Antifederalist No. 47 "BALANCE" OF DEPARTMENTS NOT ACHIEVED
UNDER NEW CONSTITUTION
This essay is made up of of excerpts from "CENTINEL's," letters of
October 5 and 24, 1787. Taken from The Independent Gazetteer:
I am fearful that the principles of government inculcated in Mr. [John]
Adams' treatise [Defence of the Constitutions of Government of the United States
of America], and enforced in the numerous essays and paragraphs in the
newspapers, have misled some well designing members of the late Convention. But
it will appear in the sequel, that the construction of the proposed plan of
government is infinitely more extravagant.
I have been anxiously expecting that some enlightened patriot would, ere
this, have taken up the pen to expose the futility, and counteract the baneful
tendency of such principles. Mr. Adams' sine qua non of a good government is
three balancing powers; whose repelling qualities are to produce an equilibrium
of interests, and thereby promote the happiness of the whole community. He
asserts that the administrators of every government, will ever be actuated by
views of private interest and ambition, to the prejudice of the public good;
that therefore the only effectual method to secure the rights of the people and
promote their welfare, is to create an opposition of interests between the
members of two distinct bodies, in the exercise of the powers of government, and
balanced by those of a third. This hypothesis supposes human wisdom competent
to the task of instituting three co-equal orders in government, and a
corresponding weight in the community to enable them respectively to exercise
their several parts, and whose views and interests should be so distinct as to
prevent a coalition of any two of them for the destruction of the third. Mr.
Adams, although he has traced the constitution of every form of government that
ever existed, as far as history affords materials, has not been able to adduce a
single instance of such a government. He indeed says that the British
constitution is such in theory, but this is rather a confirmation that his
principles are chimerical and not to be reduced to practice. If such an
organization of power were practicable, how long would it continue? Not a
day-for there is so great a disparity in the talents, wisdom and industry of
mankind, that the scale would presently preponderate to one or the other body,
and with every accession of power the means of further increase would be greatly
extended. The state of society in England is much more favorable to such a
scheme of government than that of America. There they have a powerful
hereditary nobility, and real distinctions of rank and interests; but even
there, for want of that perfect equality of power and distinction of interests
in the three orders of government, they exist but in name. The only operative
and efficient check upon the conduct of administration, is the sense of the
people at large.
Suppose a government could be formed and supported on such principles, would
it answer the great purposes of civil society? If the administrators of every
government are actuated by views of private interest and ambition, how is the
welfare and happiness of the community to be the result of such jarring adverse
interests?
Therefore, as different orders in government will not produce the good of
the whole, we must recur to other principles. I believe it will be found that
the form of government, which holds those entrusted with power in the greatest
responsibility to their constituents, the best calculated for freemen. A
republican, or free government, can only exist where the body of the people are
virtuous, and where property is pretty equally divided. In such a government
the people are the sovereign and their sense or opinion is the criterion of
every public measure. For when this ceases to be the case, the nature of the
government is changed, and an aristocracy, monarchy or despotism will rise on
its ruin. The highest responsibility is to be attained in a simple structure of
government, for the great body of the people never steadily attend to the
operations of government, and for want of due information are liable to be
imposed on. If you complicate the plan by various orders, the people will be
perplexed and divided in their sentiment about the source of abuses or
misconduct; some will impute it to the senate, others to the house of
representatives, and so on, that the interposition of the people may be rendered
imperfect or perhaps wholly abortive. But if, imitating the constitution of
Pennsylvania, you vest all the legislative power in one body of men (separating
the executive and judicial) elected for a short period, and necessarily excluded
by rotation from permanency, and guarded from precipitancy and surprise by
delays imposed on its proceedings, you will create the most perfect
responsibility. For then, whenever the people feel a grievance, they cannot
mistake the authors, and will apply the remedy with certainty and effect,
discarding them at the next election. This tie of responsibility will obviate
all the dangers apprehended from a single legislature, and will the best secure
the rights of the people.
Having premised this much, I shall now proceed to the examination of the
proposed plan of government, and I trust, shall make it appear to the meanest
capacity, that it has none of the essential requisites of a free government;
that it is neither founded on those balancing restraining powers, recommended by
Mr. Adams and attempted in the British constitution, or possessed of that
responsibility to its constituents, which, in my opinion, is the only effectual
security for the liberties and happiness of the people. But on the contrary,
that it is a most daring attempt to establish a despotic aristocracy among
freemen, that the world has ever witnessed....
