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Was the Union
Army’s Invasion of the Confederate States a Lawful
Act? An Analysis of President
Lincoln’s Legal Arguments Against Secession
by James Ostrowski
This paper, included in Secession,
State, and Liberty (New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction
Publishers, 1998), edited by David Gordon, was delivered at the
Mises Institute’s conference on the political economy of secession.
It is ©1998 by the Ludwig von Mises Institute. All rights
reserved.
On 27 May 1861, the army of the United
States of America (the Union) – a nation which had been formed by
consecutive secessions, first from Great Britain in 1776, and then
from itself in 1788 – invaded the State of Virginia,1 which had itself recently seceded from the
Union, in an effort to negate Virginia’s secession by violent
force.
The results of the efforts begun that day
are well known and indisputable: after four years of brutal warfare,
during which 620,000 Americans were killed, the United States of
America forcibly negated the secession of the Confederate States,
and re-enrolled them into the Union. The Civil War ended slavery,
left the South in economic ruins, and set the stage for twelve years
of military rule.
Beyond its immediate effects, the
Civil War also made drastic changes in politics and
law that continue to shape our world 130 years
later. Arthur Ekirch., Jr. writes:
Along with the
terrible destruction of life and property suffered in four long
years of fighting, went tremendous changes in American life and
thought, especially a decline in [classical] liberalism on all
questions save that of slavery. . . .
Through
a policy of arbitrary arrests made possible by Lincoln’s
suspension of habeas corpus, persons were seized and
confined on the 'suspicion' of disloyalty or of sympathy with the
southern cause. Thus, in the course of the
Civil War, a total of thirteen thousand civilians was estimated to
have been held as political prisoners, often without any sort of
trial or after only cursory hearings before a military tribunal.2
The Civil
War caused and allowed a tremendous expansion of the size and power
of the federal government. It gave us our first
federal conscription law (the military
draft), our first progressive income tax,
and our first enormous standing army; it gave us a higher tariff,
and it gave us greenbacks. James McPherson writes
approvingly:
This astonishing blitz of
laws . . . did more to
reshape the relation of the government to
the economy (and the people) than any comparable effort
except perhaps the first hundred days of the New Deal.
This Civil War Legislation . . . created
the blueprint for modern America.3 (And
also went AGAINST the Original U.S. Constitution that FORBADE all
these things ! Our Founding Fathers were careful to NOT allow
these things in the establishment of American
government ! These things are what they fought AGAINST;
and here this *new* northern Federal government via Lincoln,
was completely revamping the U.S. government and Constitution
!)
Albert Jay Nock was more critical of the
war’s impact, especially on the
Constitution:
Lincoln
overruled the opinion of Chief Justice Taney that
suspension of habeas corpus was unconstitutional, and in
consequence the mode of the State was, until 1865, a
monocratic military despotism. . . . The doctrine of
“reserved powers” was knaved up (dishonest, crafty men)
ex post facto as a 'justification' for his
acts, but as far as the intent of the Constitution is concerned,
it was obviously pure invention. In fact,
a very good case could be made out
for the assertion that Lincoln’s acts resulted in a
permanent radical change in the entire system of Constitutional
“interpretation” – that since his time, “interpretations” have not
been interpretations of the Constitution, but merely of 'public
policy'. . . . A strict Constitutionalist might indeed say that
the Constitution died in 1861, and one would have to scratch one’s
head pretty diligently to refute him.4
This paper will attempt to explore Nock’s
thesis by examining the central Constitutional issue of the war: was
the Union Army’s invasion of the Confederacy
a lawful act ? This will be done primarily by analyzing the legal
arguments made by President Abraham Lincoln in support of
the invasion and against the Confederate secession.
This method is justified by several facts.
First, the invasion of the Confederacy was ordered by
President Lincoln. Second, President Lincoln was
one of the most brilliant lawyers of his era. As such, it is safe to
assume that his legal argument in support of the invasion was of the
highest quality. Third, it is likely that President
Lincoln read, thought, wrote, and spoke about the legal issues
involving the Civil War more so than any other pro-Union lawyer of
his era. He was aware of the pro-Union arguments made
both by his predecessors as well as by his contemporaries.5 Finally, President Lincoln, a superb writer and
speaker, had strong incentive to make his views against secession
known to the American people in order to secure their support
(manipulate) for the onerous war which was made necessary by
his opposition to secession. From
the above facts, we can conclude that if the invasion of the
Confederacy was legally justified, such legal justification can be
found in the writings and 'pronouncements' of President
Lincoln.
This paper will not address the
morality of the Union’s invasion of the Confederacy, except
indirectly and only to the extent that certain moral 'principles'
were undoubtedly reflected in the framework of laws governing the
Union in 1861. Thus, whether the Union’s invasion of the Confederacy
can be morally justified, even if found to be unlawful, will not be
answered here.6 It is the case, however, that the
officials who launched the invasion, especially President
Lincoln, made no such argument in 1861. He had previously
indicated his views on that issue by criticizing John Brown’s raid
on Harper’s Ferry.7
The issue of the right of a state to
secede is of more than historical interest. Since the end of the
Civil War in 1865, though several 'amendments'
giving the federal government greater power over
the states have been ratified, there have been no
textual changes to the Constitution which explicitly prohibit
secession.
(Note: IT is clear that
Lincoln was determined to set up an unbreakable northern
Union of the United States government at ANY cost ! He
didn't care if he had to re-write the entire Constitution to suit
his agenda ! Lincoln wanted the Union Federal Government to
be THE dictatorial force over ALL states and he was not about
to allow ANYTHING to stop him !)
There was no attempt by either side in
the Civil War to resort to 'federal courts' or international
arbitrators for a decision on the legality of secession. Nor has any
state attempted to secede since the Civil War. As settled as
secession may be as a political or historical issue to many, it
has never been settled as a legal one. The recent revival of
secession talk and practice worldwide makes the present undertaking
a valuable one. WAS THE INVASION
JUSTIFIED BY THE SEIZURE OF FORT SUMTER?
In the context of a legal analysis of
state secession, it was the Union’s invasion of
Virginia that is significant, and not the Confederacy’s
firing on Fort Sumter a month earlier. The Confederacy fired on Fort
Sumter to expel what it believed were trespassers on South Carolina
soil and territorial waters. By no means can the seizure of the fort
be construed as a threat to the security of the states remaining in
the Union, the closest of which was 500 miles away.
If South Carolina illegally seceded from
the Union, then both the Union’s initial
refusal to surrender Fort
Sumter, and its subsequent invasion were lawful and
constitutional. Conversely, if South Carolina had the right to
secede from the Union, then indeed the Union soldiers in
the Fort were trespassers and also a potential military
threat to South Carolina. Thus, assuming the right of
secession existed, the Union had no
right to retaliate or initiate war against the
Confederacy. Its subsequent invasion of Virginia then marks
the beginning of its illegal war on the Confederacy and the Nation
of the Confederate States of America, that was a LEGAL NATION AT THE
TIME !
The incident at Fort Sumter is
largely significant as a political victory for the Union. President
Lincoln, while holding a hostile military force
on southern soil, was able to outmaneuver the
Confederacy into firing the first shot of the war.8 That the shot would be fired, however,
was guaranteed by President Lincoln in his
Inaugural Address when he disingenuously announced, “there shall be
[no violence] unless it be forced upon the national
authority.” He then defined the term “national
authority” in such a way as to insure that
war would come:
"The power confided in
me, will be used to hold, occupy, and
possess the property, and places belonging to the
government, and to collect the duties and
imposts; but beyond what may be
necessary for these objects,
there will be no invasion—no using of force against, or among the
people anywhere." (Lincoln) 9
Whatever one’s legal, political, or moral
views about President Lincoln or the Civil War, it should
be obvious that Lincoln was being dishonest here. He
was suggesting that he would not resist secession, but would
continue to tax the seceders and to hold hostile military
installations on their property – an absurdity ! (This is what dictators do
!) Before becoming president, Lincoln had been
more honest. He had simply said “we won’t let you”
secede. The truth is, the southern states wanted to go
in peace, but Lincoln “wouldn’t let them.”10
LINCOLN’S LEGAL ARGUMENTS AGAINST
SECESSION
Lincoln set forth his views on secession
mainly in his First Inaugural Address (4 March 1861), and his
Special Message to Congress (4 July 1861). In the first speech,
Lincoln made primarily political arguments against secession,
apparently hoping to persuade secessionists with his arguments.
