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II Lincoln A N D T H E C O N S T I TUT I O N Union and Secession Lincoln is the only president in American history who was forced to grapple with the fundamental Constitutional question of national union, as eleven states seceded from the United States at the beginning of the Civil War. His response to the Civil War secession crisis ultimately formed the nation as we know it today. More broadly, the secession crisis raised significant questions about federalism, states’ rights, and national sovereignty. Li n c o l n a n d S l av e r y : T h e T h i rt e e n t h A m e n d m e n t While every U.S. president before Lincoln wrestled with questions about slavery, Lincoln was the only one to offer an answer: emancipation. On this question, it took time—and circumstances—to enable Lincoln to align his political decision-making with his moral values. In 1863, Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, which freed four million slaves. He set in motion legislation 8 that would become the Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which forever abolished the institution of slavery in the nation. Ci v i l Lib e r ti e s D u r i n g Wa r ti m e President Lincoln recognized the importance of preserving the Constitution and rule of law during the Civil War. He was also keenly aware of the need to maintain the sometimes delicate balance between preserving civil liberties and ensuring national security. Still, Lincoln took action, necessary in his view, to meet the national crisis of rebellion by suspending the writ of habeas corpus, and arresting approximately 38,000 American citizens as threats to national security. BELOW: Members of the 2nd New York Artillery, outside Fort Smith, near Washington, D.C., 1864. Photo courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration. DI ALO GU E O N L IN C O L N : A L EGA CY OF L IB ERTY DialogueOnLincolnPart1.indd 8 3/27/09 11:37:58 AM Union and Secession When President Lincoln was inaugurated on March 4, 1861, he inherited a crisis in the United States: a nation on the brink of dissolution. Eleven individual Southern slave states would declare independence from the United States of America and ally to form the Confederate States of America. Leaders of the seceding states viewed Lincoln’s election—Republican leadership that wanted to strengthen the federal government, restrict slavery, increase taxes, advance industrialization, and implement tariffs—as a threat to their states, their agrarian economies, and their plantation lifestyles. As the nation’s founders nearly a century earlier had fought for independence from Britain, claiming rights to “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness,” the secessionists claimed they were protecting their rights. The Confederate states were invoking what they believed to be their rights to sovereignty, or the authority to govern themselves as states free and independent of federal control. Tensions intensified for decades prior to 1860 between free and slave state representatives over the congressional balance of power. The seceding states were no longer certain that they should consent to government under the United States. Georgian John Cochran explained, “We hold to the principle among others that this government is not solely the government of a majority but that the minority have rights that must be respected … we will not submit to having our rights taken from us.” Such was the basis of secessionist state resolutions claiming to protect natural rights guaranteed by the Declaration of Independence and U.S. Constitution. In doing so, however, the Confederacy threatened the national union that was the United States of America. President Lincoln resisted the Confederate States’ secession from the Union. On August 16, 1861, he declared them to be in rebellion against the United States. He called their actions “an insidious debauching of the public mind,” and simply unlawful. He rejected their claims to independent sovereignty, believing that: While the Constitution of the United States neither explicitly prohibits nor denies states’ rights to secede from the larger United States, its absence from the document RIGHT: Charleston Mercury extra, printed December 20, 1860, minutes after the South Carolina delegation voted in favor of secession. Broadside courtesy of the Library of Congress. was significant. He believed that the historic union of states under girds Constitutional law, and that since neither the Confederacy nor its constituent states enjoyed sovereign status prior to their inclusion in the United States, they were not in positions to [re]claim it. In his Second Inaugural Address, Lincoln explained: We find the proposition that, in legal contemplation, the Union is perpetual as confirmed by the history of the Union itself. The Union is much older than the Constitution. It was formed, in fact, by the Articles of Association in 1774. It was matured and continued by the Declaration of Independence in 1776. It was further matured, and the faith of all thirteen States expressly plighted, and engaged that it