The liberty principle for this Freedom Friday concerns the need to adhere to constitutional principles. The further America moves away from the U.S. Constitution, the more freedom is lost. In an interview with Virginia Allen of The Heritage Foundation, Joseph Postell, an associate professor of politics at Hillsdale College, discussed Congress and its history.
Allen
asked a question about the design for government created by the Founders of
America. The question is, “Now, when the Founders were crafting Congress, why
did they see a need for two separate entities, to have a House and a Senate?”
Postell gave the following as a short answer: “But I think the question you’re
asking really gets at the most significant thing about Congress…. So they
actually deliberately made Congress weak by dividing it up into these two
bodies.” The professor continued with his explanation, which Allen said, “invites
a very different answer.” Then she explained her opinion as follows.
First, there is the significance of the
word “Congress.” Here is the first definition of that word in my dictionary: “A
formal assembly of representatives, as of various nations, to discuss problems.”
The Congress of Vienna is a famous example. It was a series of meetings between
representatives of the nations of Europe to try to work out a new European
political order after the defeat of Napoleon. It was not called the Parliament
of Vienna because it was not a legislative body but an assembly of
representatives.
And neither was America’s Continental
Congress. As Postell notes, the Continental Congress predated the Constitution.
Representatives of the 13 former colonies met to work out how they could win
their independence from the British Empire. It is often said that the
Continental Congress was politically weak. All that really means is that it was
not a legislative body. The states retained their sovereignty, and the representatives
of the states met together to discuss the challenges the states needed to face
together.
Why, then, did the Founders keep that name
for the American legislature created by the Constitution? After all, it was no
longer a formal assembly of representatives of the various states to discuss
the problems they had in common.
Keeping the name made sense because the
first Congress under the Constitution was in many ways more like the
Continental Congress than the Congress of the bloated post-constitutional
central government we have in Washington, D.C., today….
So,
why did the Founders use the word Congress rather than Parliament?
Because they delegated few and defined powers to the federal government and left
all other powers to the States. The powers delegated to the federal government
are “exercised principally on external objects, as war, peace, negotiation, and
foreign commerce.” The Founders reserved all other powers to the States. This
is the principle upon which the current Supreme Court sent the matter of
abortion back to the States.
Allen
quoted Postell as giving a “very astute discussion of why the Founders kept the
name is right on target.”
So unlike, say, Parliament, which was the
ide of a legislative body with which the Framers were familiar, Congress
implies something more like a bunch of different countries or different groups
of people coming together to hash out their differences…
They use this word Congress because they
really believed in a federal system. They really believed that they were states
that were united for limited purposes, but a lot of the power and the
sovereignty was going to lie back with the states.
So under this conception, really, it’s not
an entirely national system. It’s actually a federal system in which the
Congress is almost like diplomatic representatives from different countries
coming together to kind of deal with issues like trade and military defense and
things like that.
Under
the U.S. Constitution, States send people to Congress to represent the interest
of those States and their residents. The States gave up power to wage war or to
negotiate with foreign nations. However, they also kept control of those powers
through the representatives that they sent to Congress. Allen explained the
situation as follows:
Besides, the state governments would not
be giving up control of those powers. They would retain control of them
by means of the Senate. According to the founding bargain, senators would be
chosen by the state legislatures, and the Senate would control those powers
delegated to the federal government. That’s why the Constitution gives the
Senate power over treaties, over the declaration of war, even over the people
the president selects for his Cabinet. By giving the state governments control
of the Senate, the Constitution gave them enormous power within the federal
government.
Consequently, Congress needed two houses,
not to make it weaker, but for the simplest of reasons: the Founders’
astonishing innovation required it.
The American state governments were to be
represented in the Senate – the federal legislative house of the state governments
– and you and the people in your locality were to be represented in the House
of Representatives – the federal legislative house of the people. The states
and the people would each have a representative body in the federal legislature.
But in 1913, the American people broke the
founding bargain, setting in motion the ongoing process of progressively
overthrowing the Constitution, which is the source of the mess we find
ourselves in today.
The 17th Amendment was the
single change that did the most to undo what the Founders had accomplished by
means of the Constitution. It provided for the direct election of senators, the
system we have now. The state governments would no longer control the Senate
through the representatives they chose. The state governments’ base of
political power within the federal government was taken from them, putting an
end to the federal system of the Founders.
Allen
continued by explaining that Progressives “tricked” the American people into
believing that the Constitution needed to be reformed. “The ‘reform’ in effect
repealed the 10th Amendment: ‘The powers not delegated to the United
States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to
the States respectively, or to the people.’”
If
the American voters had understood that the “reform” acted to repeal the 10th
Amendment, they most likely would not have voted for the change. “But by means
of the 17th Amendment, the Progressives accomplished something even
more far-reaching: They removed the central pillar of the Founders’ brilliantly
designed federal system.” With the 17th Amendment, Americans lost
freedoms. The loss of those freedoms brought us to the situation in which we
live today. Progressives continue to work to change the Constitution.
Today,
the U.S. Constitution “hangs by a thread” as prophesied by the Prophet Joseph
Smith. The 2024 presidential election is our last chance to save the
Constitution. If Biden is re-elected – or another Democrat is elected, we will
lose our nation as we know it. Anyone and everyone who is interested in saving
America and the U.S. Constitution should vote for Donald Trump!
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