Constitutional Myths

Home > Other > Constitutional Myths > Page 41
Constitutional Myths Page 41

by Ray Raphael


  Mason, George

  and the Bill of Rights, 132, 136–37, 139, 285nn9–10

  and the Electoral College, 51

  and federal powers of taxation, 25

  objections to ratification of the Constitution, 52–53, 137, 139

  and powers of incorporation, 291n15

  and proportional representation, 47–48, 257n19

  and slavery/slave representation, 47–48, 258n31

  and Virginia Plan, 81

  Massachusetts

  colonial town meetings and provincial assemblies, 3, 4, 5

  postwar insurrections and rebellions, 10–11, 16–17, 68

  ratification convention, 24, 66, 140–41

  Massachusetts Body of Liberties, 134

  Massachusetts Compromise, 66, 140–41

  Massachusetts Declaration of Rights, 261n5

  Mayflower Compact, 3

  McClurg, James, 267n15

  McCulloch v. Maryland (1819), 124, 129

  McHenry, James, 136, 270n33, 300n53

  McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Commission (1995), 163, 166, 293n27

  Meese, Edwin, III, 162

  Mercer, John Francis, 52

  Meyerson, Michael, 110, 281n53

  militias, 101, 115, 271n39

  Missouri Compromise, 249–50n3

  Missouri v. Jenkins (1995), 163

  M’Lean, John and Archibald, 107

  Monroe, James, 143

  Montesquieu, 36, 57–58, 61, 79, 92

  Morris, Gouverneur

  and the Bill of Rights, 136

  drafting of the Preamble, 265n27

  on the federal model, 13, 272n6

  and federal powers of taxation, 17, 254n25

  and the federal veto, 85, 268n17

  The Federalist essays, 104

  principle of representation and successive filtrations, 74, 265n28

  and proportional representation, 41–42, 43–44, 46

  ratification debates, 54

  and selection of the president, 50, 51

  and strong federal government, 8, 9, 11, 13

  and threat of political influence on democracy, 164

  Morris, Robert

  and the Bill of Rights, 147

  and federal powers of taxation, 17, 20–21, 25, 254n25

  navigation acts, 48–49, 53, 259n35

  “necessary and proper” clause (principle of implied powers), 64–66, 97, 100

  New American Library’s Mentor imprint and The Federalist Papers, 107, 109, 273n9

  New Hampshire’s ratification convention, 262n13

  New Jersey Plan, 38, 135

  New York Journal, 112, 275n23

  New York’s ratification convention, 112–13, 116–17, 132–33, 141, 262n13, 275nn23–25, 276n32, 286n20

  Nineteenth Amendment, 172

  Ninth Amendment, 150

  Nixon v. Shrink Missouri Government PAC (2007), 94

  North Carolina’s ratification convention, 141, 262n13

  O’Connor, Sandra Day, 293n28

  The Original Argument: The Federalists’ Case for the Constitution, Adapted for the 21st Century (Beck), 128, 283–84n59

  originalism, 153–75

  attempts to distinguish between rules and abstractions, 171, 295–97n43

  and civil rights legislation, 173, 299n49

  elusiveness of determining “original intent,” 154–56, 160–61, 289nn3–4, 290n5

  evolutionary interpretations, 169–73

  and First Amendment’s “wall of separation,” 161

  and Fourteenth Amendment, 161–62, 164, 171, 173, 297–98n45, 299n49

  and “judicial activism,” 162–69

  late nineteenth-/early twentieth-century approaches, 161–62

  late twentieth-century jurisprudence, 162–73

  and liberalization of American society, 169

  Madison’s suggested method of constitutional interpretation, 158–60, 290n11

  methodological questions not addressed by the Constitution, 156–58

  and the national bank debates, 159–60, 290n11, 291n15

  and ratification convention proceedings, 158–60, 289n3, 290nn12–13

  Scalia and original meaning, 153, 162, 166–73, 289n2, 294n35, 295–97n43

  “skyscraper originalism” and “framework originalism,” 300n51

  Supreme Court jurisprudence, 153, 160–73

  and Thomas, 153, 162–66, 292–93n27, 294n28

  and three causes of constitutional disputes, 155–56

  and undermining of republican government/democracy by political influence, 164–65, 292n27

