Jefferson
and Nullification
by
Clyde Wilson
by Clyde Wilson
Recently
by Clyde Wilson: Q&A
on Nullification and Interposition
"Resolved,
That the several States composing the United States of America,
are not united on the principle of unlimited submission to their
General Government . . . . and that whensoever the General Government
assumes undelegated powers, its acts are unauthoritative, void,
and of no force. . . . that the government created by this compact
[the Constitution for the United States] was not made the exclusive
or final judge of the extent of the powers delegated to itself;
since that would have made its discretion, and not the Constitution,
the measure of its powers; . . . . that this would be to surrender
the form of government we have chosen, and live under one deriving
its powers from its own will, and not from our authority; . . .
and that the co-States, recurring to their natural right in cases
not made federal, will concur in declaring these acts void, and
of no force, and will each take measures of its own for providing
that neither these acts, nor any others of the General Government
not plainly and intentionally authorised by the Constitution, shall
be exercised within their respective territories."
So wrote Thomas
Jefferson, Vice President of the United States, in a document drafted
at the request of members of the Kentucky legislature in 1798. Kentucky
passed Jefferson’s paper and broadcast it to the world as the definitive
opinion and stand of the sovereign people of the State. The language
drafted by James Madison for similar documents adopted by the Virginia
legislature in 1799 and 1800 was similarly unequivoical in its constitutional
position and forceful in expression.
The people,
acting through their natural polities, the States, had created and
given authority to the Constitution of the United States. The Constitution
conferred powers on a general government to handle certain specified
matters that were common to the "general welfare" of all
the States. That government was an agent. It could not be the judge
of its own powers. To allow it to be so would mean nothing less
than a government of unlimited power, a tyranny. The partners to
the Constitution, the sovereign peoples of the States, were the
final judges of what they had intended the Constitution to mean.
When the general government exceeded its power it was the right
and duty of the State to interpose its authority and defend its
people from federal acts of tyranny – yes, to render a federal law
inoperative in the State's jurisdiction...
The scholars
of the rising leftist Establishment who took over American history
writing beginning in the 1930s invented a self-flattering fable
to render the Kentucky and Virginia documents themselves null and
void. Jefferson and Madison, they said, really did not care about
States’ rights. They were merely anticipating the great tradition
of the American Civil Liberties Union in opposing the Alien and
Sedition Acts. Their concern was to defend the freedom of speech
of the non-conformist radicals of their time.
This established
interpretation is a lie and requires a good deal of either ignorance,
self-deception, or deliberate falsehood to peddle. It is true that
the Virginia and Kentucky acts were not followed up by active resistance
to the feds. They did not have to be, because Jefferson and his
friends won the following elections, got rid of the bad laws, and
compensated those who had been harmed by them. There is evidence
that Virginia and North Carolina were quite willing and able to
call out the militia if necessary and that grand juries were standing
by to indict any offending feds.
Not interested
in State rights? Jefferson reiterated the centrality of State rights
to the preservation of liberty and self-government in his inaugural
address (and in hundreds of letters for the rest of his life). His
party and the succeeding Democratic party proclaimed "The Principles
of 1798" repeatedly as their foundational philosophy, right up to
the War to Prevent Southern Independence. It could not be clearer:
in the American government system State rights and liberty could
not be separated. They were the same thing. They had the same defenders
and the same enemies. The Sedition Act was not just an invasion
of individual rights, it was an illegal invasion of a sphere that
the people had left to their States.
Further, the
Sedition Act, punishing criticism of federal officials with jail
sentences and fines, had
been passed in stark defiance of the recently adopted First and
Tenth Amendments which absolutely forbade Congress to pass any law
abridging the freedom of speech and press and reserved to the States
all powers not specifically conferred on the government. How then
could Congress pass such a law as the Sedition Act? Because the
Federalists, Hamilton and Adams and their supporters, justified
their legislation by invoking the Common Law’s provisions about
the punishment of "sedition." The Common Law existed in each State
to the extent that State had found it worthwhile to adopt it, but
it had no place in a written document of delegated powers such as
the Constitution for the United States. If the feds could ignore
specified power limitations by grafting Common Law jurisdiction
into the Constitution, then literally everything under the sun could
be brought under their power. Not only that, but everything under
the sun could be ultimately disposed of by the federal courts, which
would become the new sovereign. This had to be stopped.
Interposition
by Virginia and Kentucky was intended to halt the Northeastern elite's
relentless agenda to become the economic and moral overseers of
all Americans through the federal machine. This has always been
the engine for the unconstitutional usurpation of federal power
– then, since, and now. When State interposition next came into
serious play in the United States, the occasion was the tariff laws,
by which the Northeastern elite had perverted a constitutional power
to raise a revenue into a means of excluding foreign competition
and creating a captive market for their profit.