However, with secession already accomplished by 4 July 1861,
Lincoln’s Special Address to Congress focused on the alleged
illegality of secession, to establish the
'legitimacy' of his intended military resistance to it.
This paper will therefore first consider the Special
Message’s legal arguments against secession, then the First
Inaugural’s political arguments against
secession.
In his Special Message to Congress,
President Lincoln called the doctrine of the secessionists “an
insidious debauching of the public mind.” He said,
"They invented an ingenious sophism,
which, if conceded, was followed by perfectly logical steps,
through all the incidents, to the complete
destruction of the Union. The sophism itself is, that any
state of the Union may, consistently with the national
Constitution, and therefore lawfully, and
peacefully, withdraw from the Union, without the consent of
the Union, or of any other state." .....Lincoln
(Note: It is clear even
here that Lincoln's main goal was to EMPOWER, ENLARGE, AND
COMPLETELY RULE OVER ALL STATES with his Union Federal Government,
no matter what he had to do to establish that goal ! He was
not about to allow ANYTHING, even law or the Constitution, to
stand in his way !)
Ironically, it was not “fire-eating”
southern rebels who had originated this “sophism,” but the man
Lincoln called “the most distinguished politician in our
history”—Thomas Jefferson. 11 Jefferson, who called Virginia his “country,”
planted the seeds of the secession doctrine when he wrote his
Kentucky Resolution of 1798, in protest to the Alien and Sedition
laws:
"The several states composing the
United States of America are not united on the principle of
unlimited submission to their general government; but that, by
compact, under the style and title of the Constitution of the
United States, and of certain amendments thereto, they constituted
a general government for general purposes, delegated to that
government certain powers, reserving, each state to itself, the
residuary mass of right to their own self-government; and that
whensoever the general government assumes undelegated powers, its
acts are unauthoritative, void and of no effect." 12
Hannis Taylor called Jefferson’s compact
doctrine the “Pandora’s Box” out of which flew the “closely related
doctrines of nullification and secession,” which he notes, with less
than perfect foresight, “were extinguished once and
forever by the Civil War.”13 Jefferson’s biographer, Willard Sterne Randall
agrees:
[Jefferson] forthrightly
held that where the national government exercised powers not
specifically delegated to it, each state “has an equal right to
judge . . . the mode and measure of redress.” . . . He was, he
assured Madison, “confident in the good sense of the American
people,” but if they did not rally round “the true principles of
our federal compact,” he was “determined . . . to sever ourselves
from the union we so much value rather than give up the rights of
self-government . . . in which alone we see liberty, safety and
happiness.” 14
Lincoln, in reply to this “insidious
debauching of the public mind,” constructs a straw man secessionist
argument: “This sophism derives much-perhaps the whole—of its
currency, from the assumption, that there is some omnipotent, and
sacred supremacy, pertaining to a State – to each
State of "our Federal Union".” No secessionist,
including Jefferson, ever made such an argument, though it sounds
ominously like a description of Lincoln’s own feelings about the
Union. Since the states created the Union,
Lincoln’s denigration of the states and glorification of the
Union is paradoxical.
Lincoln challenges the claim of 'reserved
state powers' by asserting that no state, except Texas, had ever
“been a State out of the Union.” In fact, Lincoln argues that
the states “passed into the Union” even before 1776; united to
declare their independence in 1776; declared a “perpetual” union in
the Articles of Confederation two years later; and finally created
the present Union by ratifying the Constitution in 1788. There are
many problems with his argument.
Lincoln confuses no fewer than
four different concepts of 'union'. Prior to 4 July
1776, the colonies were united by their increasing concern over the
violation of their rights by the British government. Their
representatives met in a Continental Congress which ultimately
issued the Declaration of Independence and organized the
Revolutionary War effort. Prior to 1776, no issue of secession from
a union could have arisen because the colonies still considered
themselves part of Great Britain. Neither were there any legal
documents agreed to by the Continental Congress which directly or
indirectly addressed the issue of secession. Thus, any union that
existed prior to 1776 is of no importance at all to the issue of
secession.
Next comes the union created by the
Declaration of Independence. The most notable fact in this context
is that the Declaration announces a lawful secession by the
colonies from Great Britain based on the right of the
people to alter or abolish their form of
government. It is thus apparent that the Declaration
of Independence establishes that the right of secession is among the
inalienable rights of men. The Declaration is, therefore,
literally the last place on earth one would hope to find legal
justification for a war against secession. It was adopted by
representatives of the thirteen colonies, and declared that those
colonies had become “Free and Independent States.” However,
the Declaration was not a Constitution, establishing any
particular type of union among the states, or specifying
any duties binding on them other than a moral commitment to mutually
defend their newly declared independence.
Ironically, the past “train of abuses”
Thomas Jefferson cited in support of secession reads like a
checklist of the tactics Lincoln and his successors used
against the South to prevent secession:
"He (Lincoln) has dissolved
Representative Houses repeatedly, for opposing with manly
firmness his invasions on the rights of the people. He has refused
for a long time, after such dissolutions, to cause others to be
elected. . . . He has made Judges dependent on his Will
alone. . . . He has erected a multitude of New Offices,
and sent hither swarms of Officers to harass our people,
and eat out their substance. He has kept among us, in times
of peace, Standing Armies without the consent of our
legislatures. He has affected to render the Military
independent of and superior to the Civil Power. He has combined
with others to subject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our
constitution, and unacknowledged by our laws, giving
his Assent to their Acts of pretended Legislation: For
quartering large bodies of armed troops among us. For cutting
off our Trade with all parts of the world. For imposing
Taxes on us without consent. For depriving us in many
cases, of the right of Trial by Jury. For taking away our
Charters, abolishing our most valuable Laws and altering
fundamentally our own legislatures, and declaring themselves
invested with power to legislate for us in all cases
whatsoever. He has abdicated Government here, by declaring
us out of his Protection and waging War against us. He has
plundered our seas, ravaged our Coast, burnt our
towns, and destroyed the lives of our people.
He is at this time transporting large Armies of foreign
Mercenaries to compleat the works of death, desolation and tyranny
!"
(Note: As is made clear
here even by Jefferson himself, is that Lincoln saw himself almost
as THE DICTATOR OVER ALL THE STATES whether they liked it or not !
He consistently abused his Executive powers; even creating powers
that did not exist ! Lincoln practically viewed himself as the
King over the entire land !)
The next union cited by Lincoln is the
government established by the Articles of Confederation, which were
ratified on 1 March 1781. Perhaps the most significant fact about
the Articles is that they specify, both in the preamble and in the
body, that the union thus created is “perpetual.” Article XIII
states:
"The Articles of this confederation
shall be inviolably observed by every state, and the
union shall be perpetual; nor shall any alteration at any
time hereafter be made in any of them; unless such alteration
be agreed to in a congress of the united states, and be afterwards
confirmed by the legislatures of every
state."
In contrast, however, Article II makes
clear that “Each state retains its sovereignty, freedom and
independence and every Power, Jurisdiction and right, which
is not by this confederation expressly delegated to the United
States, in Congress assembled.” 15 This sentence is divided into two clauses, the
first speaking of states retaining their sovereignty, freedom, and
independence, and the second reserving to the states those powers
and rights not expressly delegated to the United States.
