncertainty of its author, and
|
|
for want of a determinate object, has neither poignancy nor duration.
|
|
And while an unbounded field for cabal and intrigue lies open, all
|
|
idea of responsibility is lost. The most that the public can know,
|
|
is that the governor claims the right of nomination; that TWO out
|
|
of the inconsiderable number of FOUR men can too often be managed
|
|
without much difficulty; that if some of the members of a
|
|
particular council should happen to be of an uncomplying character,
|
|
it is frequently not impossible to get rid of their opposition by
|
|
regulating the times of meeting in such a manner as to render their
|
|
attendance inconvenient; and that from whatever cause it may
|
|
proceed, a great number of very improper appointments are from time
|
|
to time made. Whether a governor of this State avails himself of
|
|
the ascendant he must necessarily have, in this delicate and
|
|
important part of the administration, to prefer to offices men who
|
|
are best qualified for them, or whether he prostitutes that
|
|
advantage to the advancement of persons whose chief merit is their
|
|
implicit devotion to his will, and to the support of a despicable
|
|
and dangerous system of personal influence, are questions which,
|
|
unfortunately for the community, can only be the subjects of
|
|
speculation and conjecture.
|
|
Every mere council of appointment, however constituted, will be
|
|
a conclave, in which cabal and intrigue will have their full scope.
|
|
Their number, without an unwarrantable increase of expense, cannot
|
|
be large enough to preclude a facility of combination. And as each
|
|
member will have his friends and connections to provide for, the
|
|
desire of mutual gratification will beget a scandalous bartering of
|
|
votes and bargaining for places. The private attachments of one man
|
|
might easily be satisfied; but to satisfy the private attachments
|
|
of a dozen, or of twenty men, would occasion a monopoly of all the
|
|
principal employments of the government in a few families, and would
|
|
lead more directly to an aristocracy or an oligarchy than any
|
|
measure that could be contrived. If, to avoid an accumulation of
|
|
offices, there was to be a frequent change in the persons who were
|
|
to compose the council, this would involve the mischiefs of a
|
|
mutable administration in their full extent. Such a council would
|
|
also be more liable to executive influence than the Senate, because
|
|
they would be fewer in number, and would act less immediately under
|
|
the public inspection. Such a council, in fine, as a substitute for
|
|
the plan of the convention, would be productive of an increase of
|
|
expense, a multiplication of the evils which spring from favoritism
|
|
and intrigue in the distribution of public honors, a decrease of
|
|
stability in the administration of the government, and a diminution
|
|
of the security against an undue influence of the Executive. And
|
|
yet such a council has been warmly contended for as an essential
|
|
amendment in the proposed Constitution.
|
|
I could not with propriety conclude my observations on the
|
|
subject of appointments without taking notice of a scheme for which
|
|
there have appeared some, though but few advocates; I mean that of
|
|
uniting the House of Representatives in the power of making them. I
|
|
shall, however, do little more than mention it, as I cannot imagine
|
|
that it is likely to gain the countenance of any considerable part
|
|
of the community. A body so fluctuating and at the same time so
|
|
numerous, can never be deemed proper for the exercise of that power.
|
|
Its unfitness will appear manifest to all, when it is recollected
|
|
that in half a century it may consist of three or four hundred
|
|
persons. All the advantages of the stability, both of the Executive
|
|
and of the Senate, would be defeated by this union, and infinite
|
|
delays and embarrassments would be occasioned. The example of most
|
|
of the States in their local constitutions encourages us to
|
|
reprobate the idea.
|
|
The only remaining powers of the Executive are comprehended in
|
|
giving information to Congress of the state of the Union; in
|
|
recommending to their consideration such measures as he shall judge
|
|
expedient; in convening them, or either branch, upon extraordinary
|
|
occasions; in adjourning them when they cannot themselves agree
|
|
upon the time of adjournment; in receiving ambassadors and other
|
|
public ministers; in faithfully executing the laws; and in
|
|
commissioning all the officers of the United States.
|
|
Except some cavils about the power of convening EITHER house of
|
|
the legislature, and that of receiving ambassadors, no objection has
|
|
been made to this class of authorities; nor could they possibly
|
|
admit of any. It required, indeed, an insatiable avidity for
|
|
censure to invent exceptions to the parts which have been excepted
|
|
to. In regard to the power of convening either house of the
|
|
legislature, I shall barely remark, that in respect to the Senate at
|
|
least, we can readily discover a good reason for it. AS this body
|
|
has a concurrent power with the Executive in the article of
|
|
treaties, it might often be necessary to call it together with a
|
|
view to this object, when it would be unnecessary and improper to
|
|
convene the House of Representatives. As to the reception of
|
|
ambassadors, what I have said in a former paper will furnish a
|
|
sufficient answer.
|
|
We have now completed a survey of the structure and powers of
|
|
the executive department, which, I have endeavored to show,
|
|
combines, as far as republican principles will admit, all the
|
|
requisites to energy. The remaining inquiry is: Does it also
|
|
combine the requisites to safety, in a republican sense, a due
|
|
dependence on the people, a due responsibility? The answer to this
|
|
question has been anticipated in the investigation of its other
|
|
characteristics, and is satisfactorily deducible from these
|
|
circumstances; from the election of the President once in four
|
|
years by persons immediately chosen by the people for that purpose;
|
|
and from his being at all times liable to impeachment, trial,
|
|
dismission from office, incapacity to serve in any other, and to
|
|
forfeiture of life and estate by subsequent prosecution in the
|
|
common course of law. But these precautions, great as they are, are
|
|
not the only ones which the plan of the convention has provided in
|
|
favor of the public security. In the only instances in which the
|
|
abuse of the executive authority was materially to be feared, the
|
|
Chief Magistrate of the United States would, by that plan, be
|
|
subjected to the control of a branch of the legislative body. What
|
|
more could be desired by an enlightened and reasonable people?
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 78
|
|
|
|
The Judiciary Department
|
|
From McLEAN'S Edition, New York.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
WE PROCEED now to an examination of the judiciary department of
|
|
the proposed government.
|
|
In unfolding the defects of the existing Confederation, the
|
|
utility and necessity of a federal judicature have been clearly
|
|
pointed out. It is the less necessary to recapitulate the
|
|
considerations there urged, as the propriety of the institution in
|
|
the abstract is not disputed; the only questions which have been
|
|
raised being relative to the manner of constituting it, and to its
|
|
extent. To these points, therefore, our observations shall be
|
|
confined.
|
|
The manner of constituting it seems to embrace these several
|
|
objects: 1st. The mode of appointing the judges. 2d. The tenure by
|
|
which they are to hold their places. 3d. The partition of the
|
|
judiciary authority between different courts, and their relations to
|
|
each other.
|
|
First. As to the mode of appointing the judges; this is
|
|
the same with that of appointing the officers of the Union in
|
|
general, and has been so fully discussed in the two last numbers,
|
|
that nothing can be said here which would not be useless repetition.
|
|
Second. As to the tenure by which the judges are to hold
|
|
their places; this chiefly concerns their duration in office; the
|
|
provisions for their support; the precautions for their
|
|
responsibility.
|
|
According to the plan of the convention, all judges who may be
|
|
appointed by the United States are to hold their offices DURING GOOD
|
|
BEHAVIOR; which is conformable to the most approved of the State
|
|
constitutions and among the rest, to that of this State. Its
|
|
propriety having been drawn into question by the adversaries of that
|
|
plan, is no light symptom of the rage for objection, which disorders
|
|
their imaginations and judgments. The standard of good behavior for
|
|
the continuance in office of the judicial magistracy, is certainly
|
|
one of the most valuable of the modern improvements in the practice
|
|
of government. In a monarchy it is an excellent barrier to the
|
|
despotism of the prince; in a republic it is a no less excellent
|
|
barrier to the encroachments and oppressions of the representative
|
|
body. And it is the best expedient which can be devised in any
|
|
government, to secure a steady, upright, and impartial
|
|
administration of the laws.
|
|
Whoever attentively considers the different departments of power
|
|
must perceive, that, in a government in which they are separated
|
|
from each other, the judiciary, from the nature of its functions,
|
|
will always be the least dangerous to the political rights of the
|
|
Constitution; because it will be least in a capacity to annoy or
|
|
injure them. The Executive not only dispenses the honors, but holds
|
|
the sword of the community. The legislature not only commands the
|
|
purse, but prescribes the rules by which the duties and rights of
|
|
every citizen are to be regulated. The judiciary, on the contrary,
|
|
has no influence over either the sword or the purse; no direction
|
|
either of the strength or of the wealth of the society; and can
|
|
take no active resolution whatever. It may truly be said to have
|
|
neither FORCE nor WILL, but merely judgment; and must ultimately
|
|
depend upon the aid of the executive arm even for the efficacy of
|
|
its judgments.
|
|
This simple view of the matter suggests several important
|
|
consequences. It proves incontestably, that the judiciary is beyond
|
|
comparison the weakest of the three departments of power1; that
|
|
it can never attack with success either of the other two; and that
|
|
all possible care is requisite to enable it to defend itself against
|
|
their attacks. It equally proves, that though individual oppression
|
|
may now and then proceed from the courts of justice, the general
|
|
liberty of the people can never be endangered from that quarter; I
|
|
mean so long as the judiciary remains truly distinct from both the
|
|
legislature and the Executive. For I agree, that ``there is no
|
|
liberty, if the power of judging be not separated from the
|
|
legislative and executive powers.''2 And it proves, in the last
|
|
place, that as liberty can have nothing to fear from the judiciary
|
|
alone, but would have every thing to fear from its union with either
|
|
of the other departments; that as all the effects of such a union
|
|
must ensue from a dependence of the former on the latter,
|
|
notwithstanding a nominal and apparent separation; that as, from
|
|
the natural feebleness of the judiciary, it is in continual jeopardy
|
|
of being overpowered, awed, or influenced by its co-ordinate
|
|
branches; and that as nothing can contribute so much to its
|
|
firmness and independence as permanency in office, this quality may
|
|
therefore be justly regarded as an indispensable ingredient in its
|
|
constitution, and, in a great measure, as the citadel of the public
|
|
justice and the public security.
|
|
The complete independence of the courts of justice is peculiarly
|
|
essential in a limited Constitution. By a limited Constitution, I
|
|
understand one which contains certain specified exceptions to the
|
|
legislative authority; such, for instance, as that it shall pass no
|
|
bills of attainder, no ex-post-facto laws, and the like.
|
|
Limitations of this kind can be preserved in practice no other way
|
|
than through the medium of courts of justice, whose duty it must be
|
|
to declare all acts contrary to the manifest tenor of the
|
|
Constitution void. Without this, all the reservations of particular
|
|
rights or privileges would amount to nothing.
|
|
Some perplexity respecting the rights of the courts to pronounce
|
|
legislative acts void, because contrary to the Constitution, has
|
|
arisen from an imagination that the doctrine would imply a
|
|
superiority of the judiciary to the legislative power. It is urged
|
|
that the authority which can declare the acts of another void, must
|
|
necessarily be superior to the one whose acts may be declared void.
|
|
As this doctrine is of great importance in all the American
|
|
constitutions, a brief discussion of the ground on which it rests
|
|
cannot be unacceptable.
|
|
There is no position which depends on clearer principles, than
|
|
that every act of a delegated authority, contrary to the tenor of
|
|
the commission under which it is exercised, is void. No legislative
|
|
act, therefore, contrary to the Constitution, can be valid. To deny
|
|
this, would be to affirm, that the deputy is greater than his
|
|
principal; that the servant is above his master; that the
|
|
representatives of the people are superior to the people themselves;
|
|
that men acting by virtue of powers, may do not only what their
|
|
powers do not authorize, but what they forbid.
|
|
If it be said that the legislative body are themselves the
|
|
constitutional judges of their own powers, and that the construction
|
|
they put upon them is conclusive upon the other departments, it may
|
|
be answered, that this cannot be the natural presumption, where it
|
|
is not to be collected from any particular provisions in the
|
|
Constitution. It is not otherwise to be supposed, that the
|
|
Constitution could intend to enable the representatives of the
|
|
people to substitute their WILL to that of their constituents. It
|
|
is far more rational to suppose, that the courts were designed to be
|
|
an intermediate body between the people and the legislature, in
|
|
order, among other things, to keep the latter within the limits
|
|
assigned to their authority. The interpretation of the laws is the
|
|
proper and peculiar province of the courts. A constitution is, in
|
|
fact, and must be regarded by the judges, as a fundamental law. It
|
|
therefore belongs to them to ascertain its meaning, as well as the
|
|
meaning of any particular act proceeding from the legislative body.
|
|
If there should happen to be an irreconcilable variance between the
|
|
two, that which has the superior obligation and validity ought, of
|
|
course, to be preferred; or, in other words, the Constitution ought
|
|
to be preferred to the statute, the intention of the people to the
|
|
intention of their agents.
|
|
Nor does this conclusion by any means suppose a superiority of
|
|
the judicial to the legislative power. It only supposes that the
|
|
power of the people is superior to both; and that where the will of
|
|
the legislature, declared in its statutes, stands in opposition to
|
|
that of the people, declared in the Constitution, the judges ought
|
|
to be governed by the latter rather than the former. They ought to
|
|
regulate their decisions by the fundamental laws, rather than by
|
|
those which are not fundamental.
|
|
This exercise of judicial discretion, in determining between two
|
|
contradictory laws, is exemplified in a familiar instance. It not
|
|
uncommonly happens, that there are two statutes existing at one
|
|
time, clashing in whole or in part with each other, and neither of
|
|
them containing any repealing clause or expression. In such a case,
|
|
it is the province of the courts to liquidate and fix their meaning
|
|
and operation. So far as they can, by any fair construction, be
|
|
reconciled to each other, reason and law conspire to dictate that
|
|
this should be done; where this is impracticable, it becomes a
|
|
matter of necessity to give effect to one, in exclusion of the other.
|
|
The rule which has obtained in the courts for determining their
|
|
relative validity is, that the last in order of time shall be
|
|
preferred to the first. But this is a mere rule of construction,
|
|
not derived from any positive law, but from the nature and reason of
|
|
the thing. It is a rule not enjoined upon the courts by legislative
|
|
provision, but adopted by themselves, as consonant to truth and
|
|
propriety, for the direction of their conduct as interpreters of the
|
|
law. They thought it reasonable, that between the interfering acts
|
|
of an EQUAL authority, that which was the last indication of its
|
|
will should have the preference.
|
|
But in regard to the interfering acts of a superior and
|
|
subordinate authority, of an original and derivative power, the
|
|
nature and reason of the thing indicate the converse of that rule as
|
|
proper to be followed. They teach us that the prior act of a
|
|
superior ought to be preferred to the subsequent act of an inferior
|
|
and subordinate authority; and that accordingly, whenever a
|
|
particular statute contravenes the Constitution, it will be the duty
|
|
of the judicial tribunals to adhere to the latter and disregard the
|
|
former.
|
|
It can be of no weight to say that the courts, on the pretense
|
|
of a repugnancy, may substitute their own pleasure to the
|
|
constitutional intentions of the legislature. This might as well
|
|
happen in the case of two contradictory statutes; or it might as
|
|
well happen in every adjudication upon any single statute. The
|
|
courts must declare the sense of the law; and if they should be
|
|
disposed to exercise WILL instead of JUDGMENT, the consequence would
|
|
equally be the substitution of their pleasure to that of the
|
|
legislative body. The observation, if it prove any thing, would
|
|
prove that there ought to be no judges distinct from that body.
|
|
If, then, the courts of justice are to be considered as the
|
|
bulwarks of a limited Constitution against legislative
|
|
encroachments, this consideration will afford a strong argument for
|
|
the permanent tenure of judicial offices, since nothing will
|
|
contribute so much as this to that independent spirit in the judges
|
|
which must be essential to the faithful performance of so arduous a
|
|
duty.
|
|
This independence of the judges is equally requisite to guard
|
|
the Constitution and the rights of individuals from the effects of
|
|
those ill humors, which the arts of designing men, or the influence
|
|
of particular conjunctures, sometimes disseminate among the people
|
|
themselves, and which, though they speedily give place to better
|
|
information, and more deliberate reflection, have a tendency, in the
|
|
meantime, to occasion dangerous innovations in the government, and
|
|
serious oppressions of the minor party in the community. Though I
|
|
trust the friends of the proposed Constitution will never concur
|
|
with its enemies,3 in questioning that fundamental principle of
|
|
republican government, which admits the right of the people to alter
|
|
or abolish the established Constitution, whenever they find it
|
|
inconsistent with their happiness, yet it is not to be inferred from
|
|
this principle, that the representatives of the people, whenever a
|
|
momentary inclination happens to lay hold of a majority of their
|
|
constituents, incompatible with the provisions in the existing
|
|
Constitution, would, on that account, be justifiable in a violation
|
|
of those provisions; or that the courts would be under a greater
|
|
obligation to connive at infractions in this shape, than when they
|
|
had proceeded wholly from the cabals of the representative body.
|
|
Until the people have, by some solemn and authoritative act,
|
|
annulled or changed the established form, it is binding upon
|
|
themselves collectively, as well as individually; and no
|
|
presumption, or even knowledge, of their sentiments, can warrant
|
|
their representatives in a departure from it, prior to such an act.
