The Debates in
the Federal Convention of 1787
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As Recorded by James
Madison |
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Federal Debates Calendar
WEDNESDAY
JUNE 6th IN
COMMITTEE
OF THE WHOLE
Mr. PINKNEY according to
previous notice & rule obtained, moved "that the first branch of the
national Legislature be elected by the State Legislatures, and not
by the people." contending that the people were less fit Judges in
such a case, and that the Legislatures would be less likely to
promote the adoption of the new Government, if they were to be
excluded from all share in it.
Mr. RUTLIDGE 2ded. the motion.
Mr. GERRY. Much depends on the
mode of election. In England, the people will probably lose their
liberty from the smallness of the proportion having a right of
suffrage. Our danger arises from the opposite extreme: hence in
Massts. the worst men get into the Legislature. Several members of
that Body had lately been convicted of infamous crimes. Men of
indigence, ignorance & baseness, spare no pains, however dirty to
carry their point agst. men who are superior to the artifices
practised. He was not disposed to run into extremes. He was as much
principled as ever agst. aristocracy and monarchy. It was necessary
on the one hand that the people should appoint one branch of the
Govt. in order to inspire them with the necessary confidence. But he
wished the election on the other to be so modified as to secure more
effectually a just preference of merit. His idea was that the people
should nominate certain persons in certain districts, out of whom
the State Legislatures shd. make the appointment.
Mr. WILSON. He wished for vigor
in the Govt., but he wished that vigorous authority to flow
immediately from the legitimate source of all authority. The Govt.
ought to possess not only 1st. the force, but 2dly. the
mind or sense of the people at large. The Legislature ought to
be the most exact transcript of the whole Society. Representation is
made necessary only because it is impossible for the people to act
collectively. The opposition was to be expected he said from the
Governments, not from the Citizens of the States. The latter had
parted as was observed [by Mr. King] with all the necessary powers;
1 and it was immaterial to them,
by whom they were exercised, if well exercised. The State officers
were to be the losers of power. The people he supposed would be
rather more attached to the national Govt. than to the State Govts.
as being more important in itself, and more flattering to their
pride. There is no danger of improper elections if made by large
districts. Bad elections proceed from the smallness of the districts
which give an opportunity to bad men to intrigue themselves into
office.
Mr. SHERMAN. If it were in view
to abolish the State Govts. the elections ought to be by the people.
If the State Govts. are to be continued, it is necessary in order to
preserve harmony between the National & State Govts. that the
elections to the former shd. be made by the latter. The right of
participating in the National Govt. would be sufficiently secured to
the people by their election of the State Legislatures. The objects
of the Union, he thought were few. 1. 2
defence agst. foreign danger. 2 2
agst. internal disputes & a resort to force. 3.
2 Treaties with foreign nations. 4
2 regulating foreign commerce, & drawing
revenue from it. These & perhaps a few lesser objects alone rendered
a Confederation of the States necessary. All other matters civil &
criminal would be much better in the hands of the States. The people
are more happy in small than 3
large States. States may indeed be too small as Rhode Island, &
thereby be too subject to faction. Some others were perhaps too
large, the powers of Govt. not being able to pervade them. He was
for giving the General Govt. power to legislate and execute within a
defined province.
Col. MASON. Under the existing
Confederacy, Congs. represent the States
4 not the people of the States: their acts
operate on the States, not on the individuals.
5 The case will be changed in the new plan of
Govt. The people will be represented; they ought therefore to choose
the Representatives. The requisites in actual representation are
that the Reps. should sympathize with their constituents; shd. think
as they think, & feel as they feel; and that for these purposes shd.
even be residents among them. Much he sd. had been alledged agst.
democratic elections. He admitted that much might be said; but it
was to be considered that no Govt. was free from imperfections &
evils; and that improper elections in many instances, were
inseparable from Republican Govts. But compare these with the
advantage of this Form in favor of the rights of the people, in
favor of human nature. He was persuaded there was a better chance
for proper elections by the people, if divided into large districts,
than by the State Legislatures. Paper money had been issued by the
latter when the former were against it. Was it to be supposed that
the State Legislatures then wd. not send to the Natl. legislature
patrons of such projects, if the choice depended on them.
