The select committee had very truly stated, that only the second and third sections of the act, in addition to the act for the punishment of certain crimes against the United States, are complained of—that the part of the law which punishes seditious acts is acquiesced in, and that the part that goes to restrain what are called seditious writings, is alone the object of the petitions.
This part of the law is complained of as being unwarranted by the constitution, and destructive of the first principles of Republican Government. It is always justifiable, in examining the principle of a law, to inquire what other laws can be passed with equal reason, and to impute to it all the mischiefs for which it may be used as a precedent. In this case, little inquiry is left for us to make, the arguments in favor of the law carrying us immediately, and by inevitable consequence, to absolute power over the press. The case chosen for our first legislation, that of "false, scandalous, and malicious writings," is specious, and as likely as any can be to establish an interest in its favor; but when it is fairly examined, it will be found to operate on cases, which could not, at first view, be expected to come under it; to be the instrument of most unjust oppression, and to restrain that free communication of honest opinion which is the soul of the Government. But when you come to inquire further, and learn, from the advocates of the law, the authority which they claim for passing it, you will find that the power claimed does not stop even with this law, mischievous as it may be, but that it extends to absolute and unlimited control.
It is not pretended that the constitution has given any express authority which they claim for passing this law, and it is claimed only as implied in that clause of the constitution which says, "Congress shall have power to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing powers, and all other powers vested by this constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any department or office thereof." It is, therefore, necessary to fix a just construction of this clause.
That the powers of the Federal Government were intended to be limited, is universally admitted, in the abstract; is proved by every clause of the constitution, and is positively declared by the 12th amendment in these words: "The powers not delegated to the United States by the constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."
The just construction of the constitution, if the clause respecting necessary and proper powers had been omitted, would have been the same that it ought to be with the addition; for there can be no doubt, that a grant of specified powers would have contained a grant of such power as is necessary to carry the specified power into effect, and therefore the declaration ought to make no difference, according to a well-known maxim. This was the understanding of all the friends of the constitution at its adoption, and the constitution ought now to be construed as if the clause had been omitted. But it is proper to examine the meaning of it, as expressed.
It is clear, that this clause was intended to be merely an auxiliary to the powers specially enumerated in the constitution; and it must, therefore, be so construed as to aid them, and at the same time to leave the boundaries between the General Government and the State Governments untouched. The argument by which the select committee have endeavored to establish the authority of Congress over the press, is the following: "Congress have power to punish seditious combinations to resist the laws, and therefore Congress must have the power to punish false, scandalous and malicious writings; because such writings render the Administration odious and contemptible among the people, and, by doing so, have a tendency to produce opposition to the laws."
It is expressly admitted by the committee, that the power to punish seditious combinations to resist the laws, is only derived, by construction, from the clause giving all necessary and proper powers before recited; and that there is no express power in the constitution to that effect. There is no dispute about this construction being just; but I contend that the inference from this implied power cannot be supported, viz: That Congress have a power to punish seditious writings.
The constitution says: "Congress shall have power over all acts which hinder the execution," &c.; but, to make it support the construction of the committee, it should say that, "Congress shall have power over all acts which are likely to produce acts which hinder the execution," &c. Our construction confines the power of Congress to such acts as immediately interfere with the execution of the enumerated powers of Congress; because the power can only be necessary as well as proper, when the acts really would hinder the execution. The construction of the committee extends the power of Congress to all acts which have a relation, ever so many degrees removed, to the enumerated powers, or rather to the acts which would hinder their execution. By our construction, the constitution remains defined and limited, according to the plain intent and meaning of the framers; by the construction of the committee, all limitation is lost, and it may be extended over the different actions of life as speculative politicians may think fit.
The suggestion on which the authority over the press is founded, is, that seditious writings have a tendency to produce opposition to Government. What has a greater tendency to fit men for insurrection and resistance to Government, than dissolute, immoral habits, at once destroying love of order, and dissipating the fortune which gives an interest in society?
The doctrine that Congress can punish any act which has a tendency to hinder the execution of the laws, as well as acts which do hinder it, will, therefore, clearly entitle them to assume a general guardianship over the morals of the people of the United States.