|
|
But it is easy to see, that it would require an uncommon portion of
|
|
fortitude in the judges to do their duty as faithful guardians of
|
|
the Constitution, where legislative invasions of it had been
|
|
instigated by the major voice of the community.
|
|
But it is not with a view to infractions of the Constitution
|
|
only, that the independence of the judges may be an essential
|
|
safeguard against the effects of occasional ill humors in the
|
|
society. These sometimes extend no farther than to the injury of
|
|
the private rights of particular classes of citizens, by unjust and
|
|
partial laws. Here also the firmness of the judicial magistracy is
|
|
of vast importance in mitigating the severity and confining the
|
|
operation of such laws. It not only serves to moderate the
|
|
immediate mischiefs of those which may have been passed, but it
|
|
operates as a check upon the legislative body in passing them; who,
|
|
perceiving that obstacles to the success of iniquitous intention are
|
|
to be expected from the scruples of the courts, are in a manner
|
|
compelled, by the very motives of the injustice they meditate, to
|
|
qualify their attempts. This is a circumstance calculated to have
|
|
more influence upon the character of our governments, than but few
|
|
may be aware of. The benefits of the integrity and moderation of
|
|
the judiciary have already been felt in more States than one; and
|
|
though they may have displeased those whose sinister expectations
|
|
they may have disappointed, they must have commanded the esteem and
|
|
applause of all the virtuous and disinterested. Considerate men, of
|
|
every description, ought to prize whatever will tend to beget or
|
|
fortify that temper in the courts: as no man can be sure that he
|
|
may not be to-morrow the victim of a spirit of injustice, by which
|
|
he may be a gainer to-day. And every man must now feel, that the
|
|
inevitable tendency of such a spirit is to sap the foundations of
|
|
public and private confidence, and to introduce in its stead
|
|
universal distrust and distress.
|
|
That inflexible and uniform adherence to the rights of the
|
|
Constitution, and of individuals, which we perceive to be
|
|
indispensable in the courts of justice, can certainly not be
|
|
expected from judges who hold their offices by a temporary
|
|
commission. Periodical appointments, however regulated, or by
|
|
whomsoever made, would, in some way or other, be fatal to their
|
|
necessary independence. If the power of making them was committed
|
|
either to the Executive or legislature, there would be danger of an
|
|
improper complaisance to the branch which possessed it; if to both,
|
|
there would be an unwillingness to hazard the displeasure of either;
|
|
if to the people, or to persons chosen by them for the special
|
|
purpose, there would be too great a disposition to consult
|
|
popularity, to justify a reliance that nothing would be consulted
|
|
but the Constitution and the laws.
|
|
There is yet a further and a weightier reason for the permanency
|
|
of the judicial offices, which is deducible from the nature of the
|
|
qualifications they require. It has been frequently remarked, with
|
|
great propriety, that a voluminous code of laws is one of the
|
|
inconveniences necessarily connected with the advantages of a free
|
|
government. To avoid an arbitrary discretion in the courts, it is
|
|
indispensable that they should be bound down by strict rules and
|
|
precedents, which serve to define and point out their duty in every
|
|
particular case that comes before them; and it will readily be
|
|
conceived from the variety of controversies which grow out of the
|
|
folly and wickedness of mankind, that the records of those
|
|
precedents must unavoidably swell to a very considerable bulk, and
|
|
must demand long and laborious study to acquire a competent
|
|
knowledge of them. Hence it is, that there can be but few men in
|
|
the society who will have sufficient skill in the laws to qualify
|
|
them for the stations of judges. And making the proper deductions
|
|
for the ordinary depravity of human nature, the number must be still
|
|
smaller of those who unite the requisite integrity with the
|
|
requisite knowledge. These considerations apprise us, that the
|
|
government can have no great option between fit character; and that
|
|
a temporary duration in office, which would naturally discourage
|
|
such characters from quitting a lucrative line of practice to accept
|
|
a seat on the bench, would have a tendency to throw the
|
|
administration of justice into hands less able, and less well
|
|
qualified, to conduct it with utility and dignity. In the present
|
|
circumstances of this country, and in those in which it is likely to
|
|
be for a long time to come, the disadvantages on this score would be
|
|
greater than they may at first sight appear; but it must be
|
|
confessed, that they are far inferior to those which present
|
|
themselves under the other aspects of the subject.
|
|
Upon the whole, there can be no room to doubt that the
|
|
convention acted wisely in copying from the models of those
|
|
constitutions which have established GOOD BEHAVIOR as the tenure of
|
|
their judicial offices, in point of duration; and that so far from
|
|
being blamable on this account, their plan would have been
|
|
inexcusably defective, if it had wanted this important feature of
|
|
good government. The experience of Great Britain affords an
|
|
illustrious comment on the excellence of the institution.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
1 The celebrated Montesquieu, speaking of them, says: ``Of the
|
|
three powers above mentioned, the judiciary is next to
|
|
nothing.'' ``Spirit of Laws.'' vol. i., page 186.
|
|
2 Idem, page 181.
|
|
3 Vide ``Protest of the Minority of the Convention of
|
|
Pennsylvania,'' Martin's Speech, etc.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 79
|
|
|
|
The Judiciary Continued
|
|
From MCLEAN's Edition, New York.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
NEXT to permanency in office, nothing can contribute more to the
|
|
independence of the judges than a fixed provision for their support.
|
|
The remark made in relation to the President is equally applicable
|
|
here. In the general course of human nature, A POWER OVER A MAN's
|
|
SUBSISTENCE AMOUNTS TO A POWER OVER HIS WILL. And we can never hope
|
|
to see realized in practice, the complete separation of the judicial
|
|
from the legislative power, in any system which leaves the former
|
|
dependent for pecuniary resources on the occasional grants of the
|
|
latter. The enlightened friends to good government in every State,
|
|
have seen cause to lament the want of precise and explicit
|
|
precautions in the State constitutions on this head. Some of these
|
|
indeed have declared that PERMANENT1 salaries should be
|
|
established for the judges; but the experiment has in some
|
|
instances shown that such expressions are not sufficiently definite
|
|
to preclude legislative evasions. Something still more positive and
|
|
unequivocal has been evinced to be requisite. The plan of the
|
|
convention accordingly has provided that the judges of the United
|
|
States ``shall at STATED TIMES receive for their services a
|
|
compensation which shall not be DIMINISHED during their continuance
|
|
in office.''
|
|
This, all circumstances considered, is the most eligible
|
|
provision that could have been devised. It will readily be
|
|
understood that the fluctuations in the value of money and in the
|
|
state of society rendered a fixed rate of compensation in the
|
|
Constitution inadmissible. What might be extravagant to-day, might
|
|
in half a century become penurious and inadequate. It was therefore
|
|
necessary to leave it to the discretion of the legislature to vary
|
|
its provisions in conformity to the variations in circumstances, yet
|
|
under such restrictions as to put it out of the power of that body
|
|
to change the condition of the individual for the worse. A man may
|
|
then be sure of the ground upon which he stands, and can never be
|
|
deterred from his duty by the apprehension of being placed in a less
|
|
eligible situation. The clause which has been quoted combines both
|
|
advantages. The salaries of judicial officers may from time to time
|
|
be altered, as occasion shall require, yet so as never to lessen the
|
|
allowance with which any particular judge comes into office, in
|
|
respect to him. It will be observed that a difference has been made
|
|
by the convention between the compensation of the President and of
|
|
the judges, That of the former can neither be increased nor
|
|
diminished; that of the latter can only not be diminished. This
|
|
probably arose from the difference in the duration of the respective
|
|
offices. As the President is to be elected for no more than four
|
|
years, it can rarely happen that an adequate salary, fixed at the
|
|
commencement of that period, will not continue to be such to its end.
|
|
But with regard to the judges, who, if they behave properly, will
|
|
be secured in their places for life, it may well happen, especially
|
|
in the early stages of the government, that a stipend, which would
|
|
be very sufficient at their first appointment, would become too
|
|
small in the progress of their service.
|
|
This provision for the support of the judges bears every mark of
|
|
prudence and efficacy; and it may be safely affirmed that, together
|
|
with the permanent tenure of their offices, it affords a better
|
|
prospect of their independence than is discoverable in the
|
|
constitutions of any of the States in regard to their own judges.
|
|
The precautions for their responsibility are comprised in the
|
|
article respecting impeachments. They are liable to be impeached
|
|
for malconduct by the House of Representatives, and tried by the
|
|
Senate; and, if convicted, may be dismissed from office, and
|
|
disqualified for holding any other. This is the only provision on
|
|
the point which is consistent with the necessary independence of the
|
|
judicial character, and is the only one which we find in our own
|
|
Constitution in respect to our own judges.
|
|
The want of a provision for removing the judges on account of
|
|
inability has been a subject of complaint. But all considerate men
|
|
will be sensible that such a provision would either not be practiced
|
|
upon or would be more liable to abuse than calculated to answer any
|
|
good purpose. The mensuration of the faculties of the mind has, I
|
|
believe, no place in the catalogue of known arts. An attempt to fix
|
|
the boundary between the regions of ability and inability, would
|
|
much oftener give scope to personal and party attachments and
|
|
enmities than advance the interests of justice or the public good.
|
|
The result, except in the case of insanity, must for the most part
|
|
be arbitrary; and insanity, without any formal or express
|
|
provision, may be safely pronounced to be a virtual disqualification.
|
|
The constitution of New York, to avoid investigations that must
|
|
forever be vague and dangerous, has taken a particular age as the
|
|
criterion of inability. No man can be a judge beyond sixty. I
|
|
believe there are few at present who do not disapprove of this
|
|
provision. There is no station, in relation to which it is less
|
|
proper than to that of a judge. The deliberating and comparing
|
|
faculties generally preserve their strength much beyond that period
|
|
in men who survive it; and when, in addition to this circumstance,
|
|
we consider how few there are who outlive the season of intellectual
|
|
vigor, and how improbable it is that any considerable portion of the
|
|
bench, whether more or less numerous, should be in such a situation
|
|
at the same time, we shall be ready to conclude that limitations of
|
|
this sort have little to recommend them. In a republic, where
|
|
fortunes are not affluent, and pensions not expedient, the
|
|
dismission of men from stations in which they have served their
|
|
country long and usefully, on which they depend for subsistence, and
|
|
from which it will be too late to resort to any other occupation for
|
|
a livelihood, ought to have some better apology to humanity than is
|
|
to be found in the imaginary danger of a superannuated bench.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
1 Vide ``Constitution of Massachusetts,'' chapter 2, section
|
|
I, article 13.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 80
|
|
The Powers of the Judiciary
|
|
From McLEAN's Edition, New York.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
To JUDGE with accuracy of the proper extent of the federal
|
|
judicature, it will be necessary to consider, in the first place,
|
|
what are its proper objects.
|
|
It seems scarcely to admit of controversy, that the judicary
|
|
authority of the Union ought to extend to these several descriptions
|
|
of cases: 1st, to all those which arise out of the laws of the
|
|
United States, passed in pursuance of their just and constitutional
|
|
powers of legislation; 2d, to all those which concern the execution
|
|
of the provisions expressly contained in the articles of Union; 3d,
|
|
to all those in which the United States are a party; 4th, to all
|
|
those which involve the PEACE of the CONFEDERACY, whether they
|
|
relate to the intercourse between the United States and foreign
|
|
nations, or to that between the States themselves; 5th, to all
|
|
those which originate on the high seas, and are of admiralty or
|
|
maritime jurisdiction; and, lastly, to all those in which the State
|
|
tribunals cannot be supposed to be impartial and unbiased.
|
|
The first point depends upon this obvious consideration, that
|
|
there ought always to be a constitutional method of giving efficacy
|
|
to constitutional provisions. What, for instance, would avail
|
|
restrictions on the authority of the State legislatures, without
|
|
some constitutional mode of enforcing the observance of them? The
|
|
States, by the plan of the convention, are prohibited from doing a
|
|
variety of things, some of which are incompatible with the interests
|
|
of the Union, and others with the principles of good government.
|
|
The imposition of duties on imported articles, and the emission of
|
|
paper money, are specimens of each kind. No man of sense will
|
|
believe, that such prohibitions would be scrupulously regarded,
|
|
without some effectual power in the government to restrain or
|
|
correct the infractions of them. This power must either be a direct
|
|
negative on the State laws, or an authority in the federal courts to
|
|
overrule such as might be in manifest contravention of the articles
|
|
of Union. There is no third course that I can imagine. The latter
|
|
appears to have been thought by the convention preferable to the
|
|
former, and, I presume, will be most agreeable to the States.
|
|
As to the second point, it is impossible, by any argument or
|
|
comment, to make it clearer than it is in itself. If there are such
|
|
things as political axioms, the propriety of the judicial power of a
|
|
government being coextensive with its legislative, may be ranked
|
|
among the number. The mere necessity of uniformity in the
|
|
interpretation of the national laws, decides the question. Thirteen
|
|
independent courts of final jurisdiction over the same causes,
|
|
arising upon the same laws, is a hydra in government, from which
|
|
nothing but contradiction and confusion can proceed.
|
|
Still less need be said in regard to the third point.
|
|
Controversies between the nation and its members or citizens, can
|
|
only be properly referred to the national tribunals. Any other plan
|
|
would be contrary to reason, to precedent, and to decorum.
|
|
The fourth point rests on this plain proposition, that the peace
|
|
of the WHOLE ought not to be left at the disposal of a PART. The
|
|
Union will undoubtedly be answerable to foreign powers for the
|
|
conduct of its members. And the responsibility for an injury ought
|
|
ever to be accompanied with the faculty of preventing it. As the
|
|
denial or perversion of justice by the sentences of courts, as well
|
|
as in any other manner, is with reason classed among the just causes
|
|
of war, it will follow that the federal judiciary ought to have
|
|
cognizance of all causes in which the citizens of other countries
|
|
are concerned. This is not less essential to the preservation of
|
|
the public faith, than to the security of the public tranquillity.
|
|
A distinction may perhaps be imagined between cases arising upon
|
|
treaties and the laws of nations and those which may stand merely on
|
|
the footing of the municipal law. The former kind may be supposed
|
|
proper for the federal jurisdiction, the latter for that of the
|
|
States. But it is at least problematical, whether an unjust
|
|
sentence against a foreigner, where the subject of controversy was
|
|
wholly relative to the lex loci, would not, if unredressed, be
|
|
an aggression upon his sovereign, as well as one which violated the
|
|
stipulations of a treaty or the general law of nations. And a still
|
|
greater objection to the distinction would result from the immense
|
|
difficulty, if not impossibility, of a practical discrimination
|
|
between the cases of one complexion and those of the other. So
|
|
great a proportion of the cases in which foreigners are parties,
|
|
involve national questions, that it is by far most safe and most
|
|
expedient to refer all those in which they are concerned to the
|
|
national tribunals.
|
|
The power of determining causes between two States, between one
|
|
State and the citizens of another, and between the citizens of
|
|
different States, is perhaps not less essential to the peace of the
|
|
Union than that which has been just examined. History gives us a
|
|
horrid picture of the dissensions and private wars which distracted
|
|
and desolated Germany prior to the institution of the Imperial
|
|
Chamber by Maximilian, towards the close of the fifteenth century;
|
|
and informs us, at the same time, of the vast influence of that
|
|
institution in appeasing the disorders and establishing the
|
|
tranquillity of the empire. This was a court invested with
|
|
authority to decide finally all differences among the members of the
|
|
Germanic body.
|
|
A method of terminating territorial disputes between the States,
|
|
under the authority of the federal head, was not unattended to, even
|
|
in the imperfect system by which they have been hitherto held
|
|
together. But there are many other sources, besides interfering
|
|
claims of boundary, from which bickerings and animosities may spring
|
|
up among the members of the Union. To some of these we have been
|
|
witnesses in the course of our past experience. It will readily be
|
|
conjectured that I allude to the fraudulent laws which have been
|
|
passed in too many of the States. And though the proposed
|
|
Constitution establishes particular guards against the repetition of
|
|
those instances which have heretofore made their appearance, yet it
|
|
is warrantable to apprehend that the spirit which produced them will
|
|
assume new shapes, that could not be foreseen nor specifically
|
|
provided against. Whatever practices may have a tendency to disturb
|
|
the harmony between the States, are proper objects of federal
|
|
superintendence and control.
|
|
It may be esteemed the basis of the Union, that ``the citizens
|
|
of each State shall be entitled to all the privileges and immunities
|
|
of citizens of the several States.'' And if it be a just principle
|
|
that every government OUGHT TO POSSESS THE MEANS OF EXECUTING ITS
|
|
OWN PROVISIONS BY ITS OWN AUTHORITY, it will follow, that in order
|
|
to the inviolable maintenance of that equality of privileges and
|
|
immunities to which the citizens of the Union will be entitled, the
|
|
national judiciary ought to preside in all cases in which one State
|
|
or its citizens are opposed to another State or its citizens. To
|
|
secure the full effect of so fundamental a provision against all
|
|
evasion and subterfuge, it is necessary that its construction should
|
|
be committed to that tribunal which, having no local attachments,
|
|
will be likely to be impartial between the different States and
|
|
their citizens, and which, owing its official existence to the
|
|
Union, will never be likely to feel any bias inauspicious to the
|
|
principles on which it is founded.
