国会中的宪法:杰斐逊和西部,1801-1809

David P. Currie
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Jefferson's inauguration was a significant victory for the new system, a peaceful transfer of power from one political party to another, which at the time was not to be taken for granted.(2) \"We are all Republicans,\" he said in his inaugural address, \"we are all Federalists.\"(3) It was a breath of fresh air. Jefferson's brave words, of course, did not put an end to controversy. His presidency was another exciting time: the Burr conspiracy, the embargo, the war against the Barbary pirates--in which Jefferson, following Washington's example, took a refreshingly narrow view of the president's powers as commander in chief.(4) The Twelfth Amendment, designed with the simple goal of avoiding the near disaster of the 1800 election, proved to be a surprising can of worms, a monument to the difficulty of constitutional drafting.(5) In the great Court fight of Jefferson's first term, which rivaled that of the 1930s, judicial independence suffered grave setbacks in the repeal of the Judiciary Act and the removal of Judge Pickering, only to emerge more firmly entrenched than ever after the dramatic acquittal of Justice Samuel Chase.(6) Jefferson's presidency was also a time of significant events in westward expansion: the admission of Ohio, the Louisiana Purchase, and the beginnings of the Cumberland Road. Each of these events raised fundamental constitutional questions. Each was extensively debated in Congress and in the executive branch, not in the courts. And each served as an important precedent when similar issues arose again. I. OHIO The Northwest Ordinance contemplated the creation of three to five new states in the territory ceded by individual states to the Union after the Revolution.(7) As soon as any of the areas defined in the Ordinance had sixty thousand free inhabitants it was to be admitted to statehood, and Congress was directed to admit it earlier if that was \"consistent with the general interest of the confederacy.\"(8) Settlement of the Northwest was retarded, however, by hostile Indians; the first western states admitted were Kentucky and Tennessee.(9) Then Mad Anthony Wayne defeated the Indians at Fallen Timbers, Jay's Treaty dispersed their British protectors, and Thomas Pinckney's treaty opened the Mississippi to western goods.(10) The population of the eastern part of the territory grew by leaps and bounds, and it was separated from the remaining portion, which was christened the \"Indiana Territory,\" in 1800.(11) By 1802 a number of its inhabitants were banging on Congress's door in search of admission to the union.(12) Although the 1800 census reported that the Eastern Division had a population of only 45,365, a House committee recommended that its inhabitants be authorized \"to form for themselves a constitution and State government.\"(13) Congress obliged,(14) but not without a little bloodletting on the House floor. The problem was that not everyone in the division favored immediate statehood. Governor Arthur St. Clair did not; the territorial legislature did not; neither did the territorial delegate in Congress, Paul Fearing. …","PeriodicalId":75324,"journal":{"name":"William and Mary law review","volume":"39 1","pages":"1441"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1998-05-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The Constitution in Congress: Jefferson and the West, 1801-1809\",\"authors\":\"David P. 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Jefferson's inauguration was a significant victory for the new system, a peaceful transfer of power from one political party to another, which at the time was not to be taken for granted.(2) \\\"We are all Republicans,\\\" he said in his inaugural address, \\\"we are all Federalists.\\\"(3) It was a breath of fresh air. Jefferson's brave words, of course, did not put an end to controversy. 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Each of these events raised fundamental constitutional questions. Each was extensively debated in Congress and in the executive branch, not in the courts. And each served as an important precedent when similar issues arose again. I. OHIO The Northwest Ordinance contemplated the creation of three to five new states in the territory ceded by individual states to the Union after the Revolution.(7) As soon as any of the areas defined in the Ordinance had sixty thousand free inhabitants it was to be admitted to statehood, and Congress was directed to admit it earlier if that was \\\"consistent with the general interest of the confederacy.\\\"(8) Settlement of the Northwest was retarded, however, by hostile Indians; the first western states admitted were Kentucky and Tennessee.(9) Then Mad Anthony Wayne defeated the Indians at Fallen Timbers, Jay's Treaty dispersed their British protectors, and Thomas Pinckney's treaty opened the Mississippi to western goods.(10) The population of the eastern part of the territory grew by leaps and bounds, and it was separated from the remaining portion, which was christened the \\\"Indiana Territory,\\\" in 1800.(11) By 1802 a number of its inhabitants were banging on Congress's door in search of admission to the union.(12) Although the 1800 census reported that the Eastern Division had a population of only 45,365, a House committee recommended that its inhabitants be authorized \\\"to form for themselves a constitution and State government.\\\"(13) Congress obliged,(14) but not without a little bloodletting on the House floor. 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引用次数: 2