Mr. MADISON considered an
election of one branch at least of the Legislature by the people
immediately, as a clear principle of free Govt. and that this mode
under proper regulations had the additional advantage of securing
better representatives, as well as of avoiding too great an agency
of the State Governments in the General one. — He differed from the
member from Connecticut [Mr. Sharman] in thinking the objects
mentioned to be all the principal ones that required a National
Govt. Those were certainly important and necessary objects; but he
combined with them the necessity of providing more effectually for
the security of private rights, and the steady dispensation of
Justice. Interferences with these were evils which had more perhaps
than any thing else, produced this convention. Was it to be supposed
that republican liberty could long exist under the abuses of it
practised in some of the States. The gentleman [Mr. Sharman] had
admitted that in a very small State, faction & oppression wd.
prevail. It was to be inferred then that wherever these prevailed
the State was too small. Had they not prevailed in the largest as
well as the smallest tho' less than in the smallest; and were we not
thence admonished to enlarge the sphere as far as the nature of the
Govt. would admit. This was the only defence agst. the
inconveniencies of democracy consistent with the democratic form of
Govt. All civilized Societies would be divided into different Sects,
Factions, & interests, as they happened to consist of rich & poor,
debtors & creditors, the landed, the manufacturing, the commercial
interests, the inhabitants of this district or that district, the
followers of this political leader or that political leader, the
disciples of this religious Sect or that religious Sect. In all
cases where a majority are united by a common interest or passion,
the rights of the minority are in danger. What motives are to
restrain them? A prudent regard to the maxim that honesty is the
best policy is found by experience to be as little regarded by
bodies of men as by individuals. Respect for character is always
diminished in proportion to the number among whom the blame or
praise is to be divided. Conscience, the only remaining tie, is
known to be inadequate in individuals: In large numbers, little is
to be expected from it. Besides, Religion itself may become a motive
to persecution & oppression. — These observations are verified by
the Histories of every Country antient & modern. In Greece & Rome
the rich & poor, the creditors & debtors, as well as the patricians
& plebians alternately oppressed each other with equal
unmercifulness. What a source of oppression was the relation between
the parent cities of Rome, Athens & Carthage, & their respective
provinces: the former possessing the power, & the latter being
sufficiently distinguished to be separate objects of it? Why was
America so justly apprehensive of Parliamentary injustice? Because
G. Britain had a separate interest real or supposed, & if her
authority had been admitted, could have pursued that interest at our
expence. We have seen the mere distinction of colour made in the
most enlightened period of time, a ground of the most oppressive
dominion ever exercised by man over man. What has been the source of
those unjust laws complained of among ourselves? Has it not been the
real or supposed interest of the major number? Debtors have
defrauded their creditors. The landed interest has borne hard on the
mercantile interest. The Holders of one species of property have
thrown a disproportion of taxes on the holders of another species.
The lesson we are to draw from the whole is that where a majority
are united by a common sentiment, and have an opportunity, the
rights of the minor party become insecure. In a Republican Govt. the
Majority if united have always an opportunity. The only remedy is to
enlarge the sphere, & thereby divide the community into so great a
number of interests & parties, that in the 1st. place a majority
will not be likely at the same moment to have a common interest
separate from that of the whole or of the minority; and in the 2d.
place, that in case they shd. have such an interest, they may not be
6 apt to unite in the pursuit of
it. It was incumbent on us then to try this remedy, and with that
view to frame a republican system on such a scale & in such a form
as will controul all the evils wch. have been experienced.
Mr. DICKENSON considered it as
7 essential that one branch of
the Legislature shd. be drawn immediately from the people; and as
expedient that the other shd. be chosen by the Legislatures of the
States. This combination of the State Govts. with the national Govt.
was as politic as it was unavoidable. In the formation of the Senate
we ought to carry it through such a refining process as will
assimilate it as near as may be to the House of Lords in England. He
repeated his warm eulogiums on the British Constitution. He was for
a strong National Govt. but for leaving the States a considerable
agency in the System. The objection agst. making the former
dependent on the latter might be obviated by giving to the Senate an
authority permanent & irrevocable for three, five or seven years.