|
|
The fifth point will demand little animadversion. The most
|
|
bigoted idolizers of State authority have not thus far shown a
|
|
disposition to deny the national judiciary the cognizances of
|
|
maritime causes. These so generally depend on the laws of nations,
|
|
and so commonly affect the rights of foreigners, that they fall
|
|
within the considerations which are relative to the public peace.
|
|
The most important part of them are, by the present Confederation,
|
|
submitted to federal jurisdiction.
|
|
The reasonableness of the agency of the national courts in cases
|
|
in which the State tribunals cannot be supposed to be impartial,
|
|
speaks for itself. No man ought certainly to be a judge in his own
|
|
cause, or in any cause in respect to which he has the least interest
|
|
or bias. This principle has no inconsiderable weight in designating
|
|
the federal courts as the proper tribunals for the determination of
|
|
controversies between different States and their citizens. And it
|
|
ought to have the same operation in regard to some cases between
|
|
citizens of the same State. Claims to land under grants of
|
|
different States, founded upon adverse pretensions of boundary, are
|
|
of this description. The courts of neither of the granting States
|
|
could be expected to be unbiased. The laws may have even prejudged
|
|
the question, and tied the courts down to decisions in favor of the
|
|
grants of the State to which they belonged. And even where this had
|
|
not been done, it would be natural that the judges, as men, should
|
|
feel a strong predilection to the claims of their own government.
|
|
Having thus laid down and discussed the principles which ought
|
|
to regulate the constitution of the federal judiciary, we will
|
|
proceed to test, by these principles, the particular powers of
|
|
which, according to the plan of the convention, it is to be composed.
|
|
It is to comprehend ``all cases in law and equity arising under
|
|
the Constitution, the laws of the United States, and treaties made,
|
|
or which shall be made, under their authority; to all cases
|
|
affecting ambassadors, other public ministers, and consuls; to all
|
|
cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction; to controversies to
|
|
which the United States shall be a party; to controversies between
|
|
two or more States; between a State and citizens of another State;
|
|
between citizens of different States; between citizens of the same
|
|
State claiming lands and grants of different States; and between a
|
|
State or the citizens thereof and foreign states, citizens, and
|
|
subjects.'' This constitutes the entire mass of the judicial
|
|
authority of the Union. Let us now review it in detail. It is,
|
|
then, to extend:
|
|
First. To all cases in law and equity, ARISING UNDER THE
|
|
CONSTITUTION and THE LAWS OF THE UNITED STATES. This corresponds
|
|
with the two first classes of causes, which have been enumerated, as
|
|
proper for the jurisdiction of the United States. It has been
|
|
asked, what is meant by ``cases arising under the Constitution,'' in
|
|
contradiction from those ``arising under the laws of the United
|
|
States''? The difference has been already explained. All the
|
|
restrictions upon the authority of the State legislatures furnish
|
|
examples of it. They are not, for instance, to emit paper money;
|
|
but the interdiction results from the Constitution, and will have
|
|
no connection with any law of the United States. Should paper
|
|
money, notwithstanding, be emited, the controversies concerning it
|
|
would be cases arising under the Constitution and not the laws of
|
|
the United States, in the ordinary signification of the terms. This
|
|
may serve as a sample of the whole.
|
|
It has also been asked, what need of the word ``equity What
|
|
equitable causes can grow out of the Constitution and laws of the
|
|
United States? There is hardly a subject of litigation between
|
|
individuals, which may not involve those ingredients of FRAUD,
|
|
ACCIDENT, TRUST, or HARDSHIP, which would render the matter an
|
|
object of equitable rather than of legal jurisdiction, as the
|
|
distinction is known and established in several of the States. It
|
|
is the peculiar province, for instance, of a court of equity to
|
|
relieve against what are called hard bargains: these are contracts
|
|
in which, though there may have been no direct fraud or deceit,
|
|
sufficient to invalidate them in a court of law, yet there may have
|
|
been some undue and unconscionable advantage taken of the
|
|
necessities or misfortunes of one of the parties, which a court of
|
|
equity would not tolerate. In such cases, where foreigners were
|
|
concerned on either side, it would be impossible for the federal
|
|
judicatories to do justice without an equitable as well as a legal
|
|
jurisdiction. Agreements to convey lands claimed under the grants
|
|
of different States, may afford another example of the necessity of
|
|
an equitable jurisdiction in the federal courts. This reasoning may
|
|
not be so palpable in those States where the formal and technical
|
|
distinction between LAW and EQUITY is not maintained, as in this
|
|
State, where it is exemplified by every day's practice.
|
|
The judiciary authority of the Union is to extend:
|
|
Second. To treaties made, or which shall be made, under the
|
|
authority of the United States, and to all cases affecting
|
|
ambassadors, other public ministers, and consuls. These belong to
|
|
the fourth class of the enumerated cases, as they have an evident
|
|
connection with the preservation of the national peace.
|
|
Third. To cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction.
|
|
These form, altogether, the fifth of the enumerated classes of
|
|
causes proper for the cognizance of the national courts.
|
|
Fourth. To controversies to which the United States shall be
|
|
a party. These constitute the third of those classes.
|
|
Fifth. To controversies between two or more States; between
|
|
a State and citizens of another State; between citizens of
|
|
different States. These belong to the fourth of those classes, and
|
|
partake, in some measure, of the nature of the last.
|
|
Sixth. To cases between the citizens of the same State,
|
|
CLAIMING LANDS UNDER GRANTS OF DIFFERENT STATES. These fall within
|
|
the last class, and ARE THE ONLY INSTANCES IN WHICH THE PROPOSED
|
|
CONSTITUTION DIRECTLY CONTEMPLATES THE COGNIZANCE OF DISPUTES
|
|
BETWEEN THE CITIZENS OF THE SAME STATE.
|
|
Seventh. To cases between a State and the citizens thereof,
|
|
and foreign States, citizens, or subjects. These have been already
|
|
explained to belong to the fourth of the enumerated classes, and
|
|
have been shown to be, in a peculiar manner, the proper subjects of
|
|
the national judicature.
|
|
From this review of the particular powers of the federal
|
|
judiciary, as marked out in the Constitution, it appears that they
|
|
are all conformable to the principles which ought to have governed
|
|
the structure of that department, and which were necessary to the
|
|
perfection of the system. If some partial inconviences should
|
|
appear to be connected with the incorporation of any of them into
|
|
the plan, it ought to be recollected that the national legislature
|
|
will have ample authority to make such EXCEPTIONS, and to prescribe
|
|
such regulations as will be calculated to obviate or remove these
|
|
inconveniences. The possibility of particular mischiefs can never
|
|
be viewed, by a wellinformed mind, as a solid objection to a general
|
|
principle, which is calculated to avoid general mischiefs and to
|
|
obtain general advantages.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST. No. 81
|
|
|
|
The Judiciary Continued, and the Distribution of the Judicial
|
|
Authority
|
|
From McLEAN's Edition, New York.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
LET US now return to the partition of the judiciary authority
|
|
between different courts, and their relations to each other,
|
|
``The judicial power of the United States is'' (by the plan of
|
|
the convention) ``to be vested in one Supreme Court, and in such
|
|
inferior courts as the Congress may, from time to time, ordain and
|
|
establish.''1
|
|
That there ought to be one court of supreme and final
|
|
jurisdiction, is a proposition which is not likely to be contested.
|
|
The reasons for it have been assigned in another place, and are too
|
|
obvious to need repetition. The only question that seems to have
|
|
been raised concerning it, is, whether it ought to be a distinct
|
|
body or a branch of the legislature. The same contradiction is
|
|
observable in regard to this matter which has been remarked in
|
|
several other cases. The very men who object to the Senate as a
|
|
court of impeachments, on the ground of an improper intermixture of
|
|
powers, advocate, by implication at least, the propriety of vesting
|
|
the ultimate decision of all causes, in the whole or in a part of
|
|
the legislative body.
|
|
The arguments, or rather suggestions, upon which this charge is
|
|
founded, are to this effect: ``The authority of the proposed
|
|
Supreme Court of the United States, which is to be a separate and
|
|
independent body, will be superior to that of the legislature. The
|
|
power of construing the laws according to the SPIRIT of the
|
|
Constitution, will enable that court to mould them into whatever
|
|
shape it may think proper; especially as its decisions will not be
|
|
in any manner subject to the revision or correction of the
|
|
legislative body. This is as unprecedented as it is dangerous. In
|
|
Britain, the judical power, in the last resort, resides in the House
|
|
of Lords, which is a branch of the legislature; and this part of
|
|
the British government has been imitated in the State constitutions
|
|
in general. The Parliament of Great Britain, and the legislatures
|
|
of the several States, can at any time rectify, by law, the
|
|
exceptionable decisions of their respective courts. But the errors
|
|
and usurpations of the Supreme Court of the United States will be
|
|
uncontrollable and remediless.'' This, upon examination, will be
|
|
found to be made up altogether of false reasoning upon misconceived
|
|
fact.
|
|
In the first place, there is not a syllable in the plan under
|
|
consideration which DIRECTLY empowers the national courts to
|
|
construe the laws according to the spirit of the Constitution, or
|
|
which gives them any greater latitude in this respect than may be
|
|
claimed by the courts of every State. I admit, however, that the
|
|
Constitution ought to be the standard of construction for the laws,
|
|
and that wherever there is an evident opposition, the laws ought to
|
|
give place to the Constitution. But this doctrine is not deducible
|
|
from any circumstance peculiar to the plan of the convention, but
|
|
from the general theory of a limited Constitution; and as far as it
|
|
is true, is equally applicable to most, if not to all the State
|
|
governments. There can be no objection, therefore, on this account,
|
|
to the federal judicature which will not lie against the local
|
|
judicatures in general, and which will not serve to condemn every
|
|
constitution that attempts to set bounds to legislative discretion.
|
|
But perhaps the force of the objection may be thought to consist
|
|
in the particular organization of the Supreme Court; in its being
|
|
composed of a distinct body of magistrates, instead of being one of
|
|
the branches of the legislature, as in the government of Great
|
|
Britain and that of the State. To insist upon this point, the
|
|
authors of the objection must renounce the meaning they have labored
|
|
to annex to the celebrated maxim, requiring a separation of the
|
|
departments of power. It shall, nevertheless, be conceded to them,
|
|
agreeably to the interpretation given to that maxim in the course of
|
|
these papers, that it is not violated by vesting the ultimate power
|
|
of judging in a PART of the legislative body. But though this be
|
|
not an absolute violation of that excellent rule, yet it verges so
|
|
nearly upon it, as on this account alone to be less eligible than
|
|
the mode preferred by the convention. From a body which had even a
|
|
partial agency in passing bad laws, we could rarely expect a
|
|
disposition to temper and moderate them in the application. The
|
|
same spirit which had operated in making them, would be too apt in
|
|
interpreting them; still less could it be expected that men who had
|
|
infringed the Constitution in the character of legislators, would be
|
|
disposed to repair the breach in the character of judges. Nor is
|
|
this all. Every reason which recommends the tenure of good behavior
|
|
for judicial offices, militates against placing the judiciary power,
|
|
in the last resort, in a body composed of men chosen for a limited
|
|
period. There is an absurdity in referring the determination of
|
|
causes, in the first instance, to judges of permanent standing; in
|
|
the last, to those of a temporary and mutable constitution. And
|
|
there is a still greater absurdity in subjecting the decisions of
|
|
men, selected for their knowledge of the laws, acquired by long and
|
|
laborious study, to the revision and control of men who, for want of
|
|
the same advantage, cannot but be deficient in that knowledge. The
|
|
members of the legislature will rarely be chosen with a view to
|
|
those qualifications which fit men for the stations of judges; and
|
|
as, on this account, there will be great reason to apprehend all the
|
|
ill consequences of defective information, so, on account of the
|
|
natural propensity of such bodies to party divisions, there will be
|
|
no less reason to fear that the pestilential breath of faction may
|
|
poison the fountains of justice. The habit of being continually
|
|
marshalled on opposite sides will be too apt to stifle the voice
|
|
both of law and of equity.
|
|
These considerations teach us to applaud the wisdom of those
|
|
States who have committed the judicial power, in the last resort,
|
|
not to a part of the legislature, but to distinct and independent
|
|
bodies of men. Contrary to the supposition of those who have
|
|
represented the plan of the convention, in this respect, as novel
|
|
and unprecedented, it is but a copy of the constitutions of New
|
|
Hampshire, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland,
|
|
Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia; and the
|
|
preference which has been given to those models is highly to be
|
|
commended.
|
|
It is not true, in the second place, that the Parliament of
|
|
Great Britain, or the legislatures of the particular States, can
|
|
rectify the exceptionable decisions of their respective courts, in
|
|
any other sense than might be done by a future legislature of the
|
|
United States. The theory, neither of the British, nor the State
|
|
constitutions, authorizes the revisal of a judicial sentence by a
|
|
legislative act. Nor is there any thing in the proposed
|
|
Constitution, more than in either of them, by which it is forbidden.
|
|
In the former, as well as in the latter, the impropriety of the
|
|
thing, on the general principles of law and reason, is the sole
|
|
obstacle. A legislature, without exceeding its province, cannot
|
|
reverse a determination once made in a particular case; though it
|
|
may prescribe a new rule for future cases. This is the principle,
|
|
and it applies in all its consequences, exactly in the same manner
|
|
and extent, to the State governments, as to the national government
|
|
now under consideration. Not the least difference can be pointed
|
|
out in any view of the subject.
|
|
It may in the last place be observed that the supposed danger of
|
|
judiciary encroachments on the legislative authority, which has been
|
|
upon many occasions reiterated, is in reality a phantom. Particular
|
|
misconstructions and contraventions of the will of the legislature
|
|
may now and then happen; but they can never be so extensive as to
|
|
amount to an inconvenience, or in any sensible degree to affect the
|
|
order of the political system. This may be inferred with certainty,
|
|
from the general nature of the judicial power, from the objects to
|
|
which it relates, from the manner in which it is exercised, from its
|
|
comparative weakness, and from its total incapacity to support its
|
|
usurpations by force. And the inference is greatly fortified by the
|
|
consideration of the important constitutional check which the power
|
|
of instituting impeachments in one part of the legislative body, and
|
|
of determining upon them in the other, would give to that body upon
|
|
the members of the judicial department. This is alone a complete
|
|
security. There never can be danger that the judges, by a series of
|
|
deliberate usurpations on the authority of the legislature, would
|
|
hazard the united resentment of the body intrusted with it, while
|
|
this body was possessed of the means of punishing their presumption,
|
|
by degrading them from their stations. While this ought to remove
|
|
all apprehensions on the subject, it affords, at the same time, a
|
|
cogent argument for constituting the Senate a court for the trial of
|
|
impeachments.
|
|
Having now examined, and, I trust, removed the objections to the
|
|
distinct and independent organization of the Supreme Court, I
|
|
proceed to consider the propriety of the power of constituting
|
|
inferior courts,2 and the relations which will subsist between
|
|
these and the former.
|
|
The power of constituting inferior courts is evidently
|
|
calculated to obviate the necessity of having recourse to the
|
|
Supreme Court in every case of federal cognizance. It is intended
|
|
to enable the national government to institute or AUTHORUZE, in each
|
|
State or district of the United States, a tribunal competent to the
|
|
determination of matters of national jurisdiction within its limits.
|
|
But why, it is asked, might not the same purpose have been
|
|
accomplished by the instrumentality of the State courts? This
|
|
admits of different answers. Though the fitness and competency of
|
|
those courts should be allowed in the utmost latitude, yet the
|
|
substance of the power in question may still be regarded as a
|
|
necessary part of the plan, if it were only to empower the national
|
|
legislature to commit to them the cognizance of causes arising out
|
|
of the national Constitution. To confer the power of determining
|
|
such causes upon the existing courts of the several States, would
|
|
perhaps be as much ``to constitute tribunals,'' as to create new
|
|
courts with the like power. But ought not a more direct and
|
|
explicit provision to have been made in favor of the State courts?
|
|
There are, in my opinion, substantial reasons against such a
|
|
provision: the most discerning cannot foresee how far the
|
|
prevalency of a local spirit may be found to disqualify the local
|
|
tribunals for the jurisdiction of national causes; whilst every man
|
|
may discover, that courts constituted like those of some of the
|
|
States would be improper channels of the judicial authority of the
|
|
Union. State judges, holding their offices during pleasure, or from
|
|
year to year, will be too little independent to be relied upon for
|
|
an inflexible execution of the national laws. And if there was a
|
|
necessity for confiding the original cognizance of causes arising
|
|
under those laws to them there would be a correspondent necessity
|
|
for leaving the door of appeal as wide as possible. In proportion
|
|
to the grounds of confidence in, or distrust of, the subordinate
|
|
tribunals, ought to be the facility or difficulty of appeals. And
|
|
well satisfied as I am of the propriety of the appellate
|
|
jurisdiction, in the several classes of causes to which it is
|
|
extended by the plan of the convention. I should consider every
|
|
thing calculated to give, in practice, an UNRESTRAINED COURSE to
|
|
appeals, as a source of public and private inconvenience.