should be perpetual, by the Articles of Confederation in 1778. And, finally, in 1787, one of the declared objects for ordaining and establishing the Constitution was “to form a more perfect Union.” (March 4, 1861) Lincoln, a lawyer with respect for the rule of law, compared the Confederate States’ secession to anarchy, a fundamental disordering of American government. He argued that a “minority rule” among the secessionists, making decisions for residents of their states, and the “minority rule” of the Confederacy making decisions DIA L OGU E ON L IN COL N : A L EGA C Y O F LI BERTY DialogueOnLincolnPart1.indd 9 9 3/27/09 11:38:09 AM for the rest of the United States, was tyranny. Lincoln acknowledged the “most sacred right” of citizens to “rise up, and shake off the existing government, and form a new one that suits them better.” He refused to believe, however, that a majority of voters in the Confederacy supported secession, where formal declarations “could scarcely be considered as demonstrating popular sentiment.” Lincoln argued that secession was incompatible with the republican form of government. The Declaration of Independence and the Constitution provided legal outlets for governmental change: revolution, or elections and constitutional amendments, respectively. Lincoln believed such mechanisms made secession unconstitutional and prohibitive. Finally, Lincoln feared that if the Southern States were allowed to secede, the United States would no longer serve as an example of law, order, and liberty for the world. He felt the whole American experiment that was democracy—deliberately and self-consciously creating a government “of the people, by the people, for the people”—would be destroyed. ABOVE: “Signing of the Constitution,” by Howard Chandler Christy, 1940. Image courtesy of the Architect of the Capitol. 10 ABOVE: Abraham Lincoln, photograph by Alexander Gardner, 1863. Photo courtesy of the National Archives and Records Admnistration. Join the Dialogue 1. Were the Confederate states constitutionally justified in seceding from the Union in 1861? Why or why not? Do you think states today should be able to secede? Why or why not? If so, could they do so democratically? How? 2. Lincoln believed that accepting secession would violate the “perpetual union” of the United States established by the nation’s founders. Do you believe that we are truly one nation today? Why or why not? 3. Why was the Civil War a national crisis? What other crises has our country faced? How did we address them? What do you think has been our greatest crisis? Why? 4. Inherent to our federal system of government—in which political power is shared—is a tension between the powers of the federal and state governments. Do you think the federal government has too much or too little power today? Why? Do you think the federal government should have greater power in times of national crisis? Why or why not? DI AL OGU E ON L IN C OL N : A L EGA CY OF L IB ERTY DialogueOnLincolnPart1.indd 10 3/27/09 11:38:19 AM L incoln and S lav ery: Th e T h irteent h A m endment Slavery in the United States had never been more protected than it was on the eve of the Civil War. The U.S. Constitution outlined protections for slavery, most notably in Article I, where the Three-Fifths Clause allowed slave states to gain enhanced congressional representation by counting each slave as three-fifths of one person. Although Thomas Jefferson outlawed the African slave trade in 1808, those slaves who were imported prior to that date, and their descendants, remained enslaved. In the decades leading up to the Civil War, slave states lobbied for stronger fugitive slave laws, as protections outlined in the Constitution were largely unenforced. The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 provided stronger property protections to slaveholders and strict punishments to violators. It mandated that every American, including those in free states, protect slaveholder property rights by aiding in the return of runaway slaves. It also threatened the safety of free blacks who could be mistaken for slaves. Northern abolitionists were faced with the immediate choice of breaking the law or violating their own values. Persons found guilty of aiding fugitive slaves were subject to six months imprisonment and a $1,000 fine. Ending slavery, however, was not President Lincoln’s priority at the beginning of the Civil War. He saw the primary struggle as a fight to preserve the Union. In an 1862 letter to Horace Greeley, he explained: If I could save the Union without freeing any slave I would do it, and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing some and leaving others alone I would also do that. (August 22, 1862) Early on, Lincoln was reluctant to make the Civil War about emancipation of the slaves. He wanted to preserve the slaveholding border states’—Kentucky, Missouri, Maryland, and Tennessee—allegiance to the Union. As the war dragged on, however, Lincoln came to realize that emancipation was indeed essential to preserving the Union, for both moral and practical reasons. Lincoln maintained that emancipation was part