6 7/ KEY TO THE DEAD LOCK. SPEECH OF HON. SAMUEL S. COX, OF NE^Y YORK, IX THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, FOR ADHERENCE TO RETRENCHMENT, Saturday, June 17, 1876, ON THE PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE RELATING TO APPROPRIATIONS. \^ Has not'experience verified tlie utility of rc=-u'aining money biUs to tlie iiumediate representatives of the people? — 2Iadi- son Papers, volume 3, page 1313. TV^SHiisrG-TOJsr. 1 8 7 G . r t^Ck to .G^n ^^ ^^ SPEECH OK HOX. SAMUEL S. COX. On tile President's message relating to appropriations . Mr. COX said : I would not take up the time of tlie House now except for certain imputations which have been tlirown on the famous retrencliment. rule. VM. This rule I had the honor to introduce from the Committee on Kules. It is my pleasure to defend it. Besides, I si)eak because of remarks made by the distinguished gentleman from Pennsylvania [Mr. Kklley] in relation to the Committee on Banking and Currency and the silver bills. BAXKIXG AXD CL'RRKXCV COMMITTEE IiElEXDED. As to the last matter,det me say that the House will recollect that at the beginning of this session there was a discussion as to which committee should take charge of the currency busiues.s. It was con- tended by gentlemen on one side that the Committee of Ways and Means was the only proper committee, because the greenback was currency, and because, being a debt also, it had charge of it by vir- tue of raising ways and means to support the Government. It was argued that to it lielonged the exclusive jurisdiction on that sub- ject. It was contended, on the other hand, that the Committee on Bank- ing and CiUTency should take control. As the author of the measure dividing the old Ways and Means into three committees, I was com- pelled to speak. My remarks were to the effect that it would be well if all the wise men of both committees and in Congress should give their liest attention and judgment to the solution of our most difficult and perilous problem. But the gentleman from Pennsylvania took great care in that debate to assume for his Coumiittee of Ways and Means that it was the only committee which should have the power to consider and report such measures. Now, sir, when he com- plains of the committee of which I am chairman, may I ask if any report has ever come from the Committee of Ways and Means? Cur- rency bills have been referred to it as to my committee. We have reported something to remonetize silver. Has his committee reported anything / Mr. KELLEY. Will the gentleman allowme to state my position ? Mr. COX. I prefer not to yield now. Mr. KELLEY. Let me say that I held that the Committee of Ways and Means had the right over the money and bonds, and that the currency or bank paper belonged to the Committee on Banking and Currency. Mr. COX. It is enough to say that we have had no report on money or greenbacks or .-my kind of currency from the Committee of Ways and Means. But why should I blame it on account of this? No 4 • committee of this House, no party in this House, has heeii ready thus far to make a satisfactory report. Nor has the receut cou- Yeution of the republicau people at Cincinnati given any definite couchision on that matter. All conolnsious have heen general and inconclusive. There are no remedies proposed. Why, sir, iu Cincin- nati the other day, was it an uncertain or a certain 'sound as to the repeal of this resumption law ? I say to the House what I said the other day, that the Committee on Banking and Currency will take that matter up for consideration as soon as a quorum appears. We have no desire to postpone it now that a privilege is afforded us tore- l)ort at any time. A quorum will Ije here on Monday. All intima- tions of disinclination to consider and report on that critical question will be easily repelled by the frankness and future action of that committee which has been peculiarly honored by the House. THE GKEAT EULE OF RETRENCHMENT — 120. But the matter now before the House is brought here by the message of the President. It is signiticaut of conflict, and calls for pluck, faith, virtue, and popular deliance. The debate from one side is an attack ou Rule 120 as amended. The ol^ject of the amendment of "that rule, as gentlemen know very Avell, was to allow the Committee ou Appropriations to retrench and reduce expenditures and salaries. The object of the old rule, I do not care by whom enacted, was to allow them only to increase. "It has been decided," says Barclay, (page 16,) "that under Rule 120 it is not in order to propose an amendment to a general appro- priation bill vt'hich changes existing law." Ijut ou the same page it is said that it was also decided that the latter branch of the rule not only permitted amendments increasing salaries, but was framed for that very purpose. Increase only ! Not decrease at all. No wonder this new Congress, fresh from an impoverished and indignant people, desired more virtue iu our rules as well .as rulers. What virtue comes from the new rule, which strikes out increasing and inserts its opposite, is due to the honest gentleman from Indiana [Mr. Holman] or the Committee on Rules, who reported that peculiar amendment which he sent to us. It is duo as well to the House which has so gallantly sustained the Appro]iriation Committee in giving eftect to the amended rule. From this fountain of pure legislation will come what relief a fi-ugal peo- j)le will receive from the exactions of profligate legislatures and a more profligate administration. , The amendment from the Committee on Rules was intended to re- move our disability to economize. It passed with some disgruntling remarks from gentlemen opposite. It has had several ordeals, but it has come out thus far burnished and purified. Its results arc seen iu the various reductions which I will hereafter refer to. HOW THE SENATE EECEH^ED THE EETEEXCHIXG RULE. It may be proper to say that the Senate received it in no pleasant mood ; and their action upon the liills passed under its auspices shows plainly that the reform it would work is not acceptable to that body. They fear it will encroach upon their prerogative, or that it will repeal bad laws. However, I venture to say that there was no other mode left to kill the parasite alike with the monster which had been so long eating up the siil>stance of the people by ordinate salaries and scandalous outlays. Besides, it was framed in the very spirit of the best parliamentary law. If it he an innovation, it is a wise one, for what does it not save through the agency of fresh and just legislation ? ENGLISH ANALOGIES AS TO RULE 120. Au anthill itative