Thursday, July 5.
Punishment of Crime.
SEDITION.
A bill was received from the Senate in addition to the act for the punishment of certain crimes against the United States, which was read the first time.
[This bill provides, that if any persons shall unlawfully combine or conspire together, with intent to oppose any measures of the Government of the United States, or to impede the operation of any law, or to intimidate or prevent any person holding an office under the Government from exercising his trust. And if any person shall, by writing, printing, or speaking, threaten such officer with any damage to his character, person, or estate, or shall counsel, advise, or attempt to procure any insurrection, riot, &c., whether such attempt shall have the desired effect, or not, he shall be deemed guilty of a high misdemeanor, and punished by a fine, on conviction, not exceeding $5,000, and by imprisonment not less than six months, nor exceeding five years. And if any person shall, by any libellous or scandalous writing, printing, publishing, or speaking, traduce or defame the Legislature of the United States, by seditious or inflammatory declarations or expressions, with intent to create a belief in the citizens thereof, that the said Legislature in enacting any law, was induced thereto by motives hostile to the constitution, or liberties and happiness of the people thereof; or shall in manner aforesaid, traduce or defame the President of the United States, or any Court, or Judge thereof, by declarations tending to criminate their motives in any official transaction, the persons so offending, being convicted shall be punished by a fine not exceeding $2,000 and by imprisonment not exceeding two years.]
Mr. Otis moved that it be read a second time.
Mr. Harrison called for the reading of the amendments to the constitution.
The Speaker said, the only motion in order, if objections were made to the second reading of the bill, would be to reject the bill.
Mr. Livingston made that motion.
Mr. Allen.—I hope this bill will not be rejected. If ever there was a nation which required a law of this kind, it is this. Let gentlemen look at certain papers printed in this city and elsewhere, and ask themselves whether an unwarrantable and dangerous combination does not exist to overturn and ruin the Government by publishing the most shameless falsehoods against the Representatives of the people of all denominations, that they are hostile to free Governments and genuine liberty, and of course to the welfare of this country; that they ought, therefore, to be displaced, and that the people ought to raise an insurrection against the Government.
In the Aurora, of the 28th of June last, we see this paragraph: "It is a curious fact, America is making war with France for not treating, at the very moment the Minister for Foreign Affairs fixed upon the very day for opening a negotiation with Mr. Gerry. What think you of this, Americans!"
Such paragraphs need but little comment. The public agents are charged with crimes, for which, if true, they ought to be hung. The intention here is to persuade the people that peace with France is in our power; nay, that she is sincerely desirous of it, on proper terms, but that we reject her offers, and proceed to plunge our country into a destructive war.
This combination against our peace is extensive; it embraces characters whose stations demand a different course. Is this House free from it? Recollect what a few days ago fell from the very gentleman (Mr. Livingston) who now so boldly and violently calls on us to reject this bill at the instant of its coming before us, without suffering it to be read a second time. The gentleman proposed a resolution requesting the President to instruct Mr. Gerry to conclude a treaty with the French Government; and declared that "he believed a negotiation might be opened, and that it was probable a treaty might be concluded which it would be honorable to the United States to accept. He did not wish to frustrate so happy an event by any punctilio, because they had refused to treat with three Envoys, but were willing to treat with one." This is in the very spirit of the malicious paragraph I just now read. It is pursuing the same systematic course of operations. The gentleman also said, (what has not been published, however,) that "the commission of the Envoys being joint and several, Mr. Gerry had unquestionably ample powers to treat alone." Here are circumstances of what I call a combination against the Government, in attempts to persuade the people of certain facts, which a majority of this House, at least, and of the people at large, I believe, know to be unfounded. Who can say that Mr. Gerry has power to treat alone, or that the French Government is willing to treat with him on fair and honorable terms? Gentlemen do not believe either, let them say what they will. Does such a commission empower one to exercise the functions of the whole in opposition to the opinions of his colleagues? It would produce the most inextricable confusion. The severalty of the powers is well known always to be a provision against such accidents as may prevent or disable a part of the Commissioners from acting. I mention these things to show what false ideas gentlemen endeavor to impress the public mind with on this subject.