  Page, John, 264n26

  Paine, Thomas, 60, 111, 274n21

  Paterson, William, 38, 46, 257n19

  Pennsylvania Gazette, 2

  Pennsylvania’s ratification convention, 23–24

  Pierce, William, 78

  Pinckney, Charles

  and Bill of Rights, 136

  and the federal veto, 82–83, 85, 88, 267n15

  slavery arguments, 48

  Pinckney, Charles Cotesworth, 42–46, 47–48, 258n33

  political influence and republican government/democracy, 164–65, 292n27

  Pollock v. Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company (1895), 31–33, 255n29

  popular sovereignty, principle of

  Constitution text, 72–75, 264n26, 265nn27–28

  Federal Convention debates, 73–74, 263n23, 264n24

  and the Preamble’s “We the People,” 61, 265n27

  present-day interpretations, 74–75

  and principle of representation (and successive filtrations), 73–75, 264n26, 265n28

  Preamble to the Constitution, 61, 71–72, 265n27

  presidency

  and authority in foreign relations, 121–22

  The Federalist on, 115–16, 117, 121–22, 275n30, 277n34

  impeachment power, 88–89

  method of selecting a president, 49–52, 71, 115–17, 165–66, 259n39, 259n41, 275n30, 276n31, 277n34

  power of appointments and dismissals (removals), 88, 117–19, 156–57, 278n37

  treaty-making authorities, 88, 156–57, 268n19, 291n16

  veto power, 86–88, 268n17

  and Virginia Plan, 86–89

  principles of government, 57–75

  balanced/complementary relationship between, 58–75

  and British Whig tradition, 58, 59–61

  Enlightenment influences, 57–58

  and The Federalist, 121–22

  “federalist principle” and balance of powers, 90–91

  and First Federal Congress, 67, 264n26

  principle of limited powers, 63–68

  principle of popular sovereignty, 72–75

  principle of representation (and successive filtrations), 73–75, 264n26, 265n28

  principles of individual liberty (rights) and the common good, 59–61, 68–72

  restraint principles, 62

  strengthening principles, 61–62

  Printz v. the United States (1997), 103, 123, 168, 279n44

  proportional representation, 39–49, 80–81, 83–85, 256n14, 256n19, 257n29, 259n40, 267nn13–14

  Delaware delegation, 39–41

  the Great Compromise, 38, 40–47, 49, 256n19, 257n29, 259n40

  money bills, 43, 83–84, 259n40

  navigation laws and commerce, 48–49, 53, 259n35

  and slave importation, 47–49, 258n31, 258n33, 259n34

  and slave representation, 44–46, 47–49, 257n26, 257n29, 258n30, 258n33, 259n34, 281n53

  and three-fifths compromise, 37, 45–46, 49, 257nn25–26, 258n31

  “Publius-Huldah’s Blog: Understanding the Constitution,” 128–29

  Rakove, Jack N., 89, 124–25, 289n3

  Randolph, Edmund

  and federal powers of taxation, 17, 25–26

  and national bank debate, 63–64

  opposition to ratification of the Constitution, 52, 53

  and proportional representation, 46, 84


  and Virginia Plan, 13, 36–37, 74, 81

  ratification debates and state ratification conventions, x, 23–27, 52–55, 66, 74, 126–27, 132–34, 139–42, 260n47

  and calls for a second convention, 112–13, 132–33, 141–42, 260n47, 275n25

  and The Federalist, 103–6, 109, 110–20, 273n13, 275nn23–24, 280n48

  Massachusetts’ Compromise, 66, 140–41

  originalism and proceedings of, 158–60, 289n3, 290nn12–13

  proposed amendments and declarations of rights, 26, 52–53, 132, 139–42, 145, 146, 231–33

  proposed amendments to confine federal authority to expressly delegated powers, 66–67, 262n13, 270n35

  proposed amendments to guarantee popular sovereignty, 74, 264n26

  proposed amendments to prevent national taxation, 23–27, 147

  See also Bill of Rights

  Ravalli Republic (website), 284n59

  Read, George, 39–40, 79

  Regulators’ rebellion, 10–11, 16–17, 68

  Rehnquist, William H., 162

  representation, principle of (and successive filtrations), 73–75, 264n26, 265n28

  Revolutionary War (War for Independence)

