1 REESE LIBRARY UNIVERSITY .OF CALIFORNIA. I %eceived MARIS 1893 ,g^ .j ^Accessions No. 5*0 i4-l4~Kt . Class No. TM— iJ! THE CIYIL SERYICE LAW: A DEFENSE OF ITS PRINCIPLES, WITH CORROBORATIVE EVIDENCE FROM THE WORKS OF MANY EM- INENT AMERICAN STATESMEN; BY WILLIAM HARRISON CLARKE. 4^^ OP THP. ^^ Uiri7BIlSIT7] Offices are public trusts, not private spoila.— Z)ant«Z WebtUr. No people have a higher public iutorest, except the preservation of their liberties, than integrity in Iho administration of their government in all its branches.— CT. S. Supreme Court. NEW YORK: CHARLES T. DILLINGHAM, 718 i^- 720 Broadway, Copyright, 1887, by William H. Clarke. 6~oi4Lj.6 LoTEJOY, Son & Co., Elkctrotypers, 45 to 51 Rose St., New York. PREFACE. The chief object of this work is to defend the prin- ciples of the Civil Service Law. It is not a criticism of the law, nor does it treat to any great extent of civil service economy as such, except in so far as the subject is expounded incidentally, but with ability and in the aggregate with great success, by many Ameri- can statesmen, extracts from whose works embellish and enrich its pages. These extracts in fact constitute a great part of the civil service history and literature of the country, particularly its early history and liter- ature, and therefore constitute much of the value of this volume. This is well, and is besides opportune, for the subject of civil service reform is one of the greatest issues of the day, and too much light cannot be shed upon it. A work that even aids in elucida- ting such an important subject ought to be accepta- ble ; indeed it appears to be one of the needs of the times. The fact that one chapter of the work is mostly devoted to corruption at elections and remedial election laws, only adds to its value, for the subject is not only collateral but of great importance, of as great impor- tance perhaps as civil service reform itself. Whatever IV PBEE'AC:^. may be said of the original parts of the volume, the compiled parts are certainly both useful and instructive reading, and ought to aid in elevating and purifying American politics. The importance of a sound civil service policy was never better illustrated perhaps than by the New York Times, when criticising in 1864 Senator Sumner's civil service bill. It said the subject was second in impor- tance only to the crushing of the then rebellion. The Times was then under the editorial direction of Mr. Henry J. Raymond, a statesman and one of the best known editors of his day. I am indebted to Mr. George William Curtis, the President of the National Civil Service Reform League, for valuable suggestions and encouragement to perse- vere in my researches, and also to the Astor Library for the use of many books. Other obligations are ac- knowledged here and there throughout the volume. This work, it should be understood, refers to the natio9ial civil service law. The civil service laws of New York and Massachusetts are patterned after the national law, but of course contain provisions peculiar to themselves. W. H. C. New York, July, 1888. CONTENTS. PAGE INTRODUCTIOJi;' — History of Civil Service Legislation, Summary of the salient points of the Civil Service Law, &c 7 CHAPTER I. FRUITS AND FACTS. Tlie liiw promotes Education, Efficiency, and Economy. — Its chief Object. — Its Constitutionality. — In harmony with the Teachings of Madison, Hamilton, and Jay. — Aids instead of Hampers the President, wlio makes his own Rules for its Execution 17 CHAPTER II. COMPETITIVE EXAMINATIONS. Trial by Probation. — Appointees independent of Politicians. — Com- petitive Examinations superior to non-Competitive. — The Edu- cation required. — Competitive Exaitfinations in large firms. ... 26 CHAPTER III. SOME OP THE LAW'S PROMISES. Reforms of priceless value Probable. — The danger of Bribery at Elections. — Opinions thereon of Messrs. Buchanan, Harrison, Benton, Jefferson, Barton, Bell, and Graves. — The chief Eng- lish Election Laws from 1276 to 1883 38 CHAPTER IV. THE PATRONAGE AND MERIT SYSTEMS COMPARED. The Merit System more favorable to ex-Soldiers and Sailors. — Other points of difference between the two Systems. — How the President and Congressmen were harassed under tlie Patron- age System. — Congressman Kleiner of Indiana declines a re- nomination on account of the annoyance of Officeseeking , 63 VI CONTENTS. CHAPTER V. DANGER OF AN OFFICEHOLDERS' ARISTOCRACY. PAGE The importance of the Subject. — The Cause of and Remedy for Aristocracies. — No danger in Life Tenures when based on Merit. — George William Curtis's opinion of them. — Insolence of Office. — Great depravity of the Roman Aristocracy (note). . 61 CHAPTER VI. THE PATRONAGE SYSTEM. The practicability of the System only Apparent. — General Jackson versus President Jackson. — Probable causes of his Radical Change. — Probable cause of Senator Marcy's use of the word " Spoils." — The spoils doctrine Undemocratic and Ruinous. — Appalling Corruption at Washington after the Civil War. — The Civil Service Law a Rock to build upon 71 CHAPTER VII. LEADING STATESMEN'S PRINCIPLES. The Merit System both Preached and Practiced by the six first Presidents (forty years). — Powerful blows at the Patronage System. — A profound disquisition on its Evils by William Paley, D.D., of England (1785). — Justice James Wilson on Patronage and Official Appointments 91 CHAPTER VHI. THE POWER OF REMOVAL. A remedy for its Mistakes or Abuse. — The salient points of the great debate in the first Congress (1789) on the Power of Removal. — The congressional decision then made criticised by Benton, Webster, and others. — The Four-years' Term Law and some opinions of it (note) 113 CHAPTER IX. COMPARATIVE POLITICAL ECONOMY. Its Utility.— The Civil Service Systems of England, Canada, British India, Germany, France, Sweden, Norway, and China 177 LXDEX 195 ;nirivERsiT7] INTRODUCTION. The Civil Service Law was passed January 16, 1883. The bill, which was introduced in the Senate by- Senator George H. Pendleton of Ohio, and is commonly known as " the Pendleton bill," was drawn originally by Mr. Dorman B. Eaton of New York, as Chairman of the Committee on Legislation of the New York Civil Service Reform Association. The law was preceded by two other laws, namely. Sections 164 and 1753 of the United States Revised Statutes (printed on page 23). Sec. 164 was passed March 3, 1853 ; Sec. 1753 March 3, 1871. The latter was originated by Senator Lyman Trumbull of Illinois. The civil service law bill was preceded by three other bills, all of which failed to pass Congress. The first was introduced, in 1864, by Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts, whose only recorded words are (Cong. Globe, 1864, p. 1985): ** The object of the bill is to provide a competitive system of examination in the civilt Be j;vice of the United States." The bill, which is only a good foundation on which to build, may be found in ('harles Sumner's Works (Boston, 1874), vol. viii, p. 452. The billy owing perhaps to the pressure of other busi- Till VABIOUS CITIL SERVICE BILLS. ness, never came up for discussion by the Senate. The second bill, which was wider in its scope than Senator Sumner's, was introduced, in 1865, by Representative Thomas Allen Jenckes of Rhode Island, and again, with improvements, in 1866. Mr. Jenckes advocated his bill ably, argumentatively, and earnestly during several ses- sions of Congress. The third bill was introduced, in 1869, by Senator Carl Schurz of Missouri. It gave the President the option of selecting from among the men who passed the Board, or of ordering men of his own selection before it, and required five and eight year terms of office. The object of the five-year term was to prevent such appointments from being made on the year of the inauguration of the President. The idea was, as explained by Mr. Schurz, that appointments, as a rule, should not be made until the administration was well settled down to business. Senator Schurz's bill required a year of probationary service, Representative Jenckes's six months. Both required competitive ex- aminations. Congress did not distinguish itself by sub- stituting Section 1753 for these bills, and that is saying a great deal. Other civil service bills have been intro- duced at different times by Senators Henry L. Dawes of Massachusetts and George F. Edmunds of Vermont, and Representatives John A. Kasson of Iowa, Albert S. Willis of Kentucky, and Thomas M. Bayne of Penn- sylvania. It is noteworthy in this connection that Represen- tative Samuel Brenton of Indiana, on August 11, 1852, offered an amendment to a resolution proposing to in- THE LAW'S CHIEF PROVISIONS. IX crease the pay of civil service clerks in Washington, the concluding part of which is as follows (Congres- sional Globe, vol. xxiv, pt. iii, p. 2189) : " No removals shall be made except for incompetency, or cause shown to the satisfaction of the President of the United States. And in the selection of said clerks, they shall, as far as practicable, be taken from the several States and Territories in proportion to the number of Senators, Representatives, and Delegates from each in the Thirty- third Congress." This is practically the same, so far as it goes, as the civil service law. Mr. Brenton said his object was to secure permanency, to prevent sectionalism in the selection of clerks, and to " break down party spirit as much as possible." The provisions of the civil service law 'concerning examinations are : It provides that in any State or Territory " where there are persons to be examined," at least two examinations shall be held each year, and in such places "as to make it reasonably convenient and inexpensive for applicants to attend before them." It provides that the examiners, "not less than three," shall be chosen from among United States officials* " residing in said State or Territory." It requires the Commissioners to make regulations for examinations and annual reports of their proceedings, with such sug- * Tliis is required not only in the interest of economy but to secure examiners who are familiar with the real needs of the offices for which applicants arc examined. The examiners receive no extra compensa- tion. (Third Annual Report, p. 43.) X -THE EPFICIACI? OB' THE NEW EULESr gestions as in their judgment will result in improving the service ; and it authorizes them to make investi- gations concerning all matters " in respect to the ex- ecution of this act." It requires that selections for office shall be from among the three competitors graded highest in the examinations. It forbids favoritism in examinations, and exempts officeholders from either political assessments or services, and makes a violation of either provision a misdemeanor, punishable by fine or imprisonment or both, and the new rules (adopted February 2, 1888) require that a violation of the latter provision shall be followed by dismission from the ser- vice. It exempts from examination — " (a) One private secretary, or one confidential clerk, of the head of each classified department, and of each assistant secretary thereof ; and also of each head of bureau appointed by the President by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, (b) Direct custodians of money, for whose fidelity another officer is under official bond ; but this exception shall not include any officer below the grade of assistant cashier or assistant teller, (c) Disbursing officers who give bonds, (d) Persons em- ployed exclusively in the secret service of the govern- ment, (e) Chief clerks. (/) Chiefs of divisions." Other exemptions are : Deputy collectors who do not also act as inspectors, examiners, or clerks ; otherwise not ; cashier, assistant cashier, and auditor of the col- lector ; deputy naval officers ; deputy surveyors ; as- sistant postmasters, and superintendents, custodians of money, stamps, stamped envelopes, or postal-cards, who PROMOTION, EDlTCATlON^, AGE LIMITS, ETC. Xi are designated as such by the Postoffice Department. It provides for non-competitive examinations when com- \ petent persons do not compete, and for several other jl cogent and justifiable reasons. As said on page 27, competitors must answer 10 per cent, of the questions asked, except ex-soldiers and sailors, who are requirec to answer but 65, the old standard. Competitive ex- aminations for promotion are compulsory, except for ex-soldiers and sailors, and the widows and orphans of deceased soldiers and sailors. These also receive preference in case of a reduction of force in any branch of the classified service. All who attain an average of 75 per cent, are eligible to promotion. The education required in examinations for ordinary offices embraces common- school studies only, and in many cases only a few of these. As to the age at which a person may be examined, in the Customs Department clerks and messengers must be 20 years old; all others 21. In the Postal Department clerks must be 18 years old ; messengers, stampers, and junior clerks must not be under 16 or over 45 ; carriers not under 21 or over 40 ; all others not under 18 or over 45. Enlisted men may be examined on the written consent of the Sec- retary of War or the Secretary of the Navy.* Other important provisions of the law are : It de- clares that its officials shall not " coerce the political action of any person or body, or interfere with any * For further information about competitive examinations, and also some facts about trial by probation, as well as a few other facts pertinent to the above summary, see Chapter 11 (page 26). Xll PENALTY I^OR iNfERi'ESlIira WlTti ELECTIONS. election," and dismission is the penalty of a violation of the provision. It forbids any questions as to an applicant's political or religious opinions, and when such opinions are known, any discrimination on account of them. Further, it requires its officials to discoun- tenance the disclosure of such opinions. And again dismission is the penalty. It forbids the appointment to office of persons who habitually use intoxicating liquors to excess. It limits the number of members of the same family who shall hold office in the grades covered by it. It forbids its three Commissioners, " not more than two of whom shall be adherents of the same party," from holding any other office under the United States. It authorizes the President to " re- move any Commissioner." An appointing officer may, if he deems it for the good of the service, object in writing to making an appointment, and refer the mat- ter to the Commission for investigation. No eligible person can be certified for appointment more than three times. When necessary, transfers may be made from one department to another. There are three branches of the classified civil service, namely, the departmen- tal, the customs, and the postal. Such is a summary of the chief features of the law and its rules and regulations. The whole is certainly a good foundation on which to build a sound civil ser- vice system. But the law, even in its present stage of perfection, should be increased in scope. There is prob- ably no valid reason why all postmasters and employes of the railway mail service, internal revenue service, REASOlsrS ^0& mCKEASlNO THE LAW'S SCOPE. Xlli mints, &c., should not be included within its provisions. Postmasters should be removed only for good cause known to the Postmaster-General or President and at the request of a majority of the business men of their place of office. Farther, where it is practicable to hold promotion examinations, vacant postmasterships as well as subordinate positions should be filled by the person standing the best test. There are now about 2,500 postmasters drawing $1,000 or over a year, who have for this reason to be confirmed by the Senate. In from twenty to twenty five years more the number will prob- ably be 5,000. It is impossible for the Senate to con- firm this great number properly and attend to oflier business at the same time. Hence the necessity of bringing postmasterships under civil service law rules. The increase in the number of examinations held year after year, State as well as national, is the best illustration of the progress of civil service reform. In Massachusetts, in 1887, there were 145 examina- tions. Number examined, 1,433 ; qualified, 938 ; aj^- pointmenta, 403, 2 1 of whom were women ; average age, 36 years; education — common-school, 919; colle- giate, 19. In *tho labor service of Boston'* the num- * Mayor Hugh O'Brien of Boston, in a speech in 1885, said: " I can certainly testify that it has been a great relief to the city of Boston that the Civil Service Commission has taken care of the laboring population. No men have been more abused than the laborers. They have been made the tools of political tricksters; and with civil service reform en- forced they are no longer in the hands of political tricksters." One of the best features of this ' labor service ' is that the men, when XIV HOW TO PRfiVi!i?T I*ERS0NAT101^S. ber registered was 2,235 ; certified for employment, 1,998; employed, 1,615. Including the Boston labor- ers, the classified service of the State numbers 6,000, the aggregate expense being about 14,400,000. The total number of persons who have passed examinations during the past three years, says Secretary Warren P. Dudley, is : 1885, 1,292, of whom 958 passed with a percentage of 65 or over ; 1886, 1,035, of whom 791 passed ; 1887, 1,433, of whom 938 passed. Mr. William Potts, who was Chief Examiner of the New York State Civil Service Commission during most of the year 1887, in his report to the Commission, says that 384 applicants were examined during that year, 148 more than for any previous year. He suggests that a roster of the employes be kept, stating by whom they are appointed, together with their functions and pay. Also that additional means be provided for the correction of irregularities in the service. To prevent personations at examinations he proposes that each ap- plicant shall certify to the examiners in writing as to his identity, and afterward to the Commission that he passed the examination. The handwriting of the two certificates and the signature on the application paper, he thinks, will prevent fraud. He gives an instance of an applicant who, on account of false reports con- cerning the nature of the examinations, spent so much time in studying about mountains, the distance to tlie planet Venus, f of the spirit which prevailed upon the subject, even in corrupt tiuies, and the odium in which all intermeddling of officeholders in elec- tions has ever been held in Great Britain, is to be found in the follow- ing resolution, which the House of Commons adopted on that occasion (1779), without a division, and without a dissenting voice: " ' Resolved, That it is highly criminal for any minister or ministers, or any other servant of the Crown in Great Britain, directly or indi- rectly to make use of the power of his office in order to influence tlv« election of members of Parliament ; and that an attempt to exercise that influence is an attack upon the dignity, the honor, and the inde- pendence of Parliament, an infringement of the rights and liberties of the people, and an attempt to sap the basis of our free and happy Con- Btitutiou,' " MH. CUIiTiS F0EMULATE9 CITIL SERVICE KtJLES. iS wreak his vengeance, or that of Some unprincipled sub- altern, upon the helpless officer, by hurling him from his station, for daring to discharge his constitutional right at the polls. Yes, a thousand times better would it be for the country, for in the one case the people would see and understand the object of the movement, and would fly to the rescue, and deal out vengeance on such a blood-thirsty despot ; whilst in the other case the same object is attained by the concentration of all power in the hands of one man, but in a secret, sly, and insin- uating mode, which it seems the acuteness of the public vision has not yet so clearly discerned." George William Curtis lays down the following fun- damental principles for the general guidance of office- holders ("Harper's Weekly," Nov. 19, 1887): "When a man accepts public office he necessarily surrenders the exercise of certain private rights as a citizen. He is morally bound to promote public respect for the office that he holds and personal confidence in himself. He is bound in every proper way to prevent all suspicion that he misuses his position either for a personal or a partisan object. He is indeed a member of a party, and by a party he is nominated and elected. But he administers his office not for the benefit of a party, but of the peo- ple ; and while upon fitting occasions and in a becoming manner he may justly profefes his confidence in the po- litical principles that he holds, he cannot without gross improj^riety descend to the mere details of party conten- tion, and endeavor by the weight of his official position to promote the interest of individual party candidates." As before said, too much care and interest cannot be taken in elections. The recognition of this fact no doubt accounts, to a great extent, for the wonderful stability of the English government, a stability that has carried it through war after -war, civil as well as foreign, and even revolutions. The following extracts from the chief election laws passed by that government, show the jealous care with which it has guarded, defended, and perfected its elective franchise system. Every act was passed for the purpose of remedying dangerous evils. In 1275 (3 Edward I) it was provided: "And be- cause elections ought to be free, the King commandeth upon great forfeiture, that no man by force of ai-ms, nor by malice or menacing, shall disturb any to make free elections." (The Statutes : Revised Edition, i, 16.) In 1429 (8 Henry VI, 1) Parliament passed the fol- lowing law : " Item, whereas the elections of knights of shires to come to the Parliaments of our Lord the King, in many counties of the realm of England, have now of late been made by very great, outrageous, and excessive number of people dwelling within the same counties of the realm of England, of the which most part was of people of small substance, and of no value, whereof every of them pretended a voice equivalent, as to such elections to be made, with the most worthy knights and esquires, dwelling within the same counties, whereby manslaughters, riots, batteries, and divisions among the gentlemen, and other people of the same counties, shall very likely rise and be, unless convenient and due rem- edy be provided in this behalf ; our Lord the King, considering the premises, hath provided, ordained, and established, by authority of this present Parliament, That the knights of the shires to be chosen within the same realm of England to come to the Parliaments of our Lord the King hereafter to be holden, shall be chosen in every county of the realm of England by peo- ple dwelling and resident in the same counties, whereof every one of them shall have free land or tenement to the value of forty shillings by the year at the least P^HtAtflt fOT3L FALSE ilLECTlON RETURNS. 4 If above all charges ; and such as have the greatest num- ber of them that may expend forty shillings by year and above, as afore is said, shall be returned by the sheriffs of every county, knights for the Parliament, by inden- tures sealed between the said sheriffs and the said choosers so to be made." * * * (Ruffhead's Statutes at Large, i, 481.) In 1444 (23 Henry YI), owing to sheriffs returning " knights, citizens, and burgesses * * * which were never duly chosen," and other fraudulent practices, a stringent law was passed, which, among other things, imposed a fine of £100 to the King and £100 to the aggrieved person for false election returns. In 1690 (2 William and Mary, 1) Parliament passed " An act to declare the riglit and freedom of election of members to serve in Parliament for the Cinque Ports " as follows : " Whereas the election of members to serve in Parliament ought to be free ; and whereas the late Lord Wardens of the Cinque Ports have j^retended unto, and claimed as of right, a power of nominating and recommending to each of the said Cinque Ports, the two ancient towns, and their respective members, one person whom they ought to elect to serve as a baron or member of Parliament for such respective port, an- cient town, or member, contrary to the ancient usage, right, and freedom of elections, * * * be it therefore declared * * * that all such nominations or recom- mendations were and are contrary to the laws and con- stitutions of this realm, and for the future shall be so deemed and construed.." (Ruffhead, &c., iii, 422.) In 1696* (7 and 8 William III, 4) Parliament passed * T. B. Macaulay, writing of this period, snys (" History of England," iv, 540) . " It was something new and monstrous to see a trader from Lombard street, who had no tie to the s.oU-«fc?QWt4«knd, and whose / ^^' OF *rHi? //rndTTT'ttTl^lTTV^ 4d koKEY 1^ ELECTIONS IN SIXTEEN NiNEl*Y-Sl^. ** An act for preventing charge and expense in elec- tions of members to serve in Parliament " as follows : " Whereas grievous complaints are made * * * ^f undue elections of members to Parliament, by excessive and exorbitant expenses, contrary to the laws, and * * * dishonorable, and may be destructive to the constitu- tion of Parliaments, * * * be it enacted * * * that no person or persons hereafter to be elected to serve in Parliament, * * * shall * * * directly or indirectly give, present, or allow to any person or persons, having voice or vote in such election, any money, meat, drink, entertainment, or provision * * * to or for such person or persons * * * i^ order to be elected, or for being elected, to serve in Parliament. * * * ^jj(j * * * ^Yiat every person and persons so giving * * * are hereby declared and enacted disabled and incapacitated, upon such election, to serve in Parlia-' ment." (Ruffhead, iii, 570.) During the same year Parliament passed " An act for the further regulating elections of members to serve in Parliament, and for the preventing irregular proceed- ings of sheriffs and other officers in the electing and returning such members." The preamble charges that " freeholders and others, in their right of election, as also the persons by them elected to be their representa- wealth was entirely personal and movable, post down to Devonshire or Sussex with a portmanteau full of guineas, offer himself as a candidate for a borough in opposition to a neighboring gentleman, whose ances- tors had been regularly returned ever since the Wars of the Roses, and come in at the head of the poll. Yet even this was not the worst. More than one seat in Parliament, it was said, had been bought and sold over a dish of coffee at Garraway's. The purchaser had not been required even to go through the form of showing himself to the elec- tors. Without leaving his counting house in Cheapside, he had been chosen to repr jnt a place which he bad never seen. Such things were intolerable," " " ' MeaVy t'Ei^ALTY ^on coERtrpt VoTiKa. 4d lives, have heretofore been greatly injured and abused.'* (iii, 589.) In 1729 (2 George II, 24) Parliament passed " An act for the more effectual preventing bribery and corrup- tion in the elections of members to serve in Parliament." The elector's oath is as follows : " I, A. B., do swear * * * I have not received, * * * directly or indirectly, any sum or sums of money, office, place, or employment, gift or reward * * * j^ order to give my vote at this election, and that I have not been before polled at this election." The presiding officer had to administer the oath or forfeit £50, and a bribed voter forfeited £500, and was forever disfranchised and treated as if he ** was naturally dead." (v, 510.) In 1734 (7 George II, 16) a stringent act was passed " for the better regulating the election of members to serve in the House of Commons for that part of Great Britain called Scotland ; and for incapacitating the judges of the Court of Session, Court of Justiciary, and barons of the Court of Exchequer, in Scotland, to be elected or to sit or vote as members of the House of Commons." (v, 051.) " An act for regulating the quartering of soldiers during the time of the elections of members to serve in Parliament," passed in 1735, required that, inasmuch as " all elections ought to be free," all soldiers should be removed two miles from the place of election, (v, 681.) By " An act for the better regulating of elections," &c., passed in 1746 (19 George II, 28), voters are re- quired to swear that they have '* a freehold estate * * * of the clear yearly value of forty shillings, * * * and that such freehold estate has not been granted or made to you fraudulently, on purpose to qualify you to give your vote." (vi, 312.) In 1782 (22 George III, 41) Parliament passed "An i 50 FoiiTY Tkdt^sAiJi) voters i^lsi'KAKCfliSEfi. act for the better securing the freedom of elections,'^ &c., which disfranchised excise, customs, and postoffice employes to the number of about 40,000. A violation of the law entailed forfeiture of office and a fine of £100. (ix, 230.) The passage of this act was the result of corruption among the officials named. It remained in force till 1858, when, on account of the reforms brought about by the present British civil service law, an act of re- enfranchisement was passed. It is a consolation to know that this course has never been necessary in this country. In 1827 (7 and 8 George IV, 37) Parliament passed " An act to make further regulations for preventing corrupt practices at elections," &c., wherein it is de- clared that **if any person shall, either during any election, * * * or within six calendar months previ- ous to such election, or within fourteen days after it shall have been completed, be employed at such election as counsel, agent, attorney, poll clerk, flagman, or in any other capacity, for the purposes of such election, and shall at any time, either before, during, or after such election, accept or take, * * * for or in consid- eration of or vrith reference to such employment, any sum or sums of money, retaining fee, office, place, or employment, * * * such person shall be deemed in- capable of voting at such election, and his vote, if given, shall be utterly void and of none effect." (xi, 126.) The present English election law, passed in 1872, which is founded on the Australian election system, is perhaps the best law of its kind ever devised. William M. Ivins says (" Machine Politics and Money in Elec- tions in New York City," pp. 90, 91, 94, 95, 96) : "This act provides that at every poll at an election the vote ehall be given by ballot j that the ballot of each voter iraJE MODEL ELE.CTION LAW. 51 shall contain the names and description of all the candi- dates for tlie particular office for which he is voting, which ballot-paper has a number printed on the back of it, and is attached to a stub, or * counter foil,' as it is called, with the same number printed on the face of the stub. * * * ^\\ voters are registered before each election, and when the voter has registered, he is given a registration number. This registration number is marked on the stub of the ballot at the time the ballot is delivered to him. * * * "The following is the form of directions for the guid- ance of the voter in voting, which is required by the English law to be printed in conspicuous characters and placarded in every polling-station and in every compart- ment of every 2)olling station : " * The voter may vote for candidates. The voter will go into one of the compartments, and with a pencil provided in the compartment, place a cross on the right-hand side opposite the name of each candidate for whom he votes. The voter will then fold up the ballot-paper, so as to show the official mark on the back, and leaving the compartment, will, without showing the front of the paper to any person, show the official mark* on the back to the presiding officer, and then, in the presence of the presiding officer, put the paper into the ballot-box, and forthwith quit the polling station. If the voter inadvertently spoils a ballot paper, he can return it to the officer, who will, if satisfied of such inadvertence, give him another paper. " ' If the voter votes for more than candidates, or places any mark on the paper by which he may be afterward identified, liis ballot-paper will be void and will not be counted. * Election ofTicers are required to keep the official mark secret, aud a ballot cast without it is void. ^2 SIR HENRY JAMES'S GREAT LAW. " ' If the voter takes a ballot-paper out of the polling- station, or deposits in the ballot-box any other paper than the one given him by the officer, he will be guilty of a misdemeanor, and be subject to imprisonment for any term, with or without hard labor. " ^ Note. — These directions shall be illustrated by ex- amples of the ballot-paper.' " Notwithstanding this admirable law, the elections, on account of the immense and corrupt use of money, often miscarried. A remedy was sought, and it was found in the Prevention of Corrupt Practices Act of 1883-84, an act that limits the sum of money that may be used for election purposes by a candidate or his agent, defines bribery, treating, and undue influence, forbids the use of liquor saloons for committee-room purposes, &c. This latter act, which was originated by Sir Henry James, produced almost phenomenal results. Mr. Ivins says (pp. 148-9) : "In 1880, with about 3,000,000 voters in 419 constituencies, there was spent over £3,000,000, or $15,000,000; while in 1886, with an increased number of voters, tliere was expended but £624,086, or about 13,000,000. In 1880 ninety-five petitions alleging cor- rupt practices were presented, while only two were pre- sented in 1885, and only one in 18S6. * * * As was pointed out by the New York Eiiening Post, the most significant fact disclosed by the English elections of 1886 is ^t/iat the grand total of expenditure by candi- dates is only a little more than one-half of the grand total allowed by the law."^ " The principles of the two preceding laws should be adapted to all American elections. What has been done in England can and must be done in America. It is fortunate for the nation that we can profit by Eng- land's six hundred years of experience in battling for pure elections. Pure elections are the pillars of liberty I CHAPTER IV. THE PATKONAGE AND MERIT SYSTEMS COMPARED. Tlie Merit System more favorable to ex-Soldiers and Suiloi-s. — Other points of difference between the two Systems. — How the President and Congressmen were harassed under the Patronage System. Section 1754 of the United States Revised Statutes gives the preference of appointment to office to only such properly qualilied soldiers and sailors as have been discharged on account of "wounds or sickness incurred in the line of duty." The civil sei-vice law gives pref- erence to all honorably discharged and properly quali- fied soldiers and sailors. * Under the patronage system partisanship and inter- ference at elections were the surest means of retaining an office. Under the merit system they are the surest means of losing it. Under the patronage system officeholders were almost invariably appointed with regard to politics, and usually had to vote with their party or lose their offices. Under the merit system they are appointed without regard to politics, and can vote as they choose. Under the patronage system officeholders, as a rule, cannot command that degree of public respect and con- * The Massachusetts Civil Service Commissioners say (Third Annual Report, p. a2): "The veterans have triumphed by being able to show that they possess qualifications equal to or higher than their competit- ors. It has been a triumph in a fair field, with no favor, except that of preference in case of equality." This s{)eaks well for the Massachu- setts soldiers who were educated over a quarter of a century ago. 54 LOSS OP TIME UNDER PATRONAGE SYSTEM. fidence that is essential to good government.