Mr. Otis's proposition returned, the question on which was put and negatived—55 to 27.
Mr. Sewall made the motion which he had suggested when he was last up, viz: to add the words, "between which and the United States shall exist a state of war."
Mr. Otis hoped this motion would not prevail, as he thought it would deprive the resolution of every good feature which it at present possessed; for it would prevent the exercise of the power in any other case than in a state of war; and as all the expressions were future, it supposed that such a state did not exist at present. He confessed he set no value at all upon any law, unless it was adapted to the present exigencies of the country. Gentlemen might talk as they pleased about permanent regulations; he believed they ought to provide against the residence of alien enemies existing in the bosom of the country, as the root of all the evil which we are at present experiencing, and he could not conceive any mode of doing this, but by applying the remedy immediately to the evil. Gentlemen talk about a declaration of war. No such thing scarcely ever precedes war. War and the declaration of war come together, like thunder and lightning. Indeed, if France finds she can enfeeble our councils by refraining to declare war, and that we will take no measures of effectual defence until this is done, it is probable she will not declare it, but continue to annoy us as at present. He therefore thought, if the select committee had not been ripe for making a report fully on this subject, they ought to have delayed it until they were.
Mr. Sewall explained.
Mr. Sitgreaves said, he had suffered no little from finding the difference of opinion which existed between the chairman of the committee who made the report on this subject, and gentlemen who usually voted with him. He saw that difference of opinion was essential and radical. He did not mean to go into the subject, but merely to make a proposition, and call the yeas and nays upon it. It was to add the words, "or shall declare hostility against the United States."
Mr. Davis moved a postponement of this question till to-morrow, as he wished time to consider of it. He had some doubts as to the constitutionality of such a provision.
Mr. Sitgreaves had no objection to a postponement, if time was wanted for consideration; but he could not see on what constitutional ground this motion could be objected to.
Mr. Gallatin was in favor of the postponement. He would suggest to his colleague that part of the constitution which might be in the way of this motion. A distinction was made by it between actual hostility and war.
If it had only gone to have made a difference between declared and actual war, by striking out the word "declare," it would have removed the objection. If there be a difference between a state of war and of actual hostility, there is also a difference in the relation between alien subjects of a nation with whom we are at war, and those of a nation with whom we are in a state of actual hostility. If this distinction be correct, by turning to the 9th section of the constitution, it is found that the migration of such persons as any of the States shall think proper to admit, shall not be prohibited by Congress, prior to the year 1808. He understood it, however, to be a sound principle that alien enemies might be removed, although the emigration of persons be not prohibited by a principle which existed prior to the constitution, and coeval with the law of nations. The question was, therefore, whether the citizens or subjects of nations in actual hostility can be considered as alien enemies. The term "actual hostility," is vague in its nature, and would introduce doubt as to its true import. He should, therefore, be in favor of the postponement, except the mover would consent to have the word "declare" struck out in the way he had mentioned.