w-riter, Mr. May, speaking of the English system, reminds ns that the Honse can entertain any motion for diminisliing a tax or charge upon the people; and bills are fi-equently brought iu for that purpose without the formality of a committee. All rules are opposed to the imposition of burdens, but not to their removal or alleviation. This is a principlo laid down by Gushing, ^ 2039. In- stances of the value of this principle mnj be given pertinent to our newly-amended Rule r20. as wlien blanks are left for salaries, rates, Arc. "^These are tilled up in committee, but on the report the House may reduce their amount. To increase requires recommittal. So, too, deductions from custom duties may be entertained Ijy the House, but payments out of the revenue must be considered in committee. If, therefore, the Senate objects to the reductions of our appropriations, we plant ourselves upon this priceless principle, lying at the root of parliamentary law and frugal legislation, uaiuely, to guard closely and make facile the blessed privilege of retrenchment : consider long, heedfully, carefully, and jealously the dangerous privilege of increas- ing burdens. Whereas, as I have shown, under our rule of many years' standing, only amendments on appropriation bills were allowed so as to increase, the new order plainly recognizes the sacred, traditional, rational, and invaluable popular right of curtailing expenditures! To this branch of Congress belongs the credit of building this smooth and broad highway to reform. Without it all jjlatforms and pUxt- itudes, all promises and irretentions to economy are as ashes I MENACE FKOJ[ EXECUTIVE AND SENATE. Yet we are confronted at the closing of this Congress with the men- acing challenge of the Senate. We have sent to them our bills, framed in the spirit of economy. The consnlar and di[ilomatic bill was passed here after much difficulty and contention, but it passed almost unan- imously. The Senate at once disagrees with the House. The legisla- tive, jiulicial, and executive bill, which had forty days and forty nights of a deluge of debate, passed almost unanimously. The Senate assumes and x)resumes at once to usurp our function. By a thousand amendments it would make it not only a new bill substantially, but would thereby resuscitate the old bills, as to which the popular rein-o- batiou is fresh and uncompromising. Our other bills are to share the same treatment. Let us meet this contest a Voutrance. Let ns be patient. The people are behindsus. Let the House stand upon the an- cient ways. Let us re-assert its undoubted privilege. No prerogative of power, no assumption of equality in this matter, is to be tolerated. No pretentions dignity or increasing usurxiation of power on the part of the Senate will excuse the representatives of the people from tlie courageous performance of their duty. If tliese liills fail and the very organism of government itself stops, as is threatened by the menacing message read to-day, for want of the motive power, the corrective will be applied by the popular mandate, from which there is no appeal, and before which the Senate is impotent. There is, therefore, in this dilemma no other course for us but re- sistance to encroachment. If the Senate will copy the example of the House of Lords in some of its attempts to encroach on the Com- mons, let them at once make it a standing order to "reject at sight" all of our appropriati(m bills. Much better and braver would be this contemptuous treatment than the lu-etenseof considering our bills iu detail only to reject them en bloc. JEALOUSY OF THE SENATE. It is in the beauty of proportion and its compensations of power 6 that our Government finds its best eulogy. Let one brancli eucroacli upon another, and it will become as Mr. Jiladison once said of Greece : she was undone as soon as the King of Macedou obtained a seat among the Amphictyons. It was not alone the monarchical form of the new confederate, but the disproportionate and disturbing force. Give to the Senate a power over appropriations ungranfced and pernicious, and you not only give it a force in our Federal economy ilisproportioued and jarring to the general harmony, but you place upon the House itself a responsibility, disproportioued to its power. I would not place too much confidence in the Senate. It may be as fatal as too much jealoiisy of the people. If a Senate which comes within one vote of impeaching Andrew Johnson, to aggrandize its own power, could thus arrogate more than it should, are we not wise to be jealous of its power when it would breed confusion and dis- content by tamperiug with or denying great reforms made by the popular decree and by the popular branch f TAXATION THE GItEAT ISSUE IN ADMINISTRATION. History teaches that in all contests for power between the governed and the government and between dift'erent departments of the gov- ernment, the question of taxation is not only the most sensitive, but the most potential for good or ill. From the early exactions of the oriental despots and their satrapies down to the largesses of the last Turkish Sultan, which worked his dethronement and suicide ; from the embattled protests written in Gaelic blood in the time of the Eoman Ciesars, down to the wild sanguinary scenes of the French revolution; from the early protests of the "gentlemen of Eugland" in her Commons against the exactions of the Plantagenets and Stuarts to the last allowance for the children of Queen Victoria; from the times of Hampden and ship-money and Samuel Adams and tea-tribute, which cements by a priuciple England with her colonies, and both with Magna Charta and the declarations and bills of right, down to the present dissolute extravagance and corruption of the Federal officials in this Capitol and elsewhere, and from the large cities of the sea- board to the remotest border, where the post-trader plies his ill-gotten trade for ill-gotten gain, the perversion of the taxiug and appropri- ating power,"which wrests supplies from the peojjle, has been watched with jealousy and attacked with determination. This Congress will not shame the history of its origin, nor degrade the lofty ])rivilegcs granted to it by the"^ Constitution. It will not allow them to be abridged or frittered away by making itself the supple slave to an exacting Senate or a gras])ing Executive. It is, by organic law on this matter, the master. SEXATOEIAL ASSUMPTION. I am not sure that it might, mahjr^ all usage to the contrary, be held that the Senate has no more' right to originate or destroy the fundamental propositions or substance of our monetary reform bills than it has to pass bills