* As tlie mode of obtaining office under the merit system is the reverse of that of the patronage system, officeholders appointed in accordance with its provisions ought to command both the respect and confidence of the people. They can have self-respect at least ; and self-respect begets self-confidence as well as the respect and con- fidence of others. Under the patronage system nearly all the chief of- ficials of the government, outside of as well as in Wasli- ington, were forced to devote a large part of their time to the selection of subordinate officials, of whose qualifi- cations, either theoretical or practical, they knew little or nothing. The merit system has not only stopped this waste of valuable time, but it is supplying the pub- lic service with officials of proved ability and fitness. Under the patronage system an officeholder whose tenure depended on the mere caprice of an official supe- rior, or perhaps a Ward or some other kind of politician, was little better than a slave. Besides, under such cir- cumstances, he was constantly tempted to do wrong. Under the merit system the conditions of tenure are precisely the reverse, and are therefore conducive not only of a feeling of freedom, but of self-respect and manly independence. Again, under the patronage system chief as well as subordinate public officials were assessed to raise money for partisan purposes, and as a natural consequence the}^ * A few years ago the Rev. Dr. Howard Crosby said a person would as soon think of admitting the small-pox into his house as some Xew York City politicians. The only thing that can be said in extenuation of their offenses is that they were, and to some extent stilj are, the vic- tims of a corrupt system of politics, and that is saying a great deal. It is always in order to fight corrupt systems j but, as a rule, unless it is unavoidable, individuals should not be attacked, INTELLIGENT VEESUS IGXOKANT OFFICEHOLDERS. 65 were sometimes tempted to do wrong in order to reim- burse themselves. Under the merit system assessments for partisan purposes are not allowed. Under the patronage system many honorable and meritorious persons were deterred from even attempting to enter the public service, because, as a rule, only poli- ticians, or the subservient henchmen of politicians, ap- plied for office. Under the merit system the rule is practically the reverse of this. Under the patronage system many of the subordinate public officials were incompetent. Under the merit sys- ton applicants have to pass a competitive examination, and then prove their competency by trial by probation before appointment. Therefore all, or practically all, are competent. Under the patronage system some officeholders did not know even the rudiments of the business of the offices they held. Some years ago a newspaper corre- spondent called at a public office in Washington to get some official information. The officeholder whom he chanced to meet could not give him a word of the infor- mation he desired, but he could and did, so the corre- spondent said, tell him precisely how the election was going in Ohio the next fall ! Under the merit system the case ought to be about the reverse. Under the patronage system officeholders whose ten- ures depended on the success of their own political party naturally favored members of it in preference to mem- bers of an opposite party, especially about election time. Favoritism is a form of injustice that cannot be wholly eradicated. It is an inherent if not necessary fault of humanity. A law may restrain a man, but it cannot change his nature. Yet in this case the merit system will have a beneficial effect at least, for there is one reason less for showing favoritism. M THE DANGER OP SWEEPING REMOVALS. Under the patronage system the public service was injured by sweeping removals from office. Under the merit system no sweeping removals are made. The injury caused by sweeping removals is of course in proportion to the number of offices. As these are con- stantly multiplying, the injury, under the patronage system, would in the course of time not only be serious, but in case of the success of a party with corrupt lead- ers, it would sooner or later become a source of absolute danger. Under the merit system, with solid, tranquil, educated men guarding the thousands of minor but im- portant offices, whose tenures depend solely on efficiency and fidelity, the country is comparatively safe, with or without the President. Further, even if the President should remove every chief official in the service, the public business would not be much injured, for the sub- ordinate officials, owing to security of tenure, can trans- act all ordinary business as well during as before or after the change of the chief official. In 1883 Governor Cleveland sent the name of ex-State Senator William H. Murtha of Brooklyn to the Senate of New York for confirmation as Emigration Commis- sioner. But as Mr. Murtha would not promise patron- age in advance, the Senate refused to confirm him. Under the merit system this disgraceful action of the Senate would not occur, for under it there is no patron- age to either promise or bestow. The execution of the then new law which was designed to correct abuses at Castle Garden, depended on Mr. Murtha's confirmation. Therefore a few minutes before the final adjournment of the Senate, Governor Cleveland sent a special mes- sage to that body urging Mr. Murtha's confirmation, in the course of which he said of the then management at Castle Garden : " The present management of this very important department is a scandal and a reproach to GEEAT COST OF liEVENU". C01.LECT10NS. 57 civilization. Bare-faced robbery has been committed, and the poor immigrant who looks to the Institution for protection finds that his helplessness and forlorn condi- tion afford but a readily seized opportunity for imposi- tion and swindling." And yet the Senate of the great State of ]Sew York was so debauched by the vicious patronage system that it refused to confirm the man who would have stopped this imposition and swindling ! In 1877 the Jay Commission,* among other things, reported to President Hayes that the expense of collect- ing customs revenue in the United States was more than three times as large as in France, more than four times as large as in Germany, and nearly five times as large as in Great Britain. The revenue collections in this country were then made under the patronage sys- tem, while those of the foreign countries named were made under the merit system. Again, the Commission said, on the authority of the New York Chamber of Commerce, that in 1874 it cost the United States about $7,000,000 to collect the duties on imports of the value of $642,000,000, while in the same year it cost Great Britain only $5,000,000 to collect the duties on imports valued at $1,800,000,000 ! Under the patronage system it was frequently difficult to remove incompetent and unworthy officials because of the " influence " of the politicians who vouched for them. " The same vicious, extraneous influence," says Mr. D. B. Eaton, " which puts them in office, keeps them there." Under the merit system they can be * The Commission was composed of John Jay and Lawrence Turnure of New York and J. H. Robinson of the Department of Justice at Wash- ington. Mr. Jay has since served as a New York State Civil Service Commissioner from 1883 till the fall of 1887, when he and his equally faithful colleague, Henry A. Richmond, were removed without fault of theirs, Mr. Augustus Schoonmaker having resigned in June, 1887. ^8 DUPLICITY CAUSED BY fATEOKAGU SYSfEM. readily removed, because there is no power behind the throne to protect them. * Under the patronage system the President was now and then greatly embarrassed on account of some Con- gressmen reporting on some applications for office both favorably and unfavorably. Under the merit system Congressmen are not allowed to sign recommendations for office, except as to an applicant's character and resi- dence. J. D. Cox says ("North American Review," 1871, p. 84) : "It is no uncommon thing for one who has written a high eulogium on the character and ac- quirements of a place-hunter, to write a private note begging that his formal indorsement may not be re- garded as of any weight, or to seek a private interview, in which he will state that the person is quite the re- verse of the picture drawn of him in the testimonial filed." Sometimes, says Mr. Cox, the President and his Secretaries are confronted by both the officeseeker and his sponsor, while in the drawer of the table at which they sit, listening to the latter's mock praises, is the be- fore mentioned private note contradicting every word uttered. It is not strange that Mr. Cox should say that Congressmen in those days (1869-70) often apologized for their importunity, nor that an effort was made to stop the disgraceful practice. Senator Lyman Trumbull introduced a bill in 1869 making it a misdemeanor for * The Chairman : The common question among employes is, " Who is your influence ? " Mr. Graves : That is a standard phrase in the Department, " Who is your influence ? " Where persons have very strong influence, they are apt, if any difficulty occurs in the Department, to threaten to go and get their '* influence " aod have the matter set right. Manliness and inde- pendence are destroyed by such a system. (Senate Report No. 576, for 1882, p. 132.) Mr. Edward 0. Graves at the time (1882) had had eighteen years' ex- perience in the Treasury Department at Washington. THE WHITE HOUSE BESIEGED. 5§ Congressmen to directly or indirectly recommend men for office, " except such recommendation be in writing, in response to a written request from the President or head of a Department asking information, or a Senator giving his advice and consent in the manner provided by the Constitution." The unanimous report of the Senate Committee on Civil Service and Retrenchment,* made on May 15, 1882, by Senator Hawley, both corroborates and supple- ments Mr. Cox's statements. The following extracts speak for themselves (Senate Report No. 576, for 1882, pp. 2, 3) : " It has come to pass that the work of paying political debts and discharging political obligations, of rewarding personal friends and punishing j^ersonal foes, is the first to confront each President on assuming the duties of his office. * * * Instead of the study of great questions of statesmanship, of broad and compre- hensive administrative policy, either as it may concern this particular country at home, or the relations of this great nation to the other nations of the earth, he must devote himself to the petty business of weighing in the balance the political considerations that shall determine the claim of this friend or that political supporter to the possession of some office of profit or honor under him. * * * r^i^Q executive mansion is besieged, if not sacked, and its corridors and chambers are crowded each day with the ever -changing but never-ending throng. Every Chief Magistrate, since the evil has grown to its present proportions, has cried out for de- * The Committee was composed of members of both parties as fol- lows : Joseph R. Hawley of Connecticut, Chairman ; George H. Pendle- ton of Ohio, Henry L. Dawes of Massachusetts, John I, Mitchell of Pennsylvania, M, C. Butler of South Carolina, James D. Walker of Arkansas, John S. Williams of Kentucky, Edward H. Rollins of New Hampshire, and John P. Jones of Nevada. 60 CONGRESSMEN HAUNTED NIGHT AND DAY. liverauce. Physical endurance even is taxed beyond its power. More than one President is believed to have lost his life from this cause. * * * " The malign influence of political domination in ap- pointments to office is wide-spread, and reaches out from the President himself to all possible means of approach to the appointing power. It poisons the very air we breathe. No Congressman in accord with the dispenser of power can wholly escape it. It is ever present. When he awakes in the morning it is at his door, and when he retires at night it haunts his chamber. It goes before him, it follows after him, and it meets him on the way. It levies contributions on all the relationships of a Congressman's life, summons kinshijj and friend- ship and interest to its aid, and imposes upon him a work which is never finished, and from which there is no release. Time is consumed, strength is exhausted, the mind is absorbed, and the vital forces of the legisla- tor, mental as well as physical, are spent in the never- ending struggle for offices." Representative John J. Kleiner of Indiana declined a renomination for Congress in 1886 because of the an- noyance of officeseekers. As reported by many daily newspapers, he said : " It is no w^onder to me that the House w^as charged with inefficiency last session. The Democratic members were kept so constantly engaged in looking after places for constituents that they had not time to give legislative subjects consideration. I know that I found it impossible to keep the run of cur- rent business. The greatest reform we could bring about would be to free Senators and Representatives of all responsibility as to the distribution of offices." CHAPTER V. THE DANGER OF AN OFFCEHOLDERS' ARISTOCRACY. The importance of the Subject. — The Cause of and Remedy for Aristoc- racies. — No danger in Life Tenures when based on Merit. — George William Curtis's opinion of them. — Insolence of Office. It is feared by some that the civil service law system will create an officeholders' aristocracy. This is a mat- ter of importance, and is not to be pooh-poohed, not- withstanding the fact that the same system has not only checked the English aristocracy's long monopoly of public office, but has, as before said, so purified the English civil service as to cause the annuUment of the act of 1782, an act that disfranchised 40,000 customs, postoffice, and other officials for corrupt practices at elections. But the fear, it may as well be said first as last, so far as officeholders who draw low salaries are concerned, is certainly unfounded, notwithstanding of- ficeholders are human, and are therefore liable to err. The idea of an aristocracy of public inspectors, account- ants, weighers, clerks, &c., in this country, is almost ridiculous. It is as improbable perhaps as an aristoc- racy among soldiers, sailors, or private employes. Mr. E. L. Godkin says ("The Danger of an Officeholding Aristocracy," p. 13) : "There is no country in which it would be so hard for an aristocracy of any kind to be built up as this, and probably no class seeking to make itself an aristocracy would, in the United States, have a smaller chance of success than a body composed of un- 62 THE EEAL AND THE Afl'AREKT AElSTOCEAT. ambitious, quiet-minded, unadventurous government of- ficers, doing routine work on small salaries, and with but little chance or desire of ever passing from the em- ployed into the employing class. One might nearly as well try to make an aristocracy out of the college pro- fessors or public school teachers." Mr. T. A. Jenckes says ("Congressional Globe," 1869, p. 521) : "There is not enough in this aristocratical notion to bring out of it a new farce of * High Life below Stairs.' It runs itself into the ground without comicality." But the question, as before said, is a matter of impor- tance, for, as Mr. Godkin says, " Nothing is more diffi- cult to eradicate than the remembrance of insulting treatment at the hands of an aristocracy of any kind." It has therefore a serious as well as a semi-comic aspect. The law may sooner or later be applied to officeholders who draw high salaries. This would put a diiferent face on the matter, for high salaries certainly have a tendency to create aristocracies. Aristocracies may have their uses in some countries, but we certainly have no use for them in this country. They are stern reali- ties. They are as undemocratic as they are undesirable. They are antagonistic to American ideas and institu- tions. Therefore it is our duty to study the causes of aristocracies, in order that we may guard against them« But we must learn to discriminate between the real and the apparent aristocrat. For example, learned men are often denounced as aristocrats because they do not asso- ciate with the unlearned. This is a mistake, for it is as natural for learned men to associate together as it is for the unlearned to do so. Learned men are often eminently democratic, as indeed are many rich men. It is the driving and selfish capitalist that is mostly to be feared. The idle and selfish capitalist is also bad, but is of course not so dangerous. ItHE CAUSE OF AEISTOCEACtES. 63 What is the real cause of aristocracies ? Aristocra- cies are caused by great and broad distinctions between people. There are many causes for the distinctions be- tween people, but the chief cause is the possession by some people of more money and property and conse- quently greater power than others. What but money causes the aristocracies of monarchical Europe? And what but money has planted a pale, sickly, mushroom- like variety of aristocracy in the uncongenial soil of republican America ? * * John W. Draper says (" History of the Intellectual Development of Europe," i, 252, 253): "An evil day is approaching when it becomes recognized in a community that the only standard of social distinction is wealth. That day was soon followed in Rome by its unavoidable consequence, a government founded upon two domestic elements, cor- ruption and terrorism. No language can describe the state of that cap- ital after the civil wars. The accumulation of power and wealth gave rise to a universal depravity. Law ceased to be of any value. A suitor must deposit a bribe before a trial could be had. The social fabric was a festering mass of rottenness. The people had become a populace ; the aristocracy was demoniac ; the city was a hell. No crime that the annals of human wickedness can show was left un perpetrated — re- morseless murders ; the betrayal of parents, husbands, wives, friends ; poisoning reduced to a system ; adultery degenerating into incests, and crimes that cannot be written. Women of the higher class were so lascivious, depraved, and dangerous that men could not be compelled to contract matrimony with them; marriage was displaced by concu- binage; even virgins were guilty of inconceivable immodesties; great oflBcers of state and ladies of the court, of promiscuous bathings and naked exhibitions. In the time of Caesar it had become necessary for the government to interfere, and actually put a premium on marriage. * * * They (the women) actually reckoned the years, not by the consuls, but by the men they had lived with. To be childless, and therefore without the natural restraint of a family, was looked upon as a singular felicity. Plutarch correctly touched the point when he said that the Romans married to be heirs and not to have heirs. Of offenses that do not rise to the dignity of atrocity, but which excite our loathing, such as gluttony and the most debauched luxury, the annals 64 THE WANING ENGLISH ARISTOCRACY These propositions being admitted, then it follows that if ever we have an officeholders' aristocracy in this country, it will be caused chiefly by money. Therefore the subject of officeholders' salaries should receive care- ful attention. There is too much difference in officeholders' salaries. Some are too high and some are too low.* Of course all cannot be put on an exact equality, for, among other things, an officeholder's expenses must be taken into ac- of the times furnish disgusting proofs. It was said, ' They eat that they may vomit, and vomit that they may eat.' " Professor Draper quotes from Tacitus to prove that his statements are not exaggerated. The times described are before, during, and after the reign of Julius Caesar. It is related of Csesar that on receiving a letter one day in the Senate a fellow-Senator accused him of receiving communications from the en- emy. Csesar passed the document over to the Senator. It was a lewd letter from the Senator's own sister, and was flung back with the re- mark, " Take it, you sot ! " Mr. A. J. Mundella, a member of Parliament, in a lecture, in 1870, said : " Until long after the passing of the first reform bill, offices were the reward of political services, and very frequently of political dishonor. * * * Mr. Bright characterized our civil and military services as a system of out-door relief for the aristocracy." This is not complimentary to the English aristocracy; nor is it en- couraging to would-be imitators of it here or elsewhere. It proves, if it proves anything, that while money may create an aristocracy, it can- not teach it how to use it. The words " political dishonor " may speak for themselves ; but they are no more applicable to an aristocracy than to any other class of people who are cursed by the patronage system. According to James Russell Lowell, the famous speeches of the Prince of Wales are written for him by another man! (See "New York World," October 24, 1886, p. 9.) Note. — Learning that Mr. Lowell was greatly displeased with the " World's " article, I wrote to him and asked if the above statement was true. I did not receive a reply from him. Therefore I take it for granted that Mr. Julian Hawthorne reported Mr. Lowell's words correctly. * Franklin deprecated high salaries (v, 147) ; Webster also (iv, 183). THE EVIL OF HIGH AKD LOW SALARIES. QS count. But it is wrong to give one man from 110,000 to $50,000 a year, and another, in his way equally capable, reliable, and meritorious, only $500. No man with a fam- ily can live comfortably in this country on f 500 a year. The claim sometimes made that competent men cannot be induced to accept office unless the salary is high, is usually not true. There are plenty of competent men who would be glad to fill some offices for a third of the present salary, and they could live comfortably and honestly too. No officeholder should receive greater compensation than the average sum paid for similar ser- vices, where there are such, in private business, and he should be held to as strict an accountability as to service as is the private employe.* It is a high salary and little work that make the aristocrat. Extremely high salaries are conducive of extravagance, a feeling of superiority,! and sometimes of the assumption of unwarrantable priv- ileges. Extremely low salaries are conducive chiefly of want and a feeling of inferiority. It is bad for the pub- lic service when some officials, because of high salaries, feel that they are autocrats instead of servants ; but it * Erastus Brooks, the veteran editor, who believed " in competitive test and standards of the persons appointed to all responsible places," writing on October 22, 1883, says (First Report New York State C. S. Com., p. 2«»3) : " Men in public service should receive no more favors, and no better pay, and serve neither more nor less time during the day or year, than is required of qualified and responsible men in the highest or comparative grades in commercial, mechanical, and general business life." f Nothing has so much to do with a man's manners as the manners of the society in which he lives. * * * The English or German official gives himself airs and thinks himself an aristocrat because, as a matter of fact, his official superiors are aristocrats, and the government is administered in all the higher branches by an aristocracy. * * * In any country In which politics is largely managed by an aristocracy, the aristocratic view of life is sure to permeate the civil as well as the military service, be the terms long or short. — E. L. Godkin, 66 MERIT LIFE TENURES DEMOCRATIC. is worse when others, because of low salaries, feel that they are menials, and are sometimes tempted to act dis- honestly. The way to remedy as well as to prevent an aristoc- racy is to remove its cause. Therefore the way to pre- vent an officeholders' aristocracy is to pay no extremely high or extremely low salaries. There is probabl}?" no immediate danger, but the principle is none the less sound, for aristocracies will disappear exactly in propor- tion as the distinctions between people disappear. An equitable readjustment of salaries is what is wanted. * The fear of an officeholders' aristocracy seems to be based chiefly on the life tenures of office that may occur under the civil service law system. But the fear, so far as life tenures, as such, are concerned, is certainly un- founded. Do not life tenures occur under all systems and in all governments ? But, unless the officeholder is eminently qualified to fill his office, is it not seldom that they occur in this government ? Therefore life tenures, when they are solely the reward of merit, are, on the whole, democratic instead of aristocratic. Such life tenures as these strengthen the government ; and any- thing that strengthens republican government is demo- cratic. But life tenures, even under the civil service law system, will probably be the exception rather than the ♦On January 24, 1817, on motion of Representative Samuel McKee of Kentucky, the following resolution was passed by the national House of Representatives : Resolved, That the said Committee be instructed to inquire into the expediency of equalizin;^ the pay and emoluments of the officers and persons employed in the civil, military, and naval departments of the government." The New York State Civil Service Commission recognizes the need of " a jtidicious readjustment of salaries." (First Report, 1884, p. 4.) WHY LIFE TENURES WILL BE RARE. 67 rule. Changes will occur. The characteristic ambition of Americans to better their condition in life will alone cause many resignations. Some will resign because a few years of experience in many public offices qualifies an intelligent and ambitious man to discharge the duties of better paying stations in private life ; * some will save their money and resign in order to establish them- selves in private business ; some will resign from sheer dislike of public life ; some from other causes, and some will doubtless be removed. George AVilliam Curtis says (" Civil Service Reform League Proceedings," 1884, pp. 11, 12): "The objec- tion which is expressed in the cry of * life tenure ' and *a privileged class' is one of the most ancient and familiar appeals of the spoils system to ignorance and prejudice. Whenever it has been proposed to recur to the constitutional principle and the early practice by treating the public clerk as the private clerk is treated, by ordaining that the public business shall be trans- acted upon business principles, and that filching politi- cians shall be forbidden to turn the public service to thfeir private profit, we are told that a life tenure and a privileged class are odious and un-Ainerican, as if any- thing were so odious as a system tending to destroy the self-respect of public officers, or anything so really un- American as turning out an honest, efficient, and experi- enced agent because somebody else wants his place. There can indeed be no life tenure in an offensive sense so long as the power of removal is unchecked except by a sole consideration for justice and the public service ; and the retention of a faithful, capable, and tried public servant confers no privilege which every such servant of every great corporation and of every great or small * A fact practically the saipe as the above is shown iu Chapter II, page 30, 68 THE KIND OP COAL-HEAVEES WANTED. business house, and of every well-ordered department of human industry, does not already enjoy. Of all the familiar tricks of the American demagogue none is more amusingly contemptible than the effort to show that a system which tends to promote a degrading loss of self-respect and a cringing dependence upon personal favor is peculiarly a manly and American system. It is a cry raised most vociferously by those who most despise and distrust the people, and as the sure and steady progress of reform plainly shows, it no more deceives and alarms an intelligent public opinion than the ridiculous assertion that civil service reform is a system which requires that a man shall pass a satisfac- tory examination in astronomy and the higher mathe- matics in order to be eligible to appointment as a night- watchman in the Custom House.* In the familiar story * On page 16 Mr. Curtis says : " The essential point is not to find coal-heavers who can scan Virgil correctly, but coal-heavers who, being properly qualified for heaving coal, are their own masters and not the tools of politicians," Mr. Curtis closes his address for 1885 in this lofty, hopeful, and pa- triotic strain : " Gentlemen, the stars in their courses fought against Sisera. But they fight for us. The desire of good government, of honest politics, of parties which shall be legitimate agencies of great policies ; all the high instincts of good citizenship ; all the lofty im- pulses of American patriotism, are the ' sweet influences ' that favor reform. Every patriotic American has already seen their power, " * And by the vision splendid Is on his way attended.' *' Sir Philip Sidney wrote to his brother upon his travels, * Whenever you hear of a good war, go to it.' That is the call which we have heard and obeyed. And a good war it has been, and is. Everywhere indeed there are signs of un alert and adroit liostility. They are the shots of outposts that foretell the battle. But everywhere also there are signs of the advance of the whole line, the inspiring harbingers of victory. Never was the prospect fairer. If the shadows still linger, the dawn is deepening, — the dawn that announces our suu of Austerlitz," ENGLISH VIEW VERSUS AMEitiCAN ¥lKT^. 6d the young lawyer was reminded by the judge that the court might be supposed to know some law. The American demagogue is incessantly taught by the ex- perience of this country that the American people may be supposed to have some common-sense." Mr. Curtis again says (C. S. R. L. Proceedings, 1885, p. 22) : " So long as the power of removal remains free, and while it is committed to agents appointed by of- ficers whom the people elect, a life tenure in any un- American or undesirable sense is impossible." The power of removal, for cause — and even without cause, if the chief officer is willing to take the risk of abusing his power — is as free under the civil service law system as it is in private business. The view taken by the aristocracy of England, in 1855, of the probable effect of the British civil service law was the opposite of that taken now by some Ameri- cans as to the probable effect of the American civil ser- vice law. The following extract from the Third An- nual Report of the United States Civil Service Com- mission (p. 31) speaks for itself: "The aristocratic classes, with many honorable exceptions, opposed the introduction of the merit system on the same ground that they opposed popular education at the public ex- pense ; that is, that both would weaken their means of controlling the government, at the same time that they would give greater opportunities and influence to the sons and daughters of the common people. " In a volume of official papers issued by the British government, in 1855, when the subject of introducing examinations was under consideration, it is declared that * The encouragement given to education would no doubt be great, but it will all be in favor of the lower classes of society and not of the higher. * * * Ap- pointments now conferred on young men of aristocratic ^0 UEMEDY FOR HABITUAL IKSOLKKCE OF OFE'ICE. connection will fall into the hands of a much lower grade in society. * * * Such a measure will exercise the happiest influence on the education of the lower classes throughout England, acting by the surest of all motives, the desire a man has of bettering himself in life.' The volume shows that the examinations were opposed by the privileged classes because they foresaw that such would be the effects." It is an interesting question whether the civil service law system will or will not cause an increase in what Shakespeare calls " insolence of office," a phase of pub- lic life that is a kind of first cousin to an officeholders' aristocracy, with this distinction, that insolence is more the result of a personal than an official defect of charac- ter, and is therefore not so easily cured. " Nothing is older in story," says Mr. Godkin, " than the * insolence of office.' We can go back to no time, in the annals of the Old World, when the man * dressed in a little brief authority ' was not an object of popular odium." This seems to settle the question, if such a question can be settled, in favor of the civil service law system, for is it not reasonable that the man " dressed in a little brief authority," which is a good description of the usually precarious tenure of office under the patronage system, is more likely to be insolent than the man who holds his office on condition of good behavior and efficient and faithful service ? Insolence is not good behavior. As before said, the defect is not easily cured, but the rem- edy for habitual insolence of office is removal. As a rule men of merit are not insolent. It is contrary to their nature. CHAPTER VI. THE PATRONAGE SYSTEM. The practicability of the System only Apparent.— General Jackson ver- sus President Jackson. — Probable causes of his Radical Change. — Probable cause of Senator Marcy's use of the word "Spoils." — The spoils doctrine Undemocratic and Ruinous. — Appalling Cor- ruption at Washington after the Civil War.— The Civil Service Law a Rock to build upon. The patronage system of distributing public offices was first practiced in this country in the State of New- York.