|
|
I am not sure, but that it will be found highly expedient and
|
|
useful, to divide the United States into four or five or half a
|
|
dozen districts; and to institute a federal court in each district,
|
|
in lieu of one in every State. The judges of these courts, with the
|
|
aid of the State judges, may hold circuits for the trial of causes
|
|
in the several parts of the respective districts. Justice through
|
|
them may be administered with ease and despatch; and appeals may be
|
|
safely circumscribed within a narrow compass. This plan appears to
|
|
me at present the most eligible of any that could be adopted; and
|
|
in order to it, it is necessary that the power of constituting
|
|
inferior courts should exist in the full extent in which it is to be
|
|
found in the proposed Constitution.
|
|
These reasons seem sufficient to satisfy a candid mind, that the
|
|
want of such a power would have been a great defect in the plan.
|
|
Let us now examine in what manner the judicial authority is to be
|
|
distributed between the supreme and the inferior courts of the Union.
|
|
The Supreme Court is to be invested with original jurisdiction,
|
|
only ``in cases affecting ambassadors, other public ministers, and
|
|
consuls, and those in which A STATE shall be a party.'' Public
|
|
ministers of every class are the immediate representatives of their
|
|
sovereigns. All questions in which they are concerned are so
|
|
directly connected with the public peace, that, as well for the
|
|
preservation of this, as out of respect to the sovereignties they
|
|
represent, it is both expedient and proper that such questions
|
|
should be submitted in the first instance to the highest judicatory
|
|
of the nation. Though consuls have not in strictness a diplomatic
|
|
character, yet as they are the public agents of the nations to which
|
|
they belong, the same observation is in a great measure applicable
|
|
to them. In cases in which a State might happen to be a party, it
|
|
would ill suit its dignity to be turned over to an inferior tribunal.
|
|
Though it may rather be a digression from the immediate subject
|
|
of this paper, I shall take occasion to mention here a supposition
|
|
which has excited some alarm upon very mistaken grounds. It has
|
|
been suggested that an assignment of the public securities of one
|
|
State to the citizens of another, would enable them to prosecute
|
|
that State in the federal courts for the amount of those securities;
|
|
a suggestion which the following considerations prove to be without
|
|
foundation.
|
|
It is inherent in the nature of sovereignty not to be amenable
|
|
to the suit of an individual WITHOUT ITS CONSENT. This is the
|
|
general sense, and the general practice of mankind; and the
|
|
exemption, as one of the attributes of sovereignty, is now enjoyed
|
|
by the government of every State in the Union. Unless, therefore,
|
|
there is a surrender of this immunity in the plan of the convention,
|
|
it will remain with the States, and the danger intimated must be
|
|
merely ideal. The circumstances which are necessary to produce an
|
|
alienation of State sovereignty were discussed in considering the
|
|
article of taxation, and need not be repeated here. A recurrence to
|
|
the principles there established will satisfy us, that there is no
|
|
color to pretend that the State governments would, by the adoption
|
|
of that plan, be divested of the privilege of paying their own debts
|
|
in their own way, free from every constraint but that which flows
|
|
from the obligations of good faith. The contracts between a nation
|
|
and individuals are only binding on the conscience of the sovereign,
|
|
and have no pretensions to a compulsive force. They confer no right
|
|
of action, independent of the sovereign will. To what purpose would
|
|
it be to authorize suits against States for the debts they owe? How
|
|
could recoveries be enforced? It is evident, it could not be done
|
|
without waging war against the contracting State; and to ascribe to
|
|
the federal courts, by mere implication, and in destruction of a
|
|
pre-existing right of the State governments, a power which would
|
|
involve such a consequence, would be altogether forced and
|
|
unwarrantable.
|
|
Let us resume the train of our observations. We have seen that
|
|
the original jurisdiction of the Supreme Court would be confined to
|
|
two classes of causes, and those of a nature rarely to occur. In
|
|
all other cases of federal cognizance, the original jurisdiction
|
|
would appertain to the inferior tribunals; and the Supreme Court
|
|
would have nothing more than an appellate jurisdiction, ``with such
|
|
EXCEPTIONS and under such REGULATIONS as the Congress shall make.''
|
|
The propriety of this appellate jurisdiction has been scarcely
|
|
called in question in regard to matters of law; but the clamors
|
|
have been loud against it as applied to matters of fact. Some
|
|
well-intentioned men in this State, deriving their notions from the
|
|
language and forms which obtain in our courts, have been induced to
|
|
consider it as an implied supersedure of the trial by jury, in favor
|
|
of the civil-law mode of trial, which prevails in our courts of
|
|
admiralty, probate, and chancery. A technical sense has been
|
|
affixed to the term ``appellate,'' which, in our law parlance, is
|
|
commonly used in reference to appeals in the course of the civil law.
|
|
But if I am not misinformed, the same meaning would not be given
|
|
to it in any part of New England. There an appeal from one jury to
|
|
another, is familiar both in language and practice, and is even a
|
|
matter of course, until there have been two verdicts on one side.
|
|
The word ``appellate,'' therefore, will not be understood in the
|
|
same sense in New England as in New York, which shows the
|
|
impropriety of a technical interpretation derived from the
|
|
jurisprudence of any particular State. The expression, taken in the
|
|
abstract, denotes nothing more than the power of one tribunal to
|
|
review the proceedings of another, either as to the law or fact, or
|
|
both. The mode of doing it may depend on ancient custom or
|
|
legislative provision (in a new government it must depend on the
|
|
latter), and may be with or without the aid of a jury, as may be
|
|
judged advisable. If, therefore, the re-examination of a fact once
|
|
determined by a jury, should in any case be admitted under the
|
|
proposed Constitution, it may be so regulated as to be done by a
|
|
second jury, either by remanding the cause to the court below for a
|
|
second trial of the fact, or by directing an issue immediately out
|
|
of the Supreme Court.
|
|
But it does not follow that the re-examination of a fact once
|
|
ascertained by a jury, will be permitted in the Supreme Court. Why
|
|
may not it be said, with the strictest propriety, when a writ of
|
|
error is brought from an inferior to a superior court of law in this
|
|
State, that the latter has jurisdiction of the fact as well as the
|
|
law? It is true it cannot institute a new inquiry concerning the
|
|
fact, but it takes cognizance of it as it appears upon the record,
|
|
and pronounces the law arising upon it.3 This is jurisdiction
|
|
of both fact and law; nor is it even possible to separate them.
|
|
Though the common-law courts of this State ascertain disputed facts
|
|
by a jury, yet they unquestionably have jurisdiction of both fact
|
|
and law; and accordingly when the former is agreed in the
|
|
pleadings, they have no recourse to a jury, but proceed at once to
|
|
judgment. I contend, therefore, on this ground, that the
|
|
expressions, ``appellate jurisdiction, both as to law and fact,'' do
|
|
not necessarily imply a re-examination in the Supreme Court of facts
|
|
decided by juries in the inferior courts.
|
|
The following train of ideas may well be imagined to have
|
|
influenced the convention, in relation to this particular provision.
|
|
The appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court (it may have been
|
|
argued) will extend to causes determinable in different modes, some
|
|
in the course of the COMMON LAW, others in the course of the CIVIL
|
|
LAW. In the former, the revision of the law only will be, generally
|
|
speaking, the proper province of the Supreme Court; in the latter,
|
|
the re-examination of the fact is agreeable to usage, and in some
|
|
cases, of which prize causes are an example, might be essential to
|
|
the preservation of the public peace. It is therefore necessary
|
|
that the appellate jurisdiction should, in certain cases, extend in
|
|
the broadest sense to matters of fact. It will not answer to make
|
|
an express exception of cases which shall have been originally tried
|
|
by a jury, because in the courts of some of the States ALL CAUSES
|
|
are tried in this mode4; and such an exception would preclude
|
|
the revision of matters of fact, as well where it might be proper,
|
|
as where it might be improper. To avoid all inconveniencies, it
|
|
will be safest to declare generally, that the Supreme Court shall
|
|
possess appellate jurisdiction both as to law and FACT, and that
|
|
this jurisdiction shall be subject to such EXCEPTIONS and
|
|
regulations as the national legislature may prescribe. This will
|
|
enable the government to modify it in such a manner as will best
|
|
answer the ends of public justice and security.
|
|
This view of the matter, at any rate, puts it out of all doubt
|
|
that the supposed ABOLITION of the trial by jury, by the operation
|
|
of this provision, is fallacious and untrue. The legislature of the
|
|
United States would certainly have full power to provide, that in
|
|
appeals to the Supreme Court there should be no re-examination of
|
|
facts where they had been tried in the original causes by juries.
|
|
This would certainly be an authorized exception; but if, for the
|
|
reason already intimated, it should be thought too extensive, it
|
|
might be qualified with a limitation to such causes only as are
|
|
determinable at common law in that mode of trial.
|
|
The amount of the observations hitherto made on the authority of
|
|
the judicial department is this: that it has been carefully
|
|
restricted to those causes which are manifestly proper for the
|
|
cognizance of the national judicature; that in the partition of
|
|
this authority a very small portion of original jurisdiction has
|
|
been preserved to the Supreme Court, and the rest consigned to the
|
|
subordinate tribunals; that the Supreme Court will possess an
|
|
appellate jurisdiction, both as to law and fact, in all the cases
|
|
referred to them, both subject to any EXCEPTIONS and REGULATIONS
|
|
which may be thought advisable; that this appellate jurisdiction
|
|
does, in no case, ABOLISH the trial by jury; and that an ordinary
|
|
degree of prudence and integrity in the national councils will
|
|
insure us solid advantages from the establishment of the proposed
|
|
judiciary, without exposing us to any of the inconveniences which
|
|
have been predicted from that source.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
1 Article 3, sec. I.
|
|
2 This power has been absurdly represented as intended to
|
|
abolish all the county courts in the several States, which are
|
|
commonly called inferior courts. But the expressions of the
|
|
Constitution are, to constitute ``tribunals INFERIOR TO THE SUPREME
|
|
COURT''; and the evident design of the provision is to enable the
|
|
institution of local courts, subordinate to the Supreme, either in
|
|
States or larger districts. It is ridiculous to imagine that county
|
|
courts were in contemplation.
|
|
3 This word is composed of JUS and DICTIO, juris dictio or a
|
|
speaking and pronouncing of the law.
|
|
4 I hold that the States will have concurrent jurisdiction with
|
|
the subordinate federal judicatories, in many cases of federal
|
|
cognizance, as will be explained in my next paper.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 82
|
|
|
|
The Judiciary Continued
|
|
From McLEAN's Edition, New York.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE erection of a new government, whatever care or wisdom may
|
|
distinguish the work, cannot fail to originate questions of
|
|
intricacy and nicety; and these may, in a particular manner, be
|
|
expected to flow from the establishment of a constitution founded
|
|
upon the total or partial incorporation of a number of distinct
|
|
sovereignties. 'T is time only that can mature and perfect so
|
|
compound a system, can liquidate the meaning of all the parts, and
|
|
can adjust them to each other in a harmonious and consistent WHOLE.
|
|
Such questions, accordingly, have arisen upon the plan proposed
|
|
by the convention, and particularly concerning the judiciary
|
|
department. The principal of these respect the situation of the
|
|
State courts in regard to those causes which are to be submitted to
|
|
federal jurisdiction. Is this to be exclusive, or are those courts
|
|
to possess a concurrent jurisdiction? If the latter, in what
|
|
relation will they stand to the national tribunals? These are
|
|
inquiries which we meet with in the mouths of men of sense, and
|
|
which are certainly entitled to attention.
|
|
The principles established in a former paper1 teach us that
|
|
the States will retain all PRE-EXISTING authorities which may not be
|
|
exclusively delegated to the federal head; and that this exclusive
|
|
delegation can only exist in one of three cases: where an exclusive
|
|
authority is, in express terms, granted to the Union; or where a
|
|
particular authority is granted to the Union, and the exercise of a
|
|
like authority is prohibited to the States; or where an authority
|
|
is granted to the Union, with which a similar authority in the
|
|
States would be utterly incompatible. Though these principles may
|
|
not apply with the same force to the judiciary as to the legislative
|
|
power, yet I am inclined to think that they are, in the main, just
|
|
with respect to the former, as well as the latter. And under this
|
|
impression, I shall lay it down as a rule, that the State courts
|
|
will RETAIN the jurisdiction they now have, unless it appears to be
|
|
taken away in one of the enumerated modes.
|
|
The only thing in the proposed Constitution, which wears the
|
|
appearance of confining the causes of federal cognizance to the
|
|
federal courts, is contained in this passage: ``The JUDICIAL POWER
|
|
of the United States SHALL BE VESTED in one Supreme Court, and in
|
|
SUCH inferior courts as the Congress shall from time to time ordain
|
|
and establish.'' This might either be construed to signify, that
|
|
the supreme and subordinate courts of the Union should alone have
|
|
the power of deciding those causes to which their authority is to
|
|
extend; or simply to denote, that the organs of the national
|
|
judiciary should be one Supreme Court, and as many subordinate
|
|
courts as Congress should think proper to appoint; or in other
|
|
words, that the United States should exercise the judicial power
|
|
with which they are to be invested, through one supreme tribunal,
|
|
and a certain number of inferior ones, to be instituted by them.
|
|
The first excludes, the last admits, the concurrent jurisdiction of
|
|
the State tribunals; and as the first would amount to an alienation
|
|
of State power by implication, the last appears to me the most
|
|
natural and the most defensible construction.
|
|
But this doctrine of concurrent jurisdiction is only clearly
|
|
applicable to those descriptions of causes of which the State courts
|
|
have previous cognizance. It is not equally evident in relation to
|
|
cases which may grow out of, and be PECULIAR to, the Constitution to
|
|
be established; for not to allow the State courts a right of
|
|
jurisdiction in such cases, can hardly be considered as the
|
|
abridgment of a pre-existing authority. I mean not therefore to
|
|
contend that the United States, in the course of legislation upon
|
|
the objects intrusted to their direction, may not commit the
|
|
decision of causes arising upon a particular regulation to the
|
|
federal courts solely, if such a measure should be deemed expedient;
|
|
but I hold that the State courts will be divested of no part of
|
|
their primitive jurisdiction, further than may relate to an appeal;
|
|
and I am even of opinion that in every case in which they were not
|
|
expressly excluded by the future acts of the national legislature,
|
|
they will of course take cognizance of the causes to which those
|
|
acts may give birth. This I infer from the nature of judiciary
|
|
power, and from the general genius of the system. The judiciary
|
|
power of every government looks beyond its own local or municipal
|
|
laws, and in civil cases lays hold of all subjects of litigation
|
|
between parties within its jurisdiction, though the causes of
|
|
dispute are relative to the laws of the most distant part of the
|
|
globe. Those of Japan, not less than of New York, may furnish the
|
|
objects of legal discussion to our courts. When in addition to this
|
|
we consider the State governments and the national governments, as
|
|
they truly are, in the light of kindred systems, and as parts of ONE
|
|
WHOLE, the inference seems to be conclusive, that the State courts
|
|
would have a concurrent jurisdiction in all cases arising under the
|
|
laws of the Union, where it was not expressly prohibited.
|
|
Here another question occurs: What relation would subsist
|
|
between the national and State courts in these instances of
|
|
concurrent jurisdiction? I answer, that an appeal would certainly
|
|
lie from the latter, to the Supreme Court of the United States. The
|
|
Constitution in direct terms gives an appellate jurisdiction to the
|
|
Supreme Court in all the enumerated cases of federal cognizance in
|
|
which it is not to have an original one, without a single expression
|
|
to confine its operation to the inferior federal courts. The
|
|
objects of appeal, not the tribunals from which it is to be made,
|
|
are alone contemplated. From this circumstance, and from the reason
|
|
of the thing, it ought to be construed to extend to the State
|
|
tribunals. Either this must be the case, or the local courts must
|
|
be excluded from a concurrent jurisdiction in matters of national
|
|
concern, else the judiciary authority of the Union may be eluded at
|
|
the pleasure of every plaintiff or prosecutor. Neither of these
|
|
consequences ought, without evident necessity, to be involved; the
|
|
latter would be entirely inadmissible, as it would defeat some of
|
|
the most important and avowed purposes of the proposed government,
|
|
and would essentially embarrass its measures. Nor do I perceive any
|
|
foundation for such a supposition. Agreeably to the remark already
|
|
made, the national and State systems are to be regarded as ONE WHOLE.
|
|
The courts of the latter will of course be natural auxiliaries to
|
|
the execution of the laws of the Union, and an appeal from them will
|
|
as naturally lie to that tribunal which is destined to unite and
|
|
assimilate the principles of national justice and the rules of
|
|
national decisions. The evident aim of the plan of the convention
|
|
is, that all the causes of the specified classes shall, for weighty
|
|
public reasons, receive their original or final determination in the
|
|
courts of the Union. To confine, therefore, the general expressions
|
|
giving appellate jurisdiction to the Supreme Court, to appeals from
|
|
the subordinate federal courts, instead of allowing their extension
|
|
to the State courts, would be to abridge the latitude of the terms,
|
|
in subversion of the intent, contrary to every sound rule of
|
|
interpretation.
|
|
But could an appeal be made to lie from the State courts to the
|
|
subordinate federal judicatories? This is another of the questions
|
|
which have been raised, and of greater difficulty than the former.