of attainder, (?j^j>osf/«c/o orretros])ectivelaws. When it has proposed amendments, and we do not concur, is it not its duty to yield formally to the House ? Is not the House the egg or source of the only money bills to be passed ? Does merely jjrojws- ing an amendment give the right to defeat or reject the bill alto- gether ? A distinguished English parliamentary writer, Mr. Hatsell, rejects as precedents all the proceedings of both Houses from 1641, when Charles I went to the Commons to arrest its members, until the restoration. May we not ask, are not all recent preceilents found in the Senate over- steppiug the express coustitntioual privilege of the House to the con- trol of money bills equally valueless ? If it were not so, would not an architect who is consulted as to alterations in a house claim the right to tear down and build anew ? May not this peculiar authority of the House as to money bills excluding the Senate from any proprietorship in the substantial legislation be the very method intended to prevent the " dead-lock " so often threatened and so often feared ? May it not be the plan adopted by the sages of the Constitution to keep the wheels running without hazard of losing supplies by conflicting bodies ? Btit it is not necessary to assume or assert so much as this jiroposi- tiou involves. It is enough to say now to the House as a matter of political ethics: Stand on your superior vantage-ground ! Adhere to your own rule of action and your own principle of retrenchment ! Bate not a jot of heart or hope, but press right onward to the relief of a deficient Treasury and a plundered people ! Thus acting you will be crowned with the approbation of a grateful constituency. THE COXSTITUTIOXAL PROVISION. In this grapple between the representatives of State sovereignties anopular verdict? Are they not, therefore, every two years, if not every session or week, dependent on the popular wish for support, for honor, for comfort in duty aud solace in trial, for succor in emergency as to character and standing; in fine, for those sustaining pillars and ornamental graces which make office an honorable trust, and its service an ennobling mark of dignity? Aud^\•hen it comes to the imposition of taxes, or the pay- ment of money drawn from toil, will they not be more heedful and vigilant than a body whose tenure of office is more permaneut and less democratic, aud whose habits and position are less popular and more aristocratic ? In answeringthesequestions, it is readily ascertained why the House is more changeable as to its composition, iu meu and parties ; why it is iu emergencies the only refuge against wrong and corruptiou ; why the people who are depressed and distressed astotheir agricultural, com- mercial, or manufacturing interests look first to the popular branch for relief. The Senate is not a help ; it is a clog to popular relief. It is so by the very nature of its constitution. Wholesome legislation is not to be expected of it, as from the House. From the latter should and do generally spring those measures which ameliorate aud bless. Even in the States where the tenure of senators is less than that of the Federal Senators, the provision of the constitutions as to money bills and their origin is preserved. Some of the States, in their early 11 history, even gave to the lower braucli exclusive jurisdiction over such measures. BRITISH ri!ECEliEXTS. But all such clauses point to the British constitution. In the light of that nel>ulous, unwritten, but remarkable entity we find the rea- sons for their existence ; ay, sir, we find in them motives as pure as ever animated Cato or Sydney, Hampden or Washington, for the maiutenance of our right, now sought to be intrenched upon by the Senate, and as to which we are admouislicd in an amazing way by the President's message. just read. It is both instructive and pertinent to this incjuiry to consider the growth of the Commons' right of supply. At first the exactions were of feudal origin ; all aids to the Crown, however, in the times of the Tudois were freely voted by Parliament. Judge Story, in his Comnientaries on the Constitution in regard to that clause which says that the lower House of Congress shall have the origination of money bills and the Senate only can jn-opose amend- ments or concur with them, gives tlie reason for that rule. Mr. KASSON. Does my friend also claim that the Constitution provides that this House alone shall originate appropriation bills ? Mr. COX. I will come to that in a moment ; I see it is troubling the gentleman. ■ ' Mr. KASSON. Not at all; it seems to trouble the two gentlemen from New York. The phrase in the Constitution is "Ijills for raising revenue." Mr. COX. It has been interpreted by many of the States and by many of our commentators that the term " bills for raising revenue " includes all money bills. In some States the constitutions contain the words " approjiriation and money bills." But according to our practice, according to the general interpretation, according to the reasons that lie below, and, as I shall show, according to the debates in the constitutional convention, that clause of the Constitution it- self is the true source of this moneyed power. It incliules appropria- tions. It is the old power of the Commons to hold the purse against the sword. For six hundred years in England it fought royalty with its prerogatives, backed by the usurping insolence of the peers. It has only been modified in this country because the Senate happens to represent sovereign States ; but, as Judge Story well says, the House • is nearer to the people ; it is more frequently elected ; it has more local information, and hence therefore originates money bills; and the House, if they are firm and honest, if they are parliamentary in the old heroic Saxon mold, should demand from the Senate that their prerogatives should not be interfered with, esj)ecially when the people demand it. Mr. HURLBUT. Do I understand the gentleman from New York to consider that the Senate of the United States is in any manner analogous to the hereditary House of Peers in England ? Mr. COX. I only repeatVhat Judge Story says ; I do not now pro- fess to judge upon this matter myself. If my citations (which I ask leave to print) are read and properly considered, they will helY>to dis- entangle us, or at least be a key to the deail-lock which threatens us. But, Mr. Speaker, I did not propose to speak A'ery long or to speak at all upon this question. It is perhaps a little indelicate for me, sit- uated as I am, to come down upon the fioor and speak at all after the suggestion made the other day by my friend