* But as President Jackson was the first to prac- * Mr. George William Curtis says that in 1801 " the spoils system was as much in vogue in the State of New York as it ever has been in the country since. Under the old New York Council of Appointment a man could not be an auctioneer unless he was on the right side in poli- tics. * * * III our political history in New York, one of the amus- ing incidents is that the charter of the Manhattan Bank, which is one of the chief banks in the city of New York, was procured by Aaron Burr in what was really a charter for a water company. The trick was ventured in order to hide the fact that the persons who asked for this bank were of the wrong side in politics." (Senate Report No. 576, for 1882, pp. 153, 154.) Mr. Dorman B. Eaton says: " Unfortunately for the politics of New York, one of the first of her great politicians and officers was the most adroit and unscrupulous political manipulator this country has pro- duced. Aaron Burr was our first partisan despot. * * * Martin Van Buren, probably without knowing the true character of Burr, early became his admirer and follower. ' lie learned his tactics from Aaron Burr.' He was so adroit in applying them to his own use, that as early as 1808 he got the office of Surrogate of Columbia county as the price gf his support of Tompkins for Governor. This perhaps is the earliest *J^ JOfiN LA^WRiNCiJ ON tATUOlfACtti. tice it nationally, the history of the beginning of the system naturally pertains chiefly to him and his admin- istration. The system, as explained by its advocates, and when abstractly considered, is apparently reasonable and prac- ticable. For example, its advocates say that when A is President, he should have none but his own political instance in our politics of an office, especially a judicial office, being pledged and delivered for political support." (" Spoils System," &c., pp. 4, 6.) *' His (Jackson's) election was notoriously the work of Martin Van Buren, inspired by Aaron Burr, and with his inauguration was initiated a sordidly selfish political system entirely at variance with the broad views of Washington and of Hamilton." (" Atlantic Monthly," April, 1880, p. 537.) " Among the maxims of Colonel Burr for the guidance of politicians, one of the most prominent was that the people at elections were to be managed by the same rules of discipline as the soldiers of an army; that a few leaders were to think for the masses, and that the latter were to obey implicitly their leaders, and to move only at the word of command. He had therefore great confidence in the machinery of party, and that system of regular nominations in American politics of which he may perhaps be considered one of the founders. Educated as a military man, and imbibing his early views with regard to governing others in the camp, it is not surprising that Colonel Burr should have applied the rules of military life to politics." (" Statesman's Manual," ii, 1139.) Representative John Lawrence of New York appears to have ante- dated Aaron Burr several years in the advocacy of the patronage sys- tem. In the great debate in the first Congress (IVSQ) on the power of removal he said (" Gales & Seaton's Debates," vol. i, pt. i, p. 504) : " It has been said that if it (the power of removal) is lodged here (in the President), it will be subject to abuse ; that there may be a change of officers, and a complete revolution throughout the whole Executive De- partment on the election of every new President. I admit this may be the case, and I contend that it should be the case, if the President thinks it necessary. I contend that every President ought to have those men about him in whom he can place the most confidence, pro* Tidi'd the Senate approve his choice," ?Al^ftO*fAGE SifSTfiM LEAfeg TO CORUUPxlOi^. 75 friends in the subordinate as well as the chief offices at his disposal ; for in what other way, they ask, can he be responsible for the execution of the laws? There is besides, they say, another advantage, for his political friends have a double incentive to be faithful and effi- cient — their own good names as well as that of the party in power. But this reasoning is fallacious. First, because the system is diametrically opposed to business principles ; second, because long and sad experience has proved, in this as well as in other nations, that it leads to corruption. Again, an equitable division of patronage between political parties, as was favored by President Jefferson and also Governor De Witt Clinton of New York, is politically fair, and might lessen the evils of the wholly partisan system. But, like the preceding proposition, it is not in accordance with sound business principles. General Jackson's preaching and President Jackson's practicing were very different. General Jackson, writ- ing from Washington, in 1804, said (Parton's'' Life of Jackson," i, 237) : " Of all characters my feelings de- spise a man capable of cringing to power for a benefit or office. Such characters are * * * badly calculated for a representative system. * * * Merit alone should lead to preferment." The General desired to be Gover- nor of Louisiana Territory, but he doubted the propri- ety of calling on the President in the capacity of an officeseeker. ** Before I would violate my ideas of pro- priety," he said, " I would yield up any office in the government." Writing to President-elect Monroe, in 1816, he said (ii, 360): "Everything depends on the selection of your ministry. In every selection party and party feeling should be avoided. Now is the time to exterminate the monster called party spirit. * * * The Chief Magistrate of a great and powerful natioij 7 74 PRESlftEifT JACKSON B'ifiHfS t>0Ln?lCALL1f. should never indulge in party feeling." In 1829 Presi- dent Jackson practiced almost the reverse of what he preached in 1804 and 1816. His most notable departure was the removal of hundreds of faithful civil service officials, and for purely partisan reasons. What caused this change? There may have been many causes, but the chief cause was probably the fol- lowing. During the campaign of 1828 some newspapers abused the General's wife, and even assailed the memory of his dead mother.* This was bad enough, but the death of Mrs. Jackson, which was accelerated if not caused by campaign abuse, was too much for human nature. General Jackson had years before killed Charles Dickinson in a duel on account of trouble that probably originated in the latter's alleged abuse of Mrs. Jackson. He could not now fight his enemies personally, but he could and did fight them politically ; f and under such circumstances it was as natural for him to fight them as it was for him to fight Dickinson or the British at New Orleans. Are not these facts alone sufficient to account for the * Mra. Jackson, whom Major Lewis describes as " that good woman," once, in 1828, found her husband in tears. Pointing to a newspaper paragraph, he said : " Myself I can defend, you I can defend, but now they have assailed even the memory of my mother." (iii, 141.) Mr. Parton, speaking of Mrs. Jackson, says (iii, 154): "Perhaps, if the truth were known, it would be found that she is not the only female victim of our indecent party contentions." f The *' Atlantic Monthly," in speaking of the life and death of Mrs. Jackson, says (April, 1880, pp. 537, 538): "Her sorrow-stricken hus- band came to Washington with a stern determination to punish those who had maligned her during the preceding campaign ; and those who eulogized her always found favor with him." The Washington " Telegraph " said : " We know not what line of policy General Jackson will adopt. We take it for granted, however, that ho will reward bis friends and punish his enemies," MAJOR LEWIS DIFFJERS WitH JJlCKSOJi'. ^^ change ? In fact does not the General's high character preclude almost any otlier explanation of it? But the General's own words arc the most convincing. For example, shortly after his inauguration he told a promi- nent and faithful official, Colonel Thomas L. McKenney, Superintendent of Indian Affairs, that he was charged with being " one of the principal promoters of that vile paper, We the Peoj^le, in which my wife Rachel was so shamefully abused." (iii, 216.) Thus did a wrong beget a wrong. Thus did a private curse become a public curse. In a word, thus did like beget like. Mr. Parton says President Jackson '' was a sick, unhappy, and perplexed old man, * * * always mourning for his dead wife." President Jackson's course, which was at war with that of all his predecessors in office, and even, as has been shown, with his own sentiments as expressed in 1804 and 1816, was condemned by many of his contem- poraries, as is shown by extracts from their works in this and the two succeeding chapters. Major William B. Lewis, the man, says Mr. Parton (iii, 224), who contributed the most to General Jack- son's election to the presidency, and his most intimate and constant companion, wrote to him as follows : '* In relation to the principle of rotation * * * I hold it to be fraught with the greatest mischief to the country. * * * Whenever the impression shall become gen- eral that the government is only valuable on account of its offices, the great and paramount interests of the country will be lost sight of, and the government itself ultimately destroyed." Another material cause of President Jackson's change of policy — namely, the influence over him of Mr. Martin Van Buren — is best described in the words of members of the United States Senate, who were considering, in id MR. VAN BUEEN CRITICISED. 1832, the confirmation of the latter gentleman as Minis- ter to England. Senator Clay of Kentucky said {" Gales & Seaton's Debates in Congress," 1831-32, vol. viii, pt. i, p. 1324) : "I have another objection to this nomination. I be- lieve * * * that to this gentleman is principally to be ascribed the introduction of the odious system of pro- scription for the exercise of the elective franchise. I understand that it is the system on which the party in his own State, of which he is the reputed head, con- stantly acts. He was among the first of the Secretaries to apply that system to the dismission of clerks in his department, known to me to be highly meritorious, and among them one who is now a representative in the other House. It is a detestable system, drawn from the worst periods of the Roman republic, and if it were to be perpetuated, * * * our government would finally end in a despotism as inexorable as that at Constanti- nople." * Senator Samuel A. Foot of Connecticut went even further in his criticisms of Mr. Yan Buren than Senator Clay. He said (Same Debates, p. 1328) : " In my opin- ion there is not a Senator on this floor, or any other careful observer, who has noticed the proceedings of this administration from its commencement, who is not fully convinced that there had been * behind the throne a power greater than the throne itself,' which has di- * Mr. Clay, in a speech delivered on June 27, 1840, relates the fol- lowing extraordinary ease of court-martial (" Speeches," ii, 203): *' Two officers of the army of the United States have been put upon their sol- emn trial, on the charge of prejudicing the Democratic party by making purchases for the supply of the army from members of the Whig party ! • ♦ * And this trial was commenced at the instance of a Committee of a Democratic Convention, and conducted and prosecuted by them." The trial took place at Baltimore, where the Convention met, HE FLATTEES PRESIDENT JACKSON. ^7 reeled m,ost of its movements. I will not say there is legal evidence sufficient to convict a man before a court of justice ; but there is enough to produce conviction in my mind, and I sincerely believe that General Jackson came to this place fully determined to remove no man from office but for good cause of removal. I am fully convinced that the whole * system of proscription' owes its existence to Martin Van Buren ! that the dissolution of the Cabinet was effected by his management, and for his benefit ! and that the hand of the late Secretary of State may be traced distinctly in another affair, which has produced an alienation between the first and second officers of the government, and also * * * £qj. ^i^q great abuse of the patronage of the government ! " Senator George Poindexter of Mississippi said, among other things, that Mr. Van Buren, "whose whole course was marked by a systematic tissue of dark and studied intrigue," had "seized on circumstances which pre- existed his induction into office, novel in their character in this country, but familiar at the court of Louis the Fifteenth, in France, and of Charles the Second of Eng- land, by means of which he contrived to * ride upon the whirlwind and direct the storm,' and to render the cred- ulous* and confiding chief, whose weakness he flattered and whose prejudices he nourished, subservient to all his purposes, personal and political. * * * Possessed, as he was, of the unlimited confidence of General Jack- son, he very soon found free access to his ear, and, by appropriate advances, led him into excesses and errors * David Crockett says (" Life of Martin Van Buren," p. 12): " For a man that has as much resohition and fight in him as General Jackson, there never was one that was so easy to be duped." Colonel Crockett served under General Jackson during the Creek In- dian WM- of 1813. His " Life of Martin Van Buren " is unique if not unprejudiced and CJihaustive, ^8 SENATOB FORSYTH'S TWISTED ARGUMENT. fatal to the tranquillity of the country, without affording the slightest evidence that he in any manner participated in producing the results which he anxiously desired to accomplish. The prescriptive policy, pushed, as it was, to extremities which the public interest did not seem to require, and far beyond the practice of any other Chief Magistrate, has been universally attributed to the advice and influence of Mr. Van Buren. This system, com- bined with the whole patronage of government, was, as far as practicable, placed at his discretion, to smooth the way to the ulterior object of his ambition." (pp. 1340, 1341, 1342.) Senator John Forsyth of Georgia, who favored Mr. Van Buren's confirmation, in reply to Mr. Poiudexter, said (p. 1346) : " What, sir, the most artful man in the world proclaim to a paltry editor that he acted in the manner indicated to escape the storm consequent on the dissolution of the Cabinet ! " And yet on the very next page he says : " He is called an artful man — a giant of artifice — a wily magician. From whom does he receive these 0]iprobrious names ? From open enemies and pre- tended friends." Senator Stephen D. Miller of South Carolina said (pp. 13V2, 1373) : " Sir, one of the most decided objections I have to the confirmation of this appointment is that the patronage of the government was exercised with a view to make this nominee, at the end of the present incum- bent's term of oflfice, the President. I believe this power was exercised to a criminal extent. * * * I do not think the power to turn out one man and put in another, as a mere arbitrary exercise of executive authority, does exist. * * * I tliink it a violation of the Constitution. * * * It is the essence of tyranny." Senator Robert Y. Hayne of South Carolina said (p. 1381) be had no doubt that Mr. Van Buren had ad- MR. VAN BUREN PHILOSOPHIZES ON PATRONAGE. 19 vanced " himself at the expense of all who were sup- posed to stand in his way ; and, what is worse, at the expense of the success of the administration, and at the imminent hazard to the best interests of the country." He further said that he believed " that Mr. Van Buren, while Secretary of State, used the influence derived from his high office for the purpose of controlling in- juriously the domestic and social relations of this com- munity ;* and that his conduct was in other respects inconsistent with the dignity of his station and the character of the country." Representative Henry A. Wise of Virginia, speaking, in 1836, of Mr. Van Buren, said (Same Debates, vol. xiii, pt. i, p. 1066) that he held him " responsible for most mischief that has been done, and most that is now doing," and that he was " elected by executive patron- age, corruption, and dictation." Mr. James Parton, speaking of Martin Van Buren, says ("Life of Jackson," iii, 120): "How are we to know anything about a man who was supposed to excel all men in concealing his motives and his movements?" Again (p. 126) Mr. Parton says that President Van Buren, speaking of official patronage, once said : " I prefer an office which has no patronage. When I give a man an office, I offend his disappointed competitors and their friends, and make enemies of the man I re- move and his friends. Nor am I certain of gaining a friend in the man I appoint, for in all probability he expected something better." I wrote to Mr. Parton and asked him where he got * " It is odd enough," wrote Daniel Webster to a personal friend, " that the consequence of this dispute in the sociable and fashionable world is producing great political effects, and may very probably deter- mine who shall be successor to the present Chief Magistrate." (" At- lantic Monthly," April, 1880. 80 A GOOD WOBD FOB MB. VAN BUEEN. his information concerning Mr. Van Buren's opinion of the drawbacks of official patronage. With his permis- sion, I give his reply in full. Newburyport, Mass., August 24, 1887. Dear Sir: Martin Van Buren, I think, was a far more respectable human being than many of his more gifted contemporaries, such as Webster, Clay, Calhoun, and others. The best and fairest view of him is given by himself in his work entitled " Inquiry into the Origin and Course of Political Parties in the United States," N. Y., 1867. He was a good democrat, but fell upon a difficult time, inherited a developing system, and had very strict personal limitations. I believe it was the late Coventry Waddell (the " X. Clark " of Chap, xix, vol. iii, of my Jackson), who told me Van Buren's re- marks on appointments to office. All the men who surrounded Jackson in 1829 knew very well that Jackson alone had the courage and har- dihood to introduce the system of turning out political opponents from minor offices. It was his fell work, and his alone. All was done to wreak revenge upon Clay for wrongs purely imaginary. If he turned out a post- master in Kentucky, he thought he was hitting Henry Clay. I hope you will put all your force into the work in hand. If the people of free countries cannot learn to be good employers of labor, freedom is not for man. Very truly yours, JAMES PARTON. Mr. Parton is a stanch opponent of the patronage sys- tem, and he devotes much space in his " Life of Jack- son" to a scathing denunciation and exposure of it. He attributes its origin to Aaron Burr, and says that Martin Van Buren "learned his tactics from Burr." SENATOR MARCY'S FAMOUS SPEECH. 81 His portrayal of what he calls the " Burrian Code," is an excellent description of the patronage system in its worst form. It was during the debate on Mr. Van Biireu's con- firmation that Senator William L. Marcy of New York, in reply to Senator Clay, made his famous spoils doc- trine speech, the gist of which is as follows (G. & S.'s Debates, vol. viii, pt. i, p. 1326) : "It may be, sir, that the politicians of the United States are not so fastidious as some gentlemen are as to disclosing the principles on which they. act. They boldly preach what they practice. When they are con- tending for victory, they avow their intention of enjoy- ing the fruits of it. If they are defeated, they expect to retire from office. If they are successful, they claim, as a matter of right, the advantages of success. They see nothing wrong in the rule that to the victor belong the spoils of the enemy."* Mr. Parton ("Life of Jackson," iii, 377) says that Senator Marcy, when writing out his speech, said he would willingly recall the last quoted words. President Madison says (iv, 357) : "The first, I believe, who pro- claimed the right, is now the most vehement in brand- ing the practice." I wrote to Mr. Parton and asked * Mr. Marcy, wliose speech was mostly in reply to Mr. Clay, said that Mr. Clay's " own political friends " had practiced the patronage system in Kentucky. Mr. Clay said (p. 1356): "It is not practiced in Ken- tucky by the State government when in the hands of the opposition to this administration. Very lately Governor Metcalfe has appointed to one of the three highest judicial stations in the State a supporter of this administration. * * * The Governor also renewed the appoint- ment, or commissioned several gentlemen opposed to him in politics, as State attorneys. And recently th • Legislature appointed a President of one of the banks from the ranks of one of the friends of this adminis- tration, and several other oflScers." 82 MRS. MAKCY VERSUS MR. MARCTf. him what he thought of Mr. Madison's statement. In a letter dated May 4, 1886, he said : " Mr. Marcy, as I understood, did not renounce the doctrine of the spoils, but merely regretted the blunt, impolitic words in which he expressed the same. He was simply too honest a man to alter or recall his words. My impression is that he lived and died a spoilsman." The word spoils, if not military, is frequently used by military men. Therefore its use by the soldier- statesman Marcy was perhaps only the result of habit. Here is an example of his use of military figures of speech (Curtis's " Life of James Buchanan," ii, 36) : " This little battery has kept up a brisk fire for you. * * * For want of experience you do not know the potency of such an adversary. An enemy in the camp is more dangerous than one outside of it." Here are three military figures of speech in almost as many lines. "This little battery," which was "an enemy in the camp," was Mrs. Marcy ^ and the gentleman in whose behalf she " kept up a brisk fire," and to whom Mr. Marcy was writing, was James Buchanan, a bachelory and Mr. Marcy'^s rival for the then coming Democratic presidential nomination of 1852. The letter is as hu- morous as it is kind and noble. In the political lottery of 1852-53 Governor Marcy drew the prize of Secretary of State, and it is note- worthy that he told Mr. Buchanan some months after accepting the office that, on account of officeseekers and Cabinet Councils, " he had not been able to devote one single hour together to his proper official duties." (ii, 81.) So his change of mind, if it came at all, must have come late in life. Senator Marcy was not the first person to distinguish himself during the Jackson administration by making pointed and figurative spoils doctrine speeches. Gover- AKOTHER SPOILS DOCTRINE SPEECH. 83 nor John Reynolds of Illinois relates the following by- lieutenant Governor William Kinney of' Illinois (" My Own Times," p. 185) : " Governor Kinney* had been to the city of Washington at the inauguration of General Jackson, and had considerable agency at the Federal city in the proscription visited on the Whigs of Illinois. It was said he remarked that the Whigs should be whipped out of office like dogs out of a meat-house." On page 199 Governor Reynolds says (inaugural ad- dress) : " My official care and patronage shall not be exclusively bestowed upon a few men, and on a partic- ular section of the State, and proscribe the balance. Proscription for opinion's sake is, in my oj)inion, the worst enemy to a republic. It is the birthright of every freeman to express his political sentiments frankly and freely at the polls of an election, or elsewhere, without the hope of reward or the fear of punishment." President Lincoln, like President Jackson, preached one thing and practiced another. His administration, so far as political parties are concerned, is therefore par- allel with and an offset to President Jackson's. Writing to Congressman John T. Stuart of Illinois, on December 17, 1840, he said ("Century Magazine," January, 1887, p. 377): " This affair of appointments to office is very annoy- ing — more so to you than to me doubtless. I am, as you know, opposed to removals to make places for our friends." * As Governor Reynolds merely says " Governor Kinney," I wrote to the Chicago Historical Society and asked when Mr. Kinney was Gover- nor of Illinois. In reply the Secretary, Mr. Albert D. Hager, said: " ' Governor Kinney of Illinois ' is a myth. On the 6th of December, 1826, at the time Ninian Edwards was inaugurated Governor of Illinois, William Kinney of St. Clair county was installed Lieutenant Governor, and held the position till December 9, 1830." 84 LAMON'S DARK PICTtJKE OF LINCOLN. President Lincoln, however, unlike President Jackson, made what is called " a clean sweep," that is, he prac- ticed the patronage system to its full extent. But he appears to have regretted his course, and to have had his early convictions confirmed by experience. In 1865, pointing toward a group of officeseekers, he said : " Be- hold this spectacle ! We have conquered the rebellion ; but here is a greater danger to the country than was the rebellion." Senator Charles Sumner vouched for these words to Senator Carl Schurz. Again, shortly be- fore the fall of Richmond, Mr. Lincoln left Washington for City Point, Virginia, partly, he said, to be near the important military operations then in progress and partly to get away from the officeseekers. To the then General Schurz, speaking of officeseeking, he said : " I am afraid that thing is going to ruin republican govern- ment," and much more to the same effect, says Mr. Schurz in a letter of April 30, 1886. And again. Ward H. Lamon says President Lincoln said that if ever the government was overthrown it would be caused by " the voracious desire of office — this wriggle to live without toil, from which I am not free myself."* ♦Ward H. Lamon says (''Life of Lincoln," pp. 23'7, 483, 480, 481, 242): "There is no instance where an important office seemed to be within his reach and he did not try to get it. * * * Notwithstanding his overweening ambition, he had not a particle of sympathy with the great mass of Viis fellow-citizens who were engaged in similar scrambles for place. When a candidate himself, he thought the whole canvass ought to be conducted with reference to his success. He would say to a man, * Your continuance in the field injures me,' and be quite sure he had given a perfect reason for his withdrawal. He did nothing out of mere gratitude, .ind forgot the devotion of his warmest partisans as Boon as the occasion for their services was past. What they did for him was quietly appropriated as the reward of superior merit, calling for no return in kind. * * * It was seldom that he praised anybody; and when he did, it was not a rival or an equal in the struggle for pop- LINCOLN ABUSES HIS LADY-LOVE. 85 A few more words concerning the rise, progress, and probable fall of the patronage system in this country is not inappropriate as a conclusion to this chapter. The doctrine that to the victors belong the spoils, which, as before said, was first practiced nationally in this country by President Jackson, has probably had its day. If it has, it is well. Like the doctrine itself, spoils is a bad word. It is synonymous with robbery, pillage, destruction ! It is suggestive of the days of Erratum.— Fsigc 85, line 19. For the words " his public life," rend Jiis civil service record. LEONARD SWETT CORROBORATES LAMON. In dealing with men he was a trimmer, and such a trimmer the world has never seen. Halifax, who was great in his day as a trimmer, would blush by the side of Lincoln ; yet Lincoln never trimmed in principles, it was only in his conduct with men. He used the patronage of his office to feed the hunger of various factions. * * * He used every force to the best possible advantage. He never wasted anything, and would always give more to his enemies than he would to his friends ; and the reason was because he never had anything to spare, and in the close calculation of attaching the factions to him, he counted upon the abstract affection of his friends as an element to be offset against some gift with which he must appease his enemies. Hence there was always some truth in the charge of his friends that he failed to reciprocate their devotion with his favors. * * * Adhesion was what he wanted ;, if he got it gratuitously he never wasted his substance paying for it. One jjreat public mistake of his character, as generally received Lincoln and himself, in 1842, were very friendly; that Lincoln came to him one evening and said: 'Jim, I will have to marry that girl.' He was married that evening, but Matheny says ' he looked as if he was going to the slaughter.' " It was fitting that such a spoils administration should end in the rob- bery of the White House. 84 LAMON'S DAKK PICTt^KE OF LINCOLN. President Lincoln, however, unlike President Jackson, made what is called " a clean sweep," that is, he prac- ticed the patronage system to its full extent. But he appears to have regretted his course, and to have had his early convictions confirmed by experience. In 1865, pointing toward a group of officeseekers, he said : " Be- hold this spectacle ! We have conquered the rebellion ; but here is a greater danger to the country than was the rebellion." Senator Charles Sumner vouched for these words to Senator Carl Schurz. Aerain. shortlv be- and acquiesced in, is that he is considered by the people of this country as a frank, guileless and unsophisticated man. There never was a greater mistake. Beneath a smooth surface of candor and apparent declaration of all his thoughts and feelings, he exercised, the most exalted tact and the wisest discrimination. He handled and moved men remotely as we do pieces upon a chess-board. He retained through life all the friends he ever had, and he made the wrath of his enemies to praise him. This was not by cunning and intrigue, in the low acceptation of the term, but by far-seeing reason and discernment. He always told enough only of his plans and purposes to induce the belief that he had communicated all, yet he reserved enough to have communicated nothing. He told all that was unimportant with a gushing frankness, yet no man ever kept his real purposes closer, or penetrated the future further with his deep designs. — "Rerndon's Lincoln" (1889), Vol. HI, pp. 533, 534, 537. Judge Davis says Lincoln was the most reticent, secretive man he ever knew. Herndon describes his ambition as overflowing, restless. He says Swett's letter makes the Lincoln historical picture more life like. The four men were Lincoln's life-long friends. had given a perfect reason for his withdrawal. He did nothing out of mere gratitude, and forgot the devotion of his warmest partisans as soon as the occasion for their services was past. Wiiat they did for him was quietly appropriated as the reward of superior merit, calling for no return in kind. * * * It was seldom that he praised anybody; and when he did, it was not a rival or an equal in the struggle for pop- LINCOLN ABUSES HIS LADY-LOVE. 85 A few more words concerning the rise, progress, and probable fall of the patronage system in this country is not inappropriate as a conclusion to this chapter. The doctrine that to the victors belong the spoils, which, as before said, was first practiced nationally in this country by President Jackson, has probably had its day. If it has, it is well. Like the doctrine itself, spoils is a bad word. It is synonymous with robbery, pillage, destruction ! It is suggestive of the days of ularity and power. No one knew better how to ' dam!i with faint praise,' or to divide the glory of another by being the first and frankest to acknowledge it. His encomiums were sometimes mere strategems to catch the applause he pretended to bestow. * * * Fully alive to the fact that no qualities of a public man are so charming to the people as simplicity and candor, he made simplicity and candor the mask of deep feelings carefully concealed and subtle plans studiously vailed from all eyes but one." His private life appears to have been, in some respects, as false as his public life. Mr. Lamon says: " For many reasons the publication of this letter (a document which sheds so broad a light on one part of his life and one phase of his character), is an extremely painful duty. If it could be withheld, and the act decently reconciled to the conscience of a biographer professing to be honest and candid, it should never see the light of these pages. Its grotesque humor, its coarse exaggerations in describing the person of a lady whom the writer was willing to marry, its imputation of toothless and weather-beaten old age to a woman really young and handsome," &c. (The letter is too long and irrelevant for insertion here. The picture is black enough without it.) His final marriage looks like retributive justice. Mr. Lamon says : *' The marriage of Mr. Lincoln and Mary was quick and sudden — one or two hours' notice. How poor Mr. Lincoln felt about it may be gathered from the reminiscences of his friend, J. 11, Matheny, who says that Lincoln and himself, in 1842, were very friendly ; that Lincoln came to him one evening and said: 'Jim, I will have to marry that girl.' He was married that evening, but Matheny says ' he looked as if he was going to the slaughter.' " It was fitting that such a spoils administration should end in the rob- bery of the White House. 86 THE EUK»MAD I'ATJEIOKAGE SYSTEM Nero. It is akin to barbarism, not to civilization. It is adapted to war and a description of war times, not to peace. If Americans, when talking about public offices, would stop to think of the exact meaning of this word, it would no longer mar our political vocabulary. In private life what chance of success would a man have who, when he applied for employment, talked about the spoils of private business ? Of course he would have none. Then why should such a man have a chance in public life? Is not the spoils system as unreasonable, reprehensible, and ruinous in public as in private busi- ness ? If it is, then is it not undemocratic ? And being undemocratic, does it not logically follow that it is un- American ? If a system is wrong, is not the true rem- edy the application of a precisely opposite system ? Is not the civil service law system the precise opposite of the patronage system ? If it is, then is it not both dem- ocratic and American ? But some people say it is both undemocratic and un-American. Can this be possible? If Washington, the Adamses, Jefferson, Madison, Mon- roe, Franklin, Jay, Hamilton, Gallatin, Quincy, Web- ster, Clay, Calhoun, Benton, Barton, Bell, and the many other statesmen and patriots whose words of wisdom are quoted in this volume, are not specimen democrats and Americans, then who are ? We now come to a period in the history of the gov- ernment when the patronage system reached its natural and legitimate conclusion ; that is, it became a system of spoils. The patronage system is bad enough, but the spoils system is the patronage system run mad. The patronage pandemonium reached its hight appar- ently during the administration of President Johnson, who, on account of the then peculiar and extraordinary state of national affairs, made nearly as many official removals as if he had been the leader of a new party. DESCBIBED BY JACOB D. COX. 87 But some of his appointments were caused by resigna- tions instead of removals. The resignations were caused by dissatisfaction with President Johnson's change of policy ; for after his war passions cooled down, he chose to stand, as it were, almost between rather than on the side of either the Republican or Democratic party. And thus was this iron-willed and tried Union man enabled, despite the intense turmoil and strife of the times, and despite his naturally combative nature, to pursue a comparatively conservative course till the passions of the people had also cooled down. Person- ally Andrew Johnson was incorruptible ; but the cor- ruption among officeseekers during his administration, and for some years afterward, caused as much perhaps by the demoralization of the unparalleled civil war that had just closed as by the then runrmad patronage sys- tem, and aggravated by the complications of reconstruc- tion and the President's quarrel with and impeachment by Congress, was simply appalling. Much documen- tary evidence might be cited, but the testimony of one person will suffice. Jacob D. Cox, a distinguished Union soldier, who was a State Senator in Ohio before the war. Governor of Ohio after the war (1866), and Secretary of the Interior in 1869, says ("North Ameri- can Review," 1871, pp. 87, 88) ; " During Mr. Johnson's administration * * * ^^ con- dition of things existed which rivals the most corrupt era that can be found in the history of any nation. Men were known to offer $5,000 for the influence which might secure an appointment to a ganger's situation in the revenue service, where $1,500 was the limit of the pay that could be honestly earned, and when it was morally certain that the advent of a new administration would terminate the employment within a year. This ia 88 FRAXKLIX'S WARNING VOICE. simply a type of similar transactions extending through many grades of the public service." Speaking of the duplicity used to obtain " an appoint- ment from one end of the Avenue and a confirmation from the other," Mr. Cox says (p. 87) : " In many instances two wholly separate sets of recom- mendations were procured, one proving that the appli- cant was a faithful supporter of the President, the other proving him an utter despiser of the presidential policy. More than this, it may be easily proven that one or the other party was often cognizant of the fraud perpetra- ted, and the partisans of either side congratulated each other that an appointment or a confirmation had been procured by which the other party was completely cheated. * * * j^ ^j^g ^ game of * diamond cut diamond,' in which the two parties were using all the resources and refinements of intrigue to get the start of the other in the control of the offices."