|
|
The following considerations countenance the affirmative. The plan
|
|
of the convention, in the first place, authorizes the national
|
|
legislature ``to constitute tribunals inferior to the Supreme
|
|
Court.''2 It declares, in the next place, that ``the JUDICIAL
|
|
POWER of the United States SHALL BE VESTED in one Supreme Court, and
|
|
in such inferior courts as Congress shall ordain and establish'';
|
|
and it then proceeds to enumerate the cases to which this judicial
|
|
power shall extend. It afterwards divides the jurisdiction of the
|
|
Supreme Court into original and appellate, but gives no definition
|
|
of that of the subordinate courts. The only outlines described for
|
|
them, are that they shall be ``inferior to the Supreme Court,'' and
|
|
that they shall not exceed the specified limits of the federal
|
|
judiciary. Whether their authority shall be original or appellate,
|
|
or both, is not declared. All this seems to be left to the
|
|
discretion of the legislature. And this being the case, I perceive
|
|
at present no impediment to the establishment of an appeal from the
|
|
State courts to the subordinate national tribunals; and many
|
|
advantages attending the power of doing it may be imagined. It
|
|
would diminish the motives to the multiplication of federal courts,
|
|
and would admit of arrangements calculated to contract the appellate
|
|
jurisdiction of the Supreme Court. The State tribunals may then be
|
|
left with a more entire charge of federal causes; and appeals, in
|
|
most cases in which they may be deemed proper, instead of being
|
|
carried to the Supreme Court, may be made to lie from the State
|
|
courts to district courts of the Union.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
1 No. 31.
|
|
2 Sec. 8th art. 1st.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 83
|
|
|
|
The Judiciary Continued in Relation to Trial by Jury
|
|
From MCLEAN's Edition, New York.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
THE objection to the plan of the convention, which has met with
|
|
most success in this State, and perhaps in several of the other
|
|
States, is THAT RELATIVE TO THE WANT OF A CONSTITUTIONAL PROVISION
|
|
for the trial by jury in civil cases. The disingenuous form in
|
|
which this objection is usually stated has been repeatedly adverted
|
|
to and exposed, but continues to be pursued in all the conversations
|
|
and writings of the opponents of the plan. The mere silence of the
|
|
Constitution in regard to CIVIL CAUSES, is represented as an
|
|
abolition of the trial by jury, and the declamations to which it has
|
|
afforded a pretext are artfully calculated to induce a persuasion
|
|
that this pretended abolition is complete and universal, extending
|
|
not only to every species of civil, but even to CRIMINAL CAUSES. To
|
|
argue with respect to the latter would, however, be as vain and
|
|
fruitless as to attempt the serious proof of the EXISTENCE of
|
|
MATTER, or to demonstrate any of those propositions which, by their
|
|
own internal evidence, force conviction, when expressed in language
|
|
adapted to convey their meaning.
|
|
With regard to civil causes, subtleties almost too contemptible
|
|
for refutation have been employed to countenance the surmise that a
|
|
thing which is only NOT PROVIDED FOR, is entirely ABOLISHED. Every
|
|
man of discernment must at once perceive the wide difference between
|
|
SILENCE and ABOLITION. But as the inventors of this fallacy have
|
|
attempted to support it by certain LEGAL MAXIMS of interpretation,
|
|
which they have perverted from their true meaning, it may not be
|
|
wholly useless to explore the ground they have taken.
|
|
The maxims on which they rely are of this nature: ``A
|
|
specification of particulars is an exclusion of generals''; or,
|
|
``The expression of one thing is the exclusion of another.'' Hence,
|
|
say they, as the Constitution has established the trial by jury in
|
|
criminal cases, and is silent in respect to civil, this silence is
|
|
an implied prohibition of trial by jury in regard to the latter.
|
|
The rules of legal interpretation are rules of COMMONSENSE,
|
|
adopted by the courts in the construction of the laws. The true
|
|
test, therefore, of a just application of them is its conformity to
|
|
the source from which they are derived. This being the case, let me
|
|
ask if it is consistent with common-sense to suppose that a
|
|
provision obliging the legislative power to commit the trial of
|
|
criminal causes to juries, is a privation of its right to authorize
|
|
or permit that mode of trial in other cases? Is it natural to
|
|
suppose, that a command to do one thing is a prohibition to the
|
|
doing of another, which there was a previous power to do, and which
|
|
is not incompatible with the thing commanded to be done? If such a
|
|
supposition would be unnatural and unreasonable, it cannot be
|
|
rational to maintain that an injunction of the trial by jury in
|
|
certain cases is an interdiction of it in others.
|
|
A power to constitute courts is a power to prescribe the mode of
|
|
trial; and consequently, if nothing was said in the Constitution on
|
|
the subject of juries, the legislature would be at liberty either to
|
|
adopt that institution or to let it alone. This discretion, in
|
|
regard to criminal causes, is abridged by the express injunction of
|
|
trial by jury in all such cases; but it is, of course, left at
|
|
large in relation to civil causes, there being a total silence on
|
|
this head. The specification of an obligation to try all criminal
|
|
causes in a particular mode, excludes indeed the obligation or
|
|
necessity of employing the same mode in civil causes, but does not
|
|
abridge THE POWER of the legislature to exercise that mode if it
|
|
should be thought proper. The pretense, therefore, that the
|
|
national legislature would not be at full liberty to submit all the
|
|
civil causes of federal cognizance to the determination of juries,
|
|
is a pretense destitute of all just foundation.
|
|
From these observations this conclusion results: that the trial
|
|
by jury in civil cases would not be abolished; and that the use
|
|
attempted to be made of the maxims which have been quoted, is
|
|
contrary to reason and common-sense, and therefore not admissible.
|
|
Even if these maxims had a precise technical sense, corresponding
|
|
with the idea of those who employ them upon the present occasion,
|
|
which, however, is not the case, they would still be inapplicable to
|
|
a constitution of government. In relation to such a subject, the
|
|
natural and obvious sense of its provisions, apart from any
|
|
technical rules, is the true criterion of construction.
|
|
Having now seen that the maxims relied upon will not bear the
|
|
use made of them, let us endeavor to ascertain their proper use and
|
|
true meaning. This will be best done by examples. The plan of the
|
|
convention declares that the power of Congress, or, in other words,
|
|
of the NATIONAL LEGISLATURE, shall extend to certain enumerated
|
|
cases. This specification of particulars evidently excludes all
|
|
pretension to a general legislative authority, because an
|
|
affirmative grant of special powers would be absurd, as well as
|
|
useless, if a general authority was intended.
|
|
In like manner the judicial authority of the federal judicatures
|
|
is declared by the Constitution to comprehend certain cases
|
|
particularly specified. The expression of those cases marks the
|
|
precise limits, beyond which the federal courts cannot extend their
|
|
jurisdiction, because the objects of their cognizance being
|
|
enumerated, the specification would be nugatory if it did not
|
|
exclude all ideas of more extensive authority.
|
|
These examples are sufficient to elucidate the maxims which have
|
|
been mentioned, and to designate the manner in which they should be
|
|
used. But that there may be no misapprehensions upon this subject,
|
|
I shall add one case more, to demonstrate the proper use of these
|
|
maxims, and the abuse which has been made of them.
|
|
Let us suppose that by the laws of this State a married woman
|
|
was incapable of conveying her estate, and that the legislature,
|
|
considering this as an evil, should enact that she might dispose of
|
|
her property by deed executed in the presence of a magistrate. In
|
|
such a case there can be no doubt but the specification would amount
|
|
to an exclusion of any other mode of conveyance, because the woman
|
|
having no previous power to alienate her property, the specification
|
|
determines the particular mode which she is, for that purpose, to
|
|
avail herself of. But let us further suppose that in a subsequent
|
|
part of the same act it should be declared that no woman should
|
|
dispose of any estate of a determinate value without the consent of
|
|
three of her nearest relations, signified by their signing the deed;
|
|
could it be inferred from this regulation that a married woman
|
|
might not procure the approbation of her relations to a deed for
|
|
conveying property of inferior value? The position is too absurd to
|
|
merit a refutation, and yet this is precisely the position which
|
|
those must establish who contend that the trial by juries in civil
|
|
cases is abolished, because it is expressly provided for in cases of
|
|
a criminal nature.
|
|
From these observations it must appear unquestionably true, that
|
|
trial by jury is in no case abolished by the proposed Constitution,
|
|
and it is equally true, that in those controversies between
|
|
individuals in which the great body of the people are likely to be
|
|
interested, that institution will remain precisely in the same
|
|
situation in which it is placed by the State constitutions, and will
|
|
be in no degree altered or influenced by the adoption of the plan
|
|
under consideration. The foundation of this assertion is, that the
|
|
national judiciary will have no cognizance of them, and of course
|
|
they will remain determinable as heretofore by the State courts
|
|
only, and in the manner which the State constitutions and laws
|
|
prescribe. All land causes, except where claims under the grants of
|
|
different States come into question, and all other controversies
|
|
between the citizens of the same State, unless where they depend
|
|
upon positive violations of the articles of union, by acts of the
|
|
State legislatures, will belong exclusively to the jurisdiction of
|
|
the State tribunals. Add to this, that admiralty causes, and almost
|
|
all those which are of equity jurisdiction, are determinable under
|
|
our own government without the intervention of a jury, and the
|
|
inference from the whole will be, that this institution, as it
|
|
exists with us at present, cannot possibly be affected to any great
|
|
extent by the proposed alteration in our system of government.
|
|
The friends and adversaries of the plan of the convention, if
|
|
they agree in nothing else, concur at least in the value they set
|
|
upon the trial by jury; or if there is any difference between them
|
|
it consists in this: the former regard it as a valuable safeguard
|
|
to liberty; the latter represent it as the very palladium of free
|
|
government. For my own part, the more the operation of the
|
|
institution has fallen under my observation, the more reason I have
|
|
discovered for holding it in high estimation; and it would be
|
|
altogether superfluous to examine to what extent it deserves to be
|
|
esteemed useful or essential in a representative republic, or how
|
|
much more merit it may be entitled to, as a defense against the
|
|
oppressions of an hereditary monarch, than as a barrier to the
|
|
tyranny of popular magistrates in a popular government. Discussions
|
|
of this kind would be more curious than beneficial, as all are
|
|
satisfied of the utility of the institution, and of its friendly
|
|
aspect to liberty. But I must acknowledge that I cannot readily
|
|
discern the inseparable connection between the existence of liberty,
|
|
and the trial by jury in civil cases. Arbitrary impeachments,
|
|
arbitrary methods of prosecuting pretended offenses, and arbitrary
|
|
punishments upon arbitrary convictions, have ever appeared to me to
|
|
be the great engines of judicial despotism; and these have all
|
|
relation to criminal proceedings. The trial by jury in criminal
|
|
cases, aided by the habeas-corpus act, seems therefore to be
|
|
alone concerned in the question. And both of these are provided
|
|
for, in the most ample manner, in the plan of the convention.
|
|
It has been observed, that trial by jury is a safeguard against
|
|
an oppressive exercise of the power of taxation. This observation
|
|
deserves to be canvassed.
|
|
It is evident that it can have no influence upon the
|
|
legislature, in regard to the AMOUNT of taxes to be laid, to the
|
|
OBJECTS upon which they are to be imposed, or to the RULE by which
|
|
they are to be apportioned. If it can have any influence,
|
|
therefore, it must be upon the mode of collection, and the conduct
|
|
of the officers intrusted with the execution of the revenue laws.
|
|
As to the mode of collection in this State, under our own
|
|
Constitution, the trial by jury is in most cases out of use. The
|
|
taxes are usually levied by the more summary proceeding of distress
|
|
and sale, as in cases of rent. And it is acknowledged on all hands,
|
|
that this is essential to the efficacy of the revenue laws. The
|
|
dilatory course of a trial at law to recover the taxes imposed on
|
|
individuals, would neither suit the exigencies of the public nor
|
|
promote the convenience of the citizens. It would often occasion an
|
|
accumulation of costs, more burdensome than the original sum of the
|
|
tax to be levied.
|
|
And as to the conduct of the officers of the revenue, the
|
|
provision in favor of trial by jury in criminal cases, will afford
|
|
the security aimed at. Wilful abuses of a public authority, to the
|
|
oppression of the subject, and every species of official extortion,
|
|
are offenses against the government, for which the persons who
|
|
commit them may be indicted and punished according to the
|
|
circumstances of the case.
|
|
The excellence of the trial by jury in civil cases appears to
|
|
depend on circumstances foreign to the preservation of liberty. The
|
|
strongest argument in its favor is, that it is a security against
|
|
corruption. As there is always more time and better opportunity to
|
|
tamper with a standing body of magistrates than with a jury summoned
|
|
for the occasion, there is room to suppose that a corrupt influence
|
|
would more easily find its way to the former than to the latter.
|
|
The force of this consideration is, however, diminished by others.
|
|
The sheriff, who is the summoner of ordinary juries, and the clerks
|
|
of courts, who have the nomination of special juries, are themselves
|
|
standing officers, and, acting individually, may be supposed more
|
|
accessible to the touch of corruption than the judges, who are a
|
|
collective body. It is not difficult to see, that it would be in
|
|
the power of those officers to select jurors who would serve the
|
|
purpose of the party as well as a corrupted bench. In the next
|
|
place, it may fairly be supposed, that there would be less
|
|
difficulty in gaining some of the jurors promiscuously taken from
|
|
the public mass, than in gaining men who had been chosen by the
|
|
government for their probity and good character. But making every
|
|
deduction for these considerations, the trial by jury must still be
|
|
a valuable check upon corruption. It greatly multiplies the
|
|
impediments to its success. As matters now stand, it would be
|
|
necessary to corrupt both court and jury; for where the jury have
|
|
gone evidently wrong, the court will generally grant a new trial,
|
|
and it would be in most cases of little use to practice upon the
|
|
jury, unless the court could be likewise gained. Here then is a
|
|
double security; and it will readily be perceived that this
|
|
complicated agency tends to preserve the purity of both institutions.
|
|
By increasing the obstacles to success, it discourages attempts to
|
|
seduce the integrity of either. The temptations to prostitution
|
|
which the judges might have to surmount, must certainly be much
|
|
fewer, while the co-operation of a jury is necessary, than they
|
|
might be, if they had themselves the exclusive determination of all
|
|
causes.
|
|
Notwithstanding, therefore, the doubts I have expressed, as to
|
|
the essentiality of trial by jury in civil cases to liberty, I admit
|
|
that it is in most cases, under proper regulations, an excellent
|
|
method of determining questions of property; and that on this
|
|
account alone it would be entitled to a constitutional provision in
|
|
its favor if it were possible to fix the limits within which it
|
|
ought to be comprehended. There is, however, in all cases, great
|
|
difficulty in this; and men not blinded by enthusiasm must be
|
|
sensible that in a federal government, which is a composition of
|
|
societies whose ideas and institutions in relation to the matter
|
|
materially vary from each other, that difficulty must be not a
|
|
little augmented. For my own part, at every new view I take of the
|
|
subject, I become more convinced of the reality of the obstacles
|
|
which, we are authoritatively informed, prevented the insertion of a
|
|
provision on this head in the plan of the convention.
|
|
The great difference between the limits of the jury trial in
|
|
different States is not generally understood; and as it must have
|
|
considerable influence on the sentence we ought to pass upon the
|
|
omission complained of in regard to this point, an explanation of it
|
|
is necessary. In this State, our judicial establishments resemble,
|
|
more nearly than in any other, those of Great Britain. We have
|
|
courts of common law, courts of probates (analogous in certain
|
|
matters to the spiritual courts in England), a court of admiralty
|
|
and a court of chancery. In the courts of common law only, the
|
|
trial by jury prevails, and this with some exceptions. In all the
|
|
others a single judge presides, and proceeds in general either
|
|
according to the course of the canon or civil law, without the aid
|
|
of a jury.1 In New Jersey, there is a court of chancery which
|
|
proceeds like ours, but neither courts of admiralty nor of probates,
|
|
in the sense in which these last are established with us. In that
|
|
State the courts of common law have the cognizance of those causes
|
|
which with us are determinable in the courts of admiralty and of
|
|
probates, and of course the jury trial is more extensive in New
|
|
Jersey than in New York. In Pennsylvania, this is perhaps still
|
|
more the case, for there is no court of chancery in that State, and
|
|
its common-law courts have equity jurisdiction. It has a court of
|
|
admiralty, but none of probates, at least on the plan of ours.
|
|
Delaware has in these respects imitated Pennsylvania. Maryland
|
|
approaches more nearly to New York, as does also Virginia, except
|
|
that the latter has a plurality of chancellors. North Carolina
|
|
bears most affinity to Pennsylvania; South Carolina to Virginia. I
|
|
believe, however, that in some of those States which have distinct
|
|
courts of admiralty, the causes depending in them are triable by
|
|
juries. In Georgia there are none but common-law courts, and an
|
|
appeal of course lies from the verdict of one jury to another, which
|
|
is called a special jury, and for which a particular mode of
|
|
appointment is marked out. In Connecticut, they have no distinct
|
|
courts either of chancery or of admiralty, and their courts of
|
|
probates have no jurisdiction of causes. Their common-law courts
|
|
have admiralty and, to a certain extent, equity jurisdiction. In
|
|
cases of importance, their General Assembly is the only court of
|
|
chancery. In Connecticut, therefore, the trial by jury extends in
|
|
PRACTICE further than in any other State yet mentioned. Rhode
|
|
Island is, I believe, in this particular, pretty much in the
|
|
situation of Connecticut. Massachusetts and New Hampshire, in
|
|
regard to the blending of law, equity, and admiralty jurisdictions,
|
|
are in a similar predicament. In the four Eastern States, the trial
|
|
by jury not only stands upon a broader foundation than in the other
|
|
States, but it is attended with a peculiarity unknown, in its full
|
|
extent, to any of them. There is an appeal OF COURSE from one jury
|
|
to another, till there have been two verdicts out of three on one
|
|
side.