from Massachusetts [Mr. HoAii] who is absent. But one thing ought to be borne in mind, and especially by this 12 side of the House, that the people are demanding, especially in view of the deficit now threatened in the Treasury, not that we sliall issue new bonds or create new debts or add to our taxation system, already the most bxirdensome in all the world, but they are demanding-, as a good housewife would demand about her domestic economy, that we cut down the expenses of tliis Government ; and if the Senate does not concur with us, there is their duty in the Constitution ; they can simply propose amendments. They should not cripple our efforts, nor stop the wheels of the state. To avoid this, is the very object of their inferior relations to the House on money bills. The Constitu- tion does not say that they shall stand there and insist and ad- hei'e to amendments and thus break down the machinery of the Government, but they are at liberty, as once the Peers of Eng- land were, to propose or to concur in amendments. Hence in the conference committee we may agree on many matters where mis- takes may have been made. But one thing is sure, Mr. Speaker, and gentlemen, that the main contest in the coming election will depend upon the fairness of those who seek the popular suffrage in reaching out after economy. The people do not want those economists who are all the time extravagant and who never go forward in the work of cutting down expenditures; men who, like some upon the other side of the House — thank God they are very few — think they are starving because they do not wear puiple and hue linen antl fare sumptuously every dav. Mr. FOSTER. Kentucky jean. [Laughter.] Mr. COX. It would be a very happy thing if more persons, l^oth republicans and democrats, wore homespun. It would be a good thing if the Government itself wore more horoespnu. [Laughter.] But what I am referring to is not so much what you put on, as how you behave. [Laughter and applause. J I do not care how my friend from Ohio is dressed, I respect him ; 1 suspect he is arrayed in tine linen ; perhaps in royal English Inoadcloth, upon which he has fixed a high tariff. [Laughter.] I am too near-siglited to see just how he is dressed, but the reporters will get it. I suspect that my friend is trying to affect some votes in Ohio and Indiana in our favor; I some- times suspect him, owing to some spasms of goodness, as having a little leaning to our side of the House. 1 am glad he has made this reference to an honest, iiiainly-dressed man, who has, as chairman of Accounts, been taking care of our accounts so honestly, and when he goes before the people of Indiana to give another account, as their man for governor, they will take good care of him. [Applause.] • MODE OF ENGLISH Al'PROrKIATIOXS. In the Commons, there is what would seem to us a paradox. When the supplies for the service of the year have all been granted, the Committee of Supply discontinues its sittings ; but then the Ways and Means Committee have yet to act. There is a revenue called a consoli- dated fund, and the several grants come out of it and a bill is passed to that effect. That is the English appro) )riation bill. The bill en- umerates all tlie grants of the session ; and, by a prudence we should imitate, it orders no illegal use of the supplies. When these formalities are complied with and the appropriation bill is passed both houses, then it is fit to receive the royal assent. It is handed back to the Commons, its source. When Parliament is prorogued, as I have seen it, l)y the lord commissioners — or, as some- times occurs, by the sovereign — the speaker carries the appropriation bill to the bar of the House of Peers. The speaker tells roj'alty that & 13 the Coninioiis have rovided for. ]Moiit lily assessments were made. It is said that as William ma relied from Torbayto London the |)eop]eiinpoi tuned him, as they importune iis now, to relieve, them of their intolerable burdens. The chief of these was hearth-money. 14 HEARTH-MONEY. It Tvas the meanest tax ever levied, unless it be our tariff taxes on woolens, iron, and quinine. It was unequal. It pressed the poor ; it was light on the rich ; dukes paid but little more than peasants. Families were disturbed at meals ; bed-rooms were forced ; the very trencher on which the barley loaf was divided among the poor chil- dren and the pillow from under the head of the lying-in woman were taxed and seized by a remorseless hand. Besides, the tax was farmed out to rascals, Avhose counterpart is only to be found in our custom- houses. There was a tax in Rome once Avhich was levied upon the very offal of mankind. "My son," said an emperor, "the coin smells good, whatever may be the odor of the thing taxed." The hearth- money came in all too regularly, but was not of a pleasant savor, ex- cept to the goldsmiths who advanced money on it. .Where was the remedy 1 In the Lords ? Did they strike down this hearth-tax ? No ! The Commons was the refuge. It gave relief to the hearth, and the smoke that curled from the chimney of the English peasant was in- cense to the grand body of the people represented in the Commons. Again, in 1690, the revenue came again before the Commons. The reform had not been consummated. .Salaries and pensions wei'e enor- mous. Independent members, like Sedley, played their jests of pleas- antry on the civil list ; but sarcasm, jests, and invective fell power- less on the mailed form of tyranny. The civil list, however, only provoked ill-humor, which so(ui evaporated. It was so easy then as now to laugh off the details as little. The income in lieu of the old feudal services had remained. Appeals were made on behalf of William, who had saved the nation from popery, who had delivered the church from persecution. In vain whig and tory joined in the Commons against the incomes, and placed all disasters at the door of a too liberal Parliament in the days of the Stuarts. Experience had taught them ; and tliougli a compromise was made whereby some of the excise was fixed for life on tlie sovereign for the household and civil list, yet William growled at the grudging Commons ; but the Commons established a precedent and a principle, and protected pos- terity against indiscreet liberality, Avliile furnishing a code for a new hemisj)here. ENGLISH CIVIL LIST AND OUR OWN PRODIGALITY. I venture to say that upon this civil list — then considered by the king so meager — there was not so much prodigality as the last ten years show in this Congress. In recent Parliaments, Englishmen like Sir Charles Dilke have shown what extravagant largesses have been granted to the numerous