* The spoils doctrine has done more perhaps to corrupt * Benjamin Franklin, addressing the Constitutional Convention of 178*7 on the subject of salaries, seems to have had a prevision of the scenes above described. He said ("Franklin's Works,'" v, 146): "Sir, there are two passions which have a powerful influence in the affairs of men. Those are * ambition ' and ' avarice ' — the love of power and the love of money. Separately each of these has great force in prompting men to action ; but when united in view of the same object, they have in many minds the most violent effects. Place before such men a post of ' honor,' that shall at the same time be a place of ' profit,' and they will move heaven and earth to obtain it. * * * And of what kind are the men who will strive for this profitable pre- eminence ? It will not be the wise and moderate, the lovers of peace and good order, the men fittest for the trust. It will be the bold and the violent, the men of strong passions and indefatigable activity in their selfish pursuits. These will thrust themselves into your govern- ment and be your rulers." THE EVILS OP SPOILS SCHEMES INSIDIOUS. 89 American politics than all other causes combined. Its evils, which are reflected in the darkest pages of the world's history, are insidious. This fact has just been well illustrated, for what did the general public know, at the time, of the corruption described by Mr. Cox? Again, who but the principals and their accomplices would know of the corruption of New York's fugitive (1884) Aldermen, if the facts had not been published? Further, spoils and insidious spoils schemes are not con- fined to public business. Many are private, or semi- private ; such, for example, as the numerous " rings " and monopolies throughout the country, the corruption of many of which has been exposed by newspapers dur- ing the past twenty-five years. But, as before said, this bad doctrine, which for full fifty years hung over the nation like the black clouds that precede as well as attend the coming storm, but no blacker than the picture of partisan patronage just por- trayed, has probably had its day. And again, as before said, if it has, it is well, for fifty years more of such corruption would imperil the safety of the nation. * Fortunately a welcome, timely, and salutary change has come. The beclouded skies are slowly but surely clearing, and the outlook is hopeful. A great political storm is subsiding and is being succeeded by a political sunshine that not only makes the dangers through which we have passed plainer, but is teaching us how to avoid them in the future. Our course is plain. The civil service law, in order to make it a complete success, must be enforced and perfected and its scope gradually increased. Its en- forcement will naturally lead to its perfection, and its * Doubts may well be entertained whether our government could sur- vive the strain of a continuance of this system. — Grover Cleveland, So SOMETHING BETTER THAN OFFICEHOLDING. perfection to its increase of scope. As before said, the law has made a good beginning. It must also make a good ending. The increase of its usefulness must not cease till it has utterly destroyed the political dragon that has done so much to degrade American politics. Safety itself demands that, no matter what the circum- stances may be, a repetition of the scenes described by Mr. Cox shall be rendered impossible. This, notwith- standing it requires the practical abolition of the pat- ronage system, is not as difficult as it seems. When business men and business men only, without regard to politics, fill all non-political public offices, the patronage system will be practically dead, and the complete reform of the civil service will be a question of only a few years. The civil service law promises to gradually accom- plish this result. It will then have been carried to its legitimate conclusion. And it is well. There is some- thing higher, better, and more important for Americans than ordinary officeholding.* The time and talent here- tofore spent in striving for office can hereafter be more usefully devoted to studying the exact nature of public grievances and to originating corrective measures for them. This is noble, patriotic, and useful work, for it subserves the interests of the people as a body. Ameri- cans who are not already qualified, should qualify them- selves for this work. In short, they should imitate the statesmen whose wise words and examples are given in the succeeding as well as other chapters of this volume. * The support which has been given to the present administration in its efforts to preserve and advance this reform * * * shouhl con- firm our belief that there is a sentiment among the people better than a desire to hold office, and a patriotic impulse upon which may safely r«st the integrity of our institutions and the strength and perpetuity of our government. — Grover Clevkland, CHAPTER VII. LEADING STATESMEN'S PKINCIPLES. The Merit System both Preached and Practiced by the six first Presi- dents (forty years). — Powerful blows at the Patronage System. — A profound disquisition on its Evils by William Paley of England (1785). — James Wilson on Patronage and OflScial Appointments. President Washington's three cardinal rules were (" Writings," ix, 479) : 1. He would not be under en- gagements to any person. 2. He would not be influ- enced by " ties of family blood." 3. Three things were to be considered : («) Fitness, (b) The *' comparative merits and sufferings in service." (c) The equal distri- bution of appointments among the States. It is noteworthy that the civil service law is practic- ally the same as the three last requirements. It is there- fore Washingtonian. President John Adams went into oftice with the " de- termination to make as few removals as possible — not one from personal motives, not one from party consid- erations" (ix, 47). But he would not countenance " mis- conduct in oflice," and he removed "several ofticers at Portsmouth " because their " daily language," reported to him, implied "aversion if not hostility to the govern- ment." President Jefferson's principles are expressed in thirty- three words, thus (iv, 391) : " Good men, in whom there is no objection but a difference of political principle, practiced only as far as the right of a private citizen 92 JEFFERSON, MADISON, MONEOE, J. Q. ADAMS. will justify, are not proper subjects of removal." Re- ferring to removals from office, Jefferson says (iv, 409) : " I had foreseen, years ago, that the first Republican President * * * would have a dreadful operation to perform." The Marshals removed by him were charged with packing juries. When urged by a representative of the Tammany Society of Baltimore to remove Feder- alists from office, the philosopher said (Parton's " Life of Jefferson," p. 611) : " What is the difference between denying the right of suffrage and punishing a man for exercising it by turning him out of office ?" President Madison, writing to Edward Coles, August 29, 1834, said (iv, 356) : " You call my attention, with much emphasis, to the princij^le * * * that offices were the spoils of victory. * * * I fully agree in all the odium you attach to such a rule. * * * The prin- ciple could not fail to degrade any administration." President Monroe says (Gilraan's " Monroe," p. 202) : " No person at the head of the government has, in my opinion, any claim to the active partisan exertions of those in office under him." President John Quincy Adams, not only refused to remove political opponents, but he even refused to re- move a naval officer who had been concerned in an unexecuted project to insult one of his (Adams's) polit- ical friends. He says (Morse's "Adams," p. 180): "I have been urged to sweep away my opponents and pro- vide for my friends. I can justify the refusal to adopt this policy only by the steadiness and consistency of my adherence to my own. If I depart from this in one in- stance, I shall be called upon to do the same in many. An invidious and inquisitorial scrutiny into the personal dispositions of public officers will creep through the whole Union, and the most selfish and sordid passions will be kindled into activity to distort the conduct and SifLEfi, BUCHANAN, JOHNSON. ^3 misrepresent the feelings of men whose places may be- come the prize of slander upon them."* President Tyler was opposed to making removals on account of political opinions. In his first annual mes- sage he said he had used the power only in cases of unfaithfulness, incompetency, and partisanship that led to undue influence over elections. He further said (Benton's Debates, xiv, 375) : "I shall cordially concur in any constitutional measures for regulating and re- straining the power of removal." James Buchanan, in discussing in the Senate, in 1839, a bill to prevent the interference of Federal officers with elections, said (Curtis'a "Buchanan," i, 395): "Now, sir, if any freak of destiny should ever place me in one of these executive departments * * * I shall tell you the course I would pursue. I should not become an inquisitor of the political opinions of the subordinate officeholders. * * * For the higher and more respon- sible offices, however, I would select able, faithful, and well tried political friends. * * * With General Washington, I believe that any other course * would be a sort of political suicide.' " f President Johnson says (Appendix to Cong. Globe, 1867, p. 4) : " The unrestricted power of removal from office is a very great one to be trusted even to a Magis- trate chosen by the general suffrage of the whole peo- ple, and accountable directly to them for his acts. It is undoubtedly liable to abuse, and at some period of our history perhaps has been abused.^' * Washington, says Mr. James Parton, made 9 removals, J. Adams 9, Jefferson 39, Madison 5, Monroe 9, and J. Q. Adams 2. Total, 73. J. C. Calhotm (ii, 438) says J. Adams made 10 removals and JeflFerson 42. President Jackson's removals, in eight years, aggregated nearly 1,000. f Washington's Writings, xi, 76. On page 78 of the same volume he speaks of " governmental suicide," 04 GEANl^, HAYES, tlLDfii^^. President Grant was not long in perceiving the need of reform in the civil service. In his first annual mes- sage he says (Cong. Globe, ISlO, p. 9) : "I would re- spectfully call your attention to * * * a reform in the civil service of the country. I would have it go beyond the mere fixing of the tenure of ofiice of clerks and employes, * * * J would have it govern * * * the manner of making all appointments. There is no duty which so much embarrasses the Executive and heads of Departments as that of appointments. * * * The present system does not secure the best men, and often not even fit men for public place." President Hayes denounced the/ patronage system and advocated '* a return to the principles and practices of the founders of the government y in both his letter of acceptance and his inaugural address. He also de- nounced the farming out of appoint«jents among Con- * The following " plank " from the national Democratic " platform " of 181G favors the requirement of " proved competency" in filling pub- lic offices, which is precisely what the competitive examination system has accomplished. It is statesman-like and is in harmony with the present civil service law : " Reform is necessary in the civil service. Experience proves that efficient, economical conduct of the governmental business is not possi- ble if its civil service be subject to change at every election ; be a prize fought for at the ballot-box ; be a brief reward of party zeal, instead of posts of honor, assigned for proved competency, and held for fidelity in the public employ ; that the dispensing of patronage should neither be a tax upon the time of all our public men nor the instrument of their ambition." Mr. Tilden, in his letter of acceptance, favors the " organization of a better civil service system, under the tests, wherever practicable, of proved competency and fidelity." It is noteworthy that he repeats the words " proved competency." It is clear therefore what his course would have probably been had the Electoral Commission declared him elected President instead of Hayes. GABflELB A^^D ARTllUK. Do gressmen, saying : " The offices in these cases have become not merely rewards for party services, but re- wards for services to party leaders." President Garfield says (Cong. Record, 1881, p. 3) : " The civil service can never be placed on a satisfactory basis until it is regulated by law. For the good of the service itself, for the protection of those who are in- trusted with the appointing power against the waste of time and obstruction to the public business, caused by the inordinate pressure* for place, and for the protec- tion of incumbents against intrigue and lorong, \ I shall, at the proper time, ask Congress to fix the tenure of the minor offices of the several Executive Departments, and to prescribe the grounds upon which removals shall be made during the terms for which incumbents have been appointed." ^President Arthur favored civil service reform in his letter of acceptance of the nomination for Vice-Presi- dent as well as in two annual messages. He found the * We press such appointments upon tlie Departments; we crowd the doors; we fill the corridors ; Senators and Representatives throng the offices and bureaus until the public business is obstructed ; the patience of officers is worn out, and sometimes, for fear of losing their pl.'ices by our influence, they at last give way, and appoint men, not because they are fit for the position, but because we ask it. — Garfield's Speech in Congress, 1870. Let it once be fully understood that continuance in office depends solely upon the faithful and efficient discharge of duties, and that no man will be removed to make place for anoth. r, and the reform will be half accomplished. — Garfield at Athens, Ohio, 1879. To reform this service is one of the highest and most imperative duties of statesmanship, — Garfield in "Atlantic Monthly," July, 1877, p. 61. f The italics are mine. The civil service law does not make suffi- cient provision " for the protection of incumbents against intrigue and wrong ; " neither does it " prescribe the grounds upon which removals shall be made," (See introduction to Chapter VIII.) 96 PRESIDENT Cleveland's decided vieWS. " inordinate pressure for place '^ too great to bear, and further that it diverts the President's •'time and at- tention from the proper discharge of other duties no less delicate and responsible, and which, in the very nature of things, cannot be delegated to other hands." Among other things, he said : " Original appointments should be based upon ascertained fitness. The tenure of office should be stable. Positions of responsibility should, as far as practicable, be filled by the promotion of worthy and efficient officers." President Cleveland has proved himself a civil service reformer in deed as well as in word, not only as Presi- dent, but as Governor of New York./T[n his inaugural address he says (Cong. Record, 1885, p. 3) : " The peo- ple demand reform in the administration of the govern- ment and the application of business principles to public affairs. As a means to this end civil service reform should be in good faith enforced. Our citizens have the right to protection from the incompetency of public employes who hold their places solely as the reward of partisan service, and from the corrupting influence of those who promise and the vicious methods of those who expect such rewards. And those who worthily seek public employment, have the right to insist that merit and competency shall be recognized instead of party subserviency, or the surrender of honest political belief." Again, in his second annual message, President Cleve- land says (Cong. Record, Dec. 7, 1886, p. 11): "The continued operation of the law relating to our civil ser- vice has added the most convincing proofs of its neces- sity and usefulness. It is a fact worthy of note that every public officer who has a just idea of his duty to the people, testifies to the value of this reform. Its ptanchest friends are found among those who under- koft'TGAdiNd EiEatf'^tVB j^Alftdj^A^ti. 67 stand it best, and its warmest supporters are those who are restrained and protected by its requirements. " The meaning of such restraint and protection is not appreciated by those who want places under the gov- ernment, regardless of merit and efficiency, nor by those who insist that tbe selection for such places should rest upon a proper credential showing active partisan work. They mean to public officers, if not their lives, the only opportunity aiforded them to attend to public business, and they mean to the good people of the country the better performance of the work of their government. " It is exceedingly strange that the scope and nature of this reform are so little understood, and that so many things not included within its plan are called by its name. When cavil yields more fully to examination, the system will have large additions to the number of its friends. " Our civil service reform may be imperfect in some of its details ; it may be misunderstood and opposed ; it may not always be faithfully applied ; its designs may sometimes miscarry through mistake or willful in- tent ; it may sometimes tremble under the assaults of its enemies or languish under the misguided zeal of im- practicable friends ; but if the people of this country ever submit to the banishment of its underlying princi- ple from the operation of their government, they will abandon the surest guarantee of the safety and success of American institutions."^^ Representative James iCT Bayard of Delaware (after- ward United States Senator), the grandfather of Secre- tary of State Thomas F. Bayard, to whose patriotic and disinterested exertions is largely due Thomas Jefferson's election to the presidency in 1801, was decidedly op- posed to '* mortgaging the patronage of the Executive," to use his own words. His views ou the civil service OS Mr. bayard's HOKORABLti CON£>Ud¥. problem are expressed in a deposition,* made on April 3, 1806, *'in a cause depending in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, between James Gillespie, plaintiff, and Abram Smith, defendant." Mr. Bayard was a Federalist, but in the long contest (thirty-six bal- lots) for the presidency in the House of Representatives between the two great Republicans, Thomas Jefferson and Aaron Burr, was inclined, with the rest of his party (Federal), to support Burr, as being less opposed to them than Jefferson. But, after consultation and cor- respondence with Alexander Hamilton, Burr's personal character became better known to Mr. Bayard. There- fore, in order to keep Burr out of the presidency, and to prevent a failure to elect a President, and a conse- quent disruption of the new government, it was decided to put an end to the contest by the election of Jefferson. This was accomplished by Mr. Bayard, who held the vote of one State, casting a blank ballot.f But before * The deposition is adduced as evidence in the course of a " Vindica- tion of the late James A. Bayard," by his son, Senator James A. Bay- ard of Delaware, and may be found, with much other documentary evi- dence, in the Congressional Globe for January 31, 1855, page ISI. Mr. Bayard's vindication of his father from the charge of falsehood made against him by Mr. Jefferson in his " Anas "' papers (ix, 209), is com- plete and overwhelming. Mr. Jefferson's charge was undoubtedly made under a misunderstanding of the facts of the case ; and something may also be attributed perhaps to the adroitness of Senator Smith (whose deposition appears on page 100) in drawing him out. f Mr. Bayard, in order to avoid even the suspicion of impure motives in giving, as he said, " the ' turn ' to the election," declined an appoint- ment as Minister to France, tendered to him by President Adams in Feb- ruary, 1801, and to which he had been confirmed by the Senate, because it " would be held on the tenure of Mr. Jefferson's pleasure." He said : " My ambition shall never be gratified at the expense of a suspicion." Note. — I am indebted to Secretary of State T. F. Bayard for the minute details concerning his grandfather's course and change of senti^ meut in the presidential election of 1801, \^HAT MR. BAYARD WAXTEI). §^ this was done, it was thought proper to secure Mr. Jefferson's engagement in certain important political matters, which are explained in the following extract from the deposition of Mr. Bayard : "I stated to Mr. Nicholas* that if certain points of the future administration could be understood and ar- ranged with Mr Jefferson, I was authorized to say that three States would withdraw from an opposition to his election. He asked me what those points were. I an- swered : First, sir, the support of public credit ; sec- ondly, the maintenance of the naval system ; and lastly, that subordinate public officers, employed only in the execution of details established by law, shall not be removed from office on the ground of their political character, nor without complaint against their conduct. I explained myself, that I considered it not only rea- sonable, but necessary, that offices of high discretion and confidence should be filled by men of Mr. Jeffer- son's choice. I exemplified by mentioning, on the one hand, the offices of the Secretaries of States, Treasury, foreign Ministers, &c., and on the other the Collectors of ports, &c. Mr. Nicholas answered me, that he con- sidered the points as very reasonable ; that he was sat- isfied that they corresponded with the views and inten- tions of Mr. Jefferson, and [that he] knew him well. That he was acquainted with most of the gentlemen who would probably be about him and enjoying his confidence, in case he became President, and that if I would be satisfied with his assurance, he could solemnly declare it as his opinion that Mr. Jefferson, in his ad- ministration, would not depart from the points I had proposed."! * Representative John Nicholas of Virginia. j- Mr. Bayard's deposition is corroborated by a deposition of United iOO MR. SMITfl CORfeOBORAtfiS MR. fiAtAfti3. Representative Josiah Quincy of Massachusetts, on January 30, 1811, made a very original and unique speech on the subject of officeholding and the appoint- ment of Congressmen to office. " Early in the session," says Mr. Edmund Quincy ("Life of Josiah Quincy," p. 219), "Mr. Macon* of North Carolina moved the following amendment to the Constitution : " * Besolved, That no Senator or Representative shall be appointed to any civil office, place, or emolument, under the authority of the United States, until the ex- piration of the presidential term in which such person shall have served as a Senator or Representative.' States Senator Samuel Smith of Maryland, who was also a witness in the case of Gillespie vs. Smith, and who was requested by Mr, Bayard, in 1801, to inquire of Mr. Jefferson personally concerning the political topics named (p. 99), and to bring a direct reply the next day. Senator Smith says (Appendix to Cong. Globe, vol. xxxi, p. 138): "I did so. And the next day (Saturday) told him that Mr. Jefferson had said that he did not think that such officers ought to be dismissed on political grounds only, except in cases where they had made improper use of their offices to force the officers under them to vote contrary to their judgment. That as to Mr. McLane, he had already been spoken to in his behalf by Major Eccleston, and from the character given him by that gentleman, he considered him a meritorious officer ; of course that he would not be displaced, or ought not to be displaced. I further added that Mr. Bayard might rest assured (or words to that effect), that Mr. Jefferson would conduct, as to those points, agreeably to the opinions I had stated as his." * Nathaniel Macon, born in North Carolina, 1757 ; served as a private in the Revolutionary War, having declined a commission. He was ia the House and Senate frjom 1791 to 1828, the longest term of congres- sional service, I believe, on record. He was Speaker from 1801 to 1807; and president pro tern, of the Senate from 1825 to 1828. Died 1837.— E. Qdincy. It is noteworthy that 'Mr. Macon's proposed amendment, which was again presented and urged in 1826, is in substance the same as that of Representative Tucker in the first Congress. (See note, page 152,^ MR. QUINCY'S GREAT SPEECH. 101 *' Mr. Quincy moved that the following proposition be added to it : " * And no person standing to any Senator or Rep- resentative in the relation of father, brother, or sou, by blood or marriage, shall be appointed to any civil office under the United States, or shall receive any place, agency, contract, or emolument from or under any de- partment or officer thereof.' " The following are extracts from Mr. Quincy's speech, as reported by his son : " Upon this subject of offices my sentiments may per- haps be too refined for the present condition of human nature. And I am aware, in what I am about to say, that I may run athwart political friends as well as political foes. Such considerations as these shall not, however, deter me from introducing just and high notions of their duties to the consideration of the members of tlie Legislature. I hold, sir, the accept- ance of an office of mere emolument, or which is principally emolument, by a member of Congress from the Executive, as unworthy his station, and incompati- ble with that high sense of irreproachable character which it is one of the choicest terrestrial boons of vir- tue to attain. For while the attainment of office is to members of Congress the consequence solely of co- Incidence with the 'Executive, he who has the office carries on his forehead the mark of having fulfilled the condition. And although his self-love may denom- inate his attainment of the office to be the reward of merit, the world, which usually judges acutely on these matters, will denominate it the reward of service. * * * " Such is the opinion which, in my judgment, ought to be entertained of the mere acceptance of office by members of Congress, But as to that other class of 102 EXCOBIATING PROFESSIONAL OFFICESEEKERS. persons, who are open, notorious solicitors of office, they give occasion to reflections of a very different na- ture. This class of persons in all times past have appeared, and (for I say nothing of times present) in all times future will appear, on this and the other floor of Congress, creatures who, under pretense of serving the people, are in fact serving themselves ; creatures who, while their distant constituents — good, easy men, industrious, frugal, and unsuspicious — dream, in visions, that they are laboring for their country's welfare, are in truth spending their time mousing at the doors of the palace or the crannies of the depart- ments, and laying low snares to catch for themselves a-nd their relations every stray office that flits by them. For such men, chosen into this high and responsible trust, to whom have been confided the precious desti- nies of this people, and who thus openly abandon their duties, and set their places and their consciences to sale, in defiance of the multiplied, strong, and tender ties by which they are bound to their country, I have no language to express my contempt. I never have seen, and I never shall see, any of these notorious solicitors of office, for themselves or their relations, standing on this or the other floor, bawling and bully- ing, or coming down with dead votes in support of executive measures, but I think I see a hackney labor- ing for hire in a most degrading service ; a poor, earth- spirited animal, trudging in his traces, with much at- trition of the sides and induration of the membranes, encouraged by this special certainty, that, at the end of his journey, he shall have measured out to him his proportion of provender. " But I have heard that the bare suggestion of such corruption was a libel upon this House and upon this people, I h^ve he^rd that we were in this country so AFTER MANS OFFICE BEFORE CORPSE IS COLD. 103 virtuous that we were above the influence of these allurements ; that beyond the Atlantic, in old govern- ments, such things might be suspected, but that here we were too pure for such guilt, too innocent for such suspicions. Mr. Cliairman, I shall not hesitate, in spite of such popular declamation, to believe and follow the evidence of my senses and the concurrent testimonies of contemporaneous beholders. I shall not, in my esti* mation of character, degrade this people below, nor* exalt them far above, the ordinary condition of culti- vated humanity. And of this be assured, that every system of conduct or course of policy which has for its basis an excess of virtue in this country beyond what human nature exhibits in its improved state else- where, will be found on trial fallacious. Is there on this earth any collection of men in which there exists a more intrinsic, hearty, and desperate love of oflice or place — particularly of fat places ? Is there any country more infested than this with the vermin that breed in the corruptions of power ? Is there any in which place and official emolument more certainly follow distin- guished servility at elections, or base scurrility in the press ? And as to eagerness for the reward, what is the fact? Let now one of your great officeholders, a collector of the customs, a marshal, a commissioner of loans, a postmaster in one of your cities, or any officer, agent, or factor for your territories or public lands, or person holding a place of minor distinction, but of considerable profit, be called on to pay the last great debt of nature. The poor man shall hardly be dead ; lie shall not be cold ; long before the corpse is in the coffin, the mail shall be crowded to repletion with let- ters and certificates, and recommendations and repre- sentations, and every species of sturdy, sycophantic BoUcitation by which obtrusive mendicity seeks charity 104 UNSrRPASSKD WORD PAINTINGS. or invites compassion. Why, sir, we hear the clamor of the craving animals at the treasury-trough here in this capitol. Such running, such jostling, such wrig- gling, such clambering over one another's backs, such squealing because the tub is so narrow and the com- pany so crowded ! No, sir, let us not talk of stoical apathy toward the things of the national treasury, either in this people or in their Representatives or Senators. " But it will be asked (for it has been asked), Shall the Executive be suspected of ccy-rupting the national Legislature? Is he not virtuous? Without making personal distinctions or references, for the sake of argument it may be admitted that all Executives for the time being are virtuous — reasonably virtuous, Mr. Chairman — flesh and blood notwithstanding. And without meaning in this place to cast any particular reflections upon this or upon any other Executive, this I will say, that if no additional guards are provided, and now after the spirit of party has brought into so full activity the spirit of patronage, there never will be a President of these United States, elected by means now in use, who, if he deals honestly with himself, will not be able, on quitting his presidential chair, to address it as John Falstaff addressed Prince Hal : * Be- fore I knew thee, I knew nothing ; and now I am but little better than one of the wicked.' The possession of that station under the reign of party will make a man so acquainted with the corrupt principles of hu- man conduct ; he will behold oar nature in so hungry and shivering and craving a state, and be compelled so constantly to observe the solid rewards daily de- manded by way of compensation for outrageous patri- otism, that if he escape out of that atmosphere with- out partaking of its corruption, he must be below or above the ordinary condition of mortal nature. Is it A GOOD OFFICE FOB A GOOD OFFICE. 105 possible, sir, that he should remain altogether unin- fected? What is the fact? The Constitution prohib- its the members of this and of the other branch of the Legislature from being electors of the President of the United States. Yet what is done ? The prac- tice of late is so prevalent as to liave grown almost into a sanctioned usage of party. Prior to the presi- dential terms of four years, members of Congress, hav- ing received the privileged ticket of admission, as- semble themselves in a sort of electoral college, on the floor of the Senate or of the House of Representatives. They select a candidate for the presidency. * To their voice, to their influence, he is indebted for his eleva- tion. So long as this condition of things continues, what ordinary Executive will refuse to accommodate those who in so distinguished a manner have accom- modated him? Is there a better reason in the world why a man should give you, Mr. Chairman, an oflice worth two or three thousand dollars a year, for which you are qualified, and which he could give as well as not, than this — that you had been greatly instrumental in giving him one worth five and twenty thousand, for which he was equally qualified ? It is in vain to con- ceal it. So long as the present condition of things continues, it may reasonably be expected that there shall take place regularly between the President of the * This system continued till 1824, when William H. Crawford, who was nominated in accordance with it, ran behind both Adams and Jack- son. In 1828 Jackson and Adams ran without any formal nomination. The first national Convention was held by the Democratic party in Bal- timore in 1832, when Jackson and Van Buren were nominated. The Whigs held their first national Convention in Harrisburg in December, 1839, when General Harrison and John Tyler were nominated. In New York and Pennsylvania the caucus system was superseded by State Con- rentions between 1820 and 1830. Mr. Qnincy helped to kill "King Caucus," as the system was sometimes called. 106 WHAT MR. QUINCY'S FATHER SAID. United States and a portion of both Houses of Congress an interchange, strictly speaking, of good offices." * Mr. Quincy's speech, which may be found in full in Gales & Seaton's "Debates" for 1810-18]!, beginning at page 843, closed as follows : "The principle for which I contend, and which is the basis both of the original amendment and of my proposition, is this : Put it out of the power of the Executive to seem to pay any of the members of Con- gress, by putting it out of their power to receive. * Avoid the appearance of evil.' We have been taught to pray, * Lead us not into temptation.' They who rightly estimate their duties may find in public life no less necessity than in private life frequently to repeat this aspiration."