Resolving the apparent conflict between
Article II and Article XIII as it respects the issue of secession is
unnecessary for our purposes. Suffice it to say that the Articles
expressed a desire for perpetual union, while recognizing the
independence of states, and omitting any clear mandate or
enforcement mechanism that prevents state secession. They also
established a decentralized federal system without a strong
executive power that apparently failed to arouse any secessionist
impulses in its short tenure.
The union established by the Articles of
Confederation, in spite of its exhortation of perpetuity, was
terminated by nothing other than a secession
! The proposed Constitution provided that it would take effect
upon ratification by nine states. On 21 June 1788, New Hampshire
became the ninth state to ratify. On that date, a new union was
formed, exclusive of Virginia, New York, North Carolina, and Rhode
Island, which had not yet ratified. That new union seceded
from the union formed by the Articles of Confederation in violation
of Article XIII, which barred any alteration in the Articles save by
unanimous consent.16
Significantly, the exhortation of
perpetuity from the Articles—which was repeated five times—was
dropped by the new Constitution. In response to this
embarrassing fact, Lincoln argues that the phrase “a more
perfect union” in the preamble implies at least the
perpetuity of the Articles. Evidently, the Framers either disagreed
or chose to be silent on the matter. (Indeed, common
sense suggests that perpetual—forced—unions are less perfect than
consensual ones, about which more later.) Their
omission is especially significant since the term “perpetuity” was
part of the full name of the Articles: “Articles of Confederation
and Perpetual Union.” Thus, the Framers could not have missed the
term.
More importantly, a comparison of the two
texts reveals, contrary to popular thought, that much copying
was done by the Framers of the Constitution. Entire clauses from the
Articles were imported virtually word for word into the
Constitution. Examples include the following clauses: privileges and
immunities, extradition, full faith and credit, congressional
immunity while in session, ban on state treaties, and ban on state
imposts and duties. The Framers were clearly conversant with the
text of the Articles, yet no mention of perpetuity appears in the
Constitution.
Neither does the Constitution
explicitly say anything about state secession. The word “secession”
does not appear in the Constitution. The Constitution neither
prohibits a state from leaving the union nor explicitly authorizes a
state to do so. Nor does it
explicitly authorize the federal government to forcibly retain a
state that has seceded. (As Lincoln did to the Confederate
succeeded states !)
Secession was apparently not discussed at
the Constitutional Convention.17 This may have been a deliberate
omission:
'It would have been inexpedient to have
forced this issue in 1787, when the fate of any sort of a central
government was doubtful. But [this] subject [was] probably not
even seriously considered at that time.' 18
President Buchanan later argued that if
states had the right to secede, all that anti-federalist concern
about potential federal tyranny was pointless. 19 This is a clever, but strange, legal argument.
It uses circumstantial evidence to establish what certain
opponents of the Constitution might have thought it meant on
a point that was not widely discussed or considered at that time.
Such a method of Constitutional interpretation is tertiary at best.
This article relies primarily on textual analysis and secondarily on
consideration of the purposes of the drafters and ratifiers and
their historical circumstances. It is not at all clear why what
opponents of the Constitution might have thought it meant should be
a criterion of interpretation.
Even if it is considered important,
however, there are still problems with the argument, since many
historians have concluded that most people of the time believed
the states retained the right to secede. 20 Since the Constitution expanded
the powers of the Federal Government, omission from it of any
mention of secession or perpetuity certainly removes a potential
source of opposition to ratification.
Another problem with Buchanan’s argument
is that its initial premise is dubious. That is, it assumes that if
a right to secession existed under the proposed Constitution,
opposition to it would have been less severe. However, even if the
Constitution explicitly allowed states to secede, opponents
of a strong federal government nevertheless had strong incentive to
oppose it for the simple reason that the new Constitution meant the
death of the minimalist Articles of Confederation.
Finally, even if anti-federalists
believed that the states retained the right to secede under the new
Constitution, they could well have thought – with perfect foresight
– that the federal government would nevertheless
ignore that right, and use military force to prevent such a
lawful secession. Thus, Buchanan’s argument is mere
sophistry.
This review of the legal history of
the states contradicts Lincoln’s claim that the states had
always been part of a 'superior union' that implicitly
forbade secession. In fact, such a claim is preposterous. At various
times, the states had been loosely joined for their common defense
without a constitution, while at other times, certain states had
been left entirely out of the union. The very birth of
the states as independent entities took place when they ratified a
Declaration of Independence that enshrined a right of secession as
an inalienable right of the people of each of the
states. 21
We turn next to Lincoln’s discussion of
the Constitution as he believes it relates
to secession. He argues that while states have reserved powers under
the Constitution – presumably referring to, but not mentioning, the
Tenth Amendment – secession is not such a power since it is “a power
to destroy the government itself.” 22 This, of course, is hyperbole and abuse of
language. To depart from, is to 'destroy', according to
Lincoln. If the union government was destroyed by
secession, what was the entity that put a million troops in the
field during the subsequent war?
(Lincoln WORSHIPPED the
Union, and nothing was more important to him
!)
Secession
does not destroy the federal government; it merely ends its authority over a certain territory
and sets up a new government to take its place in that
territory. Nevertheless, even if we meet Lincoln halfway and
concede that secession involves a partial destruction of the power
and scope of the federal government, how does that fact alone prove
its unconstitutionality?
It still remains for Lincoln
to confront (which he always refused to do) the limited and
delegated nature of the powers of the federal
government, and the Ninth and Tenth Amendments which
transform those principles into positive law. He
dodges:
"What is now combated, is the position
that secession is consistent with the Constitution – is
lawful, and peaceful. It is not contended that there is any
express law for it; and nothing should ever be implied as law,
which leads to unjust, or absurd consequences." 23
Nowhere
does Lincoln EVER mention the Ninth and Tenth Amendments. Since
those Amendments carry much of the load of the argument for
secession, and were frequently cited by
secessionists of the day, the failure of the brilliant lawyer to
grapple with them is strong evidence of his inability to do so.
Lawyers have often treated the weak points in their cases with
silence there and much noise elsewhere.
Not
only does Lincoln ignore the Ninth and Tenth Amendments, he simply
replaces them with an amendment of his own:
"states have no rights that are not expressly stated in
the Constitution. It was precisely the point of those amendments,
however, to ensure that no serious lawyer would ever make such an
argument."
The Ninth Amendment
states:
The enumeration
in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to
deny or disparage others retained by the
people.
The precise purpose of the Ninth
Amendment was to respond to the argument Alexander Hamilton made
against attaching a Bill of Rights to the Constitution. Hamilton
argued that the expression of certain rights such as free speech and
the right to bear arms would, by longstanding rules of legal
interpretation, be construed to deny other possible rights. 24 The Ninth Amendment was added to
the Bill of Rights to make clear that rights other than those
specified were indeed retained by the people.
The most authoritative source for
unenumerated rights is the Declaration of Independence. Bennett
Paterson writes, “The Declaration of Independence was a
forerunner of the Ninth Amendment.” 25 As we have seen, in the context of announcing
secession from Great Britain,
the Declaration explicitly supports the right to alter or abolish
government. The author of the leading
constitutional-law treatise of the early-nineteenth century
wrote:
"To deny this right
[secession] would be inconsistent with the principle on which all
our political systems are founded, which is,
that the people have in all cases, a
right to determine how they are governed." 26
Thus, the right of a people to secede from
a larger polity would appear to be among the unenumerated rights
that are protected by the Ninth Amendment.
