The Debates in
the Federal Convention of 1787
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As Recorded by James
Madison |
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Federal Debates Calendar
THURSDAY
JULY 5th.
IN CONVENTION
Mr. GERRY delivered in from the
Committee appointed on Monday last the following Report.
"The Committee to whom was referred the 8th. Resol. of the Report
from the Committee of the whole House, and so much of the 7th. as
has not been decided on, submit the following Report: That the
subsequent propositions be recommended to the Convention on
condition that both shall be generally adopted. 1. That in the 1st.
branch of the Legislature each of the States now in the Union shall
be allowed 1 member for every 40,000 inhabitants of the description
reported in the 7th. Resolution of the Come. of the whole House:
that each State not containing that number shall be allowed 1
member: that all bills for raising or appropriating money, and for
fixing the Salaries of the officers of the Governt. of the U. States
shall originate in the 1st. branch of the Legislature, and shall not
be altered or amended by the 2d. branch: and that no money shall be
drawn from the public Treasury. but in pursuance of appropriations
to be orginated in the 1st. branch" II. That in the 2d. branch each
State shall have an equal vote." *1
Mr. GHORUM observed that as the
report consisted of propositions mutually conditional he wished to
hear some explanations touching the grounds on which the conditions
were estimated.
Mr. GERRY. The Committee were
of different opinions as well as the Deputations from which the
Come. were taken, and agreed to the Report merely in order that some
ground of accomodation might be proposed. Those opposed to the
equality of votes have only assented conditionally; and if the other
side do not generally agree will not be under any obligation to
support the Report.
Mr. WILSON thought the
Committee had exceeded their powers.
Mr. MARTIN was for taking the
question on the whole report.
Mr. WILSON was for a division
of the question: otherwise it wd. be a leap in the dark.
Mr. MADISON. could not regard
the exclusive 3 privilege of
originating money bills as any concession on the side of the small
States. Experience proved that it had no effect. If seven States in
the upper branch wished a bill to be originated, they might surely
find some member from some of the same States in the lower branch
who would originate it. The restriction as to amendments was of as
little consequence. Amendments could be handed privately by the
Senate to members in the other house. Bills could be negatived that
they might be sent up in the desired shape. If the Senate should
yield to the obstinacy of the 1st. branch the use of that body as a
check would be lost. If the 1st. branch should yield to that of the
Senate, the privilege would be nugatory. Experience had also shewn
both in G. B. and the States having a similar regulation that it was
a source of frequent & obstinate altercations. These considerations
had produced a rejection of a like motion on a former occasion when
judged by its own merits. It could not therefore be deemed any
concession on the present, and left in force all the objections
which had prevailed agst. allowing each State an equal voice. He
conceived that the Convention was reduced to the alternative of
either departing from justice in order to conciliate the smaller
States, and the minority of the people of the U. S. or of
displeasing these by justly gratifying the larger States and the
majority of the people. He could not himself hesitate as to the
option he ought to make. The Convention with justice & the majority
of the people on their side, had nothing to fear. With injustice and
the minority on their side they had every thing to fear. It was in
vain to purchase concord in the Convention on terms which would
perpetuate discord among their Constituents. The Convention ought to
pursue a plan which would bear the test of examination, which would
be espoused & supported by the enlightened and impartial part of
America, & which they could themselves vindicate and urge. It should
be considered that altho' at first many may judge of the system
recommended, by their opinion of the Convention, yet finally all
will judge of the Convention by the System. The merits of the System
alone can finally & effectually obtain the public suffrage. He was
not apprehensive that the people of the small States would
obstinately refuse to accede to a Govt. founded on just principles,
and promising them substantial protection. He could not suspect that
Delaware would brave the consequences of seeking her fortunes apart
from the other States, rather than submit to such a Govt. much less
could he suspect that she would pursue the rash policy of courting
foreign support, which the warmth of one of her representatives [Mr.