* Josiah Quincy, Jr., father of the author of the fore- going remarkable speech, who died just before the Rev- olutionary War (1775), but whose able pen helped to gain American independence, says that " quam dm se bene gessermt^^ (during good behavior), is "a regula- tion which ought to be the tenure of all offices of public trust." (" Life of J. Quincy, Jr.," p. 443.) Senator John C. Calhoun of South Carolina, in 1835, in a " Report on the extent of Executive Patronage," said (Cralle's " Calhoun," v, 152) : " Were a premium offered for the best means of extending to the utmost the power of patronage ; to destroy the love of coun- try, and to substitute a spirit of subserviency and man- worship ; to encourage vice and discourage virtue ; * Josiah Quincy (born Feb. 4, 1772, died July 1, 1864) "first laid down the law (1822) * * * that the publication of the truth, with a good intention, and for a justifiable end, is not libelous. This ruling excited much censure at the time, but is now the acknowledged rule of law in this country and in England." (Am. Cyclopedia, xiv, 154.) THE problem: in a nutshell. 107 and, in a word, to prepare for the subversion of lib- erty and the establishment of despotism, no scheme more perfect could be devised." Again, in 1846, in a speech in the Senate, Mr. Cal- houn said (iv, 302) : " The presidential election is no longer a straggle for great principles, but only a great struggle as to who shall have the spoils of office." Senator John Holmes of Maine, speaking of "Exec- utive power of Removal," explained the civil service problem in a nutshell. He said (G. & S.'s " Debates," 1829-30, vol. vi, pt. i, p. 389) : " The ability and fidel- ity of the officer in office would be better evidence than ten thousand recommendations in favor of the candidate who would supersede him. * * * The longer a faithful officer is in, the better will his experi- ence enable him to perform the duties." Secretary of State Thomas F. Bayard, who has per- haps seen as much of the evils of the machine in poli- tics as any man in this country, says (" Dartmouth Oration," 1882) : " We see * * * hungry seekers for office, savage with delay and disappointment, and furi- ous for success. * * * From such scenes and contro- versies men of dignity, refinement, and self-respect nat- urally shrink, * * * and places that should be filled by men possessing qualities that win and deserve pri- vate and public confidence, are filled by adroit, schem- ing, unblushing manipulators, who scoff at personal dignity and self-respect, and avow themselves * prac- tical politicians.' * * * Personal independence, indi- vidual conscience, fidelity to honest conviction, weigh nothing and can avail nothing to the man enlisted in the spoils system of politics."* * The views of many other statesmen of the present day might be given, but they would malce a small volume of themselves. The views of a few have already been given here and there. They are typical 108 P1.TI10JTAGE IS POWEB. William Paley, D.D., writing (about 1785) of "The British Constitution," says (" Moral and Political Phil- osophy," p. 205) : " When the Constitution conferred upon the Crown the nomination to all employments in the public service, the authors of this arrangement were led to it by the obvious propriety of leaving to a master the choice of his servants, and by tlie manifest inconveniency of engaging the National Council, upon every vacancy, in those personal interests which attend elections to places of honor and emolument. Our an- cestors did not observe that this disposition added an influence to the regal office which, as the number and value of public employments increased,'^ would super- sede in a great measure the forms and change the char- acter of the ancient Constitution. They knew, not, what the experience and reflection of modern ages have discovered, that patronage universally is power ; that he who possesses in a sufficient degree the means of gratifying the desires of mankind after wealth and dis- tinction, by whatever checks and forms his authority may be limited or disguised, will direct the manage- ment of public affairs. Whatever be the mechanism of the political engine, he will guide the motion. * * * Changes ought not to be adventured upon without a comprehensive discernment of the consequences — with- out a knowledge as well of the remote tendency as of the immediate design." In speaking of the checks and balances of the British Constitution, Doctor Paley says (p. 211) : " The King's choice of his Ministers is controlled by the obligation he is under of appointing those men to offices in the cases, and ought therefore to suffice. Many *' leading statesmen's prin- ciples " appear in the succeeding chapter in preference to this because they treat of the power of removal. * The italics are mine. Compare with page 56. INTLTTEKCE OF FAVOEITISM SUBDUED. 109 state who are found capable of managing the affairs of his government with the two Houses of Parliament. Which consideration imposes such a necessity upon the Crown as hath in a great measure subdued the influ- ence of favoritism ; insomuch that it is become no uncommon spectacle in this country to see men pro- moted by the King to the highest offices and richest preferments which he has in his power to bestow, who have been distinguished by their opposition to his per- sonal inclinations." In speaking of plans for " an equal or a reformed representation," he says (pp. 215, 216): "One conse- quence, however, may be expected from these projects, namely, * less flexibility to the influence of the Crown.' And since the diminution of this influence is the de- clared and perhaps the sole design of the various schemes that have been produced, whether for ri*gu- lating the elections, contracting the duration, or for purifying the constitution of Parliament by the ex- clusion of placemen and pensioners, it is obvious to remark that the more apt and natural as well as the more safe and quiet way of attaining the same end would be by a direct reduction of the patronage of the Crown, which might be effected to a certain extent without hazarding further consequences. Superfluous and exorbitant emoluments of office may not only be suppressed for the present, but provisions of law be devised which should for the future restrain within certain limits the number and value of the offices in the donation of the King. * * * It is the nature of power always to press upon the boundaries which confine it."* * It is noteworthy that so profound a thinker as Dr. Paley should favor woman suffrnge. Speaking of the right of representation, he says (p. 214): " We waive a controversy with those writers who insist upon 110 PATRONAGE THE BOX OF PANDORA* James Wilson, LL.D., one of the framers of the na- tional Constitution,* and afterward an Associate Jus- tice of the United States Supreme Court, in the course of a lecture entitled a " Comparison of the Constitution of the United States with that of Great Britain," thus expatiates concerning the evils of patronage (" Lectures on Law," i, 446) : " We are now arrived, in our pro- gress, at another fountain, from which, in Great Brit- ain, the waters of bitterness have plentifully flowed — I mean the fountain of office. * * * Offices of trust and profit are scattered, with a lavish hand, among those by whom a return, very dangerous to the liber- ties of the nation, may be made, and from whom such a return is but too often expected. This is the box of Pandora, which has been opened on Britain. To its poisonous emanations have been owing the contamina- ted and contaminating scenes of venality, of prostitu- tion, and corruption which have crowded and disgraced her political theater. To the same efficacy have been owing the indiscriminate profligacy and universal de- generacy which have been diffused through every chan- nel into which the treasures of the public have pro- cured admission." representation as a 'natural' right. We consider it so far only, as a right at all, as it conduces to public utility ; that is, as it contributes to the establishment of good laws, or as it secures to the people the just administration of these laws. These effects depend upon the disposition and abilities of the national counselors. * * * jf this right bo • natural,' no doubt it must be equal, and the right, we may add, of one sex as well as of the other. Whereas every plan of representation that we have heard of begins by excluding the votes of women, thus cutting off, at a single stroke, one-half the public from a right which is as- serted to be inherent in all ; a right too, as some represent it, not only universal, but inalienable, and indefeasible, and imprescriptible." * Washington called Mr. Wilson " as able, candid, and honest a mem- ber as was in the Convention." (Bancroft's His. of the Const., ii, 241.) HOW BAD APPOINTMEJTTS SOMETIMES OCCUR. Ill In another lecture, entitled "Of Government" (i, 401, 402), Justice Wilson lays down the following fun- damental principles for guidance in appointments to office : " The appointment to offices is an important part of the executive authority. Much of the ease, much of the reputation, much of the energy, and much of the safety of the nation depends on judicious and impartial appointments. But are impartiality and fine discernment likely to predominate in a numerous exec- utive body ? In proportion to their own number will be the number of their friends, favorites, and depend- ents. An office is to be filled. A person nearly con- nected by some of the foregoing ties with one of those who are to vote in filling it, is named as a candidate. His patron is under no necessity to take any part, par- ticularly responsible, in his appointment. He may ap- pear even cold and indiiferent on the occasion. But he possesses an advantage, the value of which is well understood in bodies of this kind. Every member who gives, on his account, a vote for his friend, will ex- pect the return of a similar favor on the first con- venient opportunity. In this manner a reciprocal in- tercourse of partiality, of interestedness, of favoritism, perhaps of venality, is established ; and in no partic- ular instance is there a practicability of tracing the poison to its source. Ignorant, vicious, and prostituted characters are introduced into office ; and some of those who voted, and procured others to vote for them, are the first and loudest in expressing their astonishment that the door of admission was ever opened to men of their infamous description. * * * Those who j^ossess talents and virtues, which would reflect honor on office, will be reluctant to appear as candidates for appoint- ments. If they should be brought into view, what weight will virtue, merit, and - taleiH^^£oas^)ffice have />^^ OP THB ^"^^ ll^ HOW TO MAKE GOOD APPOINTMENTS. in a balance held and poised by partiality, intrigue, and chicane ? " The person who nominates or makes appointments to office should be known. His own office, his own character, his own fortune should be responsible. He should be alike unfettered and unsheltered by counsel- ors. No constitutional stalking-horse should be pro- vided for him to conceal his turnings and windings, when they are too dark and too crooked to be exposed to public view. Instead of the dishonorable inter- course, which I have already mentioned, an intercourse of a very different kind should be established — an in- tercourse of integrity and discernment on the part of the magistrate who appoints, and of gratitude and con- fidence on the part of the people who will receive the benefit of his appointments. Appointments made and sanctioned in this highly respectable manner will, like a fragrant and beneficent atmosphere, diffuse sweetness and gladness around those to whom they are given. Modest merit will be beckoned to in order to encour- age her to come forward. Bare-faced impudence and unprincipled intrigue will receive repulse and disap- pointment, deservedly their portion." CHAPTER VIII. THE POWER OF REMOVAL. A remedy for its Mistakes or Abuse. — A synopsis of the great debate in the first Congress (1789) on the Power of Removal. — The con- gressional decision then made criticised by Benton, Webster, and others. — The Four-years' Term Law and some opinions of it (note). - The debate in the first Congress on the power to remove public officials was one of great interest and importance, and was besides very instructive. A bill was introduced in the House creating " The Depart- ment of Foreign Affairs," the Secretary of which was, in the words of the bill, " to be removable by the President of the United States."* The discussion was on striking out the last quoted words. The majority claimed that the President alone had the power of re- moval, while the minority claimed that the consent of the Senate was necessary ; that is, in the case of of- ficers confirmed by the Senate. Judged by the light of nearly a century of experi- ence, it is plain that both sides were partly right and partly wrong. The forefathers, who were legislating for only about three million of people, were construct- ing a political chart to guide and protect future gen- erations, and it is not strange that they should have made a few mistakes. While it is clear, as pointed out by the majority, that the President should have * The motion to establish the above mid other Executive Departments was made originally by Keprosontative lioudin.ot, in a speech, on M.iy 19, 1789. 114 A PROPOSED BOARD OF APPEALS. the power of removal, it is equally clear, as pointed out by the minority, that there should be a check to prevent him or anybody else from abusing it. Fur- ther, the President and his chief officials are as liable to make mistakes as other men. Of all public men they should be the first to correct a mistake or to right a wrong, and thus set an example for others to follow. We should give officeholders, chief as well as sub- ordinate, all the protection we can from mistakes, dis- likes, fits of passion, prejudices, cajirices, intrigues, and wrongs. But what kind of protection can we give them? It appears to me that, under the civil service law system, a Board of Appeals should be established, which could be increased in number as the number of offices and the scope of the law increase, before which all reasonable complaints could be /icard, and that where the complaint is sustained, the aggrieved official should be reinstated with full pay.* It is required by Rule 16 that the Civil Service Commissioners shall perform the work of this proposed Board. But as the Commis- * There is a remedy for every distemper in government, if the people are not wanting to themselves. For a people wanting to themselves, there is no remedy. — James Wilson. Napoleon was a despot, it is said. Yet he never dismissed any one from public office without an inquiry and report of facts, and rarely ever without hearing the accused functionary ; never when the questions involved were civil or administrative. — Napoleonic Ideas. By Louis Napoleon. But Napoleon, who was a statesman as well as a soldier, sometimes dismissed officials without much ceremony. " ' You cannot find me guilty of dishonesty,' observed the minister, Barbe-Marbois, on receiving his dismissal. ' I had rather,' replied Napoleon, ' that you had shown yourself dishonest than a fool. There is a limit to one; there is none whatever to the other.' " (Crowe's " History of France," v, 147.) Napoleon was riglit in one respect at least, namely, that fools are not proper persons to fill public offic?^ RESTRAINT THE BODY-POLITIC SAFETY-VALVE. 115 sioners are already overworked, the proposition is not practical. The functions of this proposed Board would resemble in one respect those of the Supreme Court of the United States, for one of the most important func- tions of the Supreme Court is to correct the mistakes of the legislative and executive departments. Again, having had nothing to do with the nomination, confir- mation, or appointment of officers, it would, like the Supreme Court, be free of prejudice. Such a Board would be at least a partial check on the President and all other chief officials, and would aid in preventing some future Jackson or Lincoln from throwing the official machinery of government out of gear. This is well, for restraint, in public as well as in private life, is the safety-valve of the body-politic. The minority, as before said, were certainly right about the necessity of a check to prevent the Presi- dent from abusing the power of removal. But the senatorial check they proposed, however practical it may have been then, is certainly not practical now, for, on account of the great increase of business, the Senate has hardly time now to look after confirmations, much less removals. Further, the exact check they proposed was incorporated in the Tenure of Office Act of 1860-67,* and was found in practice to be unsatis- factory. One example of its inefficacy will suffice. J. D. Cox, in an article in the North Americati llevlew for January, 1871 (p. 87), in speaking of the corrup- tion at Washington after the demoralizing civil war, and incidentally of the Tenure of Office Act, says that " dishonest (official) incumbents were plundering the people under tlie shelter of a Tenure of Office Act, which seemed to be skillfully adapted to remove every * Jiepealed in 1887, 116 GREAT USE AND POWER OP THE SENATE. trace of responsibility from botli the appointing and confirming powers. The Republicans in Congress were complaining that the President refused to remove men who were indicted or convicted in the courts, and the friends of the President retorted that the Senate refused to consent to the removal of others who were proven to be plunderers of the treasury on the like evidence." * Again, the minority were certainly right about it being the intention of the framers of the Constitution that the Senate should be a check on the President, and also (which was admitted by the majority) that its duties are sometimes executive and sometimes ju- dicial, and that it is to this extent blended with both the executive and judicial departments. The Senate, so far as the removal of an officer confirmed by it is concerned, is at all times a more or less perfect check on the President, because he has to depend on it for the confirmation of a successor. The Senate, in fact, as it is almost self-evident was the intention of the framers of the Constitution, exercises great power. It should therefore be composed of experienced and trained states- men only. No mere politician should enter its cham- ber. And it would be better, far better, that its mem- bers should all be as poor as Socrates, than that one of them should be chosen on account of his wealth, or be even charged with buying his election. Bad men may get into the Senate ; but the people who, on account of this fact, howl for its abolition, would destroy the equilibrium of the government. They might as well, for the same reason, ask for the abolition of either the House of Representatives or the United States Supreme Court. The proper remedy is purification. * See the remarkable prediction of Representative Ames, page 125. Mr. Madison (page 117) also indulges in some lamentable forebodings, and under the patronage system their realization is not impossible, TH^ iJEfiD AND tJSE OF BKSPONSIBILITY. lH SPEECHES IN FAVOR OF REMOVAL BY THE PRESIDENT ALONE. * James Madison of Virginia said (pp. 462, 463, 496, 498, 581) : " It is evidently the intention of the Con- stitution that the first Magistrate should be responsi- ble for the executive department. So far therefore as we do not make the officers who are to aid him in the duties of that department responsible to him, he is not responsible to his country. Again, is there no danger that an officer, when he is appointed by the concurrence of the Senate, and has friends in that body, may choose rather to risk his establishment on the favor of that branch than rest it upon the discharge of his duties to the satisfaction of the executive branch, which is constitutionally authorized to inspect and control his conduct? And if it should liappen that the officers connect themselves with the Senate, they may mutu- ally support each other, and for want of efficacy re- duce the power of the President to a mere vapor ; in which case his responsibility would be annihilated, and the expectation of it unjust. The high executive of- ficers, joined in cabal with the Stjnate, would lay the foundation of discord, and end in an assumption of the executive power, only to be removed by a revolution in the government. I believe no principle is more clearly laid down in the Constitution than that of responsi- bility. * * * * The salient points only of this debate are given. They are taken from vol. i of *' The Debates and Proceedings in the Congress of the United States, compiled from authentic materials, by Joseph Gales, Sr." The speeches, divided pro and con, are given in the order of their de- livery ; but those who spoke twice or three times, have their remarks combined in one speech. Repetitions of arguments, either by the same or different speakers, have, as far as practicable, been omitted. lis BEMOVAL AN EXECUTIVE POWElt. "Is the power of displacing an executive power? I conceive that if any power whatsoever is in its nature executive, it is the power of appointing, overseeing, and controlling those who execute the laws. If the Con- stitution had not qualified the power of the President in appointing to office, by associating the Senate with him in that business, would it not be clear that he would have the right, by virtue of his executive power, to make such appointment? Should we be authorized, in defiance of that clause in the Constitution, * The exec- utive power shall be vested in a President,' to unite the Senate with the President in the appointment to office? * * * If it is admitted that we should not, I think it may be disputed whether we have a right to associate them in removing persons from office, the one power being as much of an executive nature as the other ; and the first only is authorized by being excepted out of the general rule established by the Constitution, in these words : * The executive power shall be vested in a President.' * * * " The doctrine, however, which seems to stand most in opposition to the principles I contend for is that the power to annul an appointment is, in the nature of things, incidental to the power which makes the ap- pointment. I agree that if nothing more was said in the Constitution than that the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, should appoint to office, there would be great force in saying that the power of removal resulted, by a natural implication, from the power of appointing. But there is another part of the Constitution no less explicit than the one on which the gentleman's doctrine is founded. It is that part which declares that the executive power shall be vested in a President of the United States. The association of the Senate with the President in exer- GOOD OFFiCERS SHOULD l^OT BE EEMoVED. 119 cising that particular function is an exception to this general rule ; and exceptions to general rules, I con- ceive, are ever to be taken strictly.* But there is an- other part of the Constitution which inclines, in my judgment, to favor the construction I put upon it — the President is required to see that the laws be faith- fully executed. If the duty to see the laws faithfully executed be required at the hands of the Executive Magistrate, it would seem that it was generally in- tended he should have that species of power which is necessary to accomplish that end. * * * Now if the officer, when once appointed, is not to depend upon the President for his official existence, but upon a dis- tinct body (for where there are two negatives required, either can prevent the removal), I confess I do not see how the President can take care that the laws be faith- fully executed. * * * " The danger then consists merely in this : the Presi- dent can displace from office a man whose merits re- quire that he should be continued in it. What will * * * operate to prevent it (this abuse of power) ? * Daniel Webster says (iv, 193): " The error of this argument lies in this. It supposes the power of removal to be held by the Tresident under the general grant of executive power. Now it is certain that the power of appointment is not held under that general grant, because it is particularly provided for, and is conferred, in express terms, on the President and Senate, If therefore the power of removal be a natural appendage to the power of appointment, then it is not conferred by the GENERAL WORDS granting executive power to the President, but is con- ferred by the special clause which gives the appointing power to the President and Senate. * * * if exceptions to a general rule are to be taken strictly, when expressed, it is still more clear, when they are not expressed at all, that they are not to be implied except on evident and clear grounds ; and as ihe general power of appointment is confess- edly given to the President and Senate, no exception is to be implied in favor of one part of that general power, namely, the removing part, un- less for some obvious and irresistible reason." 126 WhM IMPEACttMEN* 19 SC5^mA.hLt, In the first place, lie will be impeachable by this House, before the Senate, for such an act of maladministration, for I contend that the wanton removal of meritorious officers would subject him to impeachment and removal from his own high trust. * * * q^^ jjg accomplish this end? No. He can place no man in the vacancy whom the Senate shall not approve. " If there is any point in which the separation of the legislative and executive powers ought to be main- tained with greater caution, it is that which relates to officers and offices. The powers relative to offices are partly legislative and partly executive. The Legisla- ture creates the office, defines the powers, limits its duration, and annexes a compensation. This done, the legislative power ceases. They ought to have nothing to do with designating the man to fill the office. That I conceive to be of an executive nature." John Vining of Delaware said (pp. 465, 511): "If this power is not in the President, it is not vested in any body whatever. It cannot be within the legisla- tive power of the Senate, because it is of an adverse nature. It cannot be within the executive power of the Senate, because they possess none but what is ex- pressly granted by the Constitution, * * * " I take it that the best principle is that he who is responsible for the conduct of the officer, ought to have the power of removing him. * * * Perhaps it might be equally right that the responsible person should have the appointment of those who are to aid him. But this case is qualified by an express stipulation in the Constitution, and therefore must be submitted to. " The argument of convenience is strong in favor of the President, for this man (Secretary F. A.) is an arm or an eye to him. He sees and writes his secret dis- patches. He is an instrument over which the President ought to have a complete command. * * * If the Pres- ident removes a vahiable officer, which seems to be the great danger the gentleman from South Carolina (Mr. Smith) apprehends, it would be an act of tyranny which the good sense of the nation would never forget. But if the Senate turns out a good man, they might be re- elected by the Legislatures. The Senate may remove a good officer without feeling any injury. They are not feelingly sensible of the advantages arising from his labors, because they do not act in concert with him ; while the President, by such a removal, deprives him- self of a valuable and necessary aid. When a good officer is obtained, the President has every motive of justice, self-interest, and public good to retain him in his situation. None of these motives operate, or but faintly operate, upon the Senate." On page 570 Mr. Vining, in reply to Mr. Jackson, speaks of the danger " of denying the Executive a due proportion of power." This, he said, was the case in both Sweden and Poland. " In Sweden," he said, " the limited power of the King was nearly annihilated by an aristocracy." The King, " for the security of his nation," and with the assent of the nation, had been compelled " to assume all the powers of despotism." Of Poland he said : " The object of the Poles has been to guard against what was called the encroachments of the throne. ' It is not,' said they but a century ago, * a master that we want, it is only a chief.' Some went further, and asserted that a free people w^anted no chief at all." Of our own government he said : " If by legis- lative encroachment we weaken the executive arm, we render it incapable of performing the functions assigned it by the Constitution, and subject it to become an easy prey to the other branches of the government." Elias Boudinot of New Jersey said (pp. 468, 409; 521 ^ 12?, 1?HE SEKAfE MAY THWaR* TflE MESifcENf. 528) : " Let us examine whether it (the power of re- moval) belongs to the Senate and President. Certain- ly, sir, there is nothing that gives the Senate this right in express terms. But they are authorized, in express words, to be concerned in the appointment. And does this necessarily include the power of removal ? If the President complains to the Senate of the misconduct of an officer, and desires their advice and consent to the removal, what are the Senate to do? Most certainly they will inquire if the complaint is well founded. To do this they must call the officer before them to answer. Who then are the parties ? The supreme executive of- ficer against his assistant ; and the Senate are to sit as judges, to determine whether sufficient cause of removal exists. Does not this set the Senate over the head of the President ? But suppose they shall decide in favor of the officer. What a situation is the President then in, surrounded by officers with whom, by his situation, he is compelled to act, but in whom he can have no confidence ; reversing the privilege given him by the Constitution, to prevent his having officers imposed upon him who do not meet his approbation ! " But I have another more solid objection, which places the question in a more important point of view. The Constitution has placed the Senate as the only security and barrier between the House of Representa- tives and the President. Suppose the President has desired the Senate to concur in removing an officer, and they have declined. Or suppose the House has applied to the President and Senate to remove an of- ficer obnoxious to them, and they determine against the measure. The House can have recourse to nothing but an impeachment, if they suppose the criminality of the officer will warrant such procedure. Will the Senate then be that upright cpurt which they ought to ap- Why the senate suoULb be unprejudiced. 12^ peal to on Ibis occasion, when they have prejudged your cause? I conceive the Senate will be too much under the control of their former decision to be a proper body for this House to apply to for impartial justice. As the Senate are the dernier resort, and the only court of judicature which can determine on cases of impeach- ment, I am for preserving them free and independent, both on account of the officer and this House. I there- fore conceive that it was never the intention of the Constitution to vest the power of removal in the Presi- dent and Senate ; but as it must exist somewhere, it rests on the President alone. * * * *' The President nominates and appoints. He is f ur- tlier expressly authorized to commission all officers. Now does it appear from this distribution of power that the Senate appoints? Does an officer exercise powers by authority of the Senate ? No. I believe the Presi- dent is the person from whom he derives his authority. He appoints, but under a check. It is necessary to obtain the consent of the Senate. But after that is obtained, I ask who appoints? Who vests the officer with authority ? Who commissions him ? The Presi- dent does these acts by his sole power, but they are ex- ercised in consequence of the advice of another branch of the government. If therefore the officer receives his authority and commission from the President, surely the removal follows as coincident. * * * The Con- stitution vested* all executive power in the President. The power of designating and appointing officers to execute the laws was in its nature executive. Conse- quently the President would appoint ex officio^ if he bad not been limited by the express words of the Con- stitution. Hence he (Mr. Boudinot) inferred, ex officio^ he would remove without limitation. * The four closing sentences are reported iu the second person, l24 SXTSPENSIOIT A NUGATORY rOVT^lL. " Gentlemen say they have a sufficient remedy for every evil likely to result from connecting the Senate with the President. This they propose to do by allow- ing the power of suspension. This does not answer the end, because there is a possibility that the officer may not be displaced after a hearing before the Sen- ate. * * * Y^Q }iad better at once give a power that would answer two valuable purposes, than one alto- gether nugatory. In the first place, it (removal) would entirely separate the legislative and executive depart- ments, conformably to the great principles of the Con- stitution ; and, in the second place, it would answer the end of government better, and secure real benefits to the Union." Fisher Ames of Massachusetts said (pp. 474, 475, 476, 477, 540) : " The executive powers are delegated to the President with a view to have a responsible officer to superintend, control, inspect, and check the officers nec- essarily employed in administering the laws. The only bond between him and those he employs is the confi- dence he has in their integrity and talents. When that confidence ceases, the principal ought to have power to remove those whom he can no longer trust with sefety. * * * The powers of the President are defined in the Constitution. But it is said that he is not expressly authorized to remove from office. If the Constitution is silent also with respect to the Senate, the argument may be retorted. If this silence proves that the power cannot be exercised by the President, it certainly proves that it cannot be exercised by the President by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. The power of removal is incident to government. But not being distributed by the Constitution, it will come before the Legislature, and, like every other omitted case, must be supplied by law. HOW SENATE MAY CAUSE SERIOUS TBOUBLE. 