Debate on The New Jersey Plan (June 16)

MR. PATERSON, said as he had on former occasion given his sentiments on the plan proposed by Mr. Randolph he would now avoiding repetition as much as possible give his reasons in favor of that proposed by hinself. He preferred it because it accorded l. With the powers of the Convention, 2. with the sentiments of the people.If the confedracy was radically wrong, let us return to our States, and obain larger powers, not assume them of ourselves. I came here not to speak my own sentiments, but the sentiments of those who sent me. Our object is not such a government as may be best in itself, but such a one as our Constituents have authorized us to prepare, and as they will approve. If we argue the matter on the supposition that no Confederacy at present exists, it can not be denied that all the States stand on the footing of eqnal sovereignty. All therefore must concur before any can be bound. If a proportional representation be right, why do we not vote so here? If we argue on the fact that a federal compact actually exists, and consult the articles of it We still find an equal Sovereignty to be the basis of it. He reads the fifth article of Confederation giving each State a vote and the thirteenth declaring that no alteration shall be made without unanimous consent. This is the nature of all treaties. What is unanimously done, must be unanimously undone. It was observed [by Mr. Wilson] that the larger States gave up the point, not because it was right, but because the circumstances of the moment urged the concession. Be it so. Are they for that reason at liberty to take it back. Can the donor resume his gift without the consent of the donee. This doctrine may be convenient, but it is ad octrine that will sacrifice the lesser States. The large States acceded readily to the confederacy. lt was the small ones that came in reluctantly and slowly. N. Jersey and Maryland were the two last, the former objecting to the want of power in Congress over trade: both of them to the want of power to appropriate the vacant territory to the benefit of the whole.If the sovereignty of the States is to be maintained, the Representatives must be drawn immediately from the States, not from the people: and we have no power to vary the idea of eqnal sovereignty. The only expedient that will cure the difficulty, is that of throwing the States into Hotchpot. To say that this is impracticable, will not make it so. Let it be tried, and we shall see whether the Citizens of Massachusetts, Pennsylvania and Virginia accede to it. It will be objected that Coercion will be impracticable. But will it be more so in one plan than the other? Its efficacy will depend on the quantum of power collected, not on its being drawn from the States, or from the individuals; and according to his plan it may be exerted on individuals as well as according that of Mr. Randolph. A distinct executive and Judiciary also were equally provided by his plan. It is urged that two branches in the Legislature are necessary. Why? for the purpose of check. But the reason of the precaution is not applicable to this case. Within a particular State, where party heats prevail, such check may be necessary. In such a body as Congress it is less necessary, and besides, the delegations of the different States are checks on each other. Do the people at large complain of Congress? No, what they wish is that Congress may have more power. If the power now proposed be not enough, the people heeeafter will make additions to it. With proper powers Congress wlll act with more energy and wisdom than the proposed National Legislature; being fewer in number, and more secreted and refined by the mode of election. The plan of Mr. Randolph Will also be enormously expensive. Allowing Georgia and Delaware two representatives each in the popular branch the aggregate number of that branch will he 180. Add to it half as many for the other branch and you have 270. Members coming once at least a year from the most distant as well as the most central parts of the republic. In the present deranged state of our finances can so expensive a system be seriously thought of? By enlarging the powers of Congress the greatest part of this expense will be saved, and all purposes will be answered. At least a trial ought to be made.

MR. WILSON entered into a contrast of the principal points of the two plans so far he said as there had been time to examine the one last proposed. These points were

l. In theVirginia plan there are two and in some degree three branches in the Legislature: in the plan from N.J. there is to be a single legislature only.

2. Representation of the people at large is the basis of the one. the State Legislatures, the pillars of the other

3. Proportional representation revails in one:equality of suffrage in the others.

4. A single Executive Magistrate is at the head of the one, a plurality is held out in the other.

5. In the one the majority of the people of the United States must prevail in the other a minority may prevail.

6. The National Legislature is to make laws in all cases to which the separate States are incompetent and in place of this Congress are to have additional power in a few cases ouly

7. A negative on the laws of the States in place of the coercion to be substituted

8. The Executive to be revocable on impeachment and conviction; in one plan: in the other to be removeable at the instance of majority of the Executives of the States

9. Revision of the laws provided for in one,no such eheck in the other.

l0. Inferior national tribunals in one;none such in the other.

II. In the one, jurisdiction of National tribunals to extend etc., ect; an appellate jurisdiction only allowed in the other.

12. Here the jurisdiction is to extend to all cases affecting the National peace and harmony: there, a few cases only are marked out.

13. Finally the ratification is in this to be by the people themselves in that by the legislative authorities according to the thirteenth article of Confederation.

With œgard to the power of the Convention, he conceived himself authorized to conclude nothing, but to be at liberty to propose any thing. In this particular he felt himself perfectly indifferent to the two plans.