family and dependents of the queen ! This republican member of Parliament putsto shame our republican pi'actice. The House may remember that this civil list was held sacred from parliamentary reduction during the whole reign. But Sir Cliarles held in 1872, as we hold now, that the House can examine into ex- penditures, if not question their right. How he tore the veil from the Englishpeusioners, the masters of the buck-hounds and fox-hounds and the yeomen of the guard! How he opeued to the shafts of ridicule the lord of the bed-chamber! How like the gentlemen of our Appro- priations Committee he stigmatized the sinecures and useless oliices; how he discovered the charlatanry of double offices with double salaries, like that of constable of Windsor — offices with only charges and no duty ; how he displayed the public expense for lordlings and princelings, for royal yachts and palace repairs, for masters of the horse and royal chamberlains, with duties more mysterious than proper, for robes, collars, and badges, for presents, missions, and 15 clothiug for royal trumpeters; bow lie opened the privy purse to the ridicule of seusible En.olislnueu ; how, in fine, he demauded reform in sustaining the carriages and equipages of great personages, can be found rehearsed in pure English in Hansard, ccx, page 254, and can be found equaled only in the corrupt days of France, when John Law gambled, or the worse days here when worse men rule. Talk about our post-traderships, District and whisky rings, navy-yards and naval frauds, exjiensive diplomatic nonsense, corrupt custom- houses, and worse Indian comiilications — all these in most unhappy detail, running into and out of Congress, through courts and into all the public service — these parasites nmst remain still further to fatten on the prevalent corruption. An honest Congress may not investi- gate nor even stay the unpleasant tide by fresh rules or by the ever- duriug power it holds over the ]iurse. Why ? Because the Senate says, no ! THE inOHEi; rOWEUS AXD DUTIES OF THE HOUSE. By an unexampled popular uprising the people sent to this Congress nearly a two-thirds majority favorable to economy and retrenchment. It was well known that the House had no power over general legisla- tion except in connection with the Senate and the President. But it was well known that in reference to retrenchment the House stood upon a higher plane, witli greater functions and more responsibility tban either Senate or President. It held the purse and it could with- hold supplies. It could open the purse and aliix conditions to the use of its contents. It could give or refrain as it pleased. It was the disburser, subject to certain conditions clearly fixed in the Constitu- tion and recognized by the traditions and practice under the British constitution. The Senate might modify our money bills to make them either more palatable or more just ; the President might approve or negative them ; and wliile the House is not in terms the exclusive legislature on this vital topic, its paramount voice was to be re- garded as, the creative voice. It cannot be disregarded without vio- lating the sjiirit and letter of the Constitution. The election of gentlemen here confers by the election the entire power possessed by the electors. Under our Constitution, luitil amend- ment, it is irrevocable. You, gentlemen, are butthedeputies of the peo- ple to carry out this parliamentary authority. If there is any defect in executing the electctral will, it is yours. You cannot go home, ducking to the Senate, without reproof from and damage to the constituent. You are not merely responsible to the first district of Ohio or the thirtieth district of New York. Your action binds your fellows. The safety and good of all are embraced in the Constitution, and you are the trustee for every person in the land. By jdelding to the Senate, on a question of supplies, you give up to strangers, or at best but re- mote relations, the economy of that household of which you are the stewards. Your indenture is written and interpreted. You durst not defer to those not parties in its particular execution. No pledges you have made as to this or that reform or retrenchment can change your relation to the Senate or to the Constitution. Your party fealty is nothing before your oath to the organic ordinance. Your instructions are crystallized and set. They are crown jewels of jiopular sover- eignty. In the matter of appropriations here, as supplies in Britain, you may be concurrent in a fractional incidental way, but you are independent in the integrity of your specific exclusive duty. If courtesy and conference fail to reconcile the two Houses, the responsibility falls on the branch which encroaches. There is no um- pire except the vote of the peoi)le in re-electing the House, or the 16 slower remedy in this country of reforming the Senate by filling the jilaces of expiring Senators. In England when the Lords become re- cusant the late and sure remedy is summary. A new set of peers are created by the ministry ; and the Commons become the creators and masters of the Peers. Therefore, for a stroiiger reason in this country, we must insist and adhere to our constitutional duty and trust to the righteous judgment of the people. lu all sciences — Says Lord Bacon — thoy are the soundest that keep close to jmrticnhirs. Inileerl, n science appears to lie best formed into a system by a number of instances drawn from observation and ■espeiience, and reduced graduallj' iuto geuei'al rules. The mind which would make law without heeding minute particu- lars has neither observed the phenomena of the material world, nor understands the first clause of the social contract. From the numerous precedents of English history, interpreting or.r own Constitution, we may infer the inner meaning of that constitu- tion whicli gives to the House the controlling influence in money bills. COXGEESS TAKES ACTION IX 1672. In further illustration of the power of the House, let me refer to a report made to this House on the 27th February, 1871, (Forty-first Congress, third session. Report No. 42.) It seems that a committee of conference on the part of the House was charged with the duty of conferring with a similar committee of the Senate. A question of l)rivilege was raised by resolution of the House in reference to a tax bill. The bill had originated in the Senate. It continued the income tax until after December, 1869. A respectful resolution of the House called in question the power of the Senate. The bill was sent to the ►Senate with the resolution. It involved a constitutional privilege of the House. True, it