After some further remarks by Messrs. Harper and H. Lee, the question was taken on the committee rising, and carried without a division.
The committee rose; the Chairman requested leave to sit again, which was not granted.
Mr. Harper then moved to recommit the bill to the same committee that introduced it. He said, the objection made by the gentleman from Virginia to the assumption of power by Congress goes to say that the constitutional provision, the acts of cession of Maryland and Virginia, and the act of acceptance by Congress, shall be all a dead letter; and that the Territory shall continue, as heretofore, under its old jurisdiction. This was, to all intents and purposes, the amount of the gentleman's remarks. He asked, what necessity for the exercise of power by Congress? Had not the citizens lived happily for a hundred years under the State Governments? This Mr. H. did not dispute. It was probably true that they had lived as happily as other portions of citizens under the State Governments. But the provision of the constitution on this subject had not been made with this view. It was made to bestow dignity and independence on the government of the Union. It was to protect it from such outrages as had occurred when it was differently situated, when it was without competent Legislative, Executive, and Judicial power, to ensure to itself respect. While the government was under the guardianship of State laws, those laws might be inadequate to its protection, or there might exist a spirit hostile to the general government, or at any rate indisposed to give it proper protection. This was one reason, among others, for the provisions of the constitution, confirmed and carried into effect by the acts of Maryland and Virginia, and by the act of Congress.
The object of the gentleman was to defeat all these acts and all these arrangements, in subversion of that provision which the constitution had made, and of that necessity which it had foreseen.
The gentleman from Virginia requires more time. He thinks we are not prepared to legislate. But if his (Mr. H.'s) ideas were adopted, there would be no occasion for this. The Territory has laws; and Mr. H. believed these laws would answer very well for fifty years, without giving Congress much trouble to modify them.
The establishment of a Judiciary would be very easy, and would require little time. As to a police, it may be necessary hereafter. At present it was not necessary. With regard to a corporation, he was against it at present, and he did not think it would ever be necessary.
Mr. Nicholas did not consider the power imparted by the constitution as imperative. He, therefore, could not fairly be charged with a desire to deviate from the designs of its framers. The power was like a coat of armor, intended to protect the Government in periods of danger, and not to be worn at all times for parade and show.
Remarks had been made to show that the dignity and independence of the Government required the assumption. All such arguments, when set against the happiness of the people, were inconclusive; Mr. N. had always been taught to consider the true dignity of the Government as indissolubly connected with the happiness of the people; and was unable to unlearn all that he had heretofore acquired to this effect.
Mr. Craik agreed with the member from South Carolina, as far as his remarks went, but he did not think they went far enough. He was himself friendly to the institution of a local government for local purposes, leaving all Federal powers to Congress. If the bill should be recommitted, he would be prepared to offer a plan conformably to these ideas. He felt no alarm at the doubts suggested of the validity of the laws of Maryland and Virginia. He believed that they were still in force; and did not think there was any absolute necessity for Congress to act at all at present. Still, he thought that delay would only multiply the inconveniences already experienced in the formation of a plan of government. A plan might be framed, to protect the General Government as well as, in some degree, the inhabitants of the Territory, from any tyranny that some gentlemen supposed might be exercised by Congress.
He concluded, by expressing a hope that a completely organized system might be formed and adopted.