摘要

我不久前曾写道,对宪法的最初理解不是在法庭上形成的,而是在国会和行政部门形成的。(1)在联邦主义时期,在新宪法实施后的头12年里,情况就是如此——这段时间里存在着巨大的宪法争议,涉及美国银行、《杰伊条约》、《外国人法》和《煽动叛乱法》等问题,也发生过离奇古怪的争吵,现在这些争吵基本上被遗忘了。如何称呼总统,他是否必须接受薪水,副总统如何签署法案。其中一些争端听起来微不足道,但即便如此,它们也有助于定义美国将成为什么样的国家。最初,他们中的许多人最终都在行政和立法部门进行了斗争。在托马斯·杰斐逊(Thomas Jefferson)担任总统之后的几年里,情况也是如此。杰斐逊的就职典礼是新体制的一次重大胜利,权力从一个政党和平地转移到另一个政党,这在当时并不是理所当然的。“我们都是共和党人,”他在就职演说中说,“我们都是联邦党人。”当然,杰斐逊的豪言壮语并没有结束争论。他的总统任期是另一个激动人心的时期:伯尔阴谋、禁运、对巴巴里海盗的战争——在这些事件中,杰斐逊以华盛顿为榜样,对总统作为三军统帅的权力持一种令人振奋的狭隘看法。第十二条修正案的设计目的很简单,就是为了避免1800年大选的近乎灾难,但事实证明,它是一个令人惊讶的棘手问题,是宪法起草困难的纪念碑。司法独立在《司法法案》的废除和皮克林法官的免职中遭受了严重的挫折,而在塞缪尔·蔡斯法官戏剧性的无罪释放之后,司法独立比以往任何时候都更加稳固。杰斐逊的总统任期内也发生了重大的西部扩张事件:加入俄亥俄州、购买路易斯安那州和坎伯兰路的开始。这些事件都提出了根本的宪法问题。每一个都在国会和行政部门进行了广泛的辩论,而不是在法院。当类似的问题再次出现时,每一个都成为了重要的先例。i俄亥俄州西北条例考虑创建三到五个新的州各州所放弃的领土后工会革命。(7)一旦条例》中定义的任何地区有六万居民自由承认建国,和国会早些时候针对承认如果这是“邦联的总体利益一致。”(8)解决西北迟钝,然而,充满敌意的印第安人;第一个被接纳的西部州是肯塔基州和田纳西州。(9)然后疯狂的安东尼·韦恩在倒下的木材打败了印第安人,杰伊的条约驱散了他们的英国保护者,托马斯·平克尼的条约打开了密西西比河对西部货物的大门。(10)东部地区的人口突飞猛进地增长,它与其余部分分开,被命名为“印第安纳地区”。(11)到1802年,许多东部地区的居民敲着国会的门,希望加入联邦。(12)尽管1800年的人口普查报告显示东部地区的人口只有45,365人,但一个众议院委员会建议授权东部地区的居民“自行制定宪法和州政府”。(13)国会同意了,(14)但在众议院的辩论中也发生了一些流血事件。问题是,并不是每个人都赞成立即成为一个州。总督阿瑟·圣克莱尔没有;领土立法机构没有;国会的领土代表保罗·费宁也不同意。…
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The Constitution in Congress: Jefferson and the West, 1801-1809
The original understanding of the Constitution, I wrote not so long ago, was forged not in the courts but in Congress and the executive branch.(1) That was true of the Federalist period, the first twelve years under the new Constitution--a time of great constitutional controversies involving such matters as the Bank of the United States, the Jay Treaty, and the Alien and Sedition Acts and of quaint and curious squabbles now largely forgotten: what to call the president, whether he must accept a salary, how the vice president signs a bill. Some of these disputes sound petty, but even they helped to define what kind of country the United States would be. All of them were initially, and many of them finally, fought out in the executive and legislative branches. The same was true of the years that followed, when Thomas Jefferson was president. Jefferson's inauguration was a significant victory for the new system, a peaceful transfer of power from one political party to another, which at the time was not to be taken for granted.(2) "We are all Republicans," he said in his inaugural address, "we are all Federalists."(3) It was a breath of fresh air. Jefferson's brave words, of course, did not put an end to controversy. His presidency was another exciting time: the Burr conspiracy, the embargo, the war against the Barbary pirates--in which Jefferson, following Washington's example, took a refreshingly narrow view of the president's powers as commander in chief.(4) The Twelfth Amendment, designed with the simple goal of avoiding the near disaster of the 1800 election, proved to be a surprising can of worms, a monument to the difficulty of constitutional drafting.(5) In the great Court fight of Jefferson's first term, which rivaled that of the 1930s, judicial independence suffered grave setbacks in the repeal of the Judiciary Act and the removal of Judge Pickering, only to emerge more firmly entrenched than ever after the dramatic acquittal of Justice Samuel Chase.(6) Jefferson's presidency was also a time of significant events in westward expansion: the admission of Ohio, the Louisiana Purchase, and the beginnings of the Cumberland Road. Each of these events raised fundamental constitutional questions. Each was extensively debated in Congress and in the executive branch, not in the courts. And each served as an important precedent when similar issues arose again. I. OHIO The Northwest Ordinance contemplated the creation of three to five new states in the territory ceded by individual states to the Union after the Revolution.(7) As soon as any of the areas defined in the Ordinance had sixty thousand free inhabitants it was to be admitted to statehood, and Congress was directed to admit it earlier if that was "consistent with the general interest of the confederacy."(8) Settlement of the Northwest was retarded, however, by hostile Indians; the first western states admitted were Kentucky and Tennessee.(9) Then Mad Anthony Wayne defeated the Indians at Fallen Timbers, Jay's Treaty dispersed their British protectors, and Thomas Pinckney's treaty opened the Mississippi to western goods.(10) The population of the eastern part of the territory grew by leaps and bounds, and it was separated from the remaining portion, which was christened the "Indiana Territory," in 1800.(11) By 1802 a number of its inhabitants were banging on Congress's door in search of admission to the union.(12) Although the 1800 census reported that the Eastern Division had a population of only 45,365, a House committee recommended that its inhabitants be authorized "to form for themselves a constitution and State government."(13) Congress obliged,(14) but not without a little bloodletting on the House floor. The problem was that not everyone in the division favored immediate statehood. Governor Arthur St. Clair did not; the territorial legislature did not; neither did the territorial delegate in Congress, Paul Fearing. …
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