of the Union military strategy, meant to stymie the Confederate war effort. ABOVE: Fugitive slaves fording the Rappahannock River, Rappahannock, Virginia, 1862. Photo courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration. DIA L OGU E ON L IN COL N : A L EGA C Y O F LI BERTY DialogueOnLincolnPart1.indd 11 11 3/27/09 11:38:20 AM On January 1, 1863, the Emancipation Proclamation took effect, issued by Lincoln under his constitutional authority as commander-in-chief. Lincoln biographer Allen Guelzo has called it “the single greatest social revolutionary document in American history.” It freed “all persons held as slaves within any State or designated part of a State … in rebellion against the United States … thenceforward and forever.” Lincoln’s policy position on emancipation developed over time. He evolved into the Great Emancipator. While Lincoln was long morally opposed to slavery, he initially believed, that, as long as it was contained, it would eventually grow extinct. As tensions increased before the Civil War, however, he came to believe that slavery would not simply wither away, but rather would require active abolition. He explained his complex views about slavery in an 1864 letter to Albert Hodges: I am naturally anti-slavery. If slavery is not wrong, nothing is wrong. I can not remember when I did not so think, and feel. And yet I have never understood that the Presidency conferred upon me an unrestricted right to act officially upon this judgment and feeling. (April 4, 1864) Lincoln was concerned that, as an executive order, the Emancipation Proclamation might be viewed as a temporary wartime measure. In order to permanently abolish the institution of American slavery, Lincoln pushed for congressional approval of a proposed constitutional amendment. It was not an easy fight, but, in January 1865, Congress passed what would become the Thirteenth Amendment. Lincoln would not live to see it ratified by the states and become incorporated into the U.S. Constitution: Neither slavery not involuntary servitude, except as punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction. 12 ABOVE: Harriet Tubman with former slaves. Photo courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration. JO IN T HE DIALO GUE 1. President Lincoln used his executive power as commander-in-chief to issue the Emancipation Proclamation. What is the source of this power? Do you think Lincoln appropriately exercised his presidential powers to take this action? What checks and balances does the Constitution provide to restrain the exercise of executive power? Can you think of recent examples where this has occurred? 2. Lincoln was morally opposed to slavery, but long felt it his obligation to enforce pro-slavery laws and policies. Why do you think he felt this way? Do you think it is sometimes important for political leaders to separate their moral values from their political and legal positions? Why? Can you think of situations where this has happened? 3. It took the crisis and upheaval of the Civil War to bring a dramatic end to the legally sanctioned institution of race slavery in the United States. Do you think the Civil War was required to accomplish this? Might the institution of American slavery have simply disappeared over time? Is it better for political change to happen quickly or slowly? Why? 4. Did the abolition of slavery resolve the issues of race and racism in American society? Why or why not? DI AL OGU E ON L IN C OL N : A L EGA CY OF L IB ERTY DialogueOnLincolnPart1.indd 12 3/27/09 11:38:21 AM Ex Part e Merryman, 1861 Many people responded to Lincoln’s suspension of the writ of habeas corpus with protest. The New York Tribune C i vil Liberties During Warti me called it “lawless despotism.” One person particularly incensed was Chief Justice Roger Taney, who in 1861, had an opportunity to express his opinion with the The Civil War presented President Lincoln with the difficult challenge of how to balance national security concerns during a time of extreme national crisis with the preservation of civil liberties. In a civil war, Americans were not fighting external enemies, but rather one another. Inflammatory editorials and speeches were fueling support and opposition on both sides of the Mason-Dixon Line: the imaginary demarcation between the Northern and Southern states. In this climate, Lincoln took actions that unquestionably resulted in restrictions on Americans’ civil liberties. Such actions were not new. Prior to the American Revolution, New York printer John Peter Zenger made headlines when he was charged with seditious libel and assailing the royal governor of New York, who he had declared corrupt. In 1798, President John Adams signed the Sedition Act during the Quasi-War with France, making it a crime to publish “false, scandalous, and malicious writing” against the government or its officials. Lincoln was following a line of historic decisions as commanderin-chief. Moreover, he understood himself to be fighting an unprecedented Civil War, which he claimed called for unprecedented presidential war powers. decision in the federal case Ex Parte