Though The Bars With Which We
Protect Our House May Never Have Been Tried By A Thief, We Do Not
Therefore Believe That Our House Would Have Been Safe If Such Bars
Had Been Known To Be Wanting.
And then, as to that matter of State
appointments, is it not the fact that all governing power consists
in the selection of the agents by whom the action of government
shall be carried on?
It must come to this, I imagine, when the
argument is pushed home. The power of the most powerful man depends
only on the extent of his authority over his agents. According to
the Constitution of the United States, the President can select no
agent either at home or abroad, for purposes either of peace or war,
or to the employment of whom the Senate does not agree with him.
Such a rule as this should save the nation from the use of
disreputable agents as public servants. It might perhaps have done
much more toward such salvation than it has as yet effected, and it
may well be hoped that it will in future do more.
Such are the executive powers of the Senate; and it is, I think,
remarkable that the Senate has always used these powers with extreme
moderation. It has never shown a factious inclination to hinder
government by unnecessary interference, or a disposition to clip the
President's wings by putting itself altogether at variance with him.
I am not quite sure whether some fault may not have lain on the
other side; whether the Senate may not have been somewhat slack in
exercising the protective privileges given to it by the
Constitution. And here I cannot but remark how great is the
deference paid to all governors and edicts of government throughout
the United States. One would have been disposed to think that such
a feeling would be stronger in an old country such as Great Britain
than in a young country such as the States. But I think that it is
not so. There is less disposition to question the action of
government either at Washington or at New York, than there is in
London. Men in America seem to be content when they have voted in
their governors, and to feel that for them all political action is
over until the time shall come for voting for others. And this
feeling, which seems to prevail among the people, prevails also in
both Houses of Congress. Bitter denunciations against the
President's policy or the President's ministers are seldom heard.
Speeches are not often made with the object of impeding the action
of government. That so small and so grave a body as the Senate
should abstain from factious opposition to the government when
employed on executive functions, was perhaps to be expected. It is
of course well that it should be so. I confess, however, that it
has appeared to me that the Senate has not used the power placed in
its hands as freely as the Constitution has intended, But I look at
the matter as an Englishman, and as an Englishman I can endure no
government action which is not immediately subject to parliamentary
control.
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