Being thus independent they will speak 8
& decide with becoming freedom.
Mr. READ. Too much attachment
is betrayed to the State Governts. We must look beyond their
continuance. A national Govt. must soon of necessity swallow all of
them 9 up. They will soon be
reduced to the mere office of electing the National Senate. He was
agst. patching up the old federal System: he hoped the idea wd. be
dismissed. It would be like putting new cloth on an old garment. The
confederation was founded on temporary principles. It cannot last:
it cannot be amended. If we do not establish a good Govt. on new
principles, we must either go to ruin, or have the work to do over
again. The people at large are wrongly suspected of being averse to
a Genl. Govt. The aversion lies among interested men who possess
their confidence.
Mr. PIERCE was for an election
by the people as to the 1st. branch & by the States as to the 2d.
branch; by which means the Citizens of the States wd. be represented
both individually & collectively.
General PINKNEY wished to have a good
National Govt. & at the same time to leave a considerable share of
power in the States. An election of either branch by the people
scattered as they are in many States, particularly in S. Carolina
was totally impracticable. He differed from gentlemen who thought
that a choice by the people wd. be a better guard agst. bad
measures, than by the Legislatures. A majority of the people in S.
Carolina were notoriously for paper money as a legal tender; the
Legislature had refused to make it a legal tender. The reason was
that the latter had some sense of character and were restrained by
that consideration. The State Legislatures also he said would be
more jealous, & more ready to thwart the National Govt., if excluded
from a participation in it. The Idea of abolishing these
Legislatures wd. never go down.
Mr. WILSON, would not have
spoken again, but for what had fallen from Mr. Read; namely, that
the idea of preserving the State Govts. ought to be abandoned. He
saw no incompatibility between the National & State Govts. provided
the latter were restrained to certain local purposes; nor any
probability of their being devoured by the former. In all
confederated Systems antient & modern the reverse had happened; the
Generality being destroyed gradually by the usurpations of the parts
composing it.
On the question for electing the 1st. branch by the State
Legislatures as moved by Mr. Pinkney: it was negatived:
Mass. no. Ct. ay. N. Y. no. N. J. ay. Pa. no. Del. no. Md. no.
Va. no. N. C. no. S. C. ay. Geo. no. 10
Mr. WILSON moved to reconsider
the vote excluding the Judiciary from a share in the revision of the
laws, and to add after "National Executive" the words "with a
convenient number of the national Judiciary"; remarking the
expediency of reinforcing the Executive with the influence of that
Department.
Mr. MADISON 2ded. the motion.
He observed that the great difficulty in rendering the Executive
competent to its own defence arose from the nature of Republican
Govt. which could not give to an individual citizen that settled
pre-eminence in the eyes of the rest, that weight of property, that
personal interest agst. betraying the national interest, which
appertain to an hereditary magistrate. In a Republic personal merit
alone could be the ground of political exaltation, but it would
rarely happen that this merit would be so pre-eminent as to produce
universal acquiescence. The Executive Magistrate would be envied &
assailed by disappointed competitors: His firmness therefore wd.
need support. He would not possess those great emoluments from his
station, nor that permanent stake in the public interest which wd.
place him out of the reach of foreign corruption: He would stand in
need therefore of being controuled as well as supported. An
association of the Judges in his revisionary function wd. both
double the advantage and diminish the danger. It wd. also enable the
Judiciary Department the better to defend itself agst. Legislative
encroachments. Two objections had been made 1st. that the Judges
ought not to be subject to the bias which a participation in the
making of laws might give in the exposition of them. 2dly. that the
Judiciary Departmt. ought to be separate & distinct from the other
great Departments. The 1st. objection had some weight; but it was
much diminished by reflecting that a small proportion of the laws
coming in question before a Judge wd. be such wherein he had been
consulted; that a small part of this proportion wd. be so ambiguous
as to leave room for his prepossessions; and that but a few cases
wd. probably arise in the life of a Judge under such ambiguous
passages. How much good on the other hand wd. proceed from the
perspicuity, the conciseness, and the systematic character wch. the
Code of laws wd. receive from the Judiciary talents. As to the 2d.