referred to the imposition of taxes, and not ap- jiropriations. At that time the House maintained its privilege. The report of that committee naturally looked to the British constitution as the model for our own on revenue matters. Was not the balance of power between the two Houses affected ? That report asserted that our constitutional clause was adopted as a compromise, and the committee took care to claim the sole power of the House to origi- nate " money bills." That power was considered by them a safeguard against the oppression of the people. It was therefore' considered as properly lodged in that body which most naturally reiireseuted and which Avas most directly controlled by the people. Eeferring to the British precedents which I have already quoted, the committee affirmed that the acquiescence of the Lords in the privileges of the Commons was of so clear a nature that the Lords could not amend money bills so as to alter the intention of the Commons. That in- tention went not only to the amount of the rate or charge, whether by increase or reduction, but to its duration, its mode of assessment, its levy, its collection, its ai)propriation, its management. It justifies in the precedents quoted, not merely the right of the House to origi- nate, but to appropriate and manage, by proper provisos and amend- ments, all moneys that come into the Treasury by taxation. Whoever shall pay, receive, mjinage, or control such monejns are within the rule laid down by the Constitution, copied in the spirit of jealous freedom from our British ancestors. THE COXSTITUTIGNAL COMl'liOMIoE. When our fathers considered the question of taxation and repre- sentation there was a contest for power between the large and small 17 States ; but the cduiproniise consisted in concessions to the small Htates, wliich were specifically counterbalauccd by the provisioTi that money bills should originate in the House of Eepresentatives, -where *the peo^ile vrere represented according to numbers. The origin of this clause as to money bills is attributed to Charles Pinckney in his notes of the Constitution, though Dr. Franklin af- ter introduced it in committee. The people's money should not be voted away by the Senators rei)resenting States. It was hold to be an aristocratic privilege to vote away other people's money regardless of the source from which it came, and for which thei'e was no direct responsibility. The people should know who disposed of their money, and how. " It is a maxim," said Dr. Franklin, " that those who feel can best judge." Hence, the House was given the paramount power over all money bills. Mr. Gerry considered the clause relative to money bills as the corner-stone of tlie accommodation between the large and small States. It is absolutely certain, as a careful study of the debates will disclose, that the words "money bills" as used in the British constitution, were the synonyms for the words " revenue bills" used in ours. Mr. Webster has used the words "money bills" in the same connection. The reasoning for this principle first grows out of the hereditary nature of the British House of Lords, and to the continuance and perpetuity of a body known as our Senate, each one of whose members holds through three successive Congresses. The English analogy is a more striking one the more it is considered. We even followed the English Committee on Ways and Moans in our First Congress, which was authorized not only to originate all reve- nue measures, but those of taxation and appropriation. This prac- tice is not peculiar to later days. In 1832 it was again asserted, and in other instances it was asserted by the control and to the destruc- tion of two appropriation bills : one in 1856 and another in l-^Go. To these I shall refer in det.TJl. Mr. Speaker, this is not a question of privilege altogether ; it is higher; it is a question of constitutional power. The House is the sole judge of the manner, the measure, and the time of imposing taxes or disbursing them. The committee to which I have referred, con- sisting of Messrs. Hoojjer, Allison, and Voorhees, followed the En- glish precedents which I have quoted, and deferred to the Senate only in its right to propose or concur with amendments. TWO AvruoruiATiox bu.ls failed IX twenty yeahs. This fjuestion of disagreement between the two Houses on appro- priation bills is neither new in this country nor in Eugland. The most conspicuous instances of disagreements in this country grew out of the legislation on the slavery question, and upon an Army bill. The Journal of the House of August 6, 18.56, shows the beginning of this disagreement. The House at tliat time was republican and the Sen- ate democratic. A proviso to the Army bill (Journal, page 1383) for- bade that the money appi-opriiited should be drawn from the Treas- ury until certain prosecutions in Kansas should be dismissed and those restrained of liberty released. This proviso passed the House by a vote of yeas 84, nays 09, almost a party vote. Colfax. Giddings, Grow, Wa^shburnc, and others voted for it. Another proviso substan- tially the same (page 1387) was passed — yeas «2, nays 611. The Sen- ate disagreed to the provisos, and tlie House insisted, on a motion by Mr. Stevens to recede. Tliere was a full vote, and the republican House insisted upon retaining the provisos. Tliat contest continued until the disagreement was so widi tiiat Congress adjourned, and the 2 c 18 apptopiiatiou ])ill was iost. Tlie last vote, on a motion of Mr. Camp- bell for adherence, was 101 yeas to 97 nays. . On page 1622 of the Journal of August 30, the Army hill came back for the last time on this proviso : * That no part of the militaiy forces of the United States for the support of which appioiJiiationa are made by this act shall he employed in aid of the enforcement of any enactment heretofore passed of the bodies claiming to be the teiritorial Legislature of Kansas. Tbe vote on this proviso wns yeas 101, nays 98. This was a party vote. The present financial leader of the Senate, Mr. John Sher- man, voted against striking out the proviso, (page 1623.) It therefore appears by the action of this House, Avhen the republican party was virtuous and skilled in legislation that for the purpose of rescuing the soil of Kansas from the black stain of slavery they were willing to defeat the Army biil. I came into Congress the following sessi )n and the niaiu objection I had to combat on the stump in that canvass was the admirable stand taken by my competitor in favor of holding the purse of the Government against its use to sustain the evilspiiifcof slavery, the suspension of the habeas