  British surrender at Yorktown, 8

  and colonists’ concern for public good over individual rights, 70, 263n19

  and insistence on local self-governance, 4

  and Continental Army, 5, 7

  paper bills/currency to finance, 19–20

  postwar debtor insurrections, 10–11, 16–17

  postwar return to local politics and regional interests, 9–11, 252n18

  and Second Continental Congress, 5, 7

  Reynolds v. United States (1878), 161, 292n18

  Roberts, John, 124

  Roosevelt, Theodore, 32

  Rossiter, Clinton, 109, 117–18, 273n9, 274n16, 282n54

  Rutledge, John, 48, 85, 258n33

  Scalia, Antonin

  Affordable Care Act decision, 102, 261n6

  and The Federalist Papers, 123, 125, 279n44

  rejecting original intent in favor of original meaning, 153, 162, 166–73, 289n2, 294n35, 295–97n43

  Schnapper, Eric, 299n49

  science, advancement of, 95

  Second Amendment, 150

  Second Continental Congress (1775), 5–8, 16, 19–20

  Sedgwick, Theodore, 28

  self-governance, colonial, 1–4, 69–70, 250n3

  Senate

  “advice and consent” of presidential appointments, 117–19, 156–57

  Bill of Rights debate and consideration, 147, 288n35

  the Great Compromise and equal representation, 38, 40–47, 49, 83–85, 256n19, 257n29, 259n40, 267n13

  principle of representation (and successive filtrations), 73–74

  “separation of powers,” 62, 261n5

  Seventh Amendment, 150, 295n43

  Shays, Daniel, 10

  Shays’ Rebellion, 10

  Sherman, Roger

  and the Bill of Rights, 136, 145, 287n31

  and direct taxation, 22

  and popular sovereignty, 73, 264n24

  and powers of incorporation, 291n15

  and proportional representation, 259n34

  Sixteenth Amendment, 22, 32–33

  Sixth Amendment, 150

  slavery

  and Dickinson’s draft Articles of Confederation, 6

  Dred Scott decision and appeals to original intent, 160–61

  and the Great Compromise, 44–46, 257n26, 257n29

  and proportional state representation, 44–46, 47–49, 257n26, 257n29, 258n30, 258n33, 259n34, 281n53