Merryman. John Merryman was a wealthy Maryland landowner and lieutenant in a secessionist cavalry company, which had destroyed telegraph lines outside of Baltimore. Arrested and detained at Fort McHenry, he petitioned the federal court for a writ of habeas corpus. At that time, Supreme Court justices still traveled to federal circuit courts to hear cases, and the justice stationed in Merryman’s circuit happened to be none other than Chief Justice Taney. He ordered the commanding officer at Fort McHenry to show cause for Merryman’s detention. The officer refused, citing the president’s suspension of the writ of habeas corpus. Taney immediately issued a ruling denying the president’s authority to do so. He insisted that only Congress, not the president, had the power to suspend the writ, since the suspension clause in Article I of the Constitution delegated powers to the legislative branch of government, not the executive branch. Taking direct aim at Lincoln in his ruling, Taney declared that “the President, under the Constitution and laws of the United States, cannot suspend the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus, nor authorize any military officers to do so.” In his capacity as federal circuit court judge, Chief Suspending the Writ of Habeas Corpus. Lincoln suspended the writ of habeas corpus during the Civil War. Habeas corpus is a Latin term, “meaning you have the body.” The right to habeas corpus allows a person who has been arrested to appear before a court, hear why they were arrested, and seek relief from unlawful detention. It is often celebrated as the most effective safeguard of freedom against arbitrary state actions. Lincoln was not the first president to suspend the writ. It was also suspended during Shays’ Rebellion in 1787 and again during the War of 1812. Lincoln was, however, the first president to suspend the writ of habeas corpus without prior congressional approval. Article I of the U.S. Constitution affirms habeas corpus protection, but allows for its suspension in extraordinary situations: The privilege of the writ of habeas corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in cases of rebellion or invasion, the public safety may require it. Under the suspension, any U.S. citizen, soldier, or civilian, can be arrested “for giving aid and comfort in Justice Taney had little power to enforce his decision, so Lincoln essentially ignored it. In 1863, Congress subsequently passed the Habeas Corpus Act, which finally gave Lincoln legislative sanction for suspensions. various ways to the insurrection,” and subject to “martial law, and liable to trial and punishment by courts-martial or military commission.” Though the Constitution authorizes such actions, it does not, however, outline specific procedures for suspending the writ. Every instance prior to Lincoln’s had been authorized by state or federal legislatures. Many of Lincoln’s contemporaries thought him a tyrant, but he defended his actions before Congress, citing his inaugural pledge to protect the country. In the twenty-first century, President George W. Bush issued a presidential military order in November 2001, shortly after the September 11 terrorist attacks against DIA L OGU E ON L IN COL N : A L EGA C Y O F LI BERTY DialogueOnLincolnPart1.indd 13 13 3/27/09 11:38:22 AM the United States. This order concerned the “Detention, Treatment, and Trial of Certain Non-Citizens in the War Against Terrorism.” During the ensuing years of the Bush Administration, a number of legal and judicial challenges were brought against their policies and practices in fighting the “war against terrorism.” Central to many of them was the constitutionality of efforts to effectively suspend the use of the writ of habeas corpus by suspected terrorists, especially those detained at the Guantanamo Bay facility in Cuba (see Boumediene summary on this page). Some have compared President Bush’s actions, resulting in an effort to suspend habeas corpus rights, to Lincoln’s. Both presidents cited wartime crises as justifications for suspension. Both sought to preclude only those being tried in military, not civilian, courts, from challenging the lawfulness of their detention through habeas corpus appeals. Both were challenged by the federal courts. In American history, suspension of the writ of habeas corpus has been an extraordinary action, typically reserved only for extraordinary circumstances. The Civil War and September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks have been regarded by the executive as serious emergencies. The question, however, of whether one or both of them warranted the suspension of habeas corpus is open to debate and has been the subject of much controversy. When Does Freedom of Speech Threaten National Security? Clement Vallandigham, a former congressman from Ohio, delivered an antiwar speech in Mount Vernon, Ohio, on May 1, 1863. He described the Civil War as “wicked, cruel and unnecessary,” and encouraged soldiers to desert their posts and citizens to abandon the Union war effort. Following the speech, Vallandigham was arrested, charged with making “treasonable