cwjms, and thebarbarouscode of the Legislature of Kansas. The speeches of that day are full of philippics against Draco and Jeffries, Russian serfdom and Spanish slavery. Standing armies were de- nounced; the dread of their violence and the dangers likely to ensue were held up in every light before the House and the country. It was stoutly maintained by the republican party in tbe day of itspurity that the sword should uot have -weight in the scale of American justice. Europe was appealed to with its 2,000,000 armed men. The songs of lib- erty were repeated upon this lioor as lyrics lost amid the clash of arms. Our Army was then but 14,000 strong, and, though the i>roviso did not annul the Kansas code, yet it declared it absolutely powerless and not to be enforced with the bayonet. Tlie proviso was held to be constitutional, legal, just, and reasonable. It was Congress aiul Con- gress alone which could use, as occasion retpiired, the money and the sword. The Senate was denounced as assuming a position memo- rable in the historic page of the Stuarts. Charles bad lost his head and James his crown. Revolution was openly proclaimed ; but it was revolutiou only against the known opinions of Senators. The House would not then bow before the Senate at its nod. Latin was summoned to aid the cause of the gallant republicans — Quicq^uid delirunt i eges, plectuntur Achivi — which was interpreted by scholarly republicans, " that when Sen- ators get mad the people feel the scourge." The result was that the Senate stood firm and the House firmer. The result showed subse- quently that the republican party made strength by their determina- tion to sustain the commonalty against the Senate. I have intimated that two appropriation bills have failed because of an irreconcilable disagreement between the two Houses. On the 2d day of March, 1865, when the miscellaneous bill was under con- sideration, Mr. Henry Winter Davis, of Maryland, moved an addi- tional section to the bill. It was intended that no peison should be tried by court-martial or niilitarj^ commission in any State or Terri- tory where the courts of the United States were open with certain exceptions, and that all proceedings contrary to that proviso should be vacated. It was further held tliat all persons under sentence in that peculiar mode of trial should cither be discharged or delivered to the civil authorities. 19 On 111 iV proviso Mr. Waslibiirue, oi' Illinois, raised a point of ordei'; 1)nt it Avas snl)so(iHently ruled in order by Schuyler Colfax, tite Speaker of tlie House. Mr. Davi.s strenuously and eloquently con- tended that wliile he would not cast any iiuput.ation upon the admiv- istration, he wo.ild confend aijainst destroying the foundation of the popular safety. WliiJe he confined the amendment to the so-called then loyal States, so as not to strip the Government of any power to supitiess rebellion, he rose to the height of a great argument for personal liberty, by annulling all illegal military commissions and enlarging all those illegally found unfter sentence of illegal military commissions. It must be remembered that this proviso was iutro- dnced into a republican House and by a republican. His spirit was- in.stinct with tlie virtue which belongs to our conmion freedom. He was ably seconded by the present Senator from New York, [Mr. Kek- NAX,] who gave instances of civilians of unimpeachable character be- ing thrown into prison and detained for nmuths and subjected to trial by military conunission for alleged violations of the statutes of New York, and only discharged when this military tribunal could lind nothing against them. The extreme measures of that Congress found champioushii> in the House of litipreseutativcs, and no threat of the defeat of the appro- IH'iation bill, involving millions, lessened the force of that champion- ship. Some sneered at it as a general jail delivery. Mr. Schenck wa& one of them. Mr. Stevens, while admitting that courts-martial were often composed of men ignoraut of law, refused to reverse such de- cisions and " turn loose God knows whom on the demand of the House of Representatives fixed to an appropriation bill." It is needless for me to refer to the details of that debate. It is enough to say that never was there exhibited in the best days of English ( ontest against i)rerogative, and in the conflict of the Com- mons against the King, more knoAvledgc and coolness. When that miscellaneous bill failed by the attack of freemen in a republican House, it was felt that civil law was still supreme, and that every man was able to breathe freer in the hope of the peaceful reign of liberty by submission to law ? Afterward, as will api)ear from the Globe of March 3, 18G.5, page 1421, when the disagreement was again reported to the House cer- tain small provisions like that of light-houses and gas-light were agreed to. They were large in number and amount, and covered all the business details of the various amendments of the House. But when the conference committee reached the radical diversity of opin- ion, Mr. Davis stated that while the majority of the Senate concurred in the principles involved, the majority had refused in two votes to pass the amendments. It was insisted that the Senate might pass the proviso a« a separate bill ; but these lords of the Senate refused. An important a]ipropriation bill, with a proviso touclung the right of every citizen and the endurance of reiuiblican institutions, was re- ported back to the House lender a grave disagreement, and the funda- mental principles of liberty were viiulicated. The bad pi'actices of the Government introduced into the jurisprudence of the Federal Government under the general title of the rules and usages of war, together with new crimes without any authority, were regarded as of more conse((nence than the mere temporary provision of a miscel- laneous approi>riation bill. All honor to the genthimen of that Congress, not .ilways careful of personal liberty, but with a sufficient number of republicans to join with the democrats to vindicate the primary ideas of freedom. When, 20 therefore, at tvreive o'clock on the '.jt\ of March, 18G5, tlie Speaker anuotinced that the parting' hour had come, personal liberty stood high aloof above mercenary consideration, and the departino- Speaker in adjonrning the Thirty-eight Congress sine die made a lyric orison to the Father of us all that he would lead all our wandering citi- zens to the old fold. AYhile lieavon's wide arch resdinids ajjain, With 'peace ou earth, good will to mcu." Thus, Mr. Speaker, on two occasions, both of them in rcpnT»lican Houses, have the fundamental