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<head>Sept. 1824.</head>
 
<head>Maclure Q.S.P. to J.B. ibid. on U.S. Constitution</head>
<p>The Senate of the U.S. as feel as the Senators of all<lb/> the individual States, being an imitation of the house of Peers<lb/>in Britain, is a separation of power without any utility, and<lb/> perhaps only protracts legislation and is the cause of <lb/> unnecessary dissensions&#x2014; the senate in the federal Government<lb/> only is a check on the appointment of offices by the<lb/> president&#x2014; <del>by</del> their confirmation being necessary and it<lb/> has been observed that they expect appointments<lb/> to ambassador<del>s</del><add>ships</add> to be taken from amongst themselves, <lb/>as it is difficult to obtain a majority in favour of such<lb/> as have not served in their body, in consequence<lb/> of which the greatest part of the Ambassadors to<lb/> foreign nations are taken from those either<lb/> actually in the Senate or who have served in the Senate.</p>
<p>The encroachments by implication of the government of the<lb/> Union on the individual States have been considerable in the Judiciary<lb/> right of Chartering Banks &amp;c. &amp;c. and have been as yet<lb/> tolerated and submitted to party owing to the great weight<lb/> of the mercantile interest in consequence of the neutral trade,<lb/> which, commencing with the federal government, was improperly<lb/> attributed to its influence&#x2014; giving it Credit for all the advantages<lb/> derived from the lucrative commerce the U.S.<lb/> carried on during the revolutionary war against France<lb/> that being now finished the States will most probably<lb/>be more tenacious of their rights and not submit <lb/> their differences to the direction of the U.S. courts,<lb/> as has been the practice till now. </p>
<p>It has been long the opinion of many thinking men in<lb/> the Union along with Franklin that the Senate was a useless<lb/> and perhaps a hurtful incumbrance and every day increases<lb/> the number of the party that are against Senates; so that the<lb/> probability is that the progress of civilization will lop<lb/> off that unnecessary complication of power and make<lb/> the Legislature one and indivisible.</p>




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Revision as of 22:02, 18 May 2014

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Sept. 1824. Maclure Q.S.P. to J.B. ibid. on U.S. Constitution

The Senate of the U.S. as feel as the Senators of all
the individual States, being an imitation of the house of Peers
in Britain, is a separation of power without any utility, and
perhaps only protracts legislation and is the cause of
unnecessary dissensions— the senate in the federal Government
only is a check on the appointment of offices by the
president— by their confirmation being necessary and it
has been observed that they expect appointments
to ambassadorsships to be taken from amongst themselves,
as it is difficult to obtain a majority in favour of such
as have not served in their body, in consequence
of which the greatest part of the Ambassadors to
foreign nations are taken from those either
actually in the Senate or who have served in the Senate.

The encroachments by implication of the government of the
Union on the individual States have been considerable in the Judiciary
right of Chartering Banks &c. &c. and have been as yet
tolerated and submitted to party owing to the great weight
of the mercantile interest in consequence of the neutral trade,
which, commencing with the federal government, was improperly
attributed to its influence— giving it Credit for all the advantages
derived from the lucrative commerce the U.S.
carried on during the revolutionary war against France
that being now finished the States will most probably
be more tenacious of their rights and not submit
their differences to the direction of the U.S. courts,
as has been the practice till now.

It has been long the opinion of many thinking men in
the Union along with Franklin that the Senate was a useless
and perhaps a hurtful incumbrance and every day increases
the number of the party that are against Senates; so that the
probability is that the progress of civilization will lop
off that unnecessary complication of power and make
the Legislature one and indivisible.



Identifier: | JB/044/134/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 44.

Date_1

1824-09

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

044

Main Headings

constitutional code

Folio number

134

Info in main headings field

maclure qsp to jb ibid on us constitution

Image

001

Titles

Category

copy/fair copy sheet

Number of Pages

1

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

f60

Penner

Watermarks

j whatman turkey mill 1829

Marginals

Paper Producer

jonathan blenman

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

1829

Notes public

ID Number

13919

Box Contents

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