Monday, January 11.

Apportionment Bill.

The Apportionment bill, as received from the House of Representatives, was taken up. This bill fixes the ratio of representation at one member for every 33,000 persons in each State.

Mr. Wells moved to strike out 33,000, his object being to introduce 30,000, for which he assigned his reasons at some length.

On this motion a debate of some length ensued, in which the provisions of the bill as they stood were supported by Messrs. Jackson, Mason, Wright, and Cocke; and opposed by Messrs. Wells and Hillhouse.

Mr. White, of Delaware.—Believing as I do, sir, that the minds of gentlemen on this floor are thoroughly made up as to the present subject, and that any observations now to be offered will not influence a single vote, but merely occupy the time of the Senate to no useful purpose, I shall ask your indulgence but a few moments. I cannot, sir, sit quietly and see this bill reported by your committee, meditating as it certainly does a manifest injury to the State I have the honor in part to represent, pass into a law, without doing more than oppose to it a silent negative; without holding up my voice and protesting most solemnly against the extreme injustice of the measure. If, sir, this bill passes in its present shape, there will be left in the State of Delaware twenty-eight thousand eight hundred and eleven people unrepresented in the popular branch of their Legislature. Gentlemen may say, that this is only a fraction, and that in a general apportionment of representation, fractional numbers are unavoidable. Sir, I acknowledge it is only a fraction, but it is a fraction that includes one-half the population of that State, and amounts, even upon the present contemplated plan, to within four thousand of the number sufficient to gain another Representative. Sir, twenty-eight or thirty thousand would, to one of the large States, be an inconsiderable fraction. Apportion that number, for instance, among the twenty-one Representatives from Virginia, and you give to each member but a fraction of about thirteen hundred; whereas from Delaware, there will be but one representative, and over and above his legal number a fraction of near twenty-nine thousand people unrepresented. Is this fair, sir? Is this equitable? I ask, gentlemen, is it not unfriendly and wrongful? And can it be possible, sir, that the transcendent omnipotence of a majority have fated, if I may use the expression, this injustice upon a sister State? Suppose, sir, Delaware to have but one Representative and Virginia twenty, a fraction of five thousand to the former is equal to a redundant number of one hundred thousand to the latter; or take, sir, the present case, and you will find that the fraction of twenty-nine thousand in the State of Delaware, apportioned upon the representation, is at least equal to a redundant number in the State of Virginia of three hundred thousand. If, sir, the divisor is fixed at thirty thousand, Delaware will have two Representatives; her weight, then, in the other House, will, in relation to Virginia, be as one to twelve, but if she is compelled to submit to the divisor of thirty-three thousand, you allow her but one Representative; you deny her nearly one-half her rightful influence, and place her on the floor of the House of Representatives in a relative situation toward Virginia, as one to twenty-one. Sir, an additional Representative to any of the larger States is not of the same consequence as another would be to Delaware. To Virginia, for instance, one is but the twentieth part of her force, to Delaware it would be one-half her force. Gentlemen may say that Delaware is the smallest State; but let it be remembered, sir, that her rights are equally sacred with those of the largest States; and although her citizens are not so numerous, yet, sir, their State sovereignty and other constitutional rights are quite as dear and valuable to them, as the blessing can be to any other people; and, let me add, sir, she is among the oldest States; her history travels back through the bloody scenes of your Revolution; she dates her era at your Declaration of Independence, and I am proud to say, and can do so without detracting from her neighbors, in proportion to her population, her resources, and extent, during the severe contest for American liberty, she contributed, in blood and treasure, as freely to its support and permanent establishment, as any State in the Union.

Sir, the doctrine urged by some gentlemen that the divisor of thirty thousand will increase the House of Representatives to a body too large and unwieldy for the convenient and ordinary purposes of business, seems to me totally without foundation. The observation and experience of every man must be sufficient at once to satisfy him that this cannot be the consequence; we have before our eyes, sir, examples that prove directly the reverse. This divisor will give to your House of Representatives but one hundred and fifty-seven members; the State of Virginia has in the popular branch of her Legislature one hundred and eighty members, and we have not been told that it is too numerous. The British House of Commons, before the union with Ireland, consisted of about five hundred and fifty members, and we heard no complaint of the numbers; on the contrary, sir, the nation wished a fuller representation; and it is from that House, too, sir, that, according to this logic, must be so extremely riotous and disorderly, we have drawn most of the rules that govern the proceedings of this honorable body.

Again, sir, the nature and spirit of your Government requires a full representation in the Legislature. It is a Government that must depend alone for its support upon the affections of the people; and the best security for their affections is to extend to them, upon as large a scale as comports with the public safety, the freedom of choice, and right of representation. In so extensive a country as this, many parts of which are thinly inhabited, and the election districts consequently including vast tracts of territory, it must often happen that the electors are entirely unacquainted with the person for whom they vote; but if you increase the representation, you reduce the size of the election districts; you bring the candidate within the very neighborhood of the electors; they see him, they know him; they are better enabled to estimate truly his character, and judge of his capacity and disposition to serve them. This, sir, will secure in a great degree, the constituent from imposition, and attach to the Representative a higher and more immediate responsibility; it will inspire the people with confidence in your Government, and induce them more cheerfully to acquiesce in your laws. But, above all, sir, the divisor of thirty thousand leaves throughout the United States a less aggregate of unrepresented fractions than any divisor you can take; less, permit me to say, sir, by one hundred and sixteen thousand, than the one contemplated in the bill; and I am sure gentlemen on all sides of the House wish the country as fairly represented as possible. To my mind this is a most conclusive argument in favor of the divisor of thirty thousand.

The question was now taken on the motion to strike out 33,000, and lost—ayes 11, noes 15.

Mr. Morris then moved, and Mr. Tracy seconded the motion to add, after "one representative for every 33,000," the words "and one representative for every fractional number of 27,000 persons." The number 27,000 was used to avoid a violation of the constitution, which prohibits the allotting to each State more representatives than one for every 30,000. Thus, in the case of Delaware, the ratio being 33,000, Delaware would be entitled to one member for 33,000, and one for the fraction of 27,000: both which numbers would amount to 60,000; which last number entitled a State to two members without violating the constitution. This motion was opposed by Messrs. Wright and Anderson, and was lost—ayes 10, noes 15.

On the question to agree to the final passage of this bill, it was determined in the affirmative—yeas 23, nays 5, as follows:

Yeas.—Messrs. Anderson, Baldwin, Breckenridge, Brown, Chipman, Cocke, Colhoun, Dayton, Ellery, T. Foster, Dwight Foster, Franklin, Howard, Jackson, Logan, S. T. Mason, J. Mason, Morris, Nicholas, Sheafe, Stone, Sumter, and Wright.

Nays.—Messrs. Hillhouse, Olcott, Tracy, Wells, and White.

The bill was then read a third time, and passed.