The Tenth Amendment
states:
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 Tenth Amendment complements the Ninth27 in providing a persuasive textual argument
that the right of secession is reserved to the
states.28 The 'right' to prevent
secession is NOT delegated to the United States. In fact,
the Constitutional Convention considered and rejected a
provision that would have authorized the use of Union force against
a recalcitrant state. On 31 May 1787, the
Constitutional Convention considered adding to the powers
of Congress the right:
to call forth the force of the union against any
member of the union, failing to fulfill its duty under the
articles thereof.29
The clause was rejected after James Madison
spoke against it:
"A Union of the States containing such an ingredient
seemed to provide for its own destruction. The use of force
against a State, would look more like a declaration of war,
than an infliction of punishment, and would probably be considered
by the party attacked as a dissolution of all previous compacts by
which it might be bound." 30
Neither is the right to secede expressly prohibited to
the states. Thus, under the plain meaning of the Tenth
Amendment, the states retain the right to secede. This
position is buttressed by the historical fact that the states had
the right to secede in 1776 and did not expressly give up that right
in ratifying the Constitution. To the contrary, New York and several
other states, in their acts of ratification, noted
which “the powers of government may
be reassumed by the people, whensoever it shall become necessary to
their happiness.”31 The Tenth Amendment also makes clear that a
right or power need not be expressly granted to the states by the
Constitution. Rather, the states are
irrebuttably presumed to have such a
power, unless that power is expressly taken from
them by the Constitution.32
Since the acts of secession were approved
by state legislatures, then ratified by conventions whose delegates
were elected by the people of those states, there is no conflict
between the Ninth and Tenth Amendments in authorizing Confederate
secessions.33
Lincoln was therefore in
error in suggesting that the right of secession had to be spelled
out in the Constitution. He did, however, make an
argument in the alternative that secession should not be “implied as
law [because it] leads to unjust, or absurd consequences.” Among the
“unjust” consequences of secession Lincoln cites are the
financial consequences. The Federal Government (Union) had
borrowed money to purchase the territories of several seceding
states, and had contracted to pay the debts of Texas when it entered
the Union. Also, the seceding states would allegedly escape their
share of the national debt.
All these issues, however, are
collateral to the issue of secession and are
therefore to be regarded as red herrings. We know that even
if the seceding states had hired an accountant, determined the
net amount, if any, owed to the Federal Government (Union),
and tendered payment in that amount, that President
Lincoln would nonetheless have ordered the invasion.
Furthermore, if the war was fought to recover a just debt, then the
Union army would only have needed to confiscate a sufficient
quantity of Confederate property to pay that debt, and leave in
peace. That image is as absurd as Lincoln’s argument. Since
Lincoln’s argument is not a bona fide argument against
secession, we need not consider the complex issue of whether the
seceding states actually owed money to the Federal government. 34
Yet another part of the
Bill of Rights that is ignored by Lincoln is the
Second Amendment, which
speaks of “the right of the people to keep and bear arms” and to
form a “well regulated Militia” in order to protect the security
of a “free State.” A reasonable interpretation
of this Amendment, based on its historical origins, is
that the people of the states have
the right to defend themselves against the tyranny of the federal
government:
The Second Amendment was designed to
guarantee the right of the people to have “their private arms” to
prevent tyranny and to overpower an abusive standing army or select
militia. 35
James Madison, writing before the ratification of the
Second Amendment, commented:
"Let a standing army, fully equal to the resources
of the country, be formed; and let it be entirely at the devotion
of the federal government; still it would not be going too far to
say, that the State governments, with the people on
their side, would be able to repel the danger. . . .
To these would be opposed a militia amounting to near half a
million of citizens with arms in their hands, officered
by men chosen from among themselves, fighting for their common
liberties, and united and conducted by governments possessing
their affections and confidence." 36
If states have the
right to protect themselves against federal tyranny by force, they
would appear to have the right to do so by the peaceful means of
secession. While the right of secession is not
derived from the Second Amendment, the denial of such a right
renders the Second Amendment incongruous. Lincoln not only ignored the Second Amendment, he
perverted its intent – and undercut the premise
of Madison’s argument – by calling out the militias of the
northern states to fight against the militias of the Confederate
States. His agents violated the
Second Amendment rights of citizens in border states by
systematically seizing their muskets. 37
Lincoln cites only two clauses in the Constitution in
his argument against the legality of secession: the supremacy clause
and the guarantee clause. Each argument shares the same logical
defect. The supremacy clause, in Article VI, states:
"This Constitution, and the Laws of the United
States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof . . . shall be the
supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be
bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State
to the Contrary notwithstanding."
This clause could arguably be invoked to negate
secessionist legislation as violative of federal laws against
treason. Reliance on the supremacy clause, however, begs the
question. The supremacy clause can be used as an argument against
secession only if the Constitution requires a state to remain
part of the union38 it does not apply otherwise, nor, obviously,
does it apply to a state that has left the Union. Thus, arguments
from the supremacy clause assume as a premise precisely what is in
dispute: that the state is still part of the Union and thus bound by
the supremacy clause. In light of the arguments previously made that
the Constitution allows secession, one can just as
easily argue that the supremacy clause
barred the Union army’s invasion of the South !
Article IV, §4, states that “The United States shall
guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican Form of
Government.” This clause was cited by President Lincoln to
'justify' a war to prevent secession:
"If a State may lawfully go out of the Union, having
done so, it may also discard the republican form of government; so
that to prevent its going out, is an indispensable means,
to the end, of maintaining the guaranty mentioned; and when
an end is lawful and obligatory, the indispensable means to it,
are also lawful, and obligatory."39
John Adams once complained that “he ‘never understood’
what the 'guarantee of republican government' meant; ‘and I believe
no man ever did or will.’”40 Nevertheless, Lincoln’s argument again begs
the question. The clause itself applies only to a state in the
Union. Thus, to apply the clause, one must first
assume that a state may not lawfully
secede.41
Those portions of the guarantee
clause NOT cited by Lincoln are instructive:
“The Unites States shall . . . protect each of them from Invasion;
and on application of the Legislature, or of the Executive (when the
Legislature cannot be convened) against domestic violence.”
Lincoln failed to cite the “invasion”
clause, of course, since he himself was planning an invasion of the
southern states. Nor could he very well justify
the invasion on the grounds of preventing “domestic violence” since
he lacked the consent of the legislatures of the Confederate states,
to say the least. A plain reading of the Guarantee Clause as a whole
suggests it was written for the benefit of the states, not to
provide a pretext for invading them.
Lincoln’s evasion of these critical portions of the
guarantee clause are symptomatic of the central fallacy of his
constitutional view of secession: his belief that the
Constitution countenanced a military invasion of the South and
resulting extended displacement of its civil authorities by military
rule.
To the contrary, the Constitution contemplates a
structure of state-federal relations in which the states
must take an active and voluntary part.42 This contrasts
sharply with Lincoln’s view of the Union as little more than a prison from which unhappy states are not
allowed to escape:
"The Union, in any
event, won’t be dissolved. We don’t want to dissolve it, and if
you attempt it, we won’t let you! With the
purse and sword, the army and navy and treasury in our hands and
at our command, you couldn’t do it."