With regard to the sentiments the people, he coneived it difficult to know precisely what they are. Those of the particular circle in which one moved, were commonly mistaken for the general voice. He could not persuade himself that the State Governments and Sovereignties were so much the idols of the people, nor a National Government so obnoxious to them, as some supposed. Why should a National Government be unpopular? Has it less dignity? Will each Citizen enjoy under it less liberty or protection? Will a Citizen of Delaware be degraded by becoming a Citizen of the United States? Where do the people look at present for relief from the evils of which they complain? Is it from an internal reform of their Governments? No, Sir. It is from the National Councils that relief is expected. For these reasons he did not fear, that the people would not follow us into a national Government and it will be a further recommendation of Mr. Randolph's plan that it is to be submitted to them, and not to the LœgisIatures, for ratification.

Proceeding now to the first point on which he had contrasted the two plans, he observed that anxious as he was for some augmentation of the federal powers, it would be with extreme reluctance indeed that he could ever consent to give powers to Congress; he bad two reasons either of which was sufficient.

l. Congress,as a Legislative body does not stand on the people.

2. It is a single body. He would not repeat the remarks he had formeriy made on the principles of Representation. He would only say that an inequality in it, has ever been a poison contaminating every branch of Government. In Great Britain where this poison has had a full operation, the security of private rights is owing entirely to the purity of Her tribunals of Justice, the Judges of which are neither appointed nor paid, by a venal Parliament. The political liberty of that Nation, owing to the ineqnality of representation is at the mercy of its rulers. He means not to insinuate that there is any parallel between the situation of that Country and ours at present. But it is a lesson we ought not to disregard, that the smallest bodies in Great Britain are notoriously the most corrupt. Every other sour:e of influence must also be stronger in small than large bodies of men. When Lord Chesterfield had told us that one of the Dutch provinces had been seduced into the views of France, he need not have added, that it was not Holland, but one of the smallest of them. There are facts among ourselves which are known to all. Passing over others, he will only remark that the 1mpost, so anxiously wished for by the public was defeated not by any of the larger States in the Union.

3. Congress is a single Legislature. Despotism comes on Mankind in different Shapes, sometimes in an Executive, sometimes in a Military, one. Is there no danger of a Legislative despotism? Theory and practice both proclaim it. If the Legislative authority be not restrained, there can be neither liberty nor stability; and it can only be restrained by dividing it within itseff, into distinct and independent branches. In a single House there is no check, but the inadequate one, of the virtue and good sense of those Who compose it.

On another great point, the contrast was equally favorable to the plan reported by the Committee of the whole. It vested the Executive powers in a single Magistrate. The plan of New Jersey, vested them in a pluraIity. In order to control the Legislative authority, you must divide it. In order to control the Executive you must unite it. one man will be more responsible than three. Three will contend among themselves till one becomes the master of his colleagues. In the triumvirates of Rome first Caesar, than Augustus, are witnesses of this truth. The Kings of Sparta, and the Consuls of Rome prove also the factious consequences of dividing the Executive Magitracy. Having already taken up so much time he would not he said proceed to any of the other points. Those on which he had dwelt, are sufficieut of themselves: and on a decision of them, the fate of the others will depend.

Mr RANDOLPH, Was not scrupulous on the point of power. When the salvation of the Republic was at stake, it would be treason to our trust, not to propose what we found necessary. He painted in strong colours, the imbeci1ity of the existing Confederacy, and the danger of delaying a substantial reform. In answer to the objection drawn from the sense of our Constituents as denoted by their acts relating to the Convention and the objects of their deliberation, he observed that as each State acted separately in the case, it would have been indecent for it to have charged the existing Costitution with all the vices which it might have perceived in it. The first State that set on foot this experiment would not have been justified in going so far, ignorant as it was of the opinion of others, and sensible as it must have been of the uncertainty of a succesful issue tothe experiment. There are certainly seasons of a peculiar nature where the ordinary cannions must be dispensed with; and this is certainly one of them.He wouId not as far as depended on him leave any thing that seemed necessary, undone. The present moment is favorable, and is probably the last that wilI offer.

The true question is whether we shall addere to the federal plan, or introduce the national plan. The insnfficiency of the former has been fuIIy displayed by the trial already made.There are but two modes, by which the end of a General Government can be attained: the first is by coercion as proposed by Mister Paterson's plan 2. By real legislation as proposed by the other plan. Coercion he pronounced to be impracticable. expensive, cruel to individuals. It tended also to habituate the instruments of it to shed the blood and riot in the spoils of their fellow Citizens, and consequently trained them up for the service of ambition. We must resort therefore to a National Legislation over individuals for which Congress are unfit. To vest such power in them, would be blending the Legislative with the Executive, contrary to the recorded maxim on this subject: If the Union of these powers heresofore in Congress has been safe, it has been owing to the general impotency of that body. Congress are moreover not elected by the people, but by the Legislatures who retain even a power of recall. They have therefore no will of their own, they are a mere diplomatic body, and are always obsequious to the views of the States, who are always encroaching on the authority of the United States. A provision for harmony among the States, as in trade, naturaIizaton, etc, for crushing rebellion whenever it may rear its crest and for certain other general benefits, must be made. The powers for these purposes, can never be given to a body, inadequate as Congress are in point of representation, elected in the mode in which they are, and possessing no more confidence than they do: for notwithstanding what has been said to the contrary, his own experience satisfied him that a rooted distrust of Congress pretty generally prevailed. A National Government alone, properly constituted, will answer the purpose; and he begged it to be considered that the present is the last moment for establishing one. After this select experiment, the people will yield to despair.