The gentleman (Mr. Livingston) makes his proclamation of war on the Government in the House on Monday, and this infamous printer (Bache) follows it up with the tocsin of insurrection on Tuesday. While this bill was under consideration in the Senate, an attempt is made to render it odious among the people. "Is there any alternative," says this printer, "between an abandonment of the constitution and resistance?" He declares what is unconstitutional, and then invites the people to "resistance." This is an awful, horrible example of "the liberty of opinion and freedom of the press." Can gentlemen hear these things and lie quietly on their pillows? Are we to see all these acts practised against the repose of our country, and remain passive? Are we bound hand and foot that we must be witnesses of these deadly thrusts at our liberty? Are we to be the unresisting spectators of these exertions to destroy all that we hold dear? Are these approaches to revolution and Jacobinic domination, to be observed with the eye of meek submission? No, sir, they are indeed terrible; they are calculated to freeze the very blood in our veins. Such liberty of the press and of opinion is calculated to destroy all confidence between man and man; it leads to a dissolution of every bond of union; it cuts asunder every ligament that unites man to his family, man to his neighbor, man to society, and to Government. God deliver us from such liberty, the liberty of vomiting on the public floods of falsehood and hatred to every thing sacred, human, and divine! If any gentleman doubts the effects of such a liberty, let me direct his attention across the water; it has there made slaves of thirty millions of men.
At the commencement of the Revolution in France those loud and enthusiastic advocates for liberty and equality took special care to occupy and command all the presses in the nation; they well knew the powerful influence to be obtained on the public mind by that engine; its operations are on the poor, the ignorant, the passionate, and the vicious; over all these classes of men the freedom of the press shed its baneful effects, and they all became the tools of faction and ambition, and the virtuous, the pacific, and the rich, were their victims. The Jacobins of our country, too, sir, are determined to preserve in their hands the same weapon; it is our business to wrest it from them. Hence this motion so suddenly made, and so violently supported by the mover, to reject this bill without even suffering it to have a second reading; hence this alarm for the safety of "the freedom of speech and of the press."
Mr. Harper said, if, in voting against the rejection of this bill, his vote should be considered as giving his assent to all its provisions, it would be misunderstood. He thought it right and necessary to make a law on the subject; but not exactly such a law as the present, his particular objections to which he should make known when the subject was fully before him. He should vote against a rejection of the bill, because to vote for it, would be to declare that no law ought to be passed to restrict seditious writing and speaking, which was not his opinion.
He had often heard in this place, and elsewhere, harangues on the liberty of the press, as if it were to swallow up all other liberties; as if all law and reason, and every right, human and divine, was to fall prostrate before the liberty of the press; whereas, the true meaning of it is no more than that a man shall be at liberty to print what he pleases, provided he does not offend against the laws, and not that no law shall be passed to regulate this liberty of the press. He admitted that a law which should say a man shall not slander his neighbor would be unnecessary; but it is perfectly within the constitution to say, that a man shall not do this, or the other, which shall be injurious to the well-being of society; in the same way that Congress had a right to make laws to restrain the personal liberty of man, when that liberty is abused by acts of violence on his neighbor.
Mr. H. knew the liberty of the press had been carried to a very considerable extent in this country. He had frequently seen private character vilely calumniated; he had himself come in for a share of abuse, but he had always despised the base calumniators, believing that a man's propriety of conduct would always be sufficient to shield him against these slanders. When he saw the President of the United States and the Government of the Union defamed, he still despised them, and he believed also that the people were not affected by them, because he saw they did not rise in insurrection against the Government; and if they had not believed that all the things which were said respecting the Government were vile falsehoods, he should have thought the people the most wretched fools, had they not risen against it.
Mr. Nicholas was sorry this motion had been made, because it prevents members from going into the modification of the bill, which he was convinced would completely exemplify the folly of the principle; but until gentlemen saw what form the bill was finally to take, it was impossible to speak with precision on its merits; because if the declarations of the gentlemen from Connecticut and South Carolina were attended to, it would be found they are most afraid of the speeches and letters of gentlemen in this House. They acknowledge, however, they cannot prevent members from speaking what they please here. What, then, is their aim? Do they mean to prevent the publication of their sentiments to their constituents and to the world? If this was not their intention, he could not tell what it was.
There was one general view of this subject, which Mr. N. took to be the most momentous that this country ever saw. He was ready to go with gentlemen into measures for affording a liberal support to the war, which it appears must be gone into; but he was not ready to create a domestic tyranny. The people of this country are competent judges of their own interests, and he was desirous that the press should remain perfectly free to give them every information relative to them; and to restrict it, would be to create a suspicion that there is something in our measures which ought to be kept from the light. It was striking at the root of free republican Government, to restrict the use of speaking and writing. He wished, however, to see the bill put into such a shape as the friends of it themselves might approve.
