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Federalist No. 50
Periodic Appeals to the People Considered
From the New York Packet.
Tuesday, February 5, 1788.
Author: Alexander Hamilton or James Madison
To the People of the State of New York:
IT MAY be contended, perhaps, that instead of OCCASIONAL appeals
to the people, which are liable to the objections urged against
them, PERIODICAL appeals are the proper and adequate means of
PREVENTING AND CORRECTING INFRACTIONS OF THE CONSTITUTION. It
will be attended to, that in the examination of these expedients,
I confine myself to their aptitude for ENFORCING the Constitution,
by keeping the several departments of power within their due
bounds, without particularly considering them as provisions for
ALTERING the Constitution itself. In the first view, appeals
to the people at fixed periods appear to be nearly as ineligible
as appeals on particular occasions as they emerge.
If the periods be separated by short intervals, the measures
to be reviewed and rectified will have been of recent date, and
will be connected with all the circumstances which tend to vitiate
and pervert the result of occasional revisions. If the periods
be distant from each other, the same remark will be applicable
to all recent measures; and in proportion as the remoteness of
the others may favor a dispassionate review of them, this advantage
is inseparable from inconveniences which seem to counterbalance
it. In the first place, a distant prospect of public censure
would be a very feeble restraint on power from those excesses
to which it might be urged by the force of present motives. Is
it to be imagined that a legislative assembly, consisting of
a hundred or two hundred members, eagerly bent on some favorite
object, and breaking through the restraints of the Constitution
in pursuit of it, would be arrested in their career, by considerations
drawn from a censorial revision of their conduct at the future
distance of ten, fifteen, or twenty years? In the next place,
the abuses would often have completed their mischievous effects
before the remedial provision would be applied. And in the last
place, where this might not be the case, they would be of long
standing, would have taken deep root, and would not easily be
extirpated. The scheme of revising the constitution, in order
to correct recent breaches of it, as well as for other purposes,
has been actually tried in one of the States. One of the objects
of the Council of Censors which met in Pennsylvania in 1783 and
1784, was, as we have seen, to inquire, ``whether the constitution
had been violated, and whether the legislative and executive
departments had encroached upon each other. '' This important
and novel experiment in politics merits, in several points of
view, very particular attention. In some of them it may, perhaps,
as a single experiment, made under circumstances somewhat peculiar,
be thought to be not absolutely conclusive. But as applied to
the case under consideration, it involves some facts, which I
venture to remark, as a complete and satisfactory illustration
of the reasoning which I have employed. First. It appears, from
the names of the gentlemen who composed the council, that some,
at least, of its most active members had also been active and
leading characters in the parties which pre-existed in the State.
Secondly. It appears that the same active and leading members
of the council had been active and influential members of the
legislative and executive branches, within the period to be reviewed;
and even patrons or opponents of the very measures to be thus
brought to the test of the constitution. Two of the members had
been vice-presidents of the State, and several other members
of the executive council, within the seven preceding years. One
of them had been speaker, and a number of others distinguished
members, of the legislative assembly within the same period.
Thirdly. Every page of their proceedings witnesses the effect
of all these circumstances on the temper of their deliberations.
Throughout the continuance of the council, it was split into
two fixed and violent parties. The fact is acknowledged and lamented
by themselves. Had this not been the case, the face of their
proceedings exhibits a proof equally satisfactory. In all questions,
however unimportant in themselves, or unconnected with each other,
the same names stand invariably contrasted on the opposite columns.
Every unbiased observer may infer, without danger of mistake,
and at the same time without meaning to reflect on either party,
or any individuals of either party, that, unfortunately, PASSION,
not REASON, must have presided over their decisions. When men
exercise their reason coolly and freely on a variety of distinct
questions, they inevitably fall into different opinions on some
of them. When they are governed by a common passion, their opinions,
if they are so to be called, will be the same.
Fourthly. It is at least problematical, whether the decisions
of this body do not, in several instances, misconstrue the limits
prescribed for the legislative and executive departments, instead
of reducing and limiting them within their constitutional places.
Fifthly. I have never understood that the decisions of the
council on constitutional questions, whether rightly or erroneously
formed, have had any effect in varying the practice founded on
legislative constructions. It even appears, if I mistake not,
that in one instance the contemporary legislature denied the
constructions of the council, and actually prevailed in the contest.
This censorial body, therefore, proves at the same time, by its
researches, the existence of the disease, and by its example,
the inefficacy of the remedy. This conclusion cannot be invalidated
by alleging that the State in which the experiment was made was
at that crisis, and had been for a long time before, violently
heated and distracted by the rage of party. Is it to be presumed,
that at any future septennial epoch the same State will be free
from parties? Is it to be presumed that any other State, at the
same or any other given period, will be exempt from them? Such
an event ought to be neither presumed nor desired; because an
extinction of parties necessarily implies either a universal
alarm for the public safety, or an absolute extinction of liberty.
Were the precaution taken of excluding from the assemblies elected
by the people, to revise the preceding administration of the
government, all persons who should have been concerned with the
government within the given period, the difficulties would not
be obviated. The important task would probably devolve on men,
who, with inferior capacities, would in other respects be little
better qualified. Although they might not have been personally
concerned in the administration, and therefore not immediately
agents in the measures to be examined, they would probably have
been involved in the parties connected with these measures, and
have been elected under their auspices.
PUBLIUS.
Federalist No. 51 -->
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