After their
service as presidents, Jefferson and Madison lived by their republican
ethics – they were private citizens with no special right to interfere
in public affairs. But they expressed opinions on issues of the
day privately to those who asked and who they trusted. When, less
than a generation after the "Principles of 1798" had been proclaimed,
the possible nullification of the tariff laws by South Carolina
drew attention, Jefferson was gone from the scene. Madison, in contradiction
of his own plain language and the circumstances of 1798–1800, claimed
that state interposition was not what they had had in mind at that
time. Historians who want to trash States' rights and the South
Carolina resistance to the tariff during 1828–1833 lean heavily
on Madison's somewhat vague statements. Self-evidently, Madison
contradicted himself, as he did quite often throughout his career.
Unlike Jefferson, he was a superficial and inconsistent thinker
who often swung from one side to the other. (That is why his pretentious
speculations in The Federalist, which, by his own admission,
have absolutely no constitutional authority whatsoever, are the
favourite text of third string "constitutional lawyers" and would-be
"political philosophers.")
We do not have
to wonder what Jefferson in his post-presidential years thought
about State interposition. It is not in the least a mystery, although
it is something of a secret since "scholars" have assiduously avoided
exposure of the relevant documents, which are not easy to find.
In 1825, the day after his last Christmas in this earthly realm,
Jefferson wrote to William Branch Giles, former Senator from Virginia
and stalwart Jeffersonian. He shared Giles's concerns about the
state of federal affairs. "I see, as you do, and with the deepest
affliction, the rapid strides with which the federal branch of the
government is advancing towards the usurpation of all the rights
reserved to the States, and the consolidation in itself of all powers,
foreign and domestic; and that, too, by constructions which, if
legitimate, leave no limits to their powers."
The minority
President John Quincy Adams was pushing a large program of federal
expenditures and expanded powers. Adams and his Congressional allies,
Jefferson said, for an example, had construed the delegated power
to establish post roads into a power to cut down mountains and dig
canals. The old, evil program of the Northeastern "monarchists"
to enrich themselves off the earnings of the agriculturalists was
once again in the saddle. Reason and argument were no good in such
a situation. "You might as well reason and argue with the marble
columns" in the Capitol.
The South
might well be forced into a choice between "the dissolution of
the Union with them, or submission to a government without
limitation of powers. Between these two evils, when we must
make a choice, there can be no hesitation." However, not yet.
"But in the meanwhile, the States should be watchful to note
every material usurpation on their rights; to denounce them as they
occur in the most peremptory terms, to protest them as wrongs to
which our present submission shall be considered, not as acknowledgments
. . . ."
Jefferson mentioned
that he had written a letter to Giles on Christmas about important
matters, of which Giles "will be free to make use what you please."
I have not found this letter, but it may have something to do with
a document Jefferson wrote out on December 24, which he titled "The
Solemn Declaration and Protest of the Citizens of Virginia on the
Principles of the Constitution of the United States of America and
the Violation of Them." It seems to have been intended for the use
of Jefferson's neighbours in the grand jury of Albemarle County
to begin a program for Virginia once more to interpose, against
Congress's usurpation in its "internal improvements" expenditures.
Just three
years after Jefferson wrote this, another Vice-President of the
United States, at the request of his State, drafted a "South Carolina
Exposition," which described the illegality and injustice of the
protective tariff and the proper remedy for it: State interposition
upon "The Principles of 1798." This "Exposition" was approved and
broadcast to the world by the legislature of South Carolina, along
with a "Protest." The usual clamour of rent-seekers and petty political
operators was raised, claiming, among other things, that Jefferson
had not written the Kentucky Resolutions. In 1831 Jefferson's son-in-law
produced the draft in the great man's own hand.
[There was
so much demagoguery broadcast by the opponents of nullification
and the shoddy historians who repeat their propaganda, that it is
worth saying something about the roles of Jefferson and Calhoun
as drafters of the Kentucky Resolutions and the South Carolina
Exposition. Jefferson, as we have noted, did not publicly acknowledge
his authorship. Calhoun's authorship of the Exposition was characterised
as an evil, secretive political operation. This propaganda is designed
by and for people who can think only in terms of politicians and
parties instead of principles and are ignorant of the ethics of
republican virtue that influenced many Americans before Lincoln.
Authorship was not acknowledged because it was desired that the
statements be understood as the voice of the people of the State,
not mischaracterised as merely the position of a national politician.]
In a later
generation, another minority president seemingly destroyed forever
the constitutional role of the States by declaring the open, democratic,
deliberative acts of fourteen States to be only "combinations" of
criminals who refused to obey him. Lincoln made that stick by a
brutal war of conquest that did not "preserve the Union" but changed
the Union into a central state with no limits to its power. Those
who hope to revive a constitutional role for the States as counters
to the present U.S. Empire, must hope to make the States once more
into self-conscious, viable polities who have the political will
to enact nullification and stand by it.
March
12, 2010
Clyde
Wilson [send him mail]
is a recovering
professor. Now that he is no longer a professor of history he can
at last be a real historian. He is the editor of The
Papers of John C. Calhoun.
Copyright
© 2010 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
The
Best of Clyde Wilson
|