(Lincoln) 43
Lincoln believed that
the Union would be fully preserved if that escape was prevented by
force. But was it? The Constitution uses the
word “State” over a hundred times. It does not establish a
prison-inmate relation, but rather a complex political structure in
which powers, duties, and rights are carefully split between the
federal government and the states. Even the Supreme Court, in two
cases critical of secession, admitted this:
'The States are organisms for the performance of
their appropriate functions in the vital system of the larger
polity, of which, in this aspect of the subject, they form a part,
and which would perish if they . . . ceased to perform their
allotted work.' 44
Without the States in Union, there could be no such
political body as the United States.45
The states were expected to choose members of the
House of Representatives and elect representatives to “The Senate of
the Unites States [which] shall be composed of two Senators from
each State.”46 The states were also supposed to select
electors who would then elect a president. In addition, the states
would each maintain militia, which could be called upon by the
(Union)President to defend the nation.47 States were required to respect the
“Privileges and Immunities” of the citizens of other states, give
full faith and credit to the judicial proceedings of other states,
and return fugitives from justice to other states.48 The states were expected to actively
participate in the process of amending the Constitution, such
amendments requiring the consent of three-fourths of the
states.49 State courts were expected to be bound by the
Constitution, treaties, statutes, and Federal Court decisions.50
Some of the state functions listed above are simply
not subject to being effectively compelled by the Federal
Government. Sending representatives to Congress and participating in
the election of a president fall into this category. It is difficult
to conjure an image of a state being forced at gunpoint to elect a
Senator.
Other functions listed are subject to being compelled.
Examples include recognition of the court decisions of other states
and of the Federal Government. Such compulsion, however, in the
presence of a recalcitrant (opposed to being ruled) state
government, requires the establishment of a lasting Federal Military
Government in such state.
To an extent, the South’s decision to seek secession
through military resistance obscured this fact. The South, having
been defeated militarily, and exhausted by war,
reluctantly accepted Federal authority in
order to rid itself of Federal Military occupation. (The
Southern states were really given no choice). In contrast, if a
state were to pursue secession by means of non-violent resistance
and complete non-involvement with the Federal Government, an
anti-secessionist Federal Government would have to
permanently occupy and rule that state in the manner
of a colonial power (like the colonies were under the British),
exercising even greater authority than Great
Britain held over the American Colonies prior to 1776 ! 51 That ugly scenario, however, is precisely what
anti-secessionist thinkers are obliged to assert was the
intent of the ratifiers of the Constitution of 1788, that
is, the intent of the thirteen states which had recently fought long
and hard to escape colonial status.
While it may be true that some of the Framers intended
the Union to be 'perpetual', it is unlikely that even
those Framers believed the Constitution authorized the establishment
of a military dictatorship (what Lincoln enforced to get his
way) to keep it so. Thus, it could be said that
while the issue of secession was perhaps not contemplated by the
Constitution, neither was forced
union at the cost of the military occupation of
recalcitrant states.52 Such military
occupation flatly contradicts the Guarantee Clause drafted by those
same Framers.
From the moment federal troops occupied the South, the
governments of those states could no longer be considered
“republican.” With apologies to John Adams, by republican I mean a
government exercising limited powers delegated to it by the people,
whose officials are answerable to the people in regular and free
elections.53 Since the very
purpose of invading the South was to destroy the state governments
established by the people, in militarily occupying those states, the
federal government breached its obligation to guarantee to each
state a republican form of government.54 Since the
Federal Government (Union) necessarily (deliberately) violated the
Constitution’s Guarantee Clause by waging war on the seceding
states, it should be evident that it had no
Constitutional authority to prevent such
secessions.
The strength of this argument is best seen by noting
the absurd linguistic
manipulations used to justify the constitutionality of military
occupation. Andrew Johnson, whom President Lincoln appointed the
Military Governor of Tennessee, and who, later, as President, would
appoint other Military Governors in the South, said in 1862 that
'his authority' to Militarily rule Tennessee came to him by way of
the Guarantee Clause!55 The Lincoln and Johnson Federal
Union governments did not even allow the Southern states to elect
their own governors ! THAT is how oppressive and
tyrannical the Union Federal Government was over the South,
treating those states more like prisoners of the Federal Union
Empire !! The 'republicanism' thus guaranteed by Johnson
apparently consisted of forcing on
the people of the state of Tennessee certain forms of government and
policies they evidently did not desire. The
rationale? “[The] right of self-government could be temporarily
impaired but only for the purpose of assuring its eventual and
permanent triumph.”56
The other rationale for Military Occupation is also
self-contradictory. In Coleman v Tennessee, the Supreme Court
held Military Occupation lawful, not on Constitutional grounds, but
by resorting to International Law principles which
apply primarily to independent nations.
Though the late war was not between independent
nations technically, but between different portions of the same
nation, yet having taken the proportions of a territorial war, the
insurgents having become formidable enough to be recognized as
belligerents, the same doctrine must be held to apply. The
right to govern the territory of the enemy during its military
occupation is one of the incidents of war . . . and the
character and form of the government to be established depend
entirely upon the laws of the conquering State or the orders of
its military commander.57
Thus, to justify the otherwise Unconstitutional
Military Occupation of a state, the Supreme Court treats that
state as if it were an independent nation, implicitly
recognizing the validity of its secession.
What the Court did not
cite was any Constitutional provision which justified the war in the
first place. Since the invocation of international
law was based on the fact of war, and the Union’s
involvement in that war violated the Constitution, it
is evident that the Constitution’s supremacy clause58 forbade any resort to International
Law to override the Constitution. The
Unconstitutional and amoral nature of the Court’s
reasoning can be seen by assuming that the
Confederacy, in violation of the Constitution, had conquered the
North and set up a military government there. The Supreme Court, by
the same logic they applied in Coleman, would be
compelled to endorse the legality of that Military
dictatorship !
Much ink has been spilled over the ancient debate
between those, such as Jefferson and Calhoun, who hold that the
Constitution is a compact among the states, and those, including
Marshall and Webster, who deem it “an instrument of
'perpetual' efficacy” created by the people of the nation as a
group.59 The outcome of this debate can have no impact
on the above conclusions, since those conclusions rest primarily on
an analysis of the relevant texts and secondarily on the historical
context in which those texts were drafted. Nevertheless, because of
the historical association between this debate and the issue of
secession, a brief evaluation is appropriate.
Ironically, reliance on the compact theory tends to
weaken the case for secession by suggesting that it is not justified
by the actual text of the Constitution. The main textual problem
with the compact theory is that the Constitution does not read like
a contract among the states. The main logical problem is that, while
this theory claims that the Constitution is an implied contract
among the states, that document creates a separate
entity – the Federal Government – which would not appear to
be bound by the contract because it is not a contracting party.
Thus, secessionists erred in choosing poor ground on which to do
battle with Unionists. The compact theory also creates an insoluble
procedural difficulty. If the Constitution is a compact, the
violation of which allows a state to withdraw, who is to judge
whether such a violation has occurred? However, reliance on
the Ninth and Tenth Amendments, under which secession is
a reserved power, eliminates this procedural obstacle
to secession.60
Nevertheless, the compact theory contains an essential
element of truth. It takes the long way around the barn to arrive at
the rather obvious conclusion that the states enacted the
Constitution for their mutual benefit.
Shifting then, from the quaint, complex, and controversial compact
theory to the indisputable proposition that a Constitution should be
interpreted according to the purposes of its ratifiers, it
becomes apparent that the purposes of the Constitution do not
envision the use of armed force against a state that has
concluded it is no longer benefiting from the Union. The
Constitution may not be a literal compact among the states, but
neither is it a sentence of perpetual
imprisonment.
While Unionists assert that the compact theory is
nothing more than “scholastic metaphysics,”61 their own view of the Constitution contains
elements which fail to connect with reality at any point. Bryce
wrote that the Constitution was “an instrument of perpetual
efficacy, emanating from the whole people.”62 Yet, as already noted, it contains no such
language, and, in fact, its Framers deliberately chose
not to carry over the use of the term “perpetual union” from the
Articles of Confederation to the Constitution.
Likewise, the Constitution did not “emanate
from the whole people.” Leaving aside the preamble for the
moment, the actual language of the texts of Articles VII and V is to
the contrary:
'The Ratification of the Conventions of nine States
shall be sufficient for the Establishment of this Constitution
between the States so ratifying the Same. . . . Done in Convention
by the Unanimous Consent of the States present.