utterances” and B o ume dien e v. Bu sh, 2008 In June 2008, the Supreme Court declared portions of the Military Commissions Act of 2006 unconstitutional in Boumediene v. Bush. Lakhdar Boumediene was arrested in October 2001 by local Bosnian police on suspicion of plotting to attack the U.S. embassy in Sarajevo after American intelligence agents became suspicious of “increased chatter” between Boumediene and five other Bosnian nationals and the al Qaeda terrorist group. He was 14 promptly tried and convicted by a military commission, which sentenced him to prison for the remainder of the war. Mass demonstrations against Vallandigham’s detainment erupted across Northern U.S. cities. President Lincoln faced a dilemma: allow Vallandigham to exercise his First Amendment right to free speech, or risk undermining the Union war effort. Lincoln justified the arrest in a letter to protest leader Erastus Corning as necessary for national security during war: Mr. Vallandigham … was laboring, with some effect, to prevent the raising of troops, to encourage desertions from the army, and to leave the rebellion without an adequate military force to suppress it. (June 12, 1863) This was not the first time, nor would it be the last time, that a president restricted speech in the interest of national security. In 1798, during war with France, President John Adams issued the Sedition Act, which punished any person writing, printing, BELOW: Lincoln’s Executive Order suspending habeas corpus, May 15, 1863. Facsimile courtesy of the Library of Congress. taken to Guantanamo Bay, detained in the American prison there, and never formally charged with a crime. Boumediene petitioned the United States government for a writ of habeas corpus to determine why he was being detained, and if his detention was lawful. The Supreme Court ruled that Boumediene’s detention, as it stood, without rights to habeas corpus, was unconstitutional. The Court ruled that enemy detainees in the custody of the United States were entitled to habeas corpus rights and that if Congress were going to suspend the writ, as they did with the Military Commissions Act of 2006, they must supply an adequate substitute. DI AL OGU E ON L IN C OL N : A L EGA CY OF L IB ERTY DialogueOnLincolnPart1.indd 14 3/27/09 11:38:24 AM ABOVE: Sedition Act of 1798. Facsimile courtesy of the Library of Congress. uttering, or publishing “false, scandalous, and malicious writing or writings against the government of the United States,” with a fine of up to $2,000 and a prison term of up to two years. Alexander Hamilton called the legislation “tyranny.” The Sedition Act was expanded during World War I to include prohibition of language intended to bring the United States “into contempt, scorn, contumely, or disrepute.” President Wilson declared disloyal Americans worthy of arrest, and supporters of the act warned of “even greater evils” if it were not adopted. The House Committee on Un-American Activities continued similar efforts during World War II and the Cold War. During the Vietnam War, questions about the meaning of “speech” arose as young men burned their draft cards as a form of anti-war protest. More recently during the war against terrorism, Congress passed legislation that established guidelines for wire-tapping and email monitoring to detect “suspicious” behavior patterns among American citizens. One legislator criticized the policy as “a chilling threat to civil liberties.” LEFT: Allan Pinkerton. Abraham Lincoln, and General John McClellan at Antietam, October 3, 1862. Photo courtesy of the Library of Congress. JO IN T HE DIALO GUE 1. In a July 1861 speech to Congress concerning his suspension of habeas corpus, Lincoln asked, “Are all the laws, but one, to go unexecuted, and the government itself to go to pieces, lest that one be violated?” Do you agree with his argument? What circumstances, if any, would make it necessary? Do you think Lincoln’s position is consistent with the rule of law? What does the “rule of law” mean? 2. Should presidents, acting alone, have the power to suspend the writ of habeas corpus or should such powers be exercised with the approval of Congress? Why? Do you think it is sometimes necessary and appropriate to suspend the writ of habeas corpus and detain certain individuals without giving them an opportunity to challenge their detentions in court? When and why? 3. Do you think the arrest of Vallandigham during the Civil War was justified? What about the actions of draft-card burners during the Vietnam War? Can you think of recent actions involving the war against terrorism when speech has been restricted by the government? Do you think the government should have the right to restrict speech in the interests of national security? Under what circumstances? 4. Some people claim that Americans have a duty to protect freedoms and maintain a patriotic vigilance. How do we as individuals protect liberty in our schools, communities, and in the nation? What are some of the challenges to exercising a “patriotic vigilance?” DIA L OGU E ON L IN COL N : A L EGA C Y O F LI BERTY DialogueOnLincolnPart1.indd 15 15 3/27/09 11:38:28 AM