Bedford] had suggested, or if she shd. that any foreign nation wd.
be so rash as to hearken to the overture. As little could he suspect
that the people of N. Jersey notwithstanding the decided tone of the
gentlemen from that State, would choose rather to stand on their own
legs, and bid defiance to events, than to acquiesce under an
establishment founded on principles the justice of which they could
not dispute, and absolutely necessary to redeem them from the
exactions levied on them by the commerce of the neighbouring States.
A review of other States would prove that there was as little reason
to apprehend an inflexible opposition elsewhere. Harmony in the
Convention was no doubt much to be desired. Satisfaction to all the
States, in the first instance still more so. But if the principal
States comprehending a majority of the people of the U. S. should
concur in a just & judicious plan, he had the firmest hopes, that
all the other States would by degrees accede to it.
Mr. BUTLER said he could not
let down his idea of the people, of America so far as to believe
they would from mere respect to the Convention adopt a plan
evidently unjust. He did not consider the privilege concerning money
bills as of any consequence. He urged that the 2d. branch ought to
represent the States according to their property.
Mr. GOVr. MORRIS.
thought the form as well as the matter of the Report objectionable.
It seemed in the first place to render amendments impracticable. In
the next place, it seemed to involve a pledge to agree to the 2d.
part if the 1st. shd. be agreed to. He conceived the whole aspect of
it to be wrong. He came here as a Representative of America; he
flattered himself he came here in some degree as a Representative of
the whole human race; for the whole human race will be affected by
the proceedings of this Convention. He wished gentlemen to extend
their views beyond the present moment of time; beyond the narrow
limits of place from which they derive their political origin. If he
were to believe some things which he had heard, he should suppose
that we were assembled to truck and bargain for our particular
States. He can-not descend to think that any gentlemen are really
actuated by these views. We must look forward to the effects of what
we do. These alone ought to guide us. Much has been said of the
sentiments of the people. They were unknown. They could not be
known. All that we can infer is that if the plan we recommend be
reasonable & right; all who have reasonable minds and sound
intentions will embrace it, notwithstanding what had been said by
some gentlemen. Let us suppose that the larger States shall agree;
and that the smaller refuse: and let us trace the consequences. The
opponents of the system in the smaller States will no doubt make a
party, and a noise for a time, but the ties of interest, of kindred
& of common habits which connect them with the other States will be
too strong to be easily broken. In N. Jersey particularly he was
sure a great many would follow the sentiments of Pena. & N. York.
This Country must be united. If persuasion does not unite it, the
sword will. He begged that 4 this
consideration might have its due weight. The scenes of horror
attending civil commotion can not be described, and the conclusion
of them will be worse than the term of their continuance. The
stronger party will then make traytors of the weaker; and the
Gallows & Halter will finish the work of the sword. How far foreign
powers would be ready to take part in the confusions he would not
say. Threats that they will be invited have it seems been thrown
out. He drew the melancholy picture of foreign intrusions as
exhibited in the History of Germany, & urged it as a standing lesson
to other nations. He trusted that the Gentlemen who may have
hazarded such expressions, did not entertain them till they reached
their own lips. But returning to the Report he could not think it in
any respect calculated for the public good. As the 2d. branch is now
constituted, there will be constant disputes & appeals to the States
which will undermine the Genl. Government & controul & annihilate
the 1st. branch. Suppose that the delegates from Massts. & Rho 1. in
the Upper House disagree, and that the former are outvoted. What
Results? they will immediately declare that their State will not
abide by the decision, and make such representations as will produce
that effect. The same may happen as to Virga. & other States. Of
what avail then will be what is on paper. State attachments, and
State importance have been the bane of this Country. We can not
annihilate; but we may perhaps take out the teeth of the serpents.
He wished our ideas to be enlarged to the true interest of man,
instead of being circumscribed within the narrow compass of a
particular Spot. And after all how little can be the motive yielded
by selfishness for such a policy. Who can say whether he himself,
much less whether his children, will the next year be an inhabitant
of this or that State.