Thus we see, the house of representatives are on the part of the people to
balance the senate, who I suppose will be composed of the better sort, the well
born, etc. The number of the representatives (being only one for every 30,000
inhabitants) appears to be too few, either to communicate the requisite
information of the wants, local circumstances and sentiments of so extensive an
empire, or to prevent corruption and undue influence, in the exercise of such
great powers; the term for which they are to be chosen, too long to preserve a
due dependence and accountability to their constituents; and the mode and places
of their election not sufficiently ascertained, for as Congress have the control
over both, they may govern the choice, by ordering the representatives of a
whole State, to be elected in one place, and that too may be the most
inconvenient.
The senate, the great efficient body in this plan of government, is
constituted on the most unequal principles. The smallest State in the Union has
equal weight with the great States of Virginia, Massachusetts, or Pennsylvania.
The senate, besides its legislative functions, has a very considerable share in
the executive; none of the principal appointments to office can be made without
its advice and consent. The terin and mode of its appointment will lead to
permanency. The members are chosen for six years, the mode is under the control
of Congress, and as there is no exclusion by rotation, they may be continued for
life, which, from their extensive means of influence, would follow of course.
The President, who would be a mere pageant of State, unless he coincides with
the views of the senate, would either become the bead of the aristocratic junto
in that body, or its minion; besides, their influence being the most
predominant, could the best secure his re-election to office. And from his
power of granting pardons, he might screen from punishment the most treasonable
attempts on the liberties of the people, when instigated by the senate....
Mr. [James] Wilson asserts that never was charge made with less reason, than
that which predicts the institution of a baneful aristocracy in the federal
Senate.' In my first number, I stated that this body would be a very unequal
representation of the several States, that the members being appointed for the
long term of six years, and there being no exclusion by rotation, they might be
continued for life, which would follow of course from their extensive means of
influence, and that possessing a considerable share in the executive as well as
the legislative, it would become a permanent aristocracy, and swallow up the
other orders in the government.
That these fears are not imaginary, a knowledge of the history of other
nations, where the powers of government have been injudiciously placed, will
fully demonstrate. Mr. Wilson says, "the senate branches into two
characters; the one legislative and the other executive. In its legislative
character it can effect no purpose, without the co-operation of the house of
representatives, and in its executive character it can accomplish no object
without the concurrence of the president. Thus fettered, I do not know any act
which the senate can of itself perform, and such dependence necessarily
precludes every idea of influence and superiority." This I confess is very
specious, but experience demonstrates that checks in government, unless
accompanied with adequate power and independently placed, prove merely nominal,
and will be inoperative. Is it probable, that the President of the United
States, limited as he is in power, and dependent on the will of the senate, in
appointments to office, will either have the firmness or inclination to exercise
his prerogative of a conditional control upon the proceedings of that body,
however injurious they may be to the public welfare? It will be his interest to
coincide with the views of the senate, and thus become the head of the
aristocratic junto. The king of England is a constituent part in the
legislature, but although an hereditary monarch, in possession of the whole
executive power, including the unrestrained appointment to offices, and an
immense revenue, enjoys but in name the prerogative of a negative upon the
parliament. Even the king of England, circumstanced as he is, has not dared to
exercise it for near a century past. The check of the house of representatives
upon the senate will likewise be rendered nugatory for want of due weight in the
democratic branch, and from their constitution they may become so independent of
the people as to be indifferent of its interests. Nay, as Congress would have
the control over the mode and place of their election, by ordering the
representatives of a whole state to be elected at one place, and that too the
most inconvenient, the ruling powers may govern the choice, and thus the house
of representatives may be composed of the creatures of the senate. Still the
semblance of checks may remain, but without operation.
This mixture of the legislative and executive moreover highly tends to
corruption. The chief improvement in government, in modern times, has been the
complete separation of the great distinctions of power; placing the legislative
in different hands from those which hold the executive; and again severing the
judicial part from the ordinary administrative. "When the legislative and
executive powers (says Montesquieu) are united in the same person or in the same
body of magistrates, there can be no liberty."
CENTINEL
|