Mr. Seward Is Now The Minister For Foreign Affairs In The
States, And It Is Hardly Too Much To Say That He Has Made Himself A
Laughing-Stock Among The Diplomatists Of Europe, By The Mixture Of
His Ignorance And His Arrogance.
His reports to his own ministers
during the single year of his office, as published by himself
apparently with great satisfaction, are a monument not so much of
his incapacity as of his want of training for such work.
We all
know his long state-papers on the "Trent" affair. What are we to
think of a statesman who acknowledges the action of his country's
servant to have been wrong, and in the same breath declares that he
would have held by that wrong, had the material welfare of his
country been thereby improved? The United States have now created a
great army and a great debt. They will soon also have created a
great navy. Affairs of other nations will press upon them, and they
will press against the affairs of other nations. In this way
statecraft will become necessary to them; and by degrees their
ministers will become habile, graceful, adroit, and perhaps crafty,
as are the ministers of other nations.
And, moreover, the United States have had no outlying colonies or
dependencies, such as an India and Canada are to us, as Cuba is and
Mexico was to Spain, and as were the provinces of the Roman empire.
Territories she has had, but by the peculiar beneficence of her
political arrangements, these Territories have assumed the guise of
sovereign States, and been admitted into federal partnership on
equal terms, with a rapidity which has hardly left to the central
government the reality of any dominion of its own. We are inclined
to suppose that these new States have been allowed to assume their
equal privileges and State rights because they have been contiguous
to the old States, as though it were merely an extension of
frontier. But this has not been so. California and Oregon have
been very much farther from Washington than the Canadas are from
London. Indeed they are still farther, and I hardly know whether
they can be brought much nearer than Canada is to us, even with the
assistance of railways. But nevertheless California and Oregon were
admitted as States, the former as quickly and the latter much more
quickly than its population would seem to justify Congress in doing,
according to the received ratio of population. A preference in this
way has been always given by the United States to a young population
over one that was older. Oregon with its 60,000 inhabitants has one
Representative. New York with 4,000,000 inhabitants has thirty-
three. But in order to be equal with Oregon, New York should have
sixty-six. In this way the outlying populations have been
encouraged to take upon themselves their own governance, and the
governing power of the President and his cabinet has been kept
within moderate limits.
But not the less is the position of the President very dominant in
the eyes of us Englishmen by reason of the authority with which he
is endowed. It is not that the scope of his power is great, but
that he is so nearly irresponsible in the exercise of that power.
We know that he can be impeached by the Representatives and expelled
from his office by the verdict of the Senate; but this in fact does
not amount to much. Responsibility of this nature is doubtless very
necessary, and prevents ebullitions of tyranny such as those in
which a sultan or an emperor may indulge; but it is not that
responsibility which especially recommends itself to the minds of
free men. So much of responsibility they take as a matter of
course, as they do the air which they breathe. It would be nothing
to us to know that Lord Palmerston could be impeached for robbing
the treasury, or Lord Russell punished for selling us to Austria.
It is well that such laws should exist, but we do not in the least
suspect those noble lords of such treachery. We are anxious to
know, not in what way they may be impeached and beheaded for great
crimes, but by what method they may be kept constantly straight in
small matters. That they are true and honest is a matter of course.
But they must be obedient also, discreet, capable, and, above all
things, of one mind with the public. Let them be that; or if not
they, then with as little delay as may be, some others in their
place. That with us is the meaning of ministerial responsibility.
To that responsibility all the cabinet is subject. But in the
government of the United States there is no such responsibility.
The President is placed at the head of the executive for four years,
and while he there remains no man can question him. It is not that
the scope of his power is great. Our own Prime Minister is
doubtless more powerful - has a wider authority. But it is that
within the scope of his power the President is free from all check.
There are no reins, constitutional or unconstitutional, by which he
can be restrained. He can absolutely repudiate a majority of both
Houses, and refuse the passage of any act of Congress even though
supported by those majorities. He can retain the services of
ministers distasteful to the whole country. He can place his own
myrmidons at the head of the army and navy, or can himself take the
command immediately on his own shoulders. All this he can do, and
there is no one that can question him.
It is hardly necessary that I should point out the fundamental
difference between our king or queen, and the President of the
United States. Our sovereign, we all know, is not responsible.
Such is the nature of our constitution. But there is not on that
account any analogy between the irresponsibility of the Queen and
that of the President.
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