Mr. Livingston said, after receiving the chastisement of the gentleman from Connecticut on one cheek, he, like a good Christian, had turned the other to the gentleman from South Carolina, and received the stripes of both. He expressed his acknowledgments to these gentlemen, however, if not for their chastisement, for the insight which they had given the House into this bill. They have said, its design is not only to restrict the liberty of the press, which is secured by the constitution, but the liberty of speech on this floor. The gentleman from South Carolina did not say explicitly that he wished this; but he said he was regardless of what was said in the public papers, either of private or personal slander, or of a slander on the Government, until he heard a certain speech delivered in this House; and though he said he did not intend to restrict the liberty of speech in this House, he must have had something of the kind in view. [Mr. Harper said it was not his intention to restrict the freedom of speech on that floor, but the consequences of it out of doors.] Then, said Mr. L., he will either restrict the members from speaking, or, in some way, prevent the people from knowing what has been said. How is this to be done? By shackling newspapers, and preventing that free communication of sentiment which has heretofore been expressed on public topics.
The gentleman from Connecticut had been pleased to read a quotation from some observations which he had made on a former occasion, which that gentleman thought highly blamable. Mr. L. said, what he had read he avowed to be his sentiments. He avowed them with pride, and he trusted he should always avow them with pride. Nor could he see how acts made contrary to the constitution could be binding upon the people; unless gentlemen say Congress may act in contravention to the constitution. [Mr. Otis asked who were to be the judges?] Mr. L. answered, the people of the United States. We, said he, are their servants, when we exceed our powers, we become their tyrants!
This is one object of complaint; the other is against newspaper publications. The gentleman from South Carolina has said, that provided the law is clear and well defined, and the trial by jury is preserved, he knew of no law which could infringe the liberty of the press. If this be true, Congress might restrict all printing at once. We have, said he, nothing to do but to make the law precise, and then we may forbid a newspaper to be printed, and make it death for any man to attempt it!
If this be the extent to which this bill goes, it is not only an abridgment of the liberty of the press, which the constitution has said shall not be abridged; but it is a total annihilation of the press. Were he then to withdraw his motion, he should consider himself guilty of treason; by his consent, so unconstitutional a measure should not progress an inch. However unsuccessful he might be, he would oppose it in every stage.
Mr. Otis supposed the opposition to this bill arose chiefly from prejudice, as gentlemen could not be so well acquainted with the bill from hearing it once read, as to say there are no parts of it which ought to become law. He had not nicely examined the merits of this bill, but he heard that it contained several important provisions, and he should certainly be opposed to a rejection of it without a perusal. To vote for such a motion, would be to say, we will not examine the bill; and yet he believed there was nothing in it contrary to the common law of the several States of the Union.
Mr. Macon had no doubt on his mind that this bill was in direct opposition to the constitution; and that if a law like this was passed, to abridge the liberty of the press, Congress would have the same right to pass a law making an establishment of religion, or to prohibit its free exercise, as all are contained in the same clause of the constitution; and, if it be violated in one respect, it may as well be violated in others. Several laws had been passed which he thought violated the spirit, but none before this which directly violated the letter of the constitution; and, if this bill was passed, he should hardly think it worth while in future to allege against any measure that it is in direct contradiction to the constitution.
Laws of restraint, like this, Mr. M. said, always operate in a contrary direction from that which they were intended to take. The people suspect something is not right, when free discussion is feared by government. They know that truth is not afraid of investigation.
If, said Mr. M., the people are so dissatisfied with Government as some gentlemen would have it believed, but which he did not credit, by passing a law like the present you will force them to combine together; they will establish corresponding societies throughout the Union, and communications will be made in secret, instead of publicly, as had been the case in other countries. He believed the people might be as safely trusted with free discussion, as they whom they have chosen to do their business.
It was a most extraordinary thing, Mr. M. said, that at a time like this, when some gentlemen say we are at war, and when all believe we must have war, that Congress are about to pass a law which will produce more uneasiness, more irritation, than any act which ever passed the Legislature of the Union.
No gentleman, in support of the bill, has gone into the constitutional question; no one has shown what part of the constitution will authorize the passage of a law like this. He believed none such could be adduced.
The gentleman from Massachusetts (Mr. Otis) has said, this bill is conformable to the common law. He knew persons might be prosecuted for a libel under the State Governments; but if this power exists in full force at present, what necessity can there be for this bill?
Mr. McDowell was in hopes that when the third article of the amendments to the constitution had been read, that the unconstitutionality of this bill would have been so evident, that it would have been rejected without debate.