|
|
From this sketch it appears that there is a material diversity,
|
|
as well in the modification as in the extent of the institution of
|
|
trial by jury in civil cases, in the several States; and from this
|
|
fact these obvious reflections flow: first, that no general rule
|
|
could have been fixed upon by the convention which would have
|
|
corresponded with the circumstances of all the States; and
|
|
secondly, that more or at least as much might have been hazarded by
|
|
taking the system of any one State for a standard, as by omitting a
|
|
provision altogether and leaving the matter, as has been done, to
|
|
legislative regulation.
|
|
The propositions which have been made for supplying the omission
|
|
have rather served to illustrate than to obviate the difficulty of
|
|
the thing. The minority of Pennsylvania have proposed this mode of
|
|
expression for the purpose ``Trial by jury shall be as
|
|
heretofore'' and this I maintain would be senseless and nugatory.
|
|
The United States, in their united or collective capacity, are the
|
|
OBJECT to which all general provisions in the Constitution must
|
|
necessarily be construed to refer. Now it is evident that though
|
|
trial by jury, with various limitations, is known in each State
|
|
individually, yet in the United States, AS SUCH, it is at this time
|
|
altogether unknown, because the present federal government has no
|
|
judiciary power whatever; and consequently there is no proper
|
|
antecedent or previous establishment to which the term HERETOFORE
|
|
could relate. It would therefore be destitute of a precise meaning,
|
|
and inoperative from its uncertainty.
|
|
As, on the one hand, the form of the provision would not fulfil
|
|
the intent of its proposers, so, on the other, if I apprehend that
|
|
intent rightly, it would be in itself inexpedient. I presume it to
|
|
be, that causes in the federal courts should be tried by jury, if,
|
|
in the State where the courts sat, that mode of trial would obtain
|
|
in a similar case in the State courts; that is to say, admiralty
|
|
causes should be tried in Connecticut by a jury, in New York without
|
|
one. The capricious operation of so dissimilar a method of trial in
|
|
the same cases, under the same government, is of itself sufficient
|
|
to indispose every wellregulated judgment towards it. Whether the
|
|
cause should be tried with or without a jury, would depend, in a
|
|
great number of cases, on the accidental situation of the court and
|
|
parties.
|
|
But this is not, in my estimation, the greatest objection. I
|
|
feel a deep and deliberate conviction that there are many cases in
|
|
which the trial by jury is an ineligible one. I think it so
|
|
particularly in cases which concern the public peace with foreign
|
|
nations that is, in most cases where the question turns wholly on
|
|
the laws of nations. Of this nature, among others, are all prize
|
|
causes. Juries cannot be supposed competent to investigations that
|
|
require a thorough knowledge of the laws and usages of nations; and
|
|
they will sometimes be under the influence of impressions which will
|
|
not suffer them to pay sufficient regard to those considerations of
|
|
public policy which ought to guide their inquiries. There would of
|
|
course be always danger that the rights of other nations might be
|
|
infringed by their decisions, so as to afford occasions of reprisal
|
|
and war. Though the proper province of juries be to determine
|
|
matters of fact, yet in most cases legal consequences are
|
|
complicated with fact in such a manner as to render a separation
|
|
impracticable.
|
|
It will add great weight to this remark, in relation to prize
|
|
causes, to mention that the method of determining them has been
|
|
thought worthy of particular regulation in various treaties between
|
|
different powers of Europe, and that, pursuant to such treaties,
|
|
they are determinable in Great Britain, in the last resort, before
|
|
the king himself, in his privy council, where the fact, as well as
|
|
the law, undergoes a re-examination. This alone demonstrates the
|
|
impolicy of inserting a fundamental provision in the Constitution
|
|
which would make the State systems a standard for the national
|
|
government in the article under consideration, and the danger of
|
|
encumbering the government with any constitutional provisions the
|
|
propriety of which is not indisputable.
|
|
My convictions are equally strong that great advantages result
|
|
from the separation of the equity from the law jurisdiction, and
|
|
that the causes which belong to the former would be improperly
|
|
committed to juries. The great and primary use of a court of equity
|
|
is to give relief IN EXTRAORDINARY CASES, which are EXCEPTIONS2
|
|
to general rules. To unite the jurisdiction of such cases with the
|
|
ordinary jurisdiction, must have a tendency to unsettle the general
|
|
rules, and to subject every case that arises to a SPECIAL
|
|
determination; while a separation of the one from the other has the
|
|
contrary effect of rendering one a sentinel over the other, and of
|
|
keeping each within the expedient limits. Besides this, the
|
|
circumstances that constitute cases proper for courts of equity are
|
|
in many instances so nice and intricate, that they are incompatible
|
|
with the genius of trials by jury. They require often such long,
|
|
deliberate, and critical investigation as would be impracticable to
|
|
men called from their occupations, and obliged to decide before they
|
|
were permitted to return to them. The simplicity and expedition
|
|
which form the distinguishing characters of this mode of trial
|
|
require that the matter to be decided should be reduced to some
|
|
single and obvious point; while the litigations usual in chancery
|
|
frequently comprehend a long train of minute and independent
|
|
particulars.
|
|
It is true that the separation of the equity from the legal
|
|
jurisdiction is peculiar to the English system of jurisprudence:
|
|
which is the model that has been followed in several of the States.
|
|
But it is equally true that the trial by jury has been unknown in
|
|
every case in which they have been united. And the separation is
|
|
essential to the preservation of that institution in its pristine
|
|
purity. The nature of a court of equity will readily permit the
|
|
extension of its jurisdiction to matters of law; but it is not a
|
|
little to be suspected, that the attempt to extend the jurisdiction
|
|
of the courts of law to matters of equity will not only be
|
|
unproductive of the advantages which may be derived from courts of
|
|
chancery, on the plan upon which they are established in this State,
|
|
but will tend gradually to change the nature of the courts of law,
|
|
and to undermine the trial by jury, by introducing questions too
|
|
complicated for a decision in that mode.
|
|
These appeared to be conclusive reasons against incorporating
|
|
the systems of all the States, in the formation of the national
|
|
judiciary, according to what may be conjectured to have been the
|
|
attempt of the Pennsylvania minority. Let us now examine how far
|
|
the proposition of Massachusetts is calculated to remedy the
|
|
supposed defect.
|
|
It is in this form: ``In civil actions between citizens of
|
|
different States, every issue of fact, arising in ACTIONS AT COMMON
|
|
LAW, may be tried by a jury if the parties, or either of them
|
|
request it.''
|
|
This, at best, is a proposition confined to one description of
|
|
causes; and the inference is fair, either that the Massachusetts
|
|
convention considered that as the only class of federal causes, in
|
|
which the trial by jury would be proper; or that if desirous of a
|
|
more extensive provision, they found it impracticable to devise one
|
|
which would properly answer the end. If the first, the omission of
|
|
a regulation respecting so partial an object can never be considered
|
|
as a material imperfection in the system. If the last, it affords a
|
|
strong corroboration of the extreme difficulty of the thing.
|
|
But this is not all: if we advert to the observations already
|
|
made respecting the courts that subsist in the several States of the
|
|
Union, and the different powers exercised by them, it will appear
|
|
that there are no expressions more vague and indeterminate than
|
|
those which have been employed to characterize THAT species of
|
|
causes which it is intended shall be entitled to a trial by jury.
|
|
In this State, the boundaries between actions at common law and
|
|
actions of equitable jurisdiction, are ascertained in conformity to
|
|
the rules which prevail in England upon that subject. In many of
|
|
the other States the boundaries are less precise. In some of them
|
|
every cause is to be tried in a court of common law, and upon that
|
|
foundation every action may be considered as an action at common
|
|
law, to be determined by a jury, if the parties, or either of them,
|
|
choose it. Hence the same irregularity and confusion would be
|
|
introduced by a compliance with this proposition, that I have
|
|
already noticed as resulting from the regulation proposed by the
|
|
Pennsylvania minority. In one State a cause would receive its
|
|
determination from a jury, if the parties, or either of them,
|
|
requested it; but in another State, a cause exactly similar to the
|
|
other, must be decided without the intervention of a jury, because
|
|
the State judicatories varied as to common-law jurisdiction.
|
|
It is obvious, therefore, that the Massachusetts proposition,
|
|
upon this subject cannot operate as a general regulation, until some
|
|
uniform plan, with respect to the limits of common-law and equitable
|
|
jurisdictions, shall be adopted by the different States. To devise
|
|
a plan of that kind is a task arduous in itself, and which it would
|
|
require much time and reflection to mature. It would be extremely
|
|
difficult, if not impossible, to suggest any general regulation that
|
|
would be acceptable to all the States in the Union, or that would
|
|
perfectly quadrate with the several State institutions.
|
|
It may be asked, Why could not a reference have been made to the
|
|
constitution of this State, taking that, which is allowed by me to
|
|
be a good one, as a standard for the United States? I answer that
|
|
it is not very probable the other States would entertain the same
|
|
opinion of our institutions as we do ourselves. It is natural to
|
|
suppose that they are hitherto more attached to their own, and that
|
|
each would struggle for the preference. If the plan of taking one
|
|
State as a model for the whole had been thought of in the
|
|
convention, it is to be presumed that the adoption of it in that
|
|
body would have been rendered difficult by the predilection of each
|
|
representation in favor of its own government; and it must be
|
|
uncertain which of the States would have been taken as the model.
|
|
It has been shown that many of them would be improper ones. And I
|
|
leave it to conjecture, whether, under all circumstances, it is most
|
|
likely that New York, or some other State, would have been preferred.
|
|
But admit that a judicious selection could have been effected in
|
|
the convention, still there would have been great danger of jealousy
|
|
and disgust in the other States, at the partiality which had been
|
|
shown to the institutions of one. The enemies of the plan would
|
|
have been furnished with a fine pretext for raising a host of local
|
|
prejudices against it, which perhaps might have hazarded, in no
|
|
inconsiderable degree, its final establishment.
|
|
To avoid the embarrassments of a definition of the cases which
|
|
the trial by jury ought to embrace, it is sometimes suggested by men
|
|
of enthusiastic tempers, that a provision might have been inserted
|
|
for establishing it in all cases whatsoever. For this I believe, no
|
|
precedent is to be found in any member of the Union; and the
|
|
considerations which have been stated in discussing the proposition
|
|
of the minority of Pennsylvania, must satisfy every sober mind that
|
|
the establishment of the trial by jury in ALL cases would have been
|
|
an unpardonable error in the plan.
|
|
In short, the more it is considered the more arduous will appear
|
|
the task of fashioning a provision in such a form as not to express
|
|
too little to answer the purpose, or too much to be advisable; or
|
|
which might not have opened other sources of opposition to the great
|
|
and essential object of introducing a firm national government.
|
|
I cannot but persuade myself, on the other hand, that the
|
|
different lights in which the subject has been placed in the course
|
|
of these observations, will go far towards removing in candid minds
|
|
the apprehensions they may have entertained on the point. They have
|
|
tended to show that the security of liberty is materially concerned
|
|
only in the trial by jury in criminal cases, which is provided for
|
|
in the most ample manner in the plan of the convention; that even
|
|
in far the greatest proportion of civil cases, and those in which
|
|
the great body of the community is interested, that mode of trial
|
|
will remain in its full force, as established in the State
|
|
constitutions, untouched and unaffected by the plan of the
|
|
convention; that it is in no case abolished3 by that plan; and
|
|
that there are great if not insurmountable difficulties in the way
|
|
of making any precise and proper provision for it in a Constitution
|
|
for the United States.
|
|
The best judges of the matter will be the least anxious for a
|
|
constitutional establishment of the trial by jury in civil cases,
|
|
and will be the most ready to admit that the changes which are
|
|
continually happening in the affairs of society may render a
|
|
different mode of determining questions of property preferable in
|
|
many cases in which that mode of trial now prevails. For my part, I
|
|
acknowledge myself to be convinced that even in this State it might
|
|
be advantageously extended to some cases to which it does not at
|
|
present apply, and might as advantageously be abridged in others.
|
|
It is conceded by all reasonable men that it ought not to obtain in
|
|
all cases. The examples of innovations which contract its ancient
|
|
limits, as well in these States as in Great Britain, afford a strong
|
|
presumption that its former extent has been found inconvenient, and
|
|
give room to suppose that future experience may discover the
|
|
propriety and utility of other exceptions. I suspect it to be
|
|
impossible in the nature of the thing to fix the salutary point at
|
|
which the operation of the institution ought to stop, and this is
|
|
with me a strong argument for leaving the matter to the discretion
|
|
of the legislature.
|
|
This is now clearly understood to be the case in Great Britain,
|
|
and it is equally so in the State of Connecticut; and yet it may be
|
|
safely affirmed that more numerous encroachments have been made upon
|
|
the trial by jury in this State since the Revolution, though
|
|
provided for by a positive article of our constitution, than has
|
|
happened in the same time either in Connecticut or Great Britain.
|
|
It may be added that these encroachments have generally originated
|
|
with the men who endeavor to persuade the people they are the
|
|
warmest defenders of popular liberty, but who have rarely suffered
|
|
constitutional obstacles to arrest them in a favorite career. The
|
|
truth is that the general GENIUS of a government is all that can be
|
|
substantially relied upon for permanent effects. Particular
|
|
provisions, though not altogether useless, have far less virtue and
|
|
efficacy than are commonly ascribed to them; and the want of them
|
|
will never be, with men of sound discernment, a decisive objection
|
|
to any plan which exhibits the leading characters of a good
|
|
government.
|
|
It certainly sounds not a little harsh and extraordinary to
|
|
affirm that there is no security for liberty in a Constitution which
|
|
expressly establishes the trial by jury in criminal cases, because
|
|
it does not do it in civil also; while it is a notorious fact that
|
|
Connecticut, which has been always regarded as the most popular
|
|
State in the Union, can boast of no constitutional provision for
|
|
either.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
1 It has been erroneously insinuated. with regard to the court
|
|
of chancery, that this court generally tries disputed facts by a
|
|
jury. The truth is, that references to a jury in that court rarely
|
|
happen, and are in no case necessary but where the validity of a
|
|
devise of land comes into question.
|
|
2 It is true that the principles by which that relief is
|
|
governed are now reduced to a regular system; but it is not the
|
|
less true that they are in the main applicable to SPECIAL
|
|
circumstances, which form exceptions to general rules.
|
|
3 Vide No. 81, in which the supposition of its being
|
|
abolished by the appellate jurisdiction in matters of fact being
|
|
vested in the Supreme Court, is examined and refuted.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 84
|
|
|
|
Certain General and Miscellaneous Objections to the Constitution
|
|
Considered and Answered
|
|
From McLEAN's Edition, New York.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
IN THE course of the foregoing review of the Constitution, I
|
|
have taken notice of, and endeavored to answer most of the
|
|
objections which have appeared against it. There, however, remain a
|
|
few which either did not fall naturally under any particular head or
|
|
were forgotten in their proper places. These shall now be
|
|
discussed; but as the subject has been drawn into great length, I
|
|
shall so far consult brevity as to comprise all my observations on
|
|
these miscellaneous points in a single paper.
|
|
The most considerable of the remaining objections is that the
|
|
plan of the convention contains no bill of rights. Among other
|
|
answers given to this, it has been upon different occasions remarked
|
|
that the constitutions of several of the States are in a similar
|
|
predicament. I add that New York is of the number. And yet the
|
|
opposers of the new system, in this State, who profess an unlimited
|
|
admiration for its constitution, are among the most intemperate
|
|
partisans of a bill of rights. To justify their zeal in this
|
|
matter, they allege two things: one is that, though the
|
|
constitution of New York has no bill of rights prefixed to it, yet
|
|
it contains, in the body of it, various provisions in favor of
|
|
particular privileges and rights, which, in substance amount to the
|
|
same thing; the other is, that the Constitution adopts, in their
|
|
full extent, the common and statute law of Great Britain, by which
|
|
many other rights, not expressed in it, are equally secured.
|
|
To the first I answer, that the Constitution proposed by the
|
|
convention contains, as well as the constitution of this State, a
|
|
number of such provisions.
|
|
Independent of those which relate to the structure of the
|
|
government, we find the following: Article 1, section 3, clause 7
|
|
``Judgment in cases of impeachment shall not extend further than to
|
|
removal from office, and disqualification to hold and enjoy any
|
|
office of honor, trust, or profit under the United States; but the
|
|
party convicted shall, nevertheless, be liable and subject to
|
|
indictment, trial, judgment, and punishment according to law.''
|
|
Section 9, of the same article, clause 2 ``The privilege of the
|
|
writ of habeas corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in
|
|
cases of rebellion or invasion the public safety may require it.''