objection, it either had no weight, or it applied with equal weight
to the Executive & to the Judiciary revision of the laws. The maxim
on which the objection was founded required a separation of the
Executive as well as of 11 the
Judiciary from the Legislature & from each other. There wd. in truth
however be no improper mixture of these distinct powers in the
present case. In England, whence the maxim itself had been drawn,
the Executive had an absolute negative on the laws; and the supreme
tribunal of Justice [the House of Lords] formed one of the other
branches of the Legislature. In short whether the object of the
revisionary power was to restrain the Legislature from encroaching
on the other co-ordinate Departments, or on the rights of the people
at large; or from passing laws unwise in their principle, or
incorrect in their form, the utility of annexing the wisdom and
weight of the Judiciary to the Executive seemed incontestable.
Mr. GERRY thought the
Executive, whilst standing alone wd. be more impartial than when he
cd. be covered by the sanction & seduced by the sophistry of the
Judges.
Mr. KING. If the Unity of the
Executive was preferred for the sake of responsibility, the policy
of it is as applicable to the revisionary as to the Executive power.
Mr. PINKNEY had been at first
in favor of joining the heads of the principal departmts. the
Secretary of War, of foreign affairs & — in the council of revision.
He had however relinquished the idea from a consideration that these
could be called in 12 by the
Executive Magistrate whenever he pleased to consult them. He was
opposed to an 13 introduction of
the Judges into the business.
Col. MASON was for giving all possible
weight to the revisionary institution. The Executive power ought to
be well secured agst. Legislative usurpations on it. The purse & the
sword ought never to get into the same hands whether Legislative or
Executive.
Mr. DICKENSON. Secrecy, vigor &
despatch are not the principal properties reqd. in the Executive.
Important as these are, that of responsibility is more so, which can
only be preserved; by leaving it singly to discharge its functions.
He thought too a junction of the Judiciary to it, involved an
improper mixture of powers.
Mr. WILSON remarked, that the
responsibility required belonged to his Executive duties. The
revisionary duty was an extraneous one, calculated for collateral
purposes.
Mr. WILLIAMSON, was for
substituting a clause requiring 2/3 for every effective act of the
Legislature, in place of the revisionary provision.
On the question for joining the Judges to the Executive in the
revisionary business, Mass. no. Cont. ay. N. Y. ay. N. J. no. Pa.
no. Del. no. Md. no. Va. ay. N. C. no. S. C. No. Geo. no.
14
Mr. PINKNEY gave notice that
tomorrow he should move for the reconsideration of that clause in
the sixth Resolution adopted by the Comme. which vests a negative in
the National Legislature on the laws of the several States.
The Come. rose & the House adjd. to 11 OC.
15
1. The phrase "with all the
necessary powers" is italicized in the transcript.
2. The figures "1," "2," "3" and
"4" are changed to "first," "secondly," etc. in the transcript.
3. The word "in" is here inserted
in the transcript.
4. The word "and" is here
inserted in the transcript.
5. The transcript italicizes the
word "individuals."
6. The word "so" is here inserted
in the transcript.
7. The word "as" is omitted in
the transcript.
8. The word "check" is
substituted in the transcript for "speak."
9. The words "them all" are
substituted in the transcript for "all of them."
10. In the transcript the vote
reads "Connecticut, New Jersey, South Carolina, aye — 3;
Massachusetts, New York, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia,
North Carolina, Georgia, no — 8.
11. The word "of" is omitted in
the transcript.
12. The word "on" is substituted
in the transcript for "in."
13. The word "the" is
substituted in the transcript for "an."
14. In the transcript the vote
reads: "Connecticut, New York, Virginia, aye — 3; Massachusetts, New
Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, North Carolina, South
Carolina, Georgia, no — 8."
15. The expression "to 11 OC" is
omitted in the transcript.