125 " The attempt to blend the executive and legislative departments in exercising the power of removal is such a mixing as ought not to be carried into practice on arguments grounded on implication. And the gentle- man from Virginia (Mr. White's) reasoning is wholly- drawn from implication. He supposes, as the Consti- tution qualifies tlie President's power of appointing to office by subjecting his nominations to the concurrence of the Senate, that the qualification follows of course in the removal. " Another reason occurs to me against blending these powers. An officer who superintends the public reve- nue will naturally acquire a great influence. If he ob- tains support in the Senate, upon an attempt of the President to remove him, it will be out of the power of the House, when applied to by the first Magistrate, to impeach him with success, for the very means of proving charges of malconduct against him will be under the power of the officer. All the papers neces- sary to convict him may be withheld while the person continues in liis office. Protection may be rendered for protection ; and as this officer has such exten- sive influence, it may be exerted to procure the re- election of his friends. These circumstances, in addi- tion to those stated by the gentleman from New Jersey (Mr. Boudinot), must clearly evince to every gentleman tlie impropriety of connecting the Senate with the Pres- ident in removing from office. * * On page 542 Mr. Ames says : "If the Senate are to possess the power of removal, they will be enabled to hold the person in office, let the circumstances be what they may that point out the necessity or pro- priety of his removal. It creates a permanent connection. It will nurse faction. It will promote intrigue to obtain protectors and to shelter tools. Sir, it is infusing poison into the Constitution. * * * There is rujn in it. It is tempting the Senate with forbidden fruit," 126 PRESIDENT'S EXECUTIVE POWER ILLUSTRATED. " But why should we connect the Senate in the re- moval ? Their attention is taken up with other impor- tant business, and they have no constitutional authority to watch the conduct of the executive officers, and there- fore cannot use such authority with advantage. If the President is inclined to shelter himself behind the Sen- ate with respect to having continued an improper per- son in office, we lose the responsibility, which is our greatest security. The blame among so many will be lost. * * * " It must be admitted that the Constitution is not explicit on the point in contest. Yet the Constitution strongly infers that the power is in the President alone. It is declared that the executive power shall be vested in the President. Under these terms all the powers properly belonging to the executive department of the government are given, and such only taken away as are expressly excepted. If the Constitution had stopped here, and the duties had not been defined, either the President had had no powers at all, or he would acquire from that general expression all the powers properly belonging to the executive department. * * * "The President * * * jg ^]jg agent. The Senate may prevent his acting, but cannot act themselves. It may be difficult to illustrate this point by examples which will exactly correspond. But suppose the case of an executor, to whom is devised land, to be sold with the advice of a certain person, on certain condi- tions. The executor sells, with the consent ^nd on the conditions required in tlie will. The conditions are broken. May the executor re enter for the breach of them ? Or has the person with whom he was obliged to consult in the sale any power to restrain him ? The executor may remove the wrongful possessor from the land^ though perhaps by the will he may hold it in trust SENATE NOT INSPECTORS OF OFFICERS. 127 for another person's benefit. In this manner the Presi- dent may remove from office ; though, when vacant, he cannot fill it without the advice of the Senate." Thomas Hartley of Pennsylvania said (pp. 479, 480, 481): "This is an office of considerable importance. * * * In all commercial countries it will require men of high talents to fill such an office, and great respon- sibility. It is necessary to connect the business in such a manner as to give the President a complete command over it ; so in whatever hands it is placed, or however modulated, it must be subjected to his inspection and control. * * * " Another reason why the power of removal should be lodged with the President rather than the Senate arises from their connection with the people. The Pres- ident is the representative of the people in a near and equal manner. He is the guardian of his country. The Senate are the representatives of the State Legislatures ; but they are very unequal in that representation. Each State gends two members to that House, although their proportions are as ten to one. Hence arises a degree of insecurity to an impartial administration. But if they possessed every advantage of equality, they can- not be the proper body to inspect into the proper be- havior of officers, because they have no constitutional powers for this purpose." John Lawrence of New York said (pp. 483, 484) : " It has been stated as an objection that we should extend the powers of the President, if we give him the power of removal ; and we are not to construe the Constitution in such way as to enlarge the executive power to the injury of any other ; that as he is limited in the power of appointment by the control of the Sen- ate, he ought to be equally limited in the removal. If there be any weight in* this argument, it applies, as f orci- 128 CONSISTENCY AND PRESIDENTIAL KEMOVALS. bly against vesting the power conjointly in the President and Senate ; because if we are not to extend the powers of the Executive beyond the express detail of duties found in the Constitution, neither are we at liberty to extend the duties of the Senate beyond those precise points fixed in the same instrument. Of course if we cannot say the President alone shall remove, we cannot say the President and Senate may exercise such power. " It is admitted that the Constitution is silent on this subject. But it is also silent with respect to the ap- pointments it has vested in the Legislature. The Con- stitution declares that Congress may by law vest the ap- pointment of such inferior officers as they think proper in the President alone, in the courts of law, or heads of departments, yet says nothing with respect to the removal. * * * In those cases in which the Consti- tution has given the appointment to the President, he must have the power of removal for the sake of con- sistency ; for no person will say that if the President should appoint an inferior officer, he should not have the power to remove him when he thought proper, if no particular limitation was determined by the law." Representative George Clymer of Pennsylvania said (pp. 489, 490) : " I am clear that the Executive has the power of removal as incident to his department ; and if the Constitution had been silent with respect to the appointment, he would have had that power also. The reason perhaps why it was mentioned in the Constitution was to give some further security against the introduction of improper men into office. But in cases of removal there is not such necessity for this check. What great danger would arise from the removal of a worthy man, when the Senate must be consulted in the appointment of his successor? Is it likely they will consent to advance an improper char- MB. BENSON'S ADMIRABLE ILLUSTBATION. 129 acter? The presumption therefore is that he would not abuse this power ; or, if he did, only one good man would be changed for another. If the President is divested of this power, his responsibility is destroyed. You prevent his efficiency, and disable him from af- fording that security to the people which the Consti- tution contemplates. * * * Xhe Executive must act by others. But you reduce him to a mere shadow when you control both the power of appointment and removal. If you take away the latter power, he ought to resign the power of superintending and directing the executive parts of government into the hands of the Senate at once, and then we become a dangerous aristocracy, or shall be more destitute of energy than any government on earth." Egbert Benson of New York said (pp. 505, 506, 507) : " I will not repeat what has been said to prove that the true constrution is that the President alone has the power of removal, but will state a case to show the embarrassment which must arise by a combination of the senatorial and legislative authority in this particu- lar. I will instance the officer to which the bill re- lates. To him will necessarily be committed negotia- tions with the ministers of foreign courts. This is a very delicate trust. The supreme executive officer, in superintending this department, may be entangled with suspicions of a very delicate nature relative to the trans- actions of the officer, and such as from circumstances would be injurious to name. Indeed he may be so situated that he will not, cannot, give the evidence of his suspicion. Now, thus circumstanced, suppose he should propose to the Senate to remove the Secretary of Foreign Affairs. Are we to expect the Senate will, without any reason being assigned, implicitly submit to his proposition? They will not. Suppose 130 SENlTE ONLY A dONSTlTtTTlOl^^AL CHfiaS. he should say he suspected the man's fidelity. They would say we must proceed further, and know the rea- son for this suspicion. They would insist on a full communication. Is it to be supposed that this man will not have a single friend in the Senate who will contend for a fair trial and a full hearing ? The Presi- dent then becomes the plaintiff and the Secretary the defendant. The Senate are sitting in judgment be- tween the Chief Magistrate of the United States and a subordinate officer. Now I submit to the candor of the gentlemen whether this looks like good government. Yet in every instance when the President thinks proper to have an officer removed, this absurd scene must be displayed. How much better, even on principles of expediency, will it be that the President alone have the power of removal. " It has been warmly contended that the power of removal is incidental to the power of appointment. It may be true in general, but upon examination we shall find there is a distinction in this case from what the general principle supposes. If the President and Senate are to be considered as one body, deliberating together on the business of appointments, every individual of which participates equal powers, the reasoning that has been urged will hold good. But I take it for granted that they are two distinct bodies, and can only give a simple affirmative or negative. No member of the Sen- ate has power to offer an original proposition. In short, the moment we depart from this simple idea that the provision in the Constitution is intended for any other purpose but to prevent the President from introducing improper persons into office, we shall find it difficult to form any certain principle upon which they ought to act, and our opinions and deliberations will be discord- ant and distracted." MR. SEDGWICK'S fERTINEJfT iNQttlElES. 131 Mr. Benson further said that "if we declare in the bill that the officer shall be removable by the President, it has the appearance of conferring the power upon him." Therefore, in order to avoid even an apparent conference of power, and to do nothing more than de- clare the House's " sentiments upon the meaning of a constitutional grant of power to the President," he moved as a substitute for the words " to be removable by the President," the following : " whenever the said officer shall be removed by the President." Mr. Madi- son, who appreciated Mr. Benson's delicate legislative distinction, seconded the latter's motion. The amend- ment was adopted by a vote of 30 to 18. Theodore Sedgwick of Massachusetts said (pp. 522, 523) : " What is to be the consequence if the Senate are to be applied to (for permission to remove an of- ficer) ? If they are to do anything in this business, I presume they are to deliberate, because they are to ad- vise and consent. If they are to deliberate, you put them between the officer and the President. They are then to inquire into the causes of removal. The Presi- dent must produce his testimony. How is the question to be investigated ? Because, I presume, there must be some rational rule for conducting this business. Is the President to be sworn to declare the whole truth, and to bring forward facts ? Or are they to admit suspi- cion as testimony ? Or is the word of the President to be taken at all events ? If so, this check is not of the least efficacy in nature. But if proof be necessary, what is then the consequence ? Why, in nine cases out of ten, where the case is very clear to the President that the man ought to be removed, the effect cannot be produced, because .it is absolutely impossible to pro- duce the necessary evidence. Are the Senate to pro- ceed without evidence ? Some gentlemen contend not. 132 SEPAllATE POWERS THE ONLY SAFETY. Then the object will be lost. Shall a man, under these circumstances, be saddled upon the President who has been appointed for no other purpose but to aid the President in performing certain duties? * * * if he js, where is the responsibility ? * * * Without you make him responsible, you weaken and destroy the strength and beauty of your system. What is to be done in cases which can only be known from a long acquaintance with the conduct of an officer?" On page 582 Mr. Sedgwick says there are a thousand circumstances, exclusive of impeachments, which may demand removal from office, of which the President alone is the proper judge. Richard Bland Lee of Virginia said (pp. 525, 526) : "It is laid down as a maxim in government by all judicious writers that the legislative, executive, and judicial powers should be kept as separate and distinct as possible, in order to secure the liberties of the people. And this maxim is founded on the experience of ages ; for we find that however governments have been estab- lished, however modified in their names or forms, if these powers are blended in or exercised by one body, the effects are ever the same — the public liberty is de- stroyed. * * * 'pjje fi-amers of the Constitution * * * divided our government into three principal branches, with express declarations that all legislative power shall vest in one, all executive in another, and the whole judicial in a third. * * * " It is our duty to vest all executive power belonging to the government where the Convention intended it should be placed. It adds to the responsibility of the most responsible branch of the government ; and with- out responsibility we should have little security against the depredations and gigantic strides of arbitrary power. It is necessary to hold up a single and specific object to THE PUBLIC MUST HAVE SOMEBODY TO WATCH. 133 the public jealousy to watch. Therefore it is necessary to connect the power of removal with the President. The Executive is the source of all appointments. Is his responsibility complete unless he has the power of re- moval ? * * * If the power of removal is vested in the Senate, it is evident, at a single view, that the responsibility is dissipated, because the fault cannot be fixed on any individual. Besides the Senate are not accountable to the people. * * * But even if they were, they have no powers to enable them to decide with propriety in the case of removals, and therefore are improper persons to exercise such authority." Benjamin Goodhue of Massachusetts said (pp. 533, 534) : " It has long been an opinion entertained of the people of America that they would not trust the gov- ernment with the power of doing good lest it should be abused. * * * The question on the present occasion seems to stand on nearly the same ground — whether we shall trust the power of doing good to the Executive Magistrate, or deprive him of it for fear lie may abuse it. * * * The only security wliich the Constitution means to give us is to call the officers of government to account if they abuse their powers, and not to cramp their exercise so as to make them inef- ficient. * * * " It has been said that the power would be more safe in the hands of tlie Senate than m that of the President. But I do not view it in that light. * * * j^^ would be a very inconvenient and useless power for them to be possessed of. It is in nothing similar to the power they have in appointments. There they are really use- ful by their advice, because it is more probable that the Senate may be better acquainted with the charac- ters of the officers that are nominated than the Presi- dent himself. But after their appointments such knowl- 134 KEMOVlN(i SOMfi'fiMfi^ A giiPAtiAl-fi POWKIJ. edge is little required. The officer is placed under the control of the President, and it is only through him that the improper conduct of a person in a subordinate situ- ation can be known." Thomas Scott of Pennsylvania indulged in a semi- facetious speech, but he made one good point when he said (p. 533) : " Is anything more plain than that the President, above all the officers of government, both from the manner of his appointment and the nature of his duties, is truly and justly denominated the' man of the people ? Is there any other person who represents so many of them as the President ? He is elected by the voice of the people of the whole Union. The Sen- ate are the representatives of the State sovereignties. * * * Yet this body is held up as more nearly related to the people than the President himself." Abraham Baldwin of Georgia said (pp. 557, 558, 559) : "Gentlemen who undertake to construe, say they see clearly that the power which appoints must also remove. Now I have reviewed this subject with all the application and discernment my mind is capable of, and have not been able to see any such thing. There is an agency given to the President in making appoint- ments, to which the Senate are connected. But how it follows that the connection extends to the removal, positively I cannot see. They say that it follows as a natural, inseparable consequence. This sounds like logic. But if we consult the premises, perhaps the conclusion may not follow. The Constitution opposes this maxim more than it supports it. The President is appointed by electors chosen by the people them- selves, or by the State Legislatures. Can the State Legislatures, either combined or separate, effect his re- moval ? No. But the Senate may, on impeachment by this House. The judges are appointed by the Presi- ^HE KEsTEAINING t»OWEE OF iMPEACfiMENT. l35 dent, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. But they are only removable by impeachment. The President has no agency in the removal. Hence, I say, it is not a natural consequence that the power which appoints should have the power of removal also. We may find it necessary that subordinate officers should be appointed in the first instance by the Presi- dent and Senate. I hope it will not be contended that the President and Senate shall be applied to in all cases when their removal may be necessary. * * * I dis- pute the maxim altogether ; for though it is sometimes true, it is often fallacious. But by no means is it that kind of conclusive argument which they contend for. " But what is the evil of the President being at lib- erty to exercise this power of removal? Why we fear that he will displace not one good officer only, but, in a fit of passion, all the good officers of the govern- ment ; by which, to be sure, the public would suffer. * * * I believe he could not turn out so many but that the Senate would still have some choice out of which to supply a good one. But even if he was to do this, what would be the consequence? He would be obliged to do the duties himself, or, if he did not, we would impeach him and turn him out of office as he had done others. I must admit though that there is a possibility of such an evil ; but it is a remote possibility indeed. * * * Checked and surrounded as his powers are, I see little cause for apprehension." Peter Sylvester of New York said (p. 561) : "I lay it down as a positive case that the President is invested with all executive power necessary to carry the Consti- tution and the laws passed in pursuance thereof into full effect, so far as these powers are unchecked and uncontrolled by express stipulations in the Constitution. If the exceptions with respect to appointments had not 136 THE ADVOCATES OF SUSPENSION. been made, the President would have had that power as well as the power of removal. In the first his power is eclipsed by the interference of the Senate, but in the last the manifestation is clear. Both these powers be- ing inherent in the executive branch of the government, must remain there." SPEECHES IN FAVOR OF REMOVAL BY THE PRESIDENT AND SENATE. Alexander White of Virginia, who made the motion to strike out the words " to be removable by the Presi- dent," said (pp. 467, 517) : "It was objected that the President could not remove an officer unless the Senate was in session, but yet the emergency of the case might demand an instant dismission. I should imagine that no inconvenience would result on this account, because, on my principle, the same power which can make a temporary appointment can make an equal suspension.* The powers are apposite to each other. " The gentleman (Mr. Madison) says we ought not to blend the executive and legislative powers further than they are blended in the Constitution. I contend we do not. There is no expression in the Constitution which says that the President shall have the power of removal from office. But the contrary is strongly im- plied, for it is said that Congress may establish offices by law, and vest the appointment, and consequently the removal, in the President alone, in the courts of law, or heads of departments. Now this shows that Con- gress are not at liberty to make any alteration by law in the mode of appointing superior officers, and conse- * The practicability of suspension in lieu of removal was also advoca- ted by Messrs. Jackson, Sherman, Page, Stone, and Tucker. Mr. Bou- diuot, as has already been shown, thought it would be too indecisive. THE DANGER IN AN AMBITIOUS PEESIDENT. 137 quently that they are not at liberty to alter the manner of removal. " It has been said if the concurrence of the Senate be necessary, they may refuse to concur when a removal ia proper. * * * ^y^ j^i-g ^q presume the Senate will do their duty. * * * But shall we, because the Senate may do wrong, give the President the power to act without them ? Is it contended that the Presi- dent has any superior agency in this business because he nominates ? We may as well contend, on the same principle, that because this House has the exclusive power of originating money bills, we may repeal a law of that nature without the consent of the Senate." William Smith of South Carolina said (pp. 457, 458, 608) : " I imagine, sir, we are declaring a power in the President which may hereafter be greatly abused. * * * We ought to * * * contemplate this power in the hands of an ambitious man, who might apply it to dangerous purposes. If we give this power to the President, he may, from caprice, remove the most worthy men from office. * * * ^* Another danger may result. If you desire an of- ficer to be a man of capacity and integrity, you may be disappointed. A gentleman possessed of these qual- ities, knowing he may be removed at the pleasure of the President, will be loath to risk his reputation on such insecure ground. As the matter stands in the Constitution, he knows if he is suspected of doing any- thing wrong he shall have a fair trial, and the whole of his transactions be developed by an impartial tribunal. He will have confidence in himself when he knows he can only be removed for improper behavior. But if he is subjected to the whim of any man, it may deter him from entering into the service of his country ; because, if he is not subservient to that person's pleasure, he 138 ALEXANDER HAMILTON ON REMOVALS. may be turned out, and the public may be led to sup- pose for improper behavior. This impression cannot be removed, as a public inquiry cannot be obtained. Be- sides this, it ought to be considered that the person who is appointed will probably quit some other office or business in which he is occupied. Ought he, after mak- ing this sacrifice in order to serve the public, to be turned out of place without even a reason being as- signed for such behavior ? Perhaps the President does not do this with an ill intention. He may have been misinformed ; for it is presumable that a President may have around him men envious of the honors and emol- uments of persons in office, who will insinuate suspi- cions into his honest breast that may produce a re- moval. Be this as it may, the event is still the same to the removed officer. The public suppose him guilty of malpractices. Hence his reputation is blasted, his property sacrificed. I say his property is sacrificed, because I consider his office as his property. He is stripped of this and left exposed to the malevolence of the world, contrary to the principles of the Constitution, and contrary to the principles of all free governments, which are that no man shall be despoiled of his prop- erty but by a fair and impartial trial. " Gentlemen say we ought not to suppose such an abuse of power in the President. But the Constitution wisely guards against his caprice in the appointment, and why should we abate the security in cases of re- moval?"* * Representiitivc Smith made the following quotation from General Alexander Hamilton (" The Federalist," Ilallowell Ed., p. 358): " It has been mentioned as one of the advantages to be expected from the co- operation of the Senate in the business of appointments, that it would contribute to the stability of the administration. The consent of that ^ody ^ould be necessary to displace as well as to appoint, A change TENUBE DURING GOOD BEHAVIOE. 130 On page 471 Mr. Smith says : " It will not be con- tended that the State governments did not furnish the late Convention with the skeleton of thijs Constitution. I have turned over the Constitutions of most of the States. In some instances I find the Executive Magis- trate suspends, but none of them have the right to re- move officers." On page 459 he says that in order to test and decide the constitutionality of the question of removal, a removed officer could apply to a court of justice for a mandamus to be restored to his office, and that the court would settle it. As to the tenure of sub- ordinate officers, he said they could " be regulated by law." But as to the removal of chief officials, he said that inasmuch as the Constitution prescribed impeach- ment only, it " contemplated only this mode." Messrs. Page and Huntington also believed in removal by im- peachment. Impeachment for removal, except where required by the Constitution, is of course impracticable nowadays, even for the Secretary of State, which cor- responds to the then (1781)) proposed Secretary of For- eign Affairs. Messrs. Smith, Page, and Stone favored the holding of offices during good behavior. Other Representatives were opposed to this principle, and yet of the Chief Magistrate therefore woulii not occasion so violent or so general a revolution in the officers of the government as might be expected if he were the sole disposer of offices. Where a man in any station has given satisfactory evidence of his fitness for it, a new Presi- dent would be restrained from attempting a change in favor of a person more agreeable to him by the apprehension that a discountenance of the Senate might frustrate the attempt, and bring some degree of dis- credit upon himself. Those who can best estimate the value of a steady administration, will be most disposed to prize a provision which con- nects the official existence of public men with the approbation or disap- probation of that body, which, from the greater permanency of its own composition, will in all probability be loss subject to inconstancy than any other member of the government." 140 REMOVAL A QUESTION OF CONSTITUTIONALITY. they feared that worthy men would be removed from office. In this resj)ect their arguments were both in- consistent and contradictory. Benjamin Huntington of Connecticut said (p. 459) : " I think the clause ought not tg stand. It was well observed that the Constitution was silent respecting the removal otherwise than by impeachment. I would like- wise add that it mentions no other cause of removal than treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misde- meanors. It does not, I apprehend, extend to cases of infirmity or incapacity. Indeed it appears hard to me that after an officer has become old in an honorable ser- vice, he should be impeached for this infirmity. * * * It was said if the President had this authority, it would make him more responsible for the conduct of the of- ficer. But if we have a vicious President, who inclines to abuse this power, which God forbid, his responsi- bility will stand us in little stead. Therefore that idea does not satisfy me that it is proper the President should have this power." Elbridge Gerry of Massachusetts said (pp. 472, 473, 502, 574) : " Some gentlemen consider this as a ques- tion of policy. But to me it appears a question of constitutionality, and I presume it will be determined on that point alone. " The best arguments I have heard urged on this occasion came from the honorable gentleman from Vir- ginia (Mr. Madison). He says the Constitution has vested the executive power in the President, and that he has a right to exercise it under the qualifications therein made. He lays it down as a maxim that the Constitution vesting in the President the executive power, naturally vests him with the power of appoint- ment and removal. Now I would be glad to know from that gentleman by what means we ar? to decide this I'llE SENATJl'S salutary StABlLIl'Y. 141 question. Is his maxim supported by precedent drawn from the practice of the individual States? The direct contrary is established. In many cases the Executives are not in particular vested with the power of appoint- ment. And do they exercise that power by virtue of their office ? It will be found that other branches of the government make appointments. How then can gentlemen assert that the powers of appointment and removal are incident to the executive department of government? To me it appears at best but problem- atical. Neither is it clear to me that the power that appoints naturally possesses the power of removal. *' It has been argued that if the power of removal vests in the President alone, it annuls or renders nuga- tory the clause in the Constitution which directs the concurrence of the Senate in the case of appointments. It behooves us not to adopt principles subversive of those established by the Constitution. " It has been frequently asserted, on former occa- sions, that the Senate is a permanent body, and was so constructed in order to give durability to public mea- sures. If they are not absolutely permanent, they are formed on a renovating principle, which gives them a salutary stability. This is not the case either with the President or House of Representatives. * * * j^ appears to me that a permanency was expected in the magistracy,* and therefore the Senate were combined in the appointment to office. But if the President alone has the power of removal, it is in his power at any time to destroy all that has been done. It appears to me that such a principle would be destructive of the intention of the Constitution, expressed by giving the power of appointment to the Senate. It also subverts the clause which gives the Senate the sole power of * This could not be unless a President were elected term after term. 14^ iiit. GERUY FEARS THE PItiJStf)fiNf. trying impeachments, because the President may re- move the officer in order to screen him from the effects of their judgment on an impeachment. Why should we construe any part of the Constitution in such a manner as to destroy its essential principles, when a more consonant construction can be obtained ? * * * " It has been said by my colleague that these officers are the creatures of the law. But it seems as if we were not content with that. We are making them the mere creatures of the President. They dare not exer- cise the privilege of their creation, if the President shall order them to forbear, because he holds their thread of life. Plis power will be sovereign over them, and will soon swallow up the small security we have in the Senate's concurrence to the appointment ; and we shall shortly need no other than the authority of the supreme executive officer to nominate, appoint, con- tinue, or remove. * * * " It is said that the President will be subject to im- peachment for dismissing a good man. This in my mind involves an absurdity. How can the House im- peach the President for doing an act which the Leg- islature has submitted to his discretion? " The Senate and this House may think it necessary to inquire why a good officer is dismissed. The Presi- dent will say : * It is my pleasure. I am authorized by law to exercise this prerogative. I have my reasons for it, but you have no right to inquire them of me.' This language may be proper in a monarchy ; but in a republic every action ought to be accounted for." Samuel Livermore of New Hampshire said (pp. 478, 479) : " Surely a law passed by the whole Legislature cannot be repealed by one branch of it. So I conceive in the case of appointments it requires the same force to supersede an officer as to put him in office. I ac- 143 :£iECtJTlVE POWER NOT ALL PRESlDl^J^T'S. knowledge that the clause relative to impeachment is for the benefit of the people. It is intended to enable their representatives to bring a bad officer to justice who is screened by the President. But I do not con- ceive, with the honorable gentleman from South Caro- lina (Mr. Smith), that it by any means excludes the usual ways of superseding officers. " When an important and. confidential trust is placed in a man, it is worse than death to him to be displaced without cause. His reputation depends on the single will of the President, who may ruin him on bare sus- picion. Nay, a new President may turn him out on mere caprice, or in order to make room for a favorite. This contradicts all my notions of propriety. Every- thing of this sort should be done with due deliberation. Every person ought to have a hearing before he is pun- ished." James Jackson of Georgia said (pp. 487, 488, 489, 530, 531, 555) : "If this power is incident to the ex- ecutive branch of government, it does not follow that it vests in the President alone, because he alone does not possess all executive powers. The Constitution has lodged the power of forming treaties, and all executive business, I presume, connected therewith, in the Presi- dent ; but it is qualified by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, provided two-thirds of the Sen- ate agree therein. The same has taken place with re- spect to appointing officers. * * * It may be wrong that the great powers of government should be blended in this manner. But we cannot separate them. The error is adopted in tlie Constitution. * * * " Behold the baleful influence of the royal preroga- tive when officers hold their commissions during the pleasure of the Crown ! At this moment, see the King of Sweden aiming at arbitrary power, shutting up the 144 Mesidext and senate chec^ each ofriES. doors of his Senate, and compelling, by force of arras, his shuddering councilors to acquiesce in his despotic mandates.