[The Constitution may be amended] when ratified by
the Legislatures of three fourths of the several States, or by
Conventions in three fourths, thereof. . . .'
Since the
Constitution was proposed by a convention called by the states, was
ratified by the states, and can only be amended by the states, any
notion that “the government proceeds directly from the
people,”63
that it is “of the people” and “by the
people,”64
or that it “emanates from the whole people” can only be described as
metaphysical nonsense invented by those who view the states as a
mere inconvenience on the path to creating an all-powerful central
government.
Much has been made by Unionists of the Preamble:
We, the People of the United States, in Order
to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure
domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the
general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves
and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution of
the United States of America.65
This reliance is understandable. If one lacks support
for one’s view in the text of the Constitution, one seeks it
in the preamble. The italicized phrase, however, has no
unambiguous meaning. Its meaning depends on whether the word
“United,” an adjective, or “States,” a noun, is given greater
emphasis. However, there is no need to resolve this issue, because
the presence in the Preamble of the phrase, “We, the People of the
United States” was an accident! It originally read:
That the people of the States of New Hampshire,
Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey,
Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South
Carolina and Georgia do ordain, declare and establish the
following constitution for the government of ourselves and our
posterity.66
Judge Eugene Gary explains:
It was amended, not for the purpose of submitting
the Constitution to the people in the aggregate, but because the
convention could not tell, in advance, which States would ratify
it.67
Even though Unionists have placed great
stock in the Preamble, their recitations rarely extend past the
first 15 words. Nothing thereafter is
particularly helpful to their cause. The Union’s
creation of Martial Law in the South can hardly be within the ambit
of “establishing justice” or “securing the blessings of liberty.”
“Domestic tranquility” was clearly not insured by the bloodiest war
ever fought in North America. The “general
welfare” was not promoted when one section of the nation fought,
subdued, and militarily ruled the other for 16 years.68 And “Providing for
the common defense” does not in any way sanction an attack on
eleven states.
Ultimately, one must look beyond mere logic and the
four corners of the Constitution to identify the Unionist spirit
that led to the Civil War:
The Union was . . . more than a mere compact between
separate entities, separate states. It was rather a union of early
history and future promise, of generations past and generations
still to come, of agriculture and industry, of plains and
seaboard, of the vast hosts of mystical and emotional forces which
give to man a greater sense of belonging, a greater sense of
community.69
Gary Wills denies the claim that Lincoln “did not
really have arguments for union, just a kind of mystical
attachment to it.”70 He argues that Lincoln got most of his
pro-union legal arguments from Daniel Webster. Wills’s discussion of
those arguments (e.g., the Union is older than the states, and the
Declaration of Independence sanctions war against seceding states
-[it does not]) tends one to the view that Webster was a
union mystic as well.
A THOUGHT
EXPERIMENT
Those still harboring doubts about the
constitutionality of secession in 1861 should attempt a sincere
answer to the question: would the Constitution, as
construed by President Lincoln and his allies in
all eras, have been ratified in 1788? To answer this question,
we must first make explicit those provisions Lincoln and his
successors thought were implicit in the Constitution. For the
sake of realism, these provisions will be organized in the form of
an imaginary Eleventh Amendment to the Constitution.71 Such an amendment would read as follows:
(according to Lincoln - this is HIS vision of the
Union Federal Government and HIS
Constitution)
(Imaginary) Amendment
XI
Section 1. Notwithstanding the
Guarantee Clause and the Ninth and Tenth Amendments, no state may
ever secede from the Union for any reason, except by an amendment
pursuant to Article V.72
Section 2. If any State attempts to
secede without authorization, the Federal Government shall invade
such State with sufficient military force to suppress the
attempted secession.
Section 3. The Federal Government may
require the militias of all states to join in the use of force
against the seceding State.
Section 4. After suppressing said
secession, the Federal Government shall rule said State by Martial
Law until such time as said State shall accept permanent
Federal supremacy and alter its constitution to
forbid future secessions.[What he
actually DID to the Southern states !]
Section 5. After suppressing said
secession, the Federal Government shall force said State to ratify
a new constitutional amendment which gives the Federal
Government the right to police the states whenever it believes
those states are violating the rights of their citizens.
[Lincoln actually DID this to the
Southern states !]
Section 6. The President
may, of his own authority, suspend the operation of the Bill of
Rights and the writ of habeas corpus, in a seceding or
loyal state, if in his sole judgment, such is necessary to
preserve the Union.73 [Thus the
President of the Federal Union Government is the official DICTATOR
OVER ALL ! This is how Lincoln viewed his Presidential position,
and the actions he actually
took !]
This imaginary amendment contains
a fair summary of what Lincoln thought the Constitution, ratified in
1788, had to say implicitly about state secession. Would the
Constitution have been ratified if it contained such an amendment?
Would that amendment have been ratified at any time between 1788 and
1861? The answer to both questions, according to any intellectually
honest historian or constitutional lawyer, must be a resounding “No!” If that is the case, however,
then the dense fog made up of equal parts of Websterian metaphysics
and Lincolnesque legalese disintegrates to reveal the truth of Albert Jay Nock’s thesis: the
Constitution of 1788 did indeed expire in 1861.
Note: The
Original Constitution that our Founders created, gave up
EVERYTHING in order to establish the original America and its
government, ceased at the hands of Lincoln in 1861. Lincoln
was the first President to take action to
open the way for the One World Government Elite to take
over America, and begin to change it to fit their One World agenda,
which they did ! Lincoln could be called the very first true
"Liberal".
In 1861, the Constitution did NOT
authorize the Federal Government to use military force to prevent a
state from seceding from the Union. The Constitution established a
Federal Government of limited powers
delegated to it by the people, acting through their respective
states. There is no express grant to the Federal
Government of a power to use armed force to prevent a
secession, and there is no clause which does so by
implication. To the contrary, the
notion of the use of armed force against the states, and the
subsequent military occupation and rule of the states by the federal
government, does violence to the overall structure and purpose of
the Constitution by turning the servant (gov't) of the states
into their master. Any doubts about whether the
Federal Government had such a power must be resolved in favor of the
states, since the Ninth and Tenth Amendments explicitly
reserve the vast residue of powers and rights to the states and to
the people of those states.
LINCOLN’S POLITICAL
ARGUMENTS AGAINST SECESSION :
While Lincoln the lawyer made a variety
of legal arguments against secession, Lincoln the politician made
two main political arguments against secession. He argued that the
option of secession violated the principle of majority rule and that
it led ultimately to anarchy.74 However, the line between legal and political
arguments is not precise. Further, it is undoubtedly true that
considerations of policy and consequences do impact on judgments
about what the law is and should be. Thus, a brief consideration of
Lincoln’s views on that issue is in order. It must be emphasized,
however, that the distinction between what the law is and what it
should be is a real one. Thus, the conclusions about Lincoln’s
legal arguments remain valid, regardless of the 'wisdom' of
his political arguments. In this context, Lincoln’s arguments
can be seen as points which should have been made at the
Constitutional Convention of 1787, and incorporated into the
Constitution, but were not.
Lincoln’s central political arguments
against secession are contained in the following passage from the
First Inaugural Address, he delivered on 4 March 1861:
"We divide upon [all our constitutional
controversies] into majorities and minorities. If a minority . . .
will secede rather than acquiesce [to the majority], they make a
precedent which, in turn, will divide and ruin them; for a
minority of their own will secede from them, whenever a majority
refuses to be controlled by such minority. . . . The central idea
of secession, is the essence of anarchy." 75
The argument contains two closely related
elements:
(1) secession violates the principle
of majority rule; and
(2) secession ultimately leads to
anarchy.