Mr. McD. was sorry that the gentleman from Connecticut should have thought it necessary to have taken up so much of the time of the House by reading paragraphs from newspapers, which every body had seen; but it might have been expected after the gentleman had taken so much pains to vilify and abuse the printer of one of the papers of this city, a citizen of respectable character and connections, that he should have taken at least some notice of another, called the British printer, who boasts of being a subject of King George, and who is generally supposed to be in the pay of the British Minister—whose paper contains more libels and lies than any other in the United States, and who, notwithstanding, is countenanced by characters whom he was sorry to see have any connection with such a man; whose constant daily business it is to abuse, and render ridiculous, every member of our Government who does not in every thing fall in with the British views.
As to what had been said with respect to the circular and other letters of members which have been published, he had seen some of them and heard of others. It was not any thing which the gentleman from South Carolina could say, which would prevent him from speaking and writing his sentiments freely. The gentleman from South Carolina said he had seen a letter in the papers the signature of which he knew. He should be glad to know where he saw the signature to know it? He had seen a letter in Fenno's paper, signed McDowell, followed by some violent strictures on the letter, and on the author. The letter he owned to be his, but the insinuations contained in the observations upon it were as false as they were malicious.
Mr. Harper said, he knew the gentleman wrote the letter in question; but he would assure him he did not see it under seal, nor did he break the seal, or write the strictures upon it.
Mr. Gallatin wished that the bill had been committed before any debate had taken place, as in its present stage, any observations on details susceptible of amendment would be out of order; and he must now confine himself to the general question "Does the situation of the country, at this time, require that any law of this kind should pass? Do there exist such new and alarming symptoms of sedition, as render it necessary to adopt, in addition to the existing laws, any extraordinary measure for the purpose of suppressing unlawful combinations, and of restricting the freedom of speech and of the press?" For such were the objects of the bill, whatever modifications it might hereafter receive.
The manner in which the principle of the bill had been supported, was perhaps more extraordinary still than the bill itself. The gentleman from Connecticut, (Mr. Allen,) in order to prove the existence of a combination against the constitution and government, he communicated to the House—what? a number of newspaper paragraphs; and even most of those were such as would not be punishable by the bill as it now stands. The object of that gentleman in wishing a bill of this nature to pass, extended far beyond the intention of the Senate who had sent down this bill; far beyond, he would venture to say, the idea of any other member upon this floor, besides himself. His idea was to punish men for stating facts which he happened to disbelieve, or for enacting and avowing opinions, not criminal, but perhaps erroneous. Thus one of the paragraphs most obnoxious to the gentleman from Connecticut, was that in which the writer expresses his belief that Mr. Gerry may yet make a treaty with the French Government, his powers being sufficient for that purpose. [Mr. Allen said, his charge was against persons making this assertion, when they knew it to be unfounded.] Mr. G. said, he did not understand the gentleman's explanation. He now says that the act he condemns is the assertion of a fact, which may be true, but which the writer himself disbelieves; and thus he wished to punish such men as, according to his caprice, he may suppose guilty of expressing opinions not consonant with their own sentiments. For by what rule of evidence could he discover and know what was really the writer's belief? But, to return, was there any thing criminal in that paragraph? It asserted that Mr. Gerry had powers sufficient to treat. The gentleman from Connecticut denies this to be true. Mr. G. would aver that it was an undeniable fact, as appears evidently from the documents now on the table. They showed that the powers given to the Envoys were joint and several. And, if Mr. Gerry had powers to treat, how could it be criminal to say that he might treat? Or supposing the writer of the paragraph to have said, that he believed Mr. Gerry would treat, could the opinion be charged with any thing but being erroneous? When a paragraph of this nature was held out as criminal, what writings, what opinions could escape the severity of the intended law, which did not coincide with the opinions, and which might counteract the secret views of a prevailing party?
The gentleman from Connecticut had also quoted an extract of a letter said to be written by a member of Congress from Virginia, and published in last Saturday's Aurora. The style and composition of that letter did the highest honor to its writer. It contained more information and more sense, and gave more proofs of a sound understanding and strong mind, than ever the gentleman from Connecticut had displayed, or could display on this floor. So far he would venture to say, although he had given but a cursory reading to the letter, and he was altogether at a loss to know what was criminal in it, though he might easily see why it was obnoxious. Was it erroneous or criminal to say that debts and taxes were the ruinous consequences of war? Or that some members in both Houses of Congress uniformly voted in favor of an extension of the powers of the Executive, and of every proposed expenditure of money? Was it not true? Gentlemen of that description avow that, in their opinion, the Executive is the weakest branch of government; and they act upon the ostensible principle that, on that account, its influence and powers must be increased. Look at the laws passed during this session. Look at the alien bill, at the provisional army bill, look at the prodigious influence acquired by so many new officers, and then deny that the powers of the Executive have not been greatly increased. As to the increased rate of expenditure, and the propensity of these gentlemen to vote money, they would not themselves deny it. Was it criminal to say that the Executive is supported by a party? when gentlemen declared that it must be supported by a party. When the doctrine had been avowed on this floor that men of a certain political opinion, alone ought to be appointed to offices; and when the Executive had now adopted and carried into practice that doctrine in its fullest extent?