Mr. BEDFORD. He found that what
he had said as to the small States being taken by the hand, had been
misunderstood; and he rose to explain. He did not mean that the
small States would court the aid & interposition of foreign powers.
He meant that they would not consider the federal compact as
dissolved untill it should be so by the Acts of the large States. In
this case The consequence of the breach of faith on their part, and
the readiness of the small States to fulfill their engagements,
would be that foreign Nations having demands on this Country would
find it their interest to take the small States by the hand, in
order to do themselves justice. This was what he meant. But no man
can foresee to what extremities the small States may be driven by
oppression. He observed also in apology that some allowance ought to
be made for the habits of his profession in which warmth was natural
& sometimes necessary. But is there not an apology in what was said
by [Mr. Govr. Morris] that the sword is to unite: by Mr. Ghorum that
Delaware must be annexed to Penna. and N. Jersey divided between
Pena. and N. York. To hear such language without emotion, would be
to renounce the feelings of a man and the duty of a Citizen — As to
the propositions of the Committee, the lesser States have thought it
necessary to have a security somewhere. This has been thought
necessary for the Executive Magistrate of the proposed Govt. who has
a sort of negative on the laws; and is it not of more importance
that the States should be protected, than that the Executive branch
of the Govt. shd. be protected. In order to obtain this, the smaller
States have conceded as to the constitution of the first branch, and
as to money bills. If they be not gratified by correspondent
concessions as to the 2d. branch is it to be supposed they will ever
accede to the plan; and what will be the consequence if nothing
should be done! The condition of the U. States requires that
something should be immediately done. It will be better that a
defective plan should be adopted, than that none should be
recommended. He saw no reason why defects might not be supplied by
meetings 10, 15, or 20 years hence.
Mr. ELSEWORTH said he had not
attended the proceedings of the Committee, but was ready to accede
to the compromise they had reported. Some compromise was necessary;
and he saw none more convenient or reasonable.
Mr. WILLIAMSON hoped that the
expressions of individuals would not be taken for the sense of their
colleagues, much less of their States which was not & could not be
known. He hoped also that the meaning of those expressions would not
be misconstrued or exaggerated. He did not conceive that [Mr. Govr.
Morris] meant that the sword ought to be drawn agst. the smaller
States. He only pointed out the probable consequences of anarchy in
the U. S. A similar exposition ought to be given of the expressions
[of Mr. Ghorum]. He was ready to hear the Report discussed; but
thought the propositions contained in it, the most objectionable of
any he had yet heard.
Mr. PATTERSON said that he had
when the Report was agreed to in the Come. reserved to himself the
right of freely discussing it. He acknowledged that the warmth
complained of was improper; but he thought the Sword & the Gallows
as 5 little calculated to produce
conviction. He complained of the manner in which Mr. M — & Mr. Govr.
Morris had treated the small States.
Mr. GERRY. Tho' he had assented
to the Report in the Committee, he had very material objections to
it. We were however in a peculiar situation. We were neither the
same Nation nor different Nations. We ought not therefore to pursue
the one or the other of these ideas too closely. If no compromise
should take place what will be the consequence. A secession he
foresaw would take place; for some gentlemen seem decided on it; two
different plans will be proposed; and the result no man could
foresee. If we do not come to some agreement among ourselves some
foreign sword will probably do the work for us.
Mr. MASON. The Report was meant
not as specific propositions to be adopted; but merely as a general
ground of accomodation. There must be some accomodation on this
point, or we shall make little further progress in the work.
Accomodation was the object of the House in the appointment of the
Committee; and of the Committee in the Report they had made. And
however liable the Report might be to objections, he thought it
preferable to an appeal to the world by the different sides, as had
been talked of by some Gentlemen. It could not be more inconvenient
to any gentleman to remain absent from his private affairs, than it
was for him: but he would bury his bones in this City rather than
expose his Country to the Consequences of a dissolution of the
Convention without any thing being done.
The 1st. proposition in the report for fixing the representation
in the 1st. branch, one member for every 40,000 inhabitants, being
taken up.
