
The Federalist No. 33
Concerning the General Power of Taxation (continued)
Independent Journal
Wednesday, January 2, 1788
[Alexander 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
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