It is not only against invasion that those laws are said to be necessary. We are told of a system which convulses the civilized world, and has shaken the fabric of society; of an unprecedented combination to establish new principles of social action, on the subversion of religion, morality, law, and Government. If these are the dangers which threaten us, and if Congress think themselves vested with all the powers which they may think expedient to repel them, I wish to know to what extent they may not legislate, and by what possible limitation they can be restrained, in their assumption of powers? There is not an individual on this floor, there is not a man of common understanding and common information in the nation, who, unless he is under the influence of the illusions of the new anti-republican fanaticism, or blinded by party spirit, does not know that these pretended dangers are, in America, the visionary phantoms of a disordered imagination. And I have taken notice of those sentiments merely to give an additional proof, that under pretence of preventing imaginary evils, an attempt is made to establish the omnipotence of Congress, and substantial despotism, on the ruins of our constitution.
Is that a measure of security and general defence which puts a numerous body of aliens—aliens who are represented as so desperate and dangerous—under the absolute control of one man, which, by holding the rod of terror over their heads, and leaving their fate at his sole disposal, renders them complete slaves of the President, and makes them proper instruments for the execution of every project which ambition may suggest, which faction may dictate? Is that a Government of laws which leaves us no security but in the confidence we have in the moderation and patriotism of one man? And do the abettors of these laws forget that even that is precarious, and that the unlimited power which they think safely lodged in one individual may in a day be vested in another man in whom they do not place the same confidence?
Is that a measure of general defence which has diminished confidence in the Government and produced disunion among the States and among the people?
Yet I am happy to find that even this law has produced such general dissatisfaction. I was the more alarmed on account of this law, because, attacking only aliens, for whom no immediate concern could be felt, it might the more easily become the vehicle to introduce doctrines and innovations which would hereafter serve as a precedent to attack the liberties of the citizens themselves. A pretence of general defence may justify oppressive measures against citizens as well as against aliens. Although some nice distinctions may now be made in order to discriminate one class from the other, yet it must be remembered that the only security of citizens against unconstitutional measures consists in a strict adherence to the constitution; that their liberties are only protected by a parchment—by words—and that they may be destroyed whenever it shall be admitted that the strict and common sense of words may be construed away under the plea of some supposed necessity; whenever the constitution shall be understood and exercised as an instrument unlimited where it grants power, and nugatory where it limits power.
We may feel alarmed when we see a committee of this House asserting that the powers not given to the States (and it may be added, by the same rule of construction, the powers not given to the people by the constitution) belong to the General Government. We may feel alarmed when that committee insist that, although it is true that the trial of all crimes must be by jury, yet, to inflict a punishment when no offence—no crime—has been committed, is not a violation of the constitution; when the only distinction they apply to citizens consists in the difference of punishment, but not in a difference of the principle. We may feel alarmed when we find that Congress have already acted on those principles towards citizens; that they have already passed another law—the sedition law—grounded on the same principles, on the same doctrine, or rather on the same abandonment of the explicit and evident sense of the constitution, which alone could justify the alien law. I hope—I trust—that the spirit which dictated both laws has subsided, even within these walls, and that the same Congress who, under the impressions of a momentary alarm, which prevented a cool investigation, hastily adopted those two measures, will have courage enough to revise their own conduct, to acknowledge their own errors, and, by a repeal of the obnoxious acts, restore general confidence, union, and harmony, amongst the States and the people.
When Mr. Gallatin had concluded, the question was taken and carried—yeas 52, nays 48.
The 2d resolution being next in order, viz:
Resolved, That it is inexpedient to repeal the act passed the last session, entitled "An act in addition to the act, entitled An act for the punishment of certain crimes against the United States:"
Mr. Nicholas rose and spoke as follows:
Mr. Chairman—I am sorry to be obliged to rise at this late hour of the day, indisposed also as I find myself, to speak on this important question; but, since gentlemen are determined now to decide upon it, I must be indulged in making some observations upon it, previous to the question being taken.