Majority Rule76
If anything can be identified as the key
axiom of Lincoln’s thought, it is majoritarianism. He was devoted to
the principle despite his numerous electoral losses and the
rejection of his presidential candidacy by 60 percent of the
electorate. Although Lincoln personally opposed slavery, before the
war he had favored allowing the majority in each southern state to
decide the issue.77 For the sake of a majoritarianism which he
believed was undermined by secession, he ordered the
invasion of the South. What
Lincoln never confronted was the fact that the Civil War was
a war between two majorities.78 In 1860, Lincoln did not receive a single vote
in North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee, Louisiana,
Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, or Texas.79 Not one !
The ultimate justification of majority
rule is that it is better than minority rule. Its value is purely
utilitarian – more people get what they want than if we let the
minority rule. By its very nature, the utility of majority rule
increases as the political unit is divided into smaller and
more homogeneous units. For example, if the largely black Roxbury
section of Boston seceded from the city,80 its voters, currently outvoted by the majority
white population, could increase their utility by electing officials
and policies they preferred, while the white majority would remain
able to enact its own preferred policies.
Secession therefore, far from being
hostile to majority rule, allows multiple satisfied majorities
to be created out of large political units which can only satisfy
one majority bloc at a time. The only difference, of course, is
that the old majority is no longer able to impose its will on the
old minority. It is this loss of
power over the escaped minority and its territory, and
not any devotion to majority rule, that so irks Unionists of all
eras, often leading them to start wars to retain power over
the seceders. Evidence that such was the case with
the Civil War is contained in the following passages from journals
published at that time:
[The North] fought . . . for
all those delicious dreams of national predominance in
future ages, which she must relinquish as soon as the
Union is severed.81
We love the Union because . . .
it renders us now the equal of the greatest European Power, and in
another half century, will make us the greatest, richest, and most
powerful people on the face of the earth.82
(So you can see
what the REAL motivation of the Union was, and
is.)
In examining these two quotes, it is
remarkable to note that the first journal, which was British,
pro-South, and post-War, saw the war in the same nationalistic and
imperialistic terms as did the second journal, which was American,
pro-North, and pre-War. It should be obvious that wars of
this type are not sanctioned by the majority principle; they are
condemned by it.
Anarchy
We have seen how the right of secession
and the principle of majoritarianism both tend to create
pressure for smaller political units. Lincoln argued that the
principle of secession led by infinite regress to anarchy, as each
minority seceded to become a majority. However, this theory is
killed by an ugly fact – history shows that secessions, like
revolutions, happen only seldom, because “mankind are more disposed
to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by
abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed.” After all, it
takes a “long train of abuses and usurpations” to instigate
secessionist activities.
The best example of this is, after all,
the Civil War itself. There were Unionists in the South and
secessionists in the North, however, no further secessions took
place after the start of the war, even though those were times of
great stress and social conflict. Evidently, the people on both
sides used their common sense to put a brake on Lincoln’s infinite
regress.
Even in theory, an infinite number of
secessions is unlikely because there is unlikely to be an infinite
succession of major grievances which are clearly solvable by
secession. Ireland, for example, solved its perceived major problem
by getting rid of the British in 1922 (except in Northern Ireland).
Evidently, no further significant political problem there is
sufficiently connected to the option of further secession to stir
any interest in the subject. Norway seceded from Sweden in 1905 by a
vote of 368,208 to 272!83 Since then, little has been heard from Norway
about further secession.
Lincoln was
wrong in believing that the right of secession invariably leads to
the break-up of nations. Rather, the
recognition of such a right will tend to discourage the exploitation
of states by the central Federal Government, which
in turn will encourage states to remain in the Union. Applying that
principle to 1861, can the possibility be denied that it was the
Union’s militant rejection, over several decades, of the right
to secede that was itself the proximate cause of Confederate
secession? That is, the seceding states knew their secession
would be violently resisted – Lincoln had told them so – thus, they
made a strategic decision to make this fight before the North grew
any stronger, economically or militarily. Had Lincoln recognized
a right of peaceful secession, the Confederate states may well have
stayed in the Union and tried to work out their differences, knowing
that if such attempt failed, secession remained a viable option.
Jefferson himself believed that if the South ever broke off, it
would eventually return to the Union, presumably after it had
renegotiated its constitutional arrangement.84
In this sense, secession actually
reduces anarchy by allowing a peaceful resolution of disputes
between large political groups.85 In contrast, Lincoln’s policy of forced association
led to four years of anarchy and war in the South, followed
by decades of sporadic violence and
lawlessness.
The most interesting aspect of the topic
of secession is how little attention or discussion there is
about the obverse of secession: the expulsion of a portion of
a nation by the larger and more powerful sector. It is always the
case that the people living in a small part of a nation-state desire
to secede; never that the larger part wants to kick them out.
The very fact that a portion of the
nation wants to secede, by the law of demonstrated
preference,86
proves that those citizens believe they are being harmed by being
subjects of that nation. Similarly, the rarity
of historical expulsions proves that governments benefit from ruling
over and exploiting the various regions that are within their
control. This fact is consistent with the view of the nation-state –
developed by Oppenheimer, Nock, and Rothbard87 – as the organization of the political
(coercive) means of acquiring wealth:
There are two methods, or means, and
only two, whereby man’s needs and desires can be satisfied. One is
the production and exchange of wealth; this is the economic
means. The other is the uncompensated appropriation of wealth
produced by others; this is the political means. . . . The
State is the organization of the political means.88
Another significant aspect of secession
is that, by and large, the parties that urge various legal,
political, and moral arguments for the right of secession, do so
because they are less powerful than the majority block. If they were
more powerful, they would simply secede and be done with it ! In
sum, a seceding group is generally the weaker and
economically exploited junior partner in a nation-state. Thus, in
general, we may say that in any given secession dispute, right is on the side of the proponents of
secession, while might is on the
side of their opponents. That being the case,
Lincoln’s political arguments against
secession must be rejected.
LEGAL DEVELOPMENTS
SINCE 1861
If states had the right of secession in
1861, have any developments subsequently removed that right? That is
actually a complex question for which no entirely satisfactory
answer exists. This is largely because of the eternal question:
who has the final say on
interpreting the Constitution?
One fallacy that can be quickly disposed
of is that the Civil War answered the question of secession forever.
We may call this fallacy the Ulysses S. Grant theory of
Constitutional law: “the right of a state to secede from the Union
[has been] settled forever by the highest tribunal – arms – that man
can resort to.”89 Questions of Constitutional law, however,
cannot be settled on the battlefield:
Throughout history, force appears as the arbiter of the moment.
. . . Reason, organically slow-reacting against force only when
the ill effects of the latter become so general as to be
inevitably obvious – finally confirms or annuls its judgment.90
If indeed secession was a state and
people’s right, all the Union victory
proved was that the stronger party in a Constitutional
conflict may violate the law with
impunity.
Neither was the issue of secession
settled by various Supreme Court decisions resolving questions
tangential to the issue itself.91 First, in none of those cases was the Court
asked to deal squarely with the issue of state secession when the
outcome of the case impacted on the rights of the seceding states
and those states were represented by counsel before the Court.
Second, none of those cases contained a detailed and serious
analysis of the issues, arguments, and Constitutional clauses one
would expect to see in a comprehensive treatment of the issue by the
highest court in the land. Therefore, these cases carry little moral
or legal authority.
Furthermore, if the issue of secession
had been taken to the Federal Supreme Court, for instance by the
Confederacy seeking an injunction against President Lincoln, the
Court would likely have responded by refusing to hear the case on
the grounds that it dealt mainly with a political question, that is,
a question which, although a legal one to be sure, is not suitable
for resolution by the Court.92 Thus, secession is a question that has never
been satisfactorily resolved by the Supreme Court, and is not likely
to be addressed by the Court in the future.