* I agree that this is the hour in which we ought to establish our government. But it is an hour in which we should be wary and cautious, especially in what respects the Executive Magistrate. With the present, I grant, every power may be safely lodged. * * * May not a man with a Pandora's box in his breast come into power and give us sensible cause to lament our present confidence and want of foresight? * * * I think this power too great to be safely trusted in the hands of a single man, especially in the hands of a man who has so much constitutional power. * * * I cannot agree to extend this power, because I conceive it may at some future period be exercised in such a way as to subvert the liberties of my country. * * * If the President has the power of removing all officers who may be virtuous enough to oppose his base measures, what would become of the liberties of our fellow-citizens? * * * "I differ with gentlemen who say that the Senate have no part of the executive power, or that the Presi- dent has no part of the legislative authority. I con- sider them as checks upon each other, to prevent the abuse of either. And it is in this way the liberties of the people are secured. I appeal for the truth of this sentiment to the writings of Puhlius. f " I call upon gentlemen once more to * * * prove to me that it was not the intention of this Constitu- tion to blend the executive and legislative powers. If these are the principles of the Constitution, why will * Compare with Mr. Vining's remarks, page 121, Also see the ad- mirable Swedish civil service regulations of the present day, page 186, The contrast between Sweden in 1789 and 1888 is remarkable. I Alexander Hamilton, gentlenleli contend for the independency of each bf^ttch of the government?" John Page of Virginia said (pp. 490-1, 519-20, 561, 552) : " I venture to assert that this clause of the bill contains in it the seeds of royal prerogative. If gen- tlemen lay such stress on the energy of the government, I beg them to consider how far this doctrine may go. Everything which has been said in favor of energy in the Executive, may go to the destruction of freedom, and establish despotism. This very energy, so much talked of, has led many patriots to the Bastile, to the block, and to the halter. If the Chief Magistrate can take a man away from the head of a department with- out assigning any reason, he may as well be invested with power, on certain occasions, to take away his ex- istence. But will you contend that this idea is con- sonant with the principles of a free government, where no man ought to be condemned unheard, nor till after a solemn conviction of guilt, on a fair and impartial trial ? * * * If gentlemen had been content to say that the President might suspend, I should second the motion, and afterward the officer might be removed by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. " The framers of the government had confidence in the Senate, or they would not have combined them with the Executive in the performance of his duties. * * * Some ixentlemen contend that the Senate are a dangerous and aristocratic body. But I contend that they are a safe and salutary branch of the government, representing the republican Legislatures of the individ- ual States, and intended to preserve the sovereignty and independence of the State governments, which they are more likely to do than the President, who is elected by the people at large. A popular President, influenced bjr the sentiments of his electors, may be induced tp 9 146 fotfRJ'otri CHECKS on *he ^REgit>iii^:^. believe that it would be best for the general interest that those governments were destroyed. But as long as we have that body independent of him, and secured in their aulhority, we may defy such impotent attempts. They wiH watch his conduct and prevent the exercise ol despotic power. But if they are weakened and strip- ped of their essential authority, they will become weak barriers against the strides of an uncontrolled power. If you take from them their right to check the Presi- dent in the removal of officers, they cannot prevent the dismission of a faithful servant who has opposed the arbitrary mandates of an ambitious President. The principles laid down in the Constitution clearly evince that the Senate ought not only to have a voice in the framing of laws, but ought also to see to their execu- tion. * * * I myself shall never be satisfied unless I see fourfold checks upon the President. It (the clause in the bill) will inevitably lead to the establishment of those odious prerogatives which we, by an arduous con- flict, have been endeavoring to get rid of. " Indecision, delay, blunders — nay, villainous actions iti the administration of government — are trifles com- pared to legalizing the full exertion of a tyrannical despotism. Good God I What ! authorize in a free republic, by law too, by your first act, the exertion of a dangerous royal prerogative in your Chief Magis- trate I What ! where honor and virtue ought to be the support of your government, will you infuse and clierish meanness and servility in your citizens, and in- solence and arbitrary power in your Chief Magistrate, when you know that thousands of virtuous citizens are dissatisfied with your government because they think they see the seeds of monarchy in it ? And two whole States have refused to unite with you because they tbink your government dangerous to their liberties J '» A MONSTROUS DOCTRINE. '' 14*7 Will you openly, before their faces, in a solemn act of Congress, insert words which fully justify their opin- ions and fears ? * * * " It is said the officers ought to he commissioned durante bene placito^ et ne dure se bene gesserint* a monstrous doctrine. As to inferior officers, who, w^e are told, must also be impeached, Congress have a con- stitutional right to empower the President to appoint, and, I suppose, to remove also ; not that the power nec- essarily follows appointments." Roger Sherman of Connecticut said (pp. 491, 492, 638, 576) : "It is a general principle in law as well as reason that there shall be the same authority to remove as to establish * * * unless there are express ex- ceptions made. * * * It is so in legislation, where the several branches whose concurrence is necessary to pass a law, must concur in repealing it. Just so I take it to be in cases of appointment ; and the President alone may remove when he alone appoints, as in the case of inferior officers to be established by law. * * * I have not heard any gentleman 2)roduce an authority from law or history which proves that where two branches are interested in the appointment, one of them has the power of removal. I remember that the gen- tleman from Massachusetts (Mr. Sedgwick) told us that the two Houses, notwithstanding the partial negative of the President, possessed the whole legislative powei". But will the gentleman infer from that that because the concurrence of both branches is necessary to pass a law, a less authority can repeal it? This is all we contend for. "If gentlemen would consent to make a general law declaring the proper mode of removal, I think we should acquire a greater degree of unanimity, whi(;h. on this * During good pleasure, and not during good behavior. iU »« A JIjrDaMfiNT ON THE MBSITS Ol' MEN. ^< occasion, must be bettel* than cafryin^ the question against a large minority." Michael Jenifer Stone of Maryland said (pp. 493, 495, 564, 566, 567, 568, 669) : " If the Constitution had given no rule by which officers were to be appointed, I should search for one in my own mind. But as the Constitution has laid down the rule, I consider the mode of removal as clearly defined as by implication it can be. It ought to be the same as that of the appointment. What quality of the human mind is necessary for the one that is not necessary for the other ? Information, impartiality, and judgment in the business to be con- ducted are necessary to make a good appointment. Are not the same properties necessary for a dismission ? " I cannot subscribe to the opinion that the executive, in its nature, implies the power to appoint the officers of government. Why does it imply it ? The appoint- ment of officers depends upon the qualities that are nec- essary for forming a judgment on the merits of men ;* and the displacing of them, instead of including the idea of what is necessary for an executive officer, in- cludes the idea necessary for a judicial one. Therefore it cannot exist, in the nature of things, that an execu- tive power is either to appoint or displace the officers of government. Is it a political dogma ? Is it founded in experience ? If it is, I confess it has been very long wrapped up in mysterious darkness. * * * It is very forcible to my mind that the Constitution has con- fined his (the President's) sole appointment to the case of inferior officers. * * * "Now I would ask, in all cases where the integrity * Mr. Stone cut very close to the civil service law, for the examiners, by the aid of competitive examinations, form " a judgment on the merits of men." The law is the fulfillment of his prophecy, namely, " I believe the people can apply a remedy," &c. (p. 149). BALANCE BETWEEN PRESIDENT AND SENATE. 149 and confidence is the same, whether it is more likely that one man should do right and exercise his power with propriety than a number of men with the aid of each other's deliberations? Is it more likely that a number of men should do wrong than one man ? * * * It would be more difficult for a majority to be obtained in a body composed of members of thirteen independ- ent States in favor of despotic measures than might justly be expected from the caprice or want of judg- ment in a single individual. Is it likely the danger would be so great? I apprehend it is not. * * * " If the evils we apprehend should absolutely arise from our determination, I do not conceive, with some other gentlemen, that we are inevitably ruined. I be- lieve the people can apply a remedy ; and I have no doubt but they have sense and resolution enough for th.it purpose. * * * " I suppose it is necessary to keep up the balance be- tween the Executive Magistrate and the Senate. What is this balance? It is laid down in the Constitution that the President shall nominate and the Senate ap- prove. We are bound then to carry this balance throughout all the subjects to which it relates. If the President has the solo power of removal, you destroy the power of the Senate. And though you do not ex- pressly put tiie power of appointment in the President alone, yet you put it there effectively, because he may defeat, by removal, the joint appointment. Will this be giving the proper balance which the Constitution directs? No. It will be directly the reverse. " If all executive power is vested in the President, what right has this House to prescribe him rules to in- terfere in forming executive officers ? The Executive can better form them for itself. * * * " If I look to the constitution or nature of things, I 150 AN APPOINTMENT AN IMPLIED CONTRACT. should be led to conclude tbat the body choosing agi-nts has the power of dismissing them, because the power naturally lodges in those who have the interest and management of the concern. The executive business of this officer is under the superintendence and man- agement of the Senate as well as the President. Trea- ties with foreign nations must be conducted by the advice of the Senate, and concluded with their consent. Hence results a necessity in that body having a concern in the choice and dismissal of the Secretary of Foreign. Affairs. I do not see any other sure or safe bottom on which the question can be determined. " In the nature of things, in all appointments, there is an implied contract ; on the part of the officer that he will perform the service, and on the part of those who appoint him that he shall have an adequate re- ward. In the engagement of the officer, qualities com- mensurate with the duties are required. In the reward, the dignity of the station and the qualities of the of- ficer ought to be estimated. And although in this en- gagement an officer may dispense of certain forms of trial, yet he can never surrender a natural right — he cannot engage to be punished without being guilty, or dismissed without being useless. It has been well ob- served that the appointment ought to cease when the causes of it no longer exist. But it is equally clear that it ought to continue as long as the reasons re- main. And although in public and private life it may be proper to discharge an agent without divulging the reason, yet clearly a good reason ought to precede the dismission, because otherwise you do an act of injus- tice by a breach of contract. * * * "It has been judged by some gentlemen a dreadful affair that the President should become a party before, the Senate. It would degrade his dignity. It was said LIBEETY EXALTS THE HUMAN SPECIES. 151 the judiciary would be pleased if this weighty question could be taken off their hands. To what a hight do gentlemen exalt that character in their own minds ! How far above the level of the people, when they con- sider it derogatory to his dignity to institute an exam- ination into the conduct of an officer next to himself in rank ! when they consider it almost above human na- ture to determine a question of right between the Presi- dent and a great officer of the United States. If gen- tlemen have an idea that this character is to have such a degree of elevation above the community, it is time to tbink of restraining bis power.* On what does power depend ? Not on the strength of arm, but opinion. If gentlemen will exalt a character above themselves, call him what you will, he will be possessed of monarchy. j{ " We have expended our treasure, our blood, and our time to very little purpose if we do not think that lib- erty and safety exalt the human species. From the meanest to the highest rank in life, the propriety of conduct arises from the security and independence of situation. * * * " If a man is a candidate for an office held by the tenure of will and pleasure, he must examine his soul and see if there are qualities in him to enable him to cringe and submit to the arbitrary mandate of the Pres- ident. If he finds these qualities in his disposition, he is suited for the business. But if the Constitution is to be justly administered, and he finds himself disposed * Mr. Stone, so far as I know, is the first American to make this sug- gestion. It is fitting that the author of such a clear, profound, and pro- phetic argument should have this honor. A worthy President is entitled to the support, good-will, and even love of the people, but he is no better as a man than any other worthy citizen. Further, respectful criticism of the President's official acts is always in order, even by officeholders, Intelligent criticism is often useful. 152 PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS. to sacrifice to the pleasure of the Chief Magistrate, although he possesses qualities which suited him for his employment, yet he is unfit for the ofiice." Thomas Tudor Tucker of South Carolina said (pp. 584, 585) : " I am embarrassed on this question, as the yeas and nays are called, because the vote is taken in such a manner as not to express the principles upon which I vote. In the Committee of the Whole I voted for striking out the words that are now proposed to be struck out, and my reason was I was doubtful whether it was proper to vest, on this occasion, the power in the President alone. It appears to me that the power is not necessarily vested in the President by the Constitution ; neither in the President and Senate. I find no words that fix this power precisely in any branch of the government. It must, however, by im- plication be in the Legislature, or it is nowhere until the Constitution is amended. * * * I apprehend a law is necessary in every instance to determine the ex- ercise of the power. In some cases it may be proper that the President alone should have it. I am not clear in my own mind what general rule, if any, can be established on this subject. Perhaps in other cases it may be lodged with the President and Senate ; or it may be given to the heads of departments. But who- soever is invested with it, it must be in consequence of a lav/ ; and the Legislature have a right to vest it where they please." Mr. Tucker closed his speech by saying, among other things, that perhaps it would be out of order to change the word remove to suspend. * * Mr. Tucker, some weeks after the close of the debate, moved the consideration of numerous amendments to the Constitution, among them the following (p. 702): '* Art. ii, Sec. 4, clause 3. At the end add these words: He shall also have power to suspend from his office, for a time JOHN ADAMS'S MISTA]£E (NOTE). 153 Thomas Sumter of South Carolina said (p. 591) : " This bill appears to my mind so subversive of the Constitution, and in its consequences so destructive to the liberties of the people, that I cannot consent to let it pass without expressing my detestation of the principle it contains. I do it in this public manner in order to fulfill what I think to be my duty to my country, and to discharge myself of any concern in a matter that I do not approve." The bill passed the House by a vote of 29 to 22, and went to the Senate on the 14th of July. As before said, the words " to be removable by the President," had been amended to read : " whenever the said prin- cipal officer shall be removed from office hy the Presi- dent of the United States, the chief clerk shall, during the vacancy, have charge and custody," &c. It was moved to strike out the italicized words. The debate lasted nearly four days, only one day less than that in the House. The vote was a tie (9 to 9), but as Vice- President Adams f voted in the negative, the words stood. The Senate's action vas disinterested if not not exceeding twelve months, any officer whom he shall have reason to think unfit to be intrusted with the duties thereof; and Congress may by law provide for the absolute removal of officers found to be unfit for the trust reposed in them." Also the following : *' Art, i, Sec. 6, clause 2. Amend to read thus : No person having been elected, and having taken his seat as a Senator or Representative, shall, during the time for which he was elected, be appointed to any civil office under the authority of the United States." * The world owes Mr. Sumter more than is apparent in the above remarks. Twice during the five days' debate he appealed to the House to postpone calling the yeas and nays in order to give the subject a full and free discussion. f Senator George F, Edmunds says (Supplement to Congressional Globe, 1868, p. 425): "Mr, Adams * * * was strongly opposed to the provision of the Constitution requiring the Senate to confirm any appointment." 154 SIMPtE AKD COMPOUND POWEESj patriotic, for it delegated a power to the President which by implication at least belonged to itself and the President. The Senate sat with closed doors from 1789 till 1795, "with a single exception, through all leg- islative as well as executive transactions." But Vice- President Adams kept notes for at least one day (July 15), and it is to him that the world is indebted for the following glimpse of what must have been a very in- structive debate (" Works of John Adams," vol. iii, pp. 408 to 412). NOTES OF ONE DAY'S DEBATE IN THE SENATE. Charles Carroll of Maryland : " The executive power is commensurate with the legislative and judicial pow- ers. *' The rule of construction of treaties, statutes, and deeds. " The same power which creates must annihilate. This is true where the power is simple, but when com- pound, not. "If a Minister is suspected to betray secrets to an enemy, the Senate not sitting, cannot the President dis- place nor suspend ? " The States General of France demanded that offices should be during good behavior. "It is improbable that a bad President should be chosen ; but may not bad Senators be chosen ? " Is there a due balance of power between the exec- utive and legislative, either in the general government or State governments? '^ 3fontesquieu. English liberty will be lost when the legislative shall be more corrupt than the executive. Have we not been witnesses of corrupt acts of Legis- latures, making depredations? Rhode Island yet per- EQUILIBRIUM OF CONSTITUTIONAL POWER. 155 Oliver Ellsworth of Connecticut : " We are sworn to support the Constitution. " There is an explicit grant of power to the President which contains the power of removal. The executive power is granted ; not the executive powers hereinafter enumerated and explained. " The President, not the Senate, appoints ; they only- consent and advise. " The Senate is not an executive council ; has no executive power. "The grant to the President express, not by impli- cation." Pierce Butler of South Carolina : " This power of re- moval would be unhinging the equilibrium of power in the Constitution. " The Stadiholder withheld the fleet from going out, to the annoyance of the enemies of the nation. " In treaties, all powers not expressly given, are re- served. Treaties to be gone over, clause by clause, by the President and Senate together, and modeled. " The other branches are imbecile ; disgust and alarm ; the President not sovereign ; the United States sovereign, o/ people or Congress sovereign. " The House of Representatives would not be in- duced to depart, so well satisfied of the grounds." Senator Ellsworth again : " The powers of this Con- stitution are all vested ; parted from the people, from the States, and vested, not in Congress, but in the President. " The word sovereignty is introduced without deter- minate ideas. Power in the last resort. In this sense the sovereign executive is in the President. " The United States will be parties to a thousand suits. Shall process issue in their name versus or for themselves? l56 I^UE MfiSiDENi? iJOf ABOVE *flE LAW. " The President, it is said, may be put to jail for debt." Richard Henry Lee of Virginia : " United States merely figurative, meaning the people." William Grayson of Virginia : " The President is not above the law ; an absurdity to admit this idea into our government. Not improbable that the Presi- dent may be sued. Christina II of Sweden committed murder. France excused her. The jurors of our lord, the President, present that the President committed murder. A monarchy by a side wind. You make him vindex injuriarum.^ The people will not like * the ju- rors of our lord, the President,' nor * the peace of our lord, the President,' nor his dignity ; his crown will be left out. Do not wish to make the Constitution a more unnatural, monstrous production than it is. The British Court is a three-legged stool ; if one leg is longer than another, the stool will not stand. " Unpalatable ; the removal of officers not palatable. We should not risk anything for nothing. Come for- ward like men, and reason openly, and the people will bear more quietly than if you attempt side winds. This measure will do no good, and will disgust." Senator R. H. Lee again : " The danger to liberty greater from the disunited opinions and jarring plans of many than from the energetic operations of one. Marius, Sylja, Caesar, Cromwell trampled on liberty with armies. " The power of pardon ; of adjourning the Legisla- ture. " Power of revision sufficient to defend himself. He would be supported by the people. " Patronage gives great influence. The interference more nominal than real. * All avenger of injury. li^GLlSfl LififitiTY OWING TO JURIES. 157 " The greater part of power of making treaties in the President. " The greatest power is in the President ; the less in the Senate. " Cannot see responsibility in the President or the great oflScers of state. " A masked battery of constructive powers would complete the destruction of liberty. " Can the Executive lay embargoes, establish fairs (sic), tolls, &c. " The Federal government is limited ; the legislative power of it is limited ; and therefore the executive and judicial must be limited. " The Executive not punishable but by universal con- vulsion, as Charles I. **The legislative in England not so corrupt as the executive. " There is no responsibility in the President or min- istry. ^^ Blackstone. The liberties of England owing to juries. The greatness of England owing to the genius of that people. " The Crown of England can do what it pleases, nearly. " There is no balance in America to such an Exec- utive as that in England. *' Does the executive arm mean a standing array ? "Willing to make a law that the President, if he sees gross misconduct, may suspend pro tempore.^"* William Paterson of New Jersey : " Laments that we are obliged to discuss this question ; of great im- portance and much difficulty. " The executive coextensive with the legislative. Had the clause stood alone, would not there have been a dev- olution of all executive power ? I* 1^8 No t»OWERS WltSOtJT PEOPEB SAtANCE^. " Exceptions are to be construed strictly. This is an invariable rule." Senator Grayson again : " The President has not a continental interest, but is a citizen of a particular State. A K. of E. otherwise ; K. of E. counteracted by a large, powerful, rich, and hereditary aristocracy. Hyperion to a satyr. " Where there are not intermediate powers, an alter- ation of the government must be to despotism. *' Powers ought not to be inconsiderately given to the Executive without proper balances. "Triennial and septennial Parliaments made by cor- ruption of the Executive. " Bowstring. * General Lally. f Brutus's power to put his sons to death. " The power creating shall have that of uncreating. The Minister is to hold at pleasure of the appointer. " If it is in the Constitution, why insert it in the law ? Brought in by a side wind, inferentially. " There will be every endeavor to increase the consol- idatory powers ; to weaken the Senate and strengthen the President. " No evil in the Senate participating with the Presi- dent in removal." George Read of Delaware : " The President is to take care that the laws be faithfully executed. He is responsible. How can he do his duty or be responsible, if he cannot remove his instruments ? " It is not an equal sharing of the power of appoint- * A Turkish instrument of death. f Thomas A. Lally, a French soldier, who distinguished himself in 1757-58 by making a plucky but unsuccessful expedition against Eng- land's East Indian possessions, was born in Romans, Dauphiny, in 1702 and beheaded in Paiis in 1766. Through the efforts of his son, the trial was revised and the sentence finally reversed in 1 778. A QUESTION OP EXPEDIenCT. 159 Inent between the President and Senate. The Senate are only a check to prevent impositions on the Presi- dent. " The Minister an agent, a deputy to the great Ex- ecutive. " Difficult to bring great characters to punishment or trial. " Power of suspension." William S. Johnson of Connecticut ; " Gentlemen convince themselves that it is best the President should have the power, and then study for arguments. " Exceptions. Not a grant. Vested in the Presi- dent would be void for uncertainty. Executive power is uncertain. Powers are moral, mechanical, material. Which of these powers ? What executive power ? The land ; the money ; conveys nothing. What land ? what money ? " Unumquodque dissolvitur eodem modo quo ligatur.* " Meddles not with the question of expediency. " The executive wants power by its duration and its want of a negative, and power to balance. Federalist Senator Ellsworth asked : " What is the difference between a grant and a partition?" Ralph Izard of South Carolina : " Cujus est insti- tuere, ejus est abrogare."t Senator Thomas H. Benton of Missouri, in the report of the Select Committee on amending the Constitution of the United States, made on March 1, 1826, in speak- ing of the construction put upon the Constitution by the first Congress, says it yielded to the President " the kingly prerogative of dismissing officers without the * A thing is loosed by the same means by which it is bound. \ He who has the power to institute, has also the power to abrogate. ieO THfi J'OCTE-lf Ears' TENtSE OF OFFICE LaW. formality of a trial." (Appendix to Gales & Seaton^a "Debates," 1826, vol. ii, pt. ii, p. 132.) Daniel Webster, in a speech in the Senate, in 1835, on "The Appointing and Removing Power," said (Ev- erett's Webster, iv, 184, 185, 196): "I do not mean to deny, and the bill does not deny, that the President may remove officers at will, because the early decision adopted that construction, and the laws have since uni- formly sanctioned it. The law of 1820,* intended to * The four-years' tenure of office law, the first section of which (prac- tically the whole law) is as follows : " That from and after the passage of this act all district attorneys, collectors of customs, naval officers, and surveyors of the customs, navy agents, receivers of public moneys for lands, registers of the land offices, paymasters in the army, the apothecary general, the assistant apotheca- ries general, and the commissary general of purchases, to be appointed under the laws of the United States, shall be appointed for the term of four years ; but shall be removable from office at pleasure." In 1836 all postmasters drawing an annual salary of $1,000 or more were also included in the provisions of the four-years' law. Thomas Jefferson, writing to James Madison on November 29, 1820, says of this law (vii, 190): "It saps the constitutional and salutary functions of the President, and introduces a principle of intrigue and corruption which will soon leaven the mass, not only of Senators, but of citizens. It will keep in constant excitement all the hungry cor- morants for office ; render them, as well as those in place, sycophants to their Senators ; engage these in eternal intrigue to turn out one and put in another, in cabals to swap work, and make of them, what all ex- ecutive directories become, mere sinks of corruption and faction." In reply Mr. Madison says : " The law terminating appointments at periods of four years is pregnant with mischiefs. * * * If the error be not soon corrected, the task will be very difficult, for it is of a nature to take a deep root." John Quincy Adams, who was till about 1805 an independent Feder- alist, and afterward an independent Republican, says (Morse's Adams, p. 179): "Efforts had been made by some of the Senators to obtain different nominations, and to introduce a principle of change or rotation in office at the expiration of these commissions, which would make the ORIGINATED FOE CAMPAIGN PUEPOSES. 161 be repealed by this bill, expressly affirms the power. * * * At the same time, after considering the ques- government a perpetual and unintermitting scramble for office. A more pernicious expedient could scarcely have been devised * * * I de- termined to renominate every person against whom there was no com- plaint which would have warranted his removal." Senator Samuel L. Southard of Xew Jersey, who, like Webster and others, advocated the repeal of the law, says (G. & S.'s Debates, 1835, vol. xi, pt. i, pp. 421, 422): " The law, as it stood, placed every man who was not above being bribed by office, in the market, feeling and acting on the principle that he was to support the man who would keep him in office. Pass the bill before the Senate and the result will be far different. Each officeholder would be independent, and would look solely to a faithful discharge of his duty for his continuance in office. As the law now stood * * * each one not inflaenced by pure mo- tives, would say to the Executive : ' Will you retain me in office if I support you ? ' " Mr. George William Curtis says (Senate Report No. 576, for 1882, p. 154): " The law of 1820 * * * was introduced in the Senate by a friend of William H. Crawford of Georgia [Mahlon Dickerson], who was a presidential candidate, and it was introduced, as John Quincy Adams, who was then in Washington and in the Cabinet, specifically states, for the purpose of helping Mr. Crawford in his campaign." Mr. Curtis further says, in one of his annual civil service addresses at Newport, R. I., that the bill was drawn by Mr. Crawford himself. Mr. Dorman B. Eaton says (" The Term and Tenure of Office," pp. 24, 28): "In that year (1820) William H. Crawford, Secretary of the Treasury, was a presidential candidate, and Van Buren, who was to come into the Senate in 1821 (even then an aspirant for the presidency), was Crawford's supporter. They were unsurpassed for their skillful use of patronage. Both were able to see that if the terms of the inferior officers were reduced to four years, there would be more patronage to dispose of. * * * The four-years' law, for which the only apology was the pretended need of bringing inferior officers to a more frequent and strict account before the people, was followed by 297 defaulting collectors, receivers, &c,, reported by the Secretary of the Treasury to the House on March 30, 1838." But while Mr. Crawford was probably the power behind the throne, and while the law may have been intended by him and a few others for campaign purposes only, there were probably but few statesmen of that 162 UNSUSPECTING STATESMEN ENTRAPPED. tion again and again within the last six years, I am very- willing to say that, in my deliberate judgment, the. original decision was wrong. I cannot but think that those who denied the power in 1789 had the best of the argument. * * * I believe it to be within the just power of Congress to reverse the decision of 1789." * day who were aware of the fact. A few defalcations set the sensitive, statesmen of 1820 to thinking about a remedy, and it may be that they were all caught in Mr. Crawford's four-yeai's' law trap. However this may be, the defalcations spoken of by Mr. Eaton show that the too sensitive statesmen of 1820 made a mistake; in fact, that they got out of the frying-pan into the fire. Daniel Webster, in the course of his powerful speech on the appoint- ing and removing power, testifies to the conscientiousness of some of the statesmen of 1820. He desired to repeal the four-years' law, but he says : *' I agree that it has in some instances secured promptitude, diligence, and a sense of responsibility. These were the benefits which those who passed the law expected from it, and these benefits have in some measure been realized." Senator David Barton of Missouri says (G. & S.'s Debates, 1830, vol. vi, pt. i, pp. 464, 465) : " The legislator of 1820 naturally asked himself what term and tenure of office would attain the desired public security. * * * The evil of the old law was that, while the government was plodding through some tedious process of law, * * * the defaulter could embezzle our funds * * * and escape to Texas, &c., before the process had ascertained whether there was lawful cause for removal or not." Representative Ames, speaking in the first Congress of the slow pro- cess of removal by impeachment, predicted this precise result. He said: " While we are preparing the process, the mischief will be perpe- trated, and the offender will escape." * In a speech at Worcester, Mass., in 1832, Mr. Webster thus criti- cised President Jackson's official nominations and the patronage system (i, 262) ; " Within the last three years more nominations have been rejected on the ground of ' unfitness ' than in all the preceding forty years of the government. And these nominations, you know, sir, could not have been rejected but by votes of the President's own friends. * * * In some not a third of the Senate, in others not ten votes, and in others not a single vote could be oljtained, * * * ^H this, sir, MR. WEBSTER'S STATESMAN-LIKE WORDS. 