|
|
Clause 3 ``No bill of attainder or ex-post-facto law shall be
|
|
passed.'' Clause 7 ``No title of nobility shall be granted by the
|
|
United States; and no person holding any office of profit or trust
|
|
under them, shall, without the consent of the Congress, accept of
|
|
any present, emolument, office, or title of any kind whatever, from
|
|
any king, prince, or foreign state.'' Article 3, section 2, clause
|
|
3 ``The trial of all crimes, except in cases of impeachment, shall
|
|
be by jury; and such trial shall be held in the State where the
|
|
said crimes shall have been committed; but when not committed
|
|
within any State, the trial shall be at such place or places as the
|
|
Congress may by law have directed.'' Section 3, of the same
|
|
article ``Treason against the United States shall consist only in
|
|
levying war against them, or in adhering to their enemies, giving
|
|
them aid and comfort. No person shall be convicted of treason,
|
|
unless on the testimony of two witnesses to the same overt act, or
|
|
on confession in open court.'' And clause 3, of the same
|
|
section ``The Congress shall have power to declare the punishment of
|
|
treason; but no attainder of treason shall work corruption of
|
|
blood, or forfeiture, except during the life of the person attainted.''
|
|
It may well be a question, whether these are not, upon the
|
|
whole, of equal importance with any which are to be found in the
|
|
constitution of this State. The establishment of the writ of
|
|
habeas corpus, the prohibition of ex-post-facto laws, and of
|
|
TITLES OF NOBILITY, TO WHICH WE HAVE NO CORRESPONDING PROVISION IN
|
|
OUR CONSTITUTION, are perhaps greater securities to liberty and
|
|
republicanism than any it contains. The creation of crimes after
|
|
the commission of the fact, or, in other words, the subjecting of
|
|
men to punishment for things which, when they were done, were
|
|
breaches of no law, and the practice of arbitrary imprisonments,
|
|
have been, in all ages, the favorite and most formidable instruments
|
|
of tyranny. The observations of the judicious Blackstone,1 in
|
|
reference to the latter, are well worthy of recital: ``To bereave a
|
|
man of life, says he, or by violence to confiscate his estate,
|
|
without accusation or trial, would be so gross and notorious an act
|
|
of despotism, as must at once convey the alarm of tyranny throughout
|
|
the whole nation; but confinement of the person, by secretly
|
|
hurrying him to jail, where his sufferings are unknown or forgotten,
|
|
is a less public, a less striking, and therefore A MORE DANGEROUS
|
|
ENGINE of arbitrary government.'' And as a remedy for this fatal
|
|
evil he is everywhere peculiarly emphatical in his encomiums on the
|
|
habeas-corpus act, which in one place he calls ``the BULWARK of
|
|
the British Constitution.''2
|
|
Nothing need be said to illustrate the importance of the
|
|
prohibition of titles of nobility. This may truly be denominated
|
|
the corner-stone of republican government; for so long as they are
|
|
excluded, there can never be serious danger that the government will
|
|
be any other than that of the people.
|
|
To the second that is, to the pretended establishment of the
|
|
common and state law by the Constitution, I answer, that they are
|
|
expressly made subject ``to such alterations and provisions as the
|
|
legislature shall from time to time make concerning the same.''
|
|
They are therefore at any moment liable to repeal by the ordinary
|
|
legislative power, and of course have no constitutional sanction.
|
|
The only use of the declaration was to recognize the ancient law
|
|
and to remove doubts which might have been occasioned by the
|
|
Revolution. This consequently can be considered as no part of a
|
|
declaration of rights, which under our constitutions must be
|
|
intended as limitations of the power of the government itself.
|
|
It has been several times truly remarked that bills of rights
|
|
are, in their origin, stipulations between kings and their subjects,
|
|
abridgements of prerogative in favor of privilege, reservations of
|
|
rights not surrendered to the prince. Such was MAGNA CHARTA,
|
|
obtained by the barons, sword in hand, from King John. Such were
|
|
the subsequent confirmations of that charter by succeeding princes.
|
|
Such was the PETITION OF RIGHT assented to by Charles I., in the
|
|
beginning of his reign. Such, also, was the Declaration of Right
|
|
presented by the Lords and Commons to the Prince of Orange in 1688,
|
|
and afterwards thrown into the form of an act of parliament called
|
|
the Bill of Rights. It is evident, therefore, that, according to
|
|
their primitive signification, they have no application to
|
|
constitutions professedly founded upon the power of the people, and
|
|
executed by their immediate representatives and servants. Here, in
|
|
strictness, the people surrender nothing; and as they retain every
|
|
thing they have no need of particular reservations. ``WE, THE
|
|
PEOPLE of the United States, to secure the blessings of liberty to
|
|
ourselves and our posterity, do ORDAIN and ESTABLISH this
|
|
Constitution for the United States of America.'' Here is a better
|
|
recognition of popular rights, than volumes of those aphorisms which
|
|
make the principal figure in several of our State bills of rights,
|
|
and which would sound much better in a treatise of ethics than in a
|
|
constitution of government.
|
|
But a minute detail of particular rights is certainly far less
|
|
applicable to a Constitution like that under consideration, which is
|
|
merely intended to regulate the general political interests of the
|
|
nation, than to a constitution which has the regulation of every
|
|
species of personal and private concerns. If, therefore, the loud
|
|
clamors against the plan of the convention, on this score, are well
|
|
founded, no epithets of reprobation will be too strong for the
|
|
constitution of this State. But the truth is, that both of them
|
|
contain all which, in relation to their objects, is reasonably to be
|
|
desired.
|
|
I go further, and affirm that bills of rights, in the sense and
|
|
to the extent in which they are contended for, are not only
|
|
unnecessary in the proposed Constitution, but would even be
|
|
dangerous. They would contain various exceptions to powers not
|
|
granted; and, on this very account, would afford a colorable
|
|
pretext to claim more than were granted. For why declare that
|
|
things shall not be done which there is no power to do? Why, for
|
|
instance, should it be said that the liberty of the press shall not
|
|
be restrained, when no power is given by which restrictions may be
|
|
imposed? I will not contend that such a provision would confer a
|
|
regulating power; but it is evident that it would furnish, to men
|
|
disposed to usurp, a plausible pretense for claiming that power.
|
|
They might urge with a semblance of reason, that the Constitution
|
|
ought not to be charged with the absurdity of providing against the
|
|
abuse of an authority which was not given, and that the provision
|
|
against restraining the liberty of the press afforded a clear
|
|
implication, that a power to prescribe proper regulations concerning
|
|
it was intended to be vested in the national government. This may
|
|
serve as a specimen of the numerous handles which would be given to
|
|
the doctrine of constructive powers, by the indulgence of an
|
|
injudicious zeal for bills of rights.
|
|
On the subject of the liberty of the press, as much as has been
|
|
said, I cannot forbear adding a remark or two: in the first place,
|
|
I observe, that there is not a syllable concerning it in the
|
|
constitution of this State; in the next, I contend, that whatever
|
|
has been said about it in that of any other State, amounts to
|
|
nothing. What signifies a declaration, that ``the liberty of the
|
|
press shall be inviolably preserved''? What is the liberty of the
|
|
press? Who can give it any definition which would not leave the
|
|
utmost latitude for evasion? I hold it to be impracticable; and
|
|
from this I infer, that its security, whatever fine declarations may
|
|
be inserted in any constitution respecting it, must altogether
|
|
depend on public opinion, and on the general spirit of the people
|
|
and of the government.3 And here, after all, as is intimated
|
|
upon another occasion, must we seek for the only solid basis of all
|
|
our rights.
|
|
There remains but one other view of this matter to conclude the
|
|
point. The truth is, after all the declamations we have heard, that
|
|
the Constitution is itself, in every rational sense, and to every
|
|
useful purpose, A BILL OF RIGHTS. The several bills of rights in
|
|
Great Britain form its Constitution, and conversely the constitution
|
|
of each State is its bill of rights. And the proposed Constitution,
|
|
if adopted, will be the bill of rights of the Union. Is it one
|
|
object of a bill of rights to declare and specify the political
|
|
privileges of the citizens in the structure and administration of
|
|
the government? This is done in the most ample and precise manner
|
|
in the plan of the convention; comprehending various precautions
|
|
for the public security, which are not to be found in any of the
|
|
State constitutions. Is another object of a bill of rights to
|
|
define certain immunities and modes of proceeding, which are
|
|
relative to personal and private concerns? This we have seen has
|
|
also been attended to, in a variety of cases, in the same plan.
|
|
Adverting therefore to the substantial meaning of a bill of rights,
|
|
it is absurd to allege that it is not to be found in the work of the
|
|
convention. It may be said that it does not go far enough, though
|
|
it will not be easy to make this appear; but it can with no
|
|
propriety be contended that there is no such thing. It certainly
|
|
must be immaterial what mode is observed as to the order of
|
|
declaring the rights of the citizens, if they are to be found in any
|
|
part of the instrument which establishes the government. And hence
|
|
it must be apparent, that much of what has been said on this subject
|
|
rests merely on verbal and nominal distinctions, entirely foreign
|
|
from the substance of the thing.
|
|
Another objection which has been made, and which, from the
|
|
frequency of its repetition, it is to be presumed is relied on, is
|
|
of this nature: ``It is improper say the objectors to confer such
|
|
large powers, as are proposed, upon the national government, because
|
|
the seat of that government must of necessity be too remote from
|
|
many of the States to admit of a proper knowledge on the part of the
|
|
constituent, of the conduct of the representative body.'' This
|
|
argument, if it proves any thing, proves that there ought to be no
|
|
general government whatever. For the powers which, it seems to be
|
|
agreed on all hands, ought to be vested in the Union, cannot be
|
|
safely intrusted to a body which is not under every requisite
|
|
control. But there are satisfactory reasons to show that the
|
|
objection is in reality not well founded. There is in most of the
|
|
arguments which relate to distance a palpable illusion of the
|
|
imagination. What are the sources of information by which the
|
|
people in Montgomery County must regulate their judgment of the
|
|
conduct of their representatives in the State legislature? Of
|
|
personal observation they can have no benefit. This is confined to
|
|
the citizens on the spot. They must therefore depend on the
|
|
information of intelligent men, in whom they confide; and how must
|
|
these men obtain their information? Evidently from the complexion
|
|
of public measures, from the public prints, from correspondences
|
|
with theirrepresentatives, and with other persons who reside at the
|
|
place of their deliberations. This does not apply to Montgomery
|
|
County only, but to all the counties at any considerable distance
|
|
from the seat of government.
|
|
It is equally evident that the same sources of information would
|
|
be open to the people in relation to the conduct of their
|
|
representatives in the general government, and the impediments to a
|
|
prompt communication which distance may be supposed to create, will
|
|
be overbalanced by the effects of the vigilance of the State
|
|
governments. The executive and legislative bodies of each State
|
|
will be so many sentinels over the persons employed in every
|
|
department of the national administration; and as it will be in
|
|
their power to adopt and pursue a regular and effectual system of
|
|
intelligence, they can never be at a loss to know the behavior of
|
|
those who represent their constituents in the national councils, and
|
|
can readily communicate the same knowledge to the people. Their
|
|
disposition to apprise the community of whatever may prejudice its
|
|
interests from another quarter, may be relied upon, if it were only
|
|
from the rivalship of power. And we may conclude with the fullest
|
|
assurance that the people, through that channel, will be better
|
|
informed of the conduct of their national representatives, than they
|
|
can be by any means they now possess of that of their State
|
|
representatives.
|
|
It ought also to be remembered that the citizens who inhabit the
|
|
country at and near the seat of government will, in all questions
|
|
that affect the general liberty and prosperity, have the same
|
|
interest with those who are at a distance, and that they will stand
|
|
ready to sound the alarm when necessary, and to point out the actors
|
|
in any pernicious project. The public papers will be expeditious
|
|
messengers of intelligence to the most remote inhabitants of the
|
|
Union.
|
|
Among the many curious objections which have appeared against
|
|
the proposed Constitution, the most extraordinary and the least
|
|
colorable is derived from the want of some provision respecting the
|
|
debts due TO the United States. This has been represented as a
|
|
tacit relinquishment of those debts, and as a wicked contrivance to
|
|
screen public defaulters. The newspapers have teemed with the most
|
|
inflammatory railings on this head; yet there is nothing clearer
|
|
than that the suggestion is entirely void of foundation, the
|
|
offspring of extreme ignorance or extreme dishonesty. In addition
|
|
to the remarks I have made upon the subject in another place, I
|
|
shall only observe that as it is a plain dictate of common-sense, so
|
|
it is also an established doctrine of political law, that ``STATES
|
|
NEITHER LOSE ANY OF THEIR RIGHTS, NOR ARE DISCHARGED FROM ANY OF
|
|
THEIR OBLIGATIONS, BY A CHANGE IN THE FORM OF THEIR CIVIL GOVERNMENT.''4
|
|
The last objection of any consequence, which I at present
|
|
recollect, turns upon the article of expense. If it were even true,
|
|
that the adoption of the proposed government would occasion a
|
|
considerable increase of expense, it would be an objection that
|
|
ought to have no weight against the plan.
|
|
The great bulk of the citizens of America are with reason
|
|
convinced, that Union is the basis of their political happiness.
|
|
Men of sense of all parties now, with few exceptions, agree that it
|
|
cannot be preserved under the present system, nor without radical
|
|
alterations; that new and extensive powers ought to be granted to
|
|
the national head, and that these require a different organization
|
|
of the federal government a single body being an unsafe depositary
|
|
of such ample authorities. In conceding all this, the question of
|
|
expense must be given up; for it is impossible, with any degree of
|
|
safety, to narrow the foundation upon which the system is to stand.
|
|
The two branches of the legislature are, in the first instance, to
|
|
consist of only sixty-five persons, which is the same number of
|
|
which Congress, under the existing Confederation, may be composed.
|
|
It is true that this number is intended to be increased; but this
|
|
is to keep pace with the progress of the population and resources of
|
|
the country. It is evident that a less number would, even in the
|
|
first instance, have been unsafe, and that a continuance of the
|
|
present number would, in a more advanced stage of population, be a
|
|
very inadequate representation of the people.
|
|
Whence is the dreaded augmentation of expense to spring? One
|
|
source indicated, is the multiplication of offices under the new
|
|
government. Let us examine this a little.
|
|
It is evident that the principal departments of the
|
|
administration under the present government, are the same which will
|
|
be required under the new. There are now a Secretary of War, a
|
|
Secretary of Foreign Affairs, a Secretary for Domestic Affairs, a
|
|
Board of Treasury, consisting of three persons, a Treasurer,
|
|
assistants, clerks, etc. These officers are indispensable under any
|
|
system, and will suffice under the new as well as the old. As to
|
|
ambassadors and other ministers and agents in foreign countries, the
|
|
proposed Constitution can make no other difference than to render
|
|
their characters, where they reside, more respectable, and their
|
|
services more useful. As to persons to be employed in the
|
|
collection of the revenues, it is unquestionably true that these
|
|
will form a very considerable addition to the number of federal
|
|
officers; but it will not follow that this will occasion an
|
|
increase of public expense. It will be in most cases nothing more
|
|
than an exchange of State for national officers. In the collection
|
|
of all duties, for instance, the persons employed will be wholly of
|
|
the latter description. The States individually will stand in no
|
|
need of any for this purpose. What difference can it make in point
|
|
of expense to pay officers of the customs appointed by the State or
|
|
by the United States? There is no good reason to suppose that
|
|
either the number or the salaries of the latter will be greater than
|
|
those of the former.
|
|
Where then are we to seek for those additional articles of
|
|
expense which are to swell the account to the enormous size that has
|
|
been represented to us? The chief item which occurs to me respects
|
|
the support of the judges of the United States. I do not add the
|
|
President, because there is now a president of Congress, whose
|
|
expenses may not be far, if any thing, short of those which will be
|
|
incurred on account of the President of the United States. The
|
|
support of the judges will clearly be an extra expense, but to what
|
|
extent will depend on the particular plan which may be adopted in
|
|
regard to this matter. But upon no reasonable plan can it amount to
|
|
a sum which will be an object of material consequence.
|
|
Let us now see what there is to counterbalance any extra expense
|
|
that may attend the establishment of the proposed government. The
|
|
first thing which presents itself is that a great part of the
|
|
business which now keeps Congress sitting through the year will be
|
|
transacted by the President. Even the management of foreign
|
|
negotiations will naturally devolve upon him, according to general
|
|
principles concerted with the Senate, and subject to their final
|
|
concurrence. Hence it is evident that a portion of the year will
|
|
suffice for the session of both the Senate and the House of
|
|
Representatives; we may suppose about a fourth for the latter and a
|
|
third, or perhaps half, for the former. The extra business of
|
|
treaties and appointments may give this extra occupation to the
|
|
Senate. From this circumstance we may infer that, until the House
|
|
of Representatives shall be increased greatly beyond its present
|
|
number, there will be a considerable saving of expense from the
|
|
difference between the constant session of the present and the
|
|
temporary session of the future Congress.
|
|
But there is another circumstance of great importance in the
|
|
view of economy. The business of the United States has hitherto
|
|
occupied the State legislatures, as well as Congress. The latter
|
|
has made requisitions which the former have had to provide for.