  slave importation controversy, 47–49, 258n31, 258n33, 259n34, 281n53

  taxation and slave property, 23, 29

  and three-fifths compromise, 37, 45–46, 49, 257nn25–26, 258n31

  Smith, William Loughton, 119

  social contract theory of government, 57, 132

  Souter, David, 103, 123, 168, 279n44

  South Carolina’s ratification convention, 262n13

  Spain, Jay’s attempted commercial treaty with, 9–10, 259n36

  The Spirit of the Laws (Montesquieu), 57, 92

  Springer v. United States (1881), 254n27

  State Historical Society of Wisconsin, 105

  Storer v. Brown (1974), 94

  Taney, Roger B., 160–61

  taxation, federal powers of, 15–34

  apportionment according to population, 22, 28–30, 31–33, 255n29

  Article I, Section 8 (first clause), 22–23, 32, 255n29

  Article I, Section 9 (fifth clause), 23

  Article I, Section 9 (fourth clause), 22–23, 31–32

  Article VI, 27

  Articles of Confederation prohibiting, 16, 20–21

  Bill of Rights debates, 141–42, 143, 147

  carriage taxes, 28–29, 157–58

  Civil War, 30–31, 254n27

  and the colonies, 15–16, 17–18, 254n24

  Confederation Congress, 16–17, 20–21

  direct taxation, 22, 24–25, 28–34, 253n12

  dissents/resistance and antitax crusaders, 23–27, 253n20

  ensuring regional fairness, 23, 28, 254n22

  excise taxes, 25, 28–29, 254nn21–22

  “faculty taxes,” 18, 30–31, 33–34

  Federal Convention debates and ratifying conventions, 22–27, 253n20

  income taxes, 30–34, 254n27, 255n29

  indirect taxes, 22, 28, 32–34

  liquor taxes, 25, 28, 254nn21–22

  luxury and sin taxes, 28–29

  Madison on, 17, 21–22, 24, 27

  and nationalists, 17

  poll taxes, 18, 25, 254n24

  post-Revolutionary War debts, 16–17, 21–22

  property taxes, 23, 29–34

  Revolutionary War financing, 19–20

  Second Continental Congress, 16, 19–20

  and slave property, 23, 29

  states’ proposed amendments to prevent, 23–27, 147

  Supreme Court rulings, 28–29, 31–33, 254n27, 255n29

  Tucker’s amendment to limit, 27, 147

  Virginia’s declaration of rights and no taxation without representation, 26

  “window tax,” 29–30, 254n25

  Tenth Amendment, 63, 67, 140, 150, 261n6

  Thomas, Clarence

  Affordable Care Act dissent, 102, 261–62n6

  Bush v. Gore decision, 165–66, 294n28

  Citizens United decision, 164–65, 292n27

  and The Federalist Papers, 94, 107

  Nixon v. Shrink Missouri Government PAC, 94

  and originalism, 153, 162–66, 164–66, 292n27, 294n28

  three-fifths compromise, 37, 45–46, 49, 257nn25–26, 258n31

  Tillinghast, Charles, 117

  Tillman, Seth Barrett, 277n36, 278n38

  treaty-making powers, 88, 156–57, 268n19, 291n16

  Tribe, Laurence, 169–70

  Tucker, Thomas Tudor, 27, 67, 146, 147, 270n35

  United States v. International Business Machines Corp. (1996), 163

  United States v. Lopez (1991), 162–63

  United States v. South Eastern Underwriters Association (1944), 273n9

  U.S. Supreme Court

  authority as final arbiter on issues of constitutionality, 157–58

  and federal tax law, 28–29, 31–33, 254n27, 255n29

  late nineteenth-/early twentieth-century interpretative approaches, 161–62

  late twentieth-century jurisprudence, 162–73

  opinions citing The Federalist, 93–94, 103, 123–24, 127–28, 129, 269n30, 273n9, 279n44

  originalism/appeals to original intent, 153, 160–73

  Scalia and original meaning, 153, 162, 166–73, 289n2, 294n35, 295–97n43

  Thomas and originalism, 153, 162–66, 292–93n27, 294n28

  See also originalism

  U.S. Term Limits, Inc. v. Thornton (1995), 163

  veto, federal

 
Hamilton’s arguments, 115

  Madison’s arguments, 80, 81–86, 89–92, 267n12, 267nn14–15, 268n22

  Pinckney-Madison motion to strengthen, 82–83, 85

  presidential veto and “proper proportion” of each branch that could override, 86–88, 268n17

  Virginia

  colonial charter, 134

  “declaration of rights” and principle of no taxation without representation, 26

  House of Burgesses, 3–4

  institution of slavery, 249n3

  proposed amendments, 141

  ratification convention, 24–26, 141, 262n13

  Virginia Declaration of Rights, 26, 285n9

  Virginia Independent Chronicle, 111

  Virginia Plan at Federal Convention, 13, 36–37, 41, 77–78, 81–83, 135, 197–200

  Virginia Resolutions (1798), 94–95, 269n31

  Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom (1798), 142, 161

  Waite, Morrison, 161, 292n18

  “wall of separation” between church and state, 161, 292n18

  War of 1812, 30

  Warren, James, 10, 13, 140, 252n18

  Washington, George

  and the Bill of Rights, 133, 142, 143–44

  and the Continental Army, 5

  Farewell Address, 34

  and federal powers of taxation, 17, 28, 34, 253n11

  and The Federalist, 110–11

  and Jay’s Treaty, 157, 291n16

  “Legacy” letter to the states (1783), 9, 187–96

  national bank bill, 63–65

  New England tour (1789), xi, 250n4

  postwar advocacy for strong federal government, 8–13, 65, 252n18

  presidency/as first president, 114, 143

  and proportional representation, 44

  and ratification debates, 53, 54, 142

  Virginia delegation and Virginia Plan, 81

  Webster, Noah, 113

  Wentworth, Benning, 3

  Whig tradition, 58, 59–61

  White, Alexander, 288n31

  White, Byron, 94

  Williamson, Hugh, 45, 85, 136, 137–38

  Wilson, James, 54, 73

  argument for direct election of representatives, 116, 263n23

  and federal veto, 85, 87, 267n14

  and powers of incorporation, 291n15

  and proportional representation, 41, 42, 43

  speech in support of the Constitution, 111

  Wilson, Woodrow, 161

  Wood, Gordon S., 269n27

  Wooddeson, Richard, 123

  Wythe, George, 81–82

  Yates, Robert, 52, 257n19

  CELEBRATING INDEPENDENT PUBLISHING

  Thank you for reading this book published by The New Press. The New Press is a nonprofit, public interest publisher. New Press books and authors play a crucial role in sparking conversations about the key political and social issues of our day.

 

‹ Prev