163 Henry Clay says (Colton's " Speeches of H. Clay," ii, 20) : " No one can carefully examine the debate in the House of Representatives in 1789 without being struck with the superiority of the argument on the side of the minority, and the unsatisfactory nature of that of the majority. How various are the sources whence the power is derived ! Scarcely any two of the majority agree in their deduction of it." John C. Calhoun says (ii, 430) : *' I was struck, on reading the debate, with the force of the arguments of those who contended that the power (of removal) was not vested by the Constitution in the Executive. is perfectly natural and consistent. The same party selfishness which drives good men out of office will push bad men in. Political proscrip- tion leads necessarily to the filling of offices with incompetent persons, and to a consequent mal-execution of official duties. And in my opin- ion, sir, this principle, * * » unless the public shall effectually rebuke and restrain it, will entirely change the character of our govern- ment." Again, in his speech on the appointing and removing power, Mr. Web- ster thus philosophizes concerning the evils of patronage (iv, 180, 183): " The unlimited power to grant office and to take it away gives a com- mand over the hopes and fears of a vast multitude of men. It is gener- ally true that he who controls another man's means of living controls his will. Where there are favors to be granted there are usually enough to solicit for them ; and when favors once granted may be withdrawn at pleasure, there is ordinarily little security for personal independence of character. The power of giving office thus affects the fears of all who are in and the hopes of all who are out. Those who are ' out ' endeavor to distinguish themselves by active political friendship, by warm per- sonal devotion, by clamorous support of men in whose hands is the power of reward; while those who are 'in' ordinarily take care that others shall not surpass them in such qualities or such conduct as are most likely to secure favor. They resolve not to be outdone in any of the works of partisanship. The consequence of all this is obvious. " Men in office have begun to think themselves mere agents and ser- vants of the appointing power, and not agents of the government or thQ pountry." 164 OPINIONS OF CALHOUN AND KENT. To me they appeared to be far more statesman-like than the opposite arguments, and to partake much more of the spirit of the Constitution." Again, in speaking of the powers of the President, Mr. Calhoun says (i, 219, 220): "I do not add the power of removing officers, the tenure of whose office is not fixed by the Constitution, which has grown into practice ; because it is not a power vested in the Presi- dent by the Constitution, but belongs to the class of implied powers, and, as such, can only be rightfully exercised and carried into effect by the authority of Congress." Chancellor James Kent, speaking of the decision of the Congress of 1789, says ("Commentaries," i, 344) : " This question has never been made the subject of judicial discussion ; and the construction given to the Constitution in 1789 has continued to rest on this loose, incidental, declaratory opinion of Congress, and the sense and practice of government since that time. It may now be considered as firmly and definitively set- tled, and there is good sense and practical utility in the construction. It is, however, a striking fact in the constitutional history of our government that a power so transcendent as that is, which places at the disposal of the President alone the tenure of every executive officer appointed by the President and Senate, should depend upon inference merely, and should have been gratuitously declared by the first Congress in opposition to that high authority of the Federalist,* and should have been supported or acquiesced in by some of those distinguished men who questioned or denied the power of Congress even to incorporate a national bank." Joseph Story, LL.D., says ("Exposition of the Con- stitution," N. Y. Ed., 1881, p. 175) : "If we connect * Alexaniier Hamilton. this power of I'emoVal * * * With aiiothef power, which is given in the succeeding clause, to fill up va- cancies in the recess of the Senate, the chief guards intended by the Constitution over the power of appoint- ment may become utterly nugatory. A President of high ambition and feeble principles may remove all officers, and make new appointments in the recess of the Senate ; and if his choice should not be confirmed by the Senate, he may reappoint the same persons in the recess, and thus set at defiance the salutary check of the Senate in all such cases." Senator George H. Williams of Oregon says (Sup- plement to Cong. Globe, 1868, p. 458) : " Concerning the decision of 1789, * * * j^^ jjj^y i^q gj^j^ ^\^r^^ j^ was brought about by the arguments of James Madison in the House and the casting vote of Vice-President Adams in the Senate, both of whom at the time ex- pected to fill the executive office, and both of whom, it has been said, looked upon a contrary decision as expressing a want of confidence in the then adminis- tration of Washington.* Experience has demonstrated its mischievous and corrupting tendencies and effects." * The same reasons may liave influenced Thomas Jefferson also. At the request of President Washington he wrote an " opinion whether the Senate has a right to negative the * grade ' he (the President) may think it expedient to use in a foreign mission as well as the ' person ' to be appointed," in the course of which he said (" Works of John Adams," iii, 576) : *' The Senate is not supposed by the Constitution to be ac- quainted with the concerns of the executive department. It was not intended that these should be communicated to them ; nor can they therefore be qualified to judge of the necessity which calls for a mission to any particular place, or of the particular grade, more or less marked, which special and secret circumstances may call for. All this is left to the President. They are only to see that no unfit person is employed." The original manuscript of this Opinion was found among President Adams's papers. As he was Washington's successor in office, the latter probabl)' gave it to him for reference. It is not in Jefferson's own works. 166 fSE CBITICS SOMEWHAT PREJUDICED. 'Representative Chilton Allan of Kentucky says (G. & S.'s Debates, 1833-34, vol. x, pt. iii, pp. 3354-56): "The first fatal error that crept into our system of government was the power conferred in 1789 upon the President to remove public officers — a power given to the popularity of President Washington, and which he never abused — a power that remained harmless in the statute book for forty years. This power has been called up from its long slumber. It has displayed its character. * * * The power of removal for opinion's sake at once saps the foundation of republican govern- ment and introduces the spirit of monarchy. * * * This power of removal, in its origin, was not intended to go further than to the removal of officers for whose conduct the President is immediately responsible. But of late the broad ground is taken that he can command and remove those for whose conduct he is not respon- sible." The foregoing criticisms of the decision of the first Congress express the prejudice rather than the deliber- ate judgment of the critics. President Jackson's whole- sale removals created such a profound impression on the statesmen of his day, that even Mr. Webster ad- mitted that they may have biased his judgment. This must have been true, for otherwise how could such a statesman fail to commend the profound arguments of the majority in the great debate, some of which experi- ence has proved to be true? The American people are possessed of an inherent fear of monarchical power. But they came by it honestly, for it is hereditary, having been transmitted down from the forefathers. In further proof of this fact, let the following extracts from the speeches and writings of President Jackson's contemporaries speak for them- Tflfi PRESIDENT TOO BUSY FOB MISCHJEF. l6^ selves. They do not all refer directly to the power of removal, but, like the preceding criticisms, they show the same fear and dislike of monarchical power and the same prejudice caused by President Jackson's removals. The speakers all feared and some predicted direful future results. They were greatly alarmed at the pros- pect of a corrupt President. A corrupt President would be a calamity. But the President is so beset as it were by constitutional checks, the most potent perhaps being the power of impeachment, that no permanent injury need be feared unless the people as well as the Presi- dent become corrupt. Besides the constitutional checks, the President nowadays is so engaged in the transaction of legitimate business that he has but little time to con- coct conspiracies. Further, political conspiracies, com- paratively speaking, are rare in this country. They are in fact opposed to the genius of American institu- tions. But in spite of all this, the wise words of the far-seeing statesmen of 1789 and 1829 cannot be too carefully weighed or too much heeded Senator David Barton of Missouri says (G. & S.'s Debates, 1829-30, vol. vi, pt. i, pp. 368, 462) : " He denied that in any cases, except the Cabinet officers, the Federal officers were ever intended to be rendered the servile creatures of the Executive, * * * ^^q^ were intended to be freemen, looking to the faithful performance of their duties and to the protection of the Senate and the laws for their offices. It was fit that the officers of a despot should live or die by the breath of their master. That suited such form of gov- ernment. Not so in a republic — a government of law. * * * If this abuse of the offices be tolerated, his- tory will tell posterity that a combination of aspirants destroyed the constitutional liberties of the United States by the usual gradations of tyranny and bribery, as was feared and deprecated by the Father of his Country I " Senator George M. Bibb of Kentucky, speaking of President Jackson's " Protest," * and of the power of removal, says ('' Debates," 1833-34, vol. x, pt. ii, pp. 1499, 1513): "The power of removal of officers, al- though not expressly limited by the Constitution to any particular specified causes, is yet qualified and reg- ulated by the public uses and benefits for which it was conferred, and is abused and perverted when exercised tQ * * * subserve selfish ambition. * * * Hq (the President) makes and unmakes at his pleasure. *This is my will, and that is your duty. I take the responsibility. Obey me, or 1 dismiss you, and supply your place by one whose opinions are well known to me.' Can it be true ? Does any free man believe that all officers, subject to removal, are also subject to the order and direction of the President in the exercise of the duties and trusts which their offices impose, and which they are bound by oath to execute faithfully ? Is the President the sole interpreter of the Constitution and laws for them ? * * * This prerogative power far exceeds any possessed by the King of England, for there it is an established maxim that ' no man shall dare assist the Crown in contradiction to the laws of * President Jackson's '* Protest," which was really an argument in defense of his course in removing the deposits in the United States Bank, was brought out by the following resolution, which was intro- duced by Senator Clay : Resolved, That the President, in the late executive proceedings in relation to the public revenue, has assumed upon himself authority and power not conferred by the Constitution and laws, but in derogation of both. This resolution was expunged from the journal January 16, 1837, by ft vote of 24 to 19* THE LAWS ABOVE THE COMifA:S^DS OF UE^. 169 the land.' * * * They (the writers of the Protest) might have learned from the speeches and writings of the wise and virtuous of ancient and modern times that no government is well constituted * unless the laws pre- vail above the commands of men.'"* Representative George McDuffie of South Carolina says (Debates, vol. x, pt. iii, pp. 3454, 3455) : "I have deemed it important to speak thus distinctly on the dis- missing power, because I have a deep and solemn con- viction that if Congress does not interpose, speedily and effectually interpose on this subject, the day is not dis- tant when this government will sink into deep corrup- tion and absolute monarchy. * * * j£ y^^^ bring all the offices of this government into the political market as the legitimate * spoils of victory;' if every aspirant to the presidential office inscribes on his banner this celebrated motto to animate his partisans, is not the whole mass of the offices and patronage of your gov- ernment converted into a mighty fund of corruption, sufficient to purchase an imperial crown, and which no human contrivance can permanently resist? Mr. Speaker, the immense patronage of this government, under this new doctrine of the absolute right of every new President to discharge all the incumbents from office at his mere will and pleasure, to make way for his partisans, is a power I would not trust in the hands of an angel, if there were an angel in human form." * Senator Bibb further says : " One of the great securities for liberty consists in the division of the powers of government. Thus safety in legishition is consulted by having many Senators and many Representa- tives. Safety in the judicial department is consulted by having a plu- rality of judges. So the safety in the executive department consists in distributing the powers into numerous compartments, subjecting each officer to a personal responsibility, and to the law; whereby a govern- ment of laws is created, and not a government at the will of one man/' (p. mi.) 9 ITO Removal o:c* ttiitoLUTioi^Aiit soldIees. Senator Jolin Tyler of Virginia says (Debates, vol. x, pt. i, pp. 672, 673): "Is the presidential power only to be considered dangerous when he (the President) is at the head of an army ? Patronage is the sword and the cannon by which war may be made on the liberty of the human race. * * * If the offices of the gov- ernment shall be considered but as 'spoils,' to be dis- tributed among a victorious party, then indeed, sir, the consequences are most fatal. All stability in govern- ment must be at an end. Novices are introduced in the place of long-tried, experienced, and faithful public agents, and the public interests necessarily suffer, and suffer severely." Senator Peleg Sprague of Maine says (p. 388) : "Since the political victory of 1828, the vultures have been screaming over the battle-field, and *even the cries of the widows and the orphan ' could not scare them from their prey. A spirit of proscription for opinion's sake, scarcely paralleled in the annals of free governments, has swept in terror over the land, prostrating the purest and the best, breaking down the independent, bending the feeble, and leaving the timid, like trembling slaves, to eat their bread in fear. Veteran soldiers of the Revolution have been sacrificed for daring to exercise the freedom for which they fought ! Officers of the late war. Republicans of '98, patriots at all times, have been punished for daring, in a republican country, to breathe the language of freemen ! " Senator Samuel L. Southard of New Jersey says (pp. 161, 162) : "I do not mean at this time to discuss the existence of the power of dismission, or to question its constitutionality. * * * The spoils of party * * * are the triumphs of corruption over virtue and the Con- stitution. The power of dismission, if to be exercised ^t all, should be exercised for competent cause \ mi t^ATElOK iiiJNliY t'BA^g l^OWEU AND KINGS. 1*71 that competent cause must exist in the law, and by the commands of the law ; must be connected with tlio actual discharge of the duties required by law ; to pre- vent the performance of acts expressly forbidden by law ; to secure the performance of acts expressly com- manded by law ; to relieve from fraud and mental in- capacity to discharge the duties arising under circum- stances which could not otherwise be controlled. * * * There is not a man on earth to whom I would confide it in the extent now claimed by the advocates of the Executive." Representative William F. Gordon of Virginia says (Debates, vol. xi, pt. ii, pp. 1282, 1285, 1286) : " I verily believe * * * the wise and patriotic framers of our Constitution have unintentionally given to the execu- tive power a fearful and dangerous ascendency, which makes it an overbalance to all the other departments of government. * * * Patrick Henry* uttered this sententious maxim of political wisdom : * When you give power, you know not what you give.' * * * We may all very plainly see that the contest for the executive office is the rock on which the permanency of this republic is likely to be wrecked ; and the vehe- mence of this contest will ever be in proportion to the executive patronage. * * * I desire to limit and restrain the executive patronage." * Mr. Henry's words were spoken in the Virginia Convention of lYSS, the Convention that adopted the national Constitution, Speaking of the Constitution, Mr. Henry said (Wirt's " Life of Patrick Henry," p. 296): "This Constitution is said to have beautiful features. When I come to examine these features, sir, they appear to me horribly fright- ful ! Among other deformities, it has an awful squinting. It squints toward monarchy » * » * Your President may easily become Kinc." Mr. Henry opposed the adoption of the Constitution with more elo- quence than reason. But despite his and other men's eloquence it was adopted by a vote of 89 to 79, 172 STATEMENT OF REASONS FOR REMOYAL. Albert Gallatin, one of the founders of the govern- ment, and for fourteen years Secretary of the Treasury under Jefferson and Madison, in a letter to his wife, dated Washington, May 2, 1829, says (Adams's Galla- tin, p. 633) : " On every occasion I have freely expressed my entire disapprobation of the system of removal for political opinions." Senator Samuel Smith of Maryland says (Debates, 1831-32, vol. viii, pt. i, p. 1363): "I am opposed to removals from office for opinions declared. But, sir, I l70uld remove any officer who made use of his office to force inferiors to act contrary to their wishes. I would remove every postmaster who had been known to frank the * coffin handbills,' or any other abusive papers of either of the candidates." Senator Thomas Ewing of Ohio says (Debates, vol. X, pt. ii, p. 1416) : *' I will advise and consent to the appointment of no man, to any office, who has earned that appointment in the arena as a political gladiator. And I will advise and consent to the reappointment of no man to any responsible office who, while he held that office, abused it to the mere purposes of party, instead of using it for the benefit of his country. * * * At the same time I would inquire into no man's political opinions or personal preferences. It is a gross abuse that such inquiries have ever been made in appointments to office." Senator Hugh L. White of Tennessee says (Debates, vol. xi, pt. 1, pp. 488-9) : " It is asked by the opponents of this bill what benefit its friends expect from a state- ment of the reasons of the removal when the nomination of a successor is presented to the Senate. I answer for myself, I wish to cut up by the roots the demoralizing tendencies of office-hunting. * * * Under the pres- ent state of things * * * office-hunting will become HOW OFFICE-HUNTEES DECEIVE PEESIDENT. 173 a science. Men will be selected and furnished with funds to defray the expense of coming to Washington for the purpose of having one set turned out and an- other set put in, by means of artful tales, secretly got- ten up and reduced to writing, which it is supposed will never see the light. This officer and representative of office hunters will come on with one pocket full of bad characters, with which to turn out incumbents, and tlie other filled with good characters, with which to provide for his constituents. * * * Require the reasons for removal to be stated, and no man will dare to make a statement which he does not believe to be true, because exposure and disgrace will certainly be the consequence. You will take out of the hand of the cowardly assassin the poisoned dagger heretofore used in the dark. You will shield the Executive against mistakes founded on false representations." Senator Benton, chairman of a Committee on Exec- utive Patronage, in a report made on May 4, 1826, says (Appendix to G. & S.'s Debates, vol. ii, pt. ii, p. 133) : " In coming to the conclusion tliat executive patronage ouglit to be diminished and regulated on the plan pro- posed, the Committee* rest their opinion on the ground that the exercise of great patronage in the hands of one man has a tendency to sully the purity of our in- stitutions and to endanger the lil)ertie8 of the country. Tliis doctrine is not new. A jealousy of power, f and of the influence of patronage, which must always ac- company its exercise, has ever been a distinguished * The Committee consisted of Senators T. PI Benton of Missouri, Nathaniel Macon of North Carolina, Martin Van Buren of New York, Hugh L. White of Tennessee, William Findlay of Pennsylvania, Mahlon Dickerson of New Jersey, John Holmes of Maine, Robert Y. Uayne of South Carolina, and Richard M. Johnson of Kentucky. j- Compare with page 166. 174 PEESIDENT J. Q. ADAMS CREATES A ELURRY. feature in the American character. It displayed itself strongly at the period of the formation and of the adoption of the Federal Constitution. * * * Noth- ing could reconcile the great men of that day to a Con- stitution of so much power but the guards which were put upon it against the abuse of power. Dread and jealousy of this abuse displayed itself throughout the instrument. To this spirit we are indebted for the free- dom of the press, trial by jury, liberty of conscience, freedom of debate, responsibility to constituents, power of impeachment, the control of the Senate over appoint- ments to office." The American jealousy of power is still further illus- trated by the following extracts from speeches in the United States Senate in 1826.* Senator John Branch of North Carolina says (De- bates, vol. ii, pt. i, pp. 386, 387) : "It is time to re- enact Magna Charta. It is time to reassert the prin- ciples of the Declaration of Independence. * * * Are we dependent on the whim, or caprice, or courtesy of the President for power? * * * The Senate was wisely designed to act as a check on the appointing power. * * * It is intended, I trust, to be perpetual. It was so designed. But I have the most awful fore- bodings that it will not be. * * * It (the Con- stitution) may not prove an adequate protection again^ the insidious encroachments of ambitious leaders." Senator John Randolph of Virginia says (p. 392) : "Since the revolution of 1801, the practice has been settled that the Secretary of State shall succeed the * These speeches were the result of a special message from President John Q. Adams, wherein he claimed the independent right to appoint a representative to a " Congress of American Nations, to be assembled at Panama." But out of courtesy to the Senate, he did not exercise t\]Q ^leged right. PATROKAGE LIKE AECHIMEDES'S LEVEE 175 President. Hence it is that the Secretaryship of State has been the apple of discord under all administrations succeeding that of Mr. Jefferson. It was the bone of contention between Mr. Gallatin and Mr. Robert Smith. There are more here besides myself (looking at Mr. Macon) that know it. It has been the apple of discord, ay, and of concord too, sir, since. It has been the favorite post and position of every bad, ambitious man, whether apostate Federalist or apostate Republican, who wishes to get into the presidency, * * * * honestly if they may, corruptly if they must.' It has been that which Archimedes wanted to move the world, * * * *a place to stand upon,' ay, and to live upon too, sir, and, with the lever of patronage, to move our little world." Senator Littleton W. Tazewell of Virginia says (p. 602) : " I utterly deny the correctness of this doctrine, which seeks to create a new, substantive, and fruitful source of power, in existing or future Presidents, from the past practices of their predecessors. And I deny more strongly, if I may do so, the authority to enlarge the volume of power issuing from this newly discovered fountain by the process of induction and reasoning by analogy. Let it be once granted that the practice of one President gives a legitimate authority to his successor, and that this authority may be enlarged by analogies, and it must be obvious to all that the power granted by the people to the Executive, although made by the Constitution but a school-boy's snow-ball, in. a few turns would become a monstrous avalanche, that must one day crush themselves." Senator John Chandler of Maine says (pp. 633, 634, 635) : " Hardly a session of Congress passed but what some power, some patronage was gained by the Execu- tive. * * * ju tijig government the departments 176 POWERS SHOULD BALANCE LIKE A SEE-SAW. were to balance each other. How was this balance to be kept up? Not by constantly increasing the power of one department of the government ; but the House of Representatives should take care of the portion com- mitted to them, the Senate theirs, and the President his. * * * Balance anything. Get a rail and play at see- saw. Give one a little more than the other, and away he would go. So it was with these powers. Give one of them only a hair's breadth more than it ought to have, and the balance would be destroyed. * * * Governments were made on the suspicion that all those who had power would go wrong." CHAPTER IX. COMPARATIVE POLITICAL ECONOMY. Its Utility. — The Civil Service Systems of England, Canada, British India, Germany, France, Sweden, Norway, and China. A SHORT account of the civil service laws and cus- toms of a few representative nations is a fitting con- clusion to this book. Comparative political economy, past as well as present, is a useful and instructive study. It ought to be made a distinct branch of study in all governments, for it is full of information and promise. Like comparative anatomy (and pathology also, for na- tions suffer with diseases as it were), it reveals new sources of light. It is as broad as the earth itself, and as various as the divisions and subdivisions of men. If the combined wisdom of the world does not at least approximate perfection, what will?* The bigot and the narrow-minded man only will reject useful laws or regulations because they were originated in England, France, China, or India. The time may come when it will be said of the United States of 1888, "They had only the fragment of a government, for they either re- jected or were ignorant of the wisdom of other nations." What would be thought of a nation that rejected the telegraph because it had its origin in another nation? Washington's recommendation, which was approved by Jefferson, of the establishment of a National Univer- * Let us avail ourselves of the wisdom and experience of former ages. Let us aggregate the knowledge of every nation. — John Vinino. 1V8 aiSTORY OP ENGLISH EXAMINATIONS. sity for " the education of our youth in the science of government" was certainly a wise one. The English civil service law is much like our own ; but it contains provisions that ours does not, namely. Preliminary examinations are held for the purpose of weeding out those who are " too stupid or ignorant t :> have a chance on a competitive trial." Pensions aro granted, provided the official has served ten years — one sixtieth of the original salary being allowed for ten years of service, and an additional sixtieth for each succeeding year till the fortieth, when the increase stops. Pecuniary embarrassment, caused by an officeholder's imprudence, forfeits "that honorable position in the service which is necessary to give him a claim to pro- motion or increase of salary from length of service." There is a " movable clerical force of all work," that goes " from department to department, as convenience may require." These salutary regulations are worthy of imitation. Mr. Dorman B. Eaton says that promotion examina- tions for the customs service were begun in England by Lord Liverpool in 1820 ; that non competitive ex- aminations were begun by Lord Melbourne between 1834 and 1841, but that " the decisive part of the con- test between patronage and open competition was be- tween 1845 and 1855, though the victors did not take possession of the whole field until 1870." Lord Mel- bourne favored competitive examinations, but they were thought to be " too great an innovation to begin at once." The order for the competitive system of exam- ination was issued on May 21, 1855. In Canada an act of Parliament was passed in 1882 providing for non-competitive civil service examinations. It was amended in 1883, 1884, and 1885. The exam- inations are (1) preliminary^ for lower grade offices ; THE PRACTICAL EEQIJIREMEN^TS llST CAKAbA. l79 (2) qualifying^ for clerkships and higher grade offices ; (3) promotion^ for those ah-eady in the service. The preliminary and qualifying examinations are held twice a year ; the promotion but once. But when the exi- gencies of the service require it, provision is made for special examinations. The examinations are held simul- taneously throughout the Dominion, and are conducted by subexaminers. The written papers are transmitted to the Board of Examiners at Ottawa, where they are examined and valued. The successful candidates in the preliminary and qualifying examinations receive certificates and have their names printed in the Offi- cial Gazette. Candidates who pass the preliminary examination, have the option of taking the qualifying one also. The examinations embrace the elementary branches of education, but candidates are permitted to take certain prescribed optional subjects. These are translating English into French and French into Eng- lish, book-kcei)ing, short-hand, telegraphy, type- writing, and *2)rejis' writing. The last consists in condensing the salient points of reports, &c., into about a fourth of the printed matter. For the inside service^ that is, for those employed in the different departments at Ottawa (the capital), there is an additional allowance of $50 per annum for every additional optional subject, not exceeding four, in which a candidate may pass. In most cases an annual increase of salary is allowed, but it cannot exceed the prescribed limit of the respective classes. When a vacancy occurs in a class next above the one in which an employe is serving, he may, on passing the promotion examination, be promoted to it. lie thus reaps the advantage of a double increase of salary — (1) by promotion ; (2) by annual increase. Ex- aminations are held in either the English or French lan- guage, at the option of the candidate. Thirty per cent. 180 ME. THOEBUEJ?^ I'AVORS CoMi^ETlTlVE TESTS. of the marks allowed for each branch of study and fifty per cent, of the aggregate number of marks given to all the subjects must be attained. That is, if there are eight subjects taken, there must be 400 marks made. There is a probationary period of six months, both for original and promotion appointments. The respective ages at and between which all ordinary appointments to the inside service are made are 15, 18, and 35 years — 15 for places below that of a third-class clerk ; in other cases 18. Deputy Pleads of Departments, officers, and employes, whose appointments are of a permanent char- acter, can only be removed from office by authority of the Governor in Council. Employes guilty of miscon- duct or neglect of duty are suspended without pay till such time as the suspension is removed. There is an attendance hook in which all employes, under Deputy Heads, are required to record their names every morn- ing, or at such other times as may be required by the Governor in Council. In a letter dated Ottawa, Canada, September 9, 1887, J. Thorburn, LL.D., Chairman of the Board of Exam- iners, to whom I am indebted for the foregoing facts in regard to the Canadian civil service system, says : Dear Sir: The civil service examinations in Canada differ in some important respects from those in Great Britain and in the United States. With us they are only qualifying, not necessarily, when passed, leading to appointments ; whereas with you and in England, with a few specified exceptions, they are competitive. In this respect, I am satisfied, you have the advantage of us, for, as is now generally admitted, the more fully the political element is eliminated from them, the better it is for the public service. Our government has not hitherto seen its way to EABlflKG THEIR PROMOTION. 18l adopt a competitive system. It retains the power of selecting any candidate who has passed the examina- tion test, irrespective of his standing as compared with that of others, and the result therefore naturally follows that as soon as an applicant for office finds that he has " passed the Rubicon," he sets to work at once to bnng all the pressure, political, social, or religious, that he can obtain to bear upon the different ministers of the Crown, and it will generally be found that the weakest and least deserving of the candidates, conscious of their deficiencies, are those that make the most strenuous and persistent efforts to secure political backing. Another serious drawback to our qualifying system of examination is to be found in the fact that out of the large number of candidates who every year reach the standard required by the examiners, probably not more than one in twenty has the least prospect of ap- pointment. In course of time, therefore we shall have a large army of disappointed aspirants, each one of whom thinks he has some special claim upon the government, waiting for something to turn up, instead of betaking themselves to other avocations of life. You will see from the copy of the rules and regula- tions sent to you that we have a promotion examination for those already in the service. This has given rise to considerable opposition, especially on the part of those who have been a long time in the service. The experience, however, of the Deputy Heads has been largely in its favor. It exercises a wholesome and steadying influence on the younger members of the ser- vice when they know that they have to earn their pro- motion, instead of relying for it upon the interest and solicitations of influential friends. I find that in Eng- land they have a modified form of promotion examina- tions. These are held at the request of the heads of i82 C0M1>ET1TIYE TESTS IN BBITlSti INDIA. the several departments for the purpose of selecting those who are fittest for promotion or reward, but they are not necessarily required by law. In reply to your question as to the extent of the reform in Her Majesty's dominions, I answer that the system of examination for public ofiices is in operation in India, New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia, New Zealand, and Jamaica, and so far as I have been able to learn, it is found to work satisfactorily. Respectfully yours, J. THORBURN. In another letter (April 11, 1888) Mr. Thorburn says : " The government has decided to have only one prelim- inary and qualifying examination instead of two a year. The Secretary of State has given notice of his intention to make certain slight emendations in the civil service act. When there are 80 or 100 candidates at an ex- amination, it is difficult to keep them from copying from each other ; and in some cases we have had can- didates personating others. To deal with such cases the Chairman will be authorized to examine witnesses under oath, and have the delinquents punished. I am not without hope that we shall yet have competitive examinations in Canada." The British India civil service law, which requires strict competitive examinations, was passed in 1853, two years before the passage of the English act. In fact, England wished to try an experiment, and began it in India. The plan for the enforcement of the law was drawn by Lord Macaulay, Lord Ashburton, Doctor Melvill, Doctor Jowett, and Sir John S. Lefevre. "India," says Mr. E. F. Waters, "has a special ad- ministration, differing from all the other dependencies of the Crown. Her Governor has larger powers, and THE VARIETY OP LANGITAGE IN INDIA. 183 all appointments in the civil, medical, engineering, and artillery