Mr. Dana did not propose to enter into any controversy respecting the honor which some gentlemen seemed disposed to arrogate to themselves, on account of certain sentiments which they have avowed. If any members of that House were ambitious of being distinguished as heralds of calumny and apostles of insurrection, it might serve to show how incorrect were their ideas of what is truly honorable.
The bill has two objects in view—it proposed to punish conspiracies and calumnies against the Government. Against this bill, the freedom of speech and of the press has been insisted on; and the bill has been condemned as violating one of the articles adopted as amendments to the constitution. Why is the gentleman from Pennsylvania so very anxious on the subject? Or is it abridged by a law to restrain lying? Could the framers of the constitution intend to guarantee, as a sacred principle, the liberty of lying against the Government? What do gentlemen understand by "the freedom of speech and of the press?" Is it a license to injure others or the Government, by calumnies, with impunity?
Let it be remembered, that the uttering of malicious falsehoods, to the injury of the Government, is the offence which it is now intended to restrain; for, if what is uttered can be proved true, it will not, according to this bill, be punished as libellous. What, then, is the rational, the honest, the constitutional idea of freedom of language or of conduct? Can it be any thing more than the right of uttering and doing what is not injurious to others? This limitation of doing no injury to the rights of others, undoubtedly belongs to the true character of real liberty. Indeed, can it, in the nature of things, be one of the rights of freemen to do injury? Let gentlemen consult any writer of established reputation on this subject; let them examine the constitution of their own favorite "terrible" Republic! they will not find the ideas of liberty extended to that indefinite latitude which they advocate on this floor.
However, if there are gentlemen who seriously and conscientiously believe that it would be violating the constitution to restrain abuses of the press, by punishing the guilty; if there are gentlemen who believe that malicious calumnies against the Government ought to be uttered and published with impunity, such gentlemen ought certainly not to consent to act further upon this subject. Mr. D. was of a different opinion. He believed that the editor of a newspaper, like the writer of a public history, in the execution of his office, should dare to utter what is true, and dread to utter any thing that is false. Considering, therefore, that the liberty of lying, the privilege of vice, is what is truly intended to be corrected by this bill, how is it possible that gentlemen should appear so anxious to excite clamor against it? For himself, Mr. D. wanted not the liberty of calumny or of conspiracy, and was in favor of the principle of the bill.
The question on rejecting the bill, was taken by yeas and nays—yeas 36, nays 47, as follows:
Yeas.—David Bard, Lemuel Benton, Thomas Blount, Dempsey Burges, Thomas Claiborne, William Charles Cole Claiborne, John Clopton, John Dawson, John Fowler, Albert Gallatin, James Gillespie, Andrew Gregg, John A. Hanna, Carter B. Harrison, Jonathan N. Havens, Joseph Heister, David Holmes, Walter Jones, Edward Livingston, Matthew Locke, Matthew Lyon, Nathaniel Macon, Blair McClenachan, Joseph McDowell, Anthony New, John Nicholas, Samuel Smith, William Smith, Richard Sprigg, jun., Richard Stanford, Thomas Sumter, John Trigg, Philip Van Cortlandt, Joseph B. Varnum, Abraham Venable, and Robert Williams.
Nays.—John Allen, George Baer, jr., Bailey Bartlett, Jas. A. Bayard, David Brooks, Stephen Bullock, Christopher G. Champlin, John Chapman, James Cochran, Joshua Coit, William Craik, Samuel W. Dana, George Dent, William Edmond, Thomas Evans, Abiel Foster, Dwight Foster, Jonathan Freeman, Henry Glenn, Chauncey Goodrich, William Gordon, Roger Griswold, William Barry Grove, Robert Goodloe Harper, William Hindman, Hezekiah L. Hosmer, James H. Imlay, John Wilkes Kittera, Samuel Lyman, William Matthews, Harrison G. Otis, Isaac Parker, John Read, John Rutledge, jr., James Schureman, Samuel Sewall, William Shepard, Thos. Sinnickson, Samuel Sitgreaves, Nathaniel Smith, Peleg Sprague, George Thatcher, Richard Thomas, Mark Thompson, Thomas Tillinghast, John E. Van Allen, and Peleg Wadsworth.