Mr. GOVr. MORRIS
objected to that scale of apportionment. He thought property ought
to be taken into the estimate as well as the number of inhabitants.
Life & liberty were generally said to be of more value, than
property. An accurate view of the matter would nevertheless prove
that property was the main object of Society. The savage State was
more favorable to liberty than the Civilized; and sufficiently so to
life. It was preferred by all men who had not acquired a taste for
property; it was only renounced for the sake of property which could
only be secured by the restraints of regular Government. These ideas
might appear to some new, but they were nevertheless just. If
property then was the main object of Govt. certainly it ought to be
one measure of the influence due to those who were to be affected by
the Governmt. He looked forward also to that range of New States
which wd. soon be formed in the West. He thought the rule of
representation ought to be so fixed as to secure to the Atlantic
States a prevalence in the National Councils. The new States will
know less of the public interest than these, will have an interest
in many respects different, in particular will be little scrupulous
of involving the Community in wars the burdens & operations of which
would fall chiefly on the maritime States. Provision ought therefore
to be made to prevent the maritime States from being hereafter
outvoted by them. He thought this might be easily done by
irrevocably fixing the number of representatives which the Atlantic
States should respectively have, and the number which each new State
will have. This wd. not be unjust, as the Western settlers wd.
previously know the conditions on which they were to possess their
lands. It would be politic as it would recommend the plan to the
present as well as future interest of the States which must decide
the fate of it.
Mr. RUTLIDGE. The gentleman
last up had spoken some of his sentiments precisely. Property was
certainly the principal object of Society. If numbers should be made
the rule of representation, the Atlantic States will
6 be subjected to the Western. He moved that
the first proposition in the report be postponed in order to take up
the following viz "that the suffrages of the several States be
regulated and proportioned according to the sums to be paid towards
the general revenue by the inhabitants of each State respectively.
that an apportionment of suffrages, according to the ratio aforesaid
shall be made and regulated at the end of _____ years from the 1st.
meeting of the Legislature of the U. S. and at the end of every
_____ years but that for the present, and until the period above
mentioned, the suffrages shall be for N. Hampshire _____
7 Massachts. _____ &c.-
Col. MASON said the case of new States was
not unnoticed in the Committee; but it was thought and he was
himself decidedly of opinion that if they made a part of the Union,
they ought to be subject to no unfavorable discriminations. Obvious
considerations required it.
Mr. RANDOLPH concurred with
Col. 8 Mason.
On 9 Question on Mr. Rutlidges
motion.
Masts. no. Cont. no. N. Y. no. N. J. no. Pa. no. Del. no. Maryd.
no. Va. no. N. C. no. S. C. ay. Geo. not on floor.
10
Adjd
*1. This report was founded on a
motion in the Committee made by Dr Franklin. It was barely
acquiesced in by the members from the State opposed to an equality
of votes in the 2d branch and was evidently considered by the
members on the other side, as a gaining of their point. A motion was
made by Mr Sherman [he 2 acted in
place of Mr Elseworth who was kept away by indisposition.] In the
Committee to the following effect "that each State should have an
equal vote in the 2d branch; provided that no decision therein
should prevail unless the majority of States concurring should also
comprize a majority of the inhabitants of the U. States." This
motion was not much deliberated on nor approved in the Committee. A
similar proviso had been proposed in the debates on the articles of
Confederation in 1777, to the articles giving certain powers to
"nine States." See Journals of Congs for 1777, p. 462.
2. The word "who" is substituted
in the transcript for "he."
3. The word "exclusive" is
omitted in the transcript.
4. The word "that" is omitted in
the transcript.
5. The word "as" is crossed out
in the transcript.
6. The word "would" is
substituted in the transcript for "will."
7. The word "for" is here
inserted in the transcript.
8. The word "Mr." is substituted
in the transcript for "Col."
9. The word "the" is here
inserted in the transcript.
10. In the transcript the vote
reads: "South Carolina, aye — 1; Massachusetts, Connecticut, New
York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, North
Carolina, no — 9; Georgia not on the floor."