|
|
Hence it has happened that the sessions of the State legislatures
|
|
have been protracted greatly beyond what was necessary for the
|
|
execution of the mere local business of the States. More than half
|
|
their time has been frequently employed in matters which related to
|
|
the United States. Now the members who compose the legislatures of
|
|
the several States amount to two thousand and upwards, which number
|
|
has hitherto performed what under the new system will be done in the
|
|
first instance by sixty-five persons, and probably at no future
|
|
period by above a fourth or fifth of that number. The Congress
|
|
under the proposed government will do all the business of the United
|
|
States themselves, without the intervention of the State
|
|
legislatures, who thenceforth will have only to attend to the
|
|
affairs of their particular States, and will not have to sit in any
|
|
proportion as long as they have heretofore done. This difference in
|
|
the time of the sessions of the State legislatures will be clear
|
|
gain, and will alone form an article of saving, which may be
|
|
regarded as an equivalent for any additional objects of expense that
|
|
may be occasioned by the adoption of the new system.
|
|
The result from these observations is that the sources of
|
|
additional expense from the establishment of the proposed
|
|
Constitution are much fewer than may have been imagined; that they
|
|
are counterbalanced by considerable objects of saving; and that
|
|
while it is questionable on which side the scale will preponderate,
|
|
it is certain that a government less expensive would be incompetent
|
|
to the purposes of the Union.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
1. Vide Blackstone's ``Commentaries,'' vol. 1., p. 136.
|
|
2. Vide Blackstone's ``Commentaries,'' vol. iv., p. 438.
|
|
3. To show that there is a power in the Constitution by which
|
|
the liberty of the press may be affected, recourse has been had to
|
|
the power of taxation. It is said that duties may be laid upon the
|
|
publications so high as to amount to a prohibition. I know not by
|
|
what logic it could be maintained, that the declarations in the
|
|
State constitutions, in favor of the freedom of the press, would be
|
|
a constitutional impediment to the imposition of duties upon
|
|
publications by the State legislatures. It cannot certainly be
|
|
pretended that any degree of duties, however low, would be an
|
|
abridgment of the liberty of the press. We know that newspapers
|
|
are taxed in Great Britain, and yet it is notorious that the press
|
|
nowhere enjoys greater liberty than in that country. And if duties
|
|
of any kind may be laid without a violation of that liberty, it is
|
|
evident that the extent must depend on legislative discretion,
|
|
respecting the liberty of the press, will give it no greater
|
|
security than it will have without them. The same invasions of it
|
|
may be effected under the State constitutions which contain those
|
|
declarations through the means of taxation, as under the proposed
|
|
Constitution, which has nothing of the kind. It would be quite as
|
|
significant to declare that government ought to be free, that taxes
|
|
ought not to be excessive, etc., as that the liberty of the press
|
|
ought not to be restrained.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FEDERALIST No. 85
|
|
|
|
Concluding Remarks
|
|
From MCLEAN's Edition, New York.
|
|
|
|
HAMILTON
|
|
|
|
To the People of the State of New York:
|
|
ACCORDING to the formal division of the subject of these papers,
|
|
announced in my first number, there would appear still to remain for
|
|
discussion two points: ``the analogy of the proposed government to
|
|
your own State constitution,'' and ``the additional security which
|
|
its adoption will afford to republican government, to liberty, and
|
|
to property.'' But these heads have been so fully anticipated and
|
|
exhausted in the progress of the work, that it would now scarcely be
|
|
possible to do any thing more than repeat, in a more dilated form,
|
|
what has been heretofore said, which the advanced stage of the
|
|
question, and the time already spent upon it, conspire to forbid.
|
|
It is remarkable, that the resemblance of the plan of the
|
|
convention to the act which organizes the government of this State
|
|
holds, not less with regard to many of the supposed defects, than to
|
|
the real excellences of the former. Among the pretended defects are
|
|
the re-eligibility of the Executive, the want of a council, the
|
|
omission of a formal bill of rights, the omission of a provision
|
|
respecting the liberty of the press. These and several others which
|
|
have been noted in the course of our inquiries are as much
|
|
chargeable on the existing constitution of this State, as on the one
|
|
proposed for the Union; and a man must have slender pretensions to
|
|
consistency, who can rail at the latter for imperfections which he
|
|
finds no difficulty in excusing in the former. Nor indeed can there
|
|
be a better proof of the insincerity and affectation of some of the
|
|
zealous adversaries of the plan of the convention among us, who
|
|
profess to be the devoted admirers of the government under which
|
|
they live, than the fury with which they have attacked that plan,
|
|
for matters in regard to which our own constitution is equally or
|
|
perhaps more vulnerable.
|
|
The additional securities to republican government, to liberty
|
|
and to property, to be derived from the adoption of the plan under
|
|
consideration, consist chiefly in the restraints which the
|
|
preservation of the Union will impose on local factions and
|
|
insurrections, and on the ambition of powerful individuals in single
|
|
States, who may acquire credit and influence enough, from leaders
|
|
and favorites, to become the despots of the people; in the
|
|
diminution of the opportunities to foreign intrigue, which the
|
|
dissolution of the Confederacy would invite and facilitate; in the
|
|
prevention of extensive military establishments, which could not
|
|
fail to grow out of wars between the States in a disunited
|
|
situation; in the express guaranty of a republican form of
|
|
government to each; in the absolute and universal exclusion of
|
|
titles of nobility; and in the precautions against the repetition
|
|
of those practices on the part of the State governments which have
|
|
undermined the foundations of property and credit, have planted
|
|
mutual distrust in the breasts of all classes of citizens, and have
|
|
occasioned an almost universal prostration of morals.
|
|
Thus have I, fellow-citizens, executed the task I had assigned
|
|
to myself; with what success, your conduct must determine. I trust
|
|
at least you will admit that I have not failed in the assurance I
|
|
gave you respecting the spirit with which my endeavors should be
|
|
conducted. I have addressed myself purely to your judgments, and
|
|
have studiously avoided those asperities which are too apt to
|
|
disgrace political disputants of all parties, and which have been
|
|
not a little provoked by the language and conduct of the opponents
|
|
of the Constitution. The charge of a conspiracy against the
|
|
liberties of the people, which has been indiscriminately brought
|
|
against the advocates of the plan, has something in it too wanton
|
|
and too malignant, not to excite the indignation of every man who
|
|
feels in his own bosom a refutation of the calumny. The perpetual
|
|
changes which have been rung upon the wealthy, the well-born, and
|
|
the great, have been such as to inspire the disgust of all sensible
|
|
men. And the unwarrantable concealments and misrepresentations
|
|
which have been in various ways practiced to keep the truth from the
|
|
public eye, have been of a nature to demand the reprobation of all
|
|
honest men. It is not impossible that these circumstances may have
|
|
occasionally betrayed me into intemperances of expression which I
|
|
did not intend; it is certain that I have frequently felt a
|
|
struggle between sensibility and moderation; and if the former has
|
|
in some instances prevailed, it must be my excuse that it has been
|
|
neither often nor much.
|
|
Let us now pause and ask ourselves whether, in the course of
|
|
these papers, the proposed Constitution has not been satisfactorily
|
|
vindicated from the aspersions thrown upon it; and whether it has
|
|
not been shown to be worthy of the public approbation, and necessary
|
|
to the public safety and prosperity. Every man is bound to answer
|
|
these questions to himself, according to the best of his conscience
|
|
and understanding, and to act agreeably to the genuine and sober
|
|
dictates of his judgment. This is a duty from which nothing can
|
|
give him a dispensation. 'T is one that he is called upon, nay,
|
|
constrained by all the obligations that form the bands of society,
|
|
to discharge sincerely and honestly. No partial motive, no
|
|
particular interest, no pride of opinion, no temporary passion or
|
|
prejudice, will justify to himself, to his country, or to his
|
|
posterity, an improper election of the part he is to act. Let him
|
|
beware of an obstinate adherence to party; let him reflect that the
|
|
object upon which he is to decide is not a particular interest of
|
|
the community, but the very existence of the nation; and let him
|
|
remember that a majority of America has already given its sanction
|
|
to the plan which he is to approve or reject.
|
|
I shall not dissemble that I feel an entire confidence in the
|
|
arguments which recommend the proposed system to your adoption, and
|
|
that I am unable to discern any real force in those by which it has
|
|
been opposed. I am persuaded that it is the best which our
|
|
political situation, habits, and opinions will admit, and superior
|
|
to any the revolution has produced.
|
|
Concessions on the part of the friends of the plan, that it has
|
|
not a claim to absolute perfection, have afforded matter of no small
|
|
triumph to its enemies. ``Why,'' say they, ``should we adopt an
|
|
imperfect thing? Why not amend it and make it perfect before it is
|
|
irrevocably established?'' This may be plausible enough, but it is
|
|
only plausible. In the first place I remark, that the extent of
|
|
these concessions has been greatly exaggerated. They have been
|
|
stated as amounting to an admission that the plan is radically
|
|
defective, and that without material alterations the rights and the
|
|
interests of the community cannot be safely confided to it. This,
|
|
as far as I have understood the meaning of those who make the
|
|
concessions, is an entire perversion of their sense. No advocate of
|
|
the measure can be found, who will not declare as his sentiment,
|
|
that the system, though it may not be perfect in every part, is,
|
|
upon the whole, a good one; is the best that the present views and
|
|
circumstances of the country will permit; and is such an one as
|
|
promises every species of security which a reasonable people can
|
|
desire.
|
|
I answer in the next place, that I should esteem it the extreme
|
|
of imprudence to prolong the precarious state of our national
|
|
affairs, and to expose the Union to the jeopardy of successive
|
|
experiments, in the chimerical pursuit of a perfect plan. I never
|
|
expect to see a perfect work from imperfect man. The result of the
|
|
deliberations of all collective bodies must necessarily be a
|
|
compound, as well of the errors and prejudices, as of the good sense
|
|
and wisdom, of the individuals of whom they are composed. The
|
|
compacts which are to embrace thirteen distinct States in a common
|
|
bond of amity and union, must as necessarily be a compromise of as
|
|
many dissimilar interests and inclinations. How can perfection
|
|
spring from such materials?
|
|
The reasons assigned in an excellent little pamphlet lately
|
|
published in this city,1 are unanswerable to show the utter
|
|
improbability of assembling a new convention, under circumstances in
|
|
any degree so favorable to a happy issue, as those in which the late
|
|
convention met, deliberated, and concluded. I will not repeat the
|
|
arguments there used, as I presume the production itself has had an
|
|
extensive circulation. It is certainly well worthy the perusal of
|
|
every friend to his country. There is, however, one point of light
|
|
in which the subject of amendments still remains to be considered,
|
|
and in which it has not yet been exhibited to public view. I cannot
|
|
resolve to conclude without first taking a survey of it in this
|
|
aspect.
|
|
It appears to me susceptible of absolute demonstration, that it
|
|
will be far more easy to obtain subsequent than previous amendments
|
|
to the Constitution. The moment an alteration is made in the
|
|
present plan, it becomes, to the purpose of adoption, a new one, and
|
|
must undergo a new decision of each State. To its complete
|
|
establishment throughout the Union, it will therefore require the
|
|
concurrence of thirteen States. If, on the contrary, the
|
|
Constitution proposed should once be ratified by all the States as
|
|
it stands, alterations in it may at any time be effected by nine
|
|
States. Here, then, the chances are as thirteen to nine2 in
|
|
favor of subsequent amendment, rather than of the original adoption
|
|
of an entire system.
|
|
This is not all. Every Constitution for the United States must
|
|
inevitably consist of a great variety of particulars, in which
|
|
thirteen independent States are to be accommodated in their
|
|
interests or opinions of interest. We may of course expect to see,
|
|
in any body of men charged with its original formation, very
|
|
different combinations of the parts upon different points. Many of
|
|
those who form a majority on one question, may become the minority
|
|
on a second, and an association dissimilar to either may constitute
|
|
the majority on a third. Hence the necessity of moulding and
|
|
arranging all the particulars which are to compose the whole, in
|
|
such a manner as to satisfy all the parties to the compact; and
|
|
hence, also, an immense multiplication of difficulties and
|
|
casualties in obtaining the collective assent to a final act. The
|
|
degree of that multiplication must evidently be in a ratio to the
|
|
number of particulars and the number of parties.
|
|
But every amendment to the Constitution, if once established,
|
|
would be a single proposition, and might be brought forward singly.
|
|
There would then be no necessity for management or compromise, in
|
|
relation to any other point no giving nor taking. The will of the
|
|
requisite number would at once bring the matter to a decisive issue.
|
|
And consequently, whenever nine, or rather ten States, were united
|
|
in the desire of a particular amendment, that amendment must
|
|
infallibly take place. There can, therefore, be no comparison
|
|
between the facility of affecting an amendment, and that of
|
|
establishing in the first instance a complete Constitution.
|
|
In opposition to the probability of subsequent amendments, it
|
|
has been urged that the persons delegated to the administration of
|
|
the national government will always be disinclined to yield up any
|
|
portion of the authority of which they were once possessed. For my
|
|
own part I acknowledge a thorough conviction that any amendments
|
|
which may, upon mature consideration, be thought useful, will be
|
|
applicable to the organization of the government, not to the mass of
|
|
its powers; and on this account alone, I think there is no weight
|
|
in the observation just stated. I also think there is little weight
|
|
in it on another account. The intrinsic difficulty of governing
|
|
thirteen States at any rate, independent of calculations upon an
|
|
ordinary degree of public spirit and integrity, will, in my opinion
|
|
constantly impose on the national rulers the necessity of a spirit
|
|
of accommodation to the reasonable expectations of their
|
|
constituents. But there is yet a further consideration, which
|
|
proves beyond the possibility of a doubt, that the observation is
|
|
futile. It is this that the national rulers, whenever nine States
|
|
concur, will have no option upon the subject. By the fifth article
|
|
of the plan, the Congres will be obliged ``on the application of the
|
|
legislatures of two thirds of the States which at present amount to
|
|
nine , to call a convention for proposing amendments, which shall be
|
|
valid, to all intents and purposes, as part of the Constitution,
|
|
when ratified by the legislatures of three fourths of the States, or
|
|
by conventions in three fourths thereof.'' The words of this
|
|
article are peremptory. The Congress ``shall call a convention.''
|
|
Nothing in this particular is left to the discretion of that body.
|
|
And of consequence, all the declamation about the disinclination to
|
|
a change vanishes in air. Nor however difficult it may be supposed
|
|
to unite two thirds or three fourths of the State legislatures, in
|
|
amendments which may affect local interests, can there be any room
|
|
to apprehend any such difficulty in a union on points which are
|
|
merely relative to the general liberty or security of the people.
|
|
We may safely rely on the disposition of the State legislatures to
|
|
erect barriers against the encroachments of the national authority.
|
|
If the foregoing argument is a fallacy, certain it is that I am
|
|
myself deceived by it, for it is, in my conception, one of those
|
|
rare instances in which a political truth can be brought to the test
|
|
of a mathematical demonstration. Those who see the matter in the
|
|
same light with me, however zealous they may be for amendments, must
|
|
agree in the propriety of a previous adoption, as the most direct
|
|
road to their own object.
|
|
The zeal for attempts to amend, prior to the establishment of
|
|
the Constitution, must abate in every man who is ready to accede to
|
|
the truth of the following observations of a writer equally solid
|
|
and ingenious: ``To balance a large state or society says he ,
|
|
whether monarchical or republican, on general laws, is a work of so
|
|
great difficulty, that no human genius, however comprehensive, is
|
|
able, by the mere dint of reason and reflection, to effect it. The
|
|
judgments of many must unite in the work; experience must guide
|
|
their labor; time must bring it to perfection, and the feeling of
|
|
inconveniences must correct the mistakes which they INEVITABLY fall
|
|
into in their first trials and experiments.''3 These judicious
|
|
reflections contain a lesson of moderation to all the sincere lovers
|
|
of the Union, and ought to put them upon their guard against
|
|
hazarding anarchy, civil war, a perpetual alienation of the States
|
|
from each other, and perhaps the military despotism of a victorious
|
|
demagogue, in the pursuit of what they are not likely to obtain, but
|
|
from time and experience. It may be in me a defect of political
|
|
fortitude, but I acknowledge that I cannot entertain an equal
|
|
tranquillity with those who affect to treat the dangers of a longer
|
|
continuance in our present situation as imaginary. A nation,
|
|
without a national government, is, in my view, an awful spectacle.
|
|
The establishment of a Constitution, in time of profound peace, by
|
|
the voluntary ocnsent of a whole people, is a prodigy, to the
|
|
completion of which I look forward with trembling anxiety. I can
|
|
reconcile it to no rules of prudence to let go the hold we now have,
|
|
in so arduous an enterprise, upon seven out of the thirteen States,
|
|
and after having passed over so considerable a part of the ground,
|
|
to recommence the course. I dread the more the consequences of new
|
|
attempts, because I know that powerful individuals, in this and in
|
|
other States, are enemies to a general national government in every
|
|
possible shape.
|
|
PUBLIUS.
|
|
1 Entitled ``An Address to the People of the State of New
|
|
York.''
|
|
2 It may rather be said TEN, for though two thirds may set on
|
|
foot the measure, three fourths must ratify.
|
|
3 Hume's ``Essays,'' vol. i., page 128: ``The Rise of Arts and
|
|
Sciences.''
|
|
|