ideas inherited from our English an- cestry been vindicated, and the right of the Commons to iix condi- tions to the voting of money has lifted that standard by which alone through nearly a thousand years the safety of the public charters has been secured. Mr. Speaker, much discussion has been had and much bitterness created between the two Houses in reference to retrenchment. My relation to the House and its business deters me from any partisan appeal which would intrench upon the honor or respect due to the Senate. If there were no rules requiring the House to be decorous and complaisant toward that body, it would aftbrd me no gratihcatiou to disregard that moral comity which leads us into unison for the common weal. It is not to be regarded as overstepping the limits of discussion in which the temporary Speaker might pi'operly indulge in defense of the organization of the lower branch of Congress if he did point out — not merely from English precedent, not merely from the glorious history of the Commons, but from the present condition i)i our Treasury and its finances — the immense responsibility of that branch wdiich would reject any measure for the facile running of the Government. EXl'EXDITUKKS INCREASE. This Congress was called into being to restrain, inordinate living beyond our resources. "When our expenditures exceed our means it is time for an aggressive spirit on the part of the people and their representatives against all comers who would attack them. Need I refer you to the increased expenditures of the administration since the war ended? Comparisons between IHGO and 1S70 or 1875 seem to fail of their cogency. Let me, then, take some of the years imme- diately after the war. The post-office expenditures in 1868 were $10,000,000 less than now. The Indian expenditures are nearly $4,000,000 more now tbanin 1868. Why should we appropriate for surveying the public lands uearly four times as much in 187.5 as in 1868, or double our Coast Survey expenses in the same period ? Why should the Judicial expenditures rush up from $700,000 to over three and a half millions from 1868 to 1875 1 Why should our miscellaneous expenditures in the same period be $20,000,000 more ? Are these burdens of such a character as to be patiently borne ? Is our present time so auspicious and prosperous that we can alibrd to add to instead of subtracting from our expendi- tures ? Besides, it is susceptible of proof from an authentic statement of the condition of the Treasury up until June 30, 1876, there will be a deficiency at the end of the present fiscal year of over twenty-four millions and a half. And the probable deficiency at the end of the year 1877 will be over $40,000,000. Such a condition of public finances calls either for debt, taxes, or thrift. If England could hold the purse-string against the Crown, 4 ' 21 antl il, throunh ;i rciiiaikalile struggle, a republican Congress could bold tbe purse for liberty iu Kansas, for habeas corpus, free speech, and free press ; if a republican Congress led by the eloquence of Henry AVinter Davis could break down the miscellaneous bill, by a pro- viso for a fair trial under an American bill of rights and the spirit of Magna Charta, hovr craven ami contemptible would not a democratic Congress seem should they adopt the imdget fixed by a Senate in its arrogance, and in derogation of every legislative right and privilege? It is unnecessary for me to state iu detail what bills we have offered to the Senate for retrenchment. I have already spoken as to the military and diplomatic bills. The reductions on these bills were generally concurred in. Upon the first it amounted to $200,000 below the esiiiuates. The diplomatic bfll was reduced from the estimates near one-half million. In the fortiiication bill there was a reduction of over three millions. Upon tlie legislative, executive, and judicial appropriation bill, to whicli the Senate have made nearly a thousand amendments, we had proposed a reduction of over five and a half millions. On the river and harbor bill the reduction of appropria- tions below the estimate amounted to $770,000. On the deficiency bill we reduced from the appropriation of last year nearly $4,000,000 ; on the post-office bill more than $.5,000,000 ; on the naval bill over $4,000,000 ; and on the Indian bill over one and a half millions. Or, sir, to sum it all up, the reduction on the bills thus far reported shows as in comparison with the estimates a reduction of $37,738,000, -while the actual appropriations for the present year show a reduction thus far of nearly $23,000,000. The Army bill will show a reduction of appropriation of nearly $.5,000,000. So that in the sum-total this pains-taking economy of the House of Eej)resentatives has labored to make an aggregate reduction amounting to $40,000,000. These details will be approved by a prostrate and a discriminating people. I do not propose now to argue for or against the propriety or the utility of these reductions. They have had careful consideration in the committee and unexampled debate in the Committee of the Whole. Many of them have been approved without a vote against them. The Senate may in the end generally approve of our retrench- ment, but the conciliatory disposition thus far seems lacking. Upon this retrenchment not only depend matters of a fiscal nature con- nected "with currency, economy, taxation, and iucorniptibility, but, sir, there is at stake the very organic law of constitutional liberty, derived from our English ancestors and our own American fathers. We demand that no servile submission to an inferior body should be shown by this the superior body under the sanctions of the Consti- tution. COXCLUSIOX. In conclusion, there is but one path leading out of this cave of de- iiair. We must break the lull and work. Public confidence will come nly as wo arc assured that values are no longer wasted, but created. The path may be rough and the wilderness and sloughs difficult. Our path does not lie simply in the repeal of any foolish act for resump- tion at an early and impossible day. The extension of that day is not the only jiath, though it may remove many impediments. The ex- tension of resumption nuist hot involve, as a condition, iudefuiite postponement. We have riches, developed and undeveloped, for our wants, if those wants are not too imaginative. We must prepare even for a greater shrinkage of values ; we must prepare for sacrifices. But one sacrifice we must not make : We cannot sacrifice the tradi- tions, muniments, and dignities of this House of the i)eople, this House LIBRARY OF CONGRESS lililiiliiliiiiiiinii ^ 005 858 840 4