Since the Civil War, there have been two
main legal developments impacting on the issue of secession: the
(forced under duress) 'amendment' of state constitutions to
prohibit secession, and the 'passage' of the Fourteenth Amendment
(that was never legally passed). While under Military control and
occupation, the states of Arkansas, North Carolina, Florida, South
Carolina, Mississippi, and Virginia each enacted new constitutions
under great duress, containing clauses prohibiting secession.93 Soon thereafter, the troops were finally
withdrawn. It was the only way the Southern states could get the
Union Federal Military to leave their states and stop the illegal
Military occupation.
Such clauses, however, did not
in any way serve to abolish the right of those states to secede from
the Union. First, these
clauses were added only under great duress. It is
an ancient principle of law that agreements made under duress are
voidable at the option of the aggrieved party.
Second, those states remain free at
any time to amend their constitutions to delete the ban on
secession.94 If they choose not to do so, that merely means
they are choosing not to exercise a legal right, which is quite
distinct from not possessing that right. Finally, since all
states have equal rights in the Union,95 the fact that other states have not
relinquished their right to secede means that these southern states
cannot be deemed to have relinquished theirs.96
The 'Fourteenth Amendment', however,
poses a more serious problem for a Constitutional doctrine of
secession. That Amendment reads in relevant part:
Section 1. All persons born or
naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction
thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State
wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which
shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the
United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life,
liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any
person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the
laws.
The Amendment goes on to make apparent
reference to the Civil War by prohibiting any military officer, who,
having previously sworn to support the Constitution, engaged in
“insurrection or rebellion” against it, from serving as a Federal
official.97 It further provides that no state shall assume
or pay any debt “incurred in aid of insurrection or rebellion
against the United States,” but that no debts
incurred in “suppressing insurrection or rebellion shall be
questioned.”98
The Amendment grants the
Federal Government (Union) vast new powers
over the states in the context of a concern over the
post-Civil War welfare of the recently freed slaves. That fact, and
the pejorative references to “insurrection and rebellion” quoted
above, allow a persuasive argument to be made that the
Fourteenth Amendment bars secession. If it did not,
states could simply secede, thus defeating the purpose of the
Amendment by avoiding federal regulation under §1 of the Amendment.
Ironically, if this argument is correct, the pre-war case for
secession is strengthened.99 That is, if the Fourteenth Amendment bars
secession, then presumably there was such a right before the
'Amendment' was 'passed'. (Note: It actually was
never legally or Constitutionally passed ! This was the
dream of Lincoln).
Is there any room for a secessionist
argument to be made in the post-Fourteenth Amendment era? First, the
obvious can be stated: the Fourteenth Amendment does not explicitly
prohibit secession. One would have
thought that the pro-Unionists who controlled all American politics
after the War (and still do) would have included such a
provision. Their failure to do so, whatever the
motive,100 means that resort may still be had to the
pro-secession arguments stated above. Unionists might
respond by arguing that the Fourteenth Amendment implicitly
bans secession, and, since it was 'passed' after the other
portions of the Constitution, it prevails over them in any conflict
of meaning. That argument would be perfectly valid if the Amendment
explicitly banned secession. However, since it does not, we
are left with the need to resolve an apparent implicit conflict
between the Fourteenth Amendment and the Ninth and Tenth Amendments
(true Amendments). The best that can be said in this context is that
any secession movement designed to restore blacks to their
pre-Civil War political and economic status would be barred
by the Fourteenth Amendment.
Second,
the Fourteenth Amendment was ratified by the seceding states under
the same type of duress which forced several of them to ban
secession in their state constitutions. Indeed,
'ratification' of the Fourteenth Amendment was made a pre-condition
of readmission of the states into the Union by the Reconstruction
Act of 1867.101 It was only after such ratification that
Union Military rule was ended in those states. Thus, as it regards
the issue of secession, the
Fourteenth Amendment is badly tainted,
having been enacted under the same duress which this
article concludes was a violation of the right to secession, i.e,
the invasion and occupation of the South by the Union
army. Thus, any Fourteenth-Amendment-based argument
against secession is self-negating, since it must implicitly concede
a pre-Amendment right to secede, the violation of which led to the
enactment of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Finally, in resolving any conflict
between the Fourteenth and the Ninth and Tenth Amendments, reliance
on the doctrine of inalienable rights would be useful. An
inalienable right is one possessed by a human being that is so basic
to his or her welfare that we do not enforce any contract or
agreement in which a person relinquishes such a right.102 As Murray Rothbard writes:
There are certain vital things which, in
natural fact and in the nature of man, are inalienable, i.e.,
they cannot in fact be alienated, even voluntarily.
Specifically, a person cannot alienate his will, more
particularly his control over his own mind and body. Each man has
control over his own mind and body. Each man has control over his
own will and person, and he is, if you wish, “stuck” with that
inherent and inalienable ownership. Since his will and control over
his own person are inalienable, then so also are his rights
to control that person and will. That is the ground for
the famous position of the Declaration of Independence that man’s
natural rights are inalienable; that is, they cannot be
surrendered, even if the person wishes to do
so.103
If the
right of secession is inalienable, then that right, protected as it
is by the Ninth and Tenth Amendments, survives any attempt to
relinquish it through the Fourteenth Amendment.
As such, the right to “alter or abolish” forms of government does
appear to be a fundamental right that should be considered
inalienable.104 It is
integral to the protection of those other rights which Jefferson
termed inalienable, such as the rights to life and liberty. Thus, it
is a right that should survive regardless of its alleged implicit
relinquishment under the Fourteenth
Amendment.
CONCLUSION
:
The
Union’s invasion and subsequent military occupation of the
Confederacy were illegal. Today, however, the
Fourteenth Amendment arguably prohibits secession by implication.
Nevertheless, that Amendment, insofar
as it can be interpreted to bar state secession – is badly tainted.
It is the direct result of the illegal invasion and
subsequent military domination of the South. [Note: The Fourteenth
Amendment was drawn up by Lincoln and his allies, and was never
legally passed. It was Lincoln's dream on paper; his total
disregard for the Original Constitution, and his total
dedication to build and preserve the Federal Union at ANY cost. He
would not allow a simple thing like the Constitution stand in his
way - he'd just change it ! And he DID
!]
Even the Fourteenth Amendment does not
explicitly outlaw secession, and there remains a conflict between
the Fourteenth Amendment and the Ninth and Tenth Amendments in this
regard. This conflict should be resolved by reference to
the doctrine of inalienable rights, of which secession is
one.
No doubt
today’s Federal Supreme Court, if it took the case, would rule
secession to be treasonous and illegal, not to mention highly
'Politically Incorrect'. The Supreme Court, being an agency of the
Federal Government, has, since John Marshall’s day,
usually given the Constitution that interpretation which
increases the power of the Federal Government over states and
persons.105 Its continual
abdication of its purported role of guaranteeing Constitutionally
limited government is in large part
responsible for the recent revival of interest in the theory and
practice of secession. However, far more important than
what the Federal Supreme Court would decide, is the people’s own
understanding of the true meaning of the Constitution.
The people retain the
inalienable right to alter or abolish a government destructive to
their liberties.
The existence of slavery in the
Confederate States in 1861 cannot alter this truth. The
Constitution did not forbid slavery prior to the passage of the
Thirteenth Amendment in 1865, and since chattel slavery
no longer exists in the United States, and never did exist in
Florida, it can no longer be used to legally or morally justify war
on a seceding state. That is as it should be, since, ultimately,
a policy of violent opposition to
secession is a policy of forced association.
As with all forms of forced
association, the stronger party will tend to exploit the
weaker. Such is
the case with the master-slave relationship.
Such is the case when a state is
forced to remain in the Union against its will. Both forms of forced association are immoral,
and both should be – and are – forbidden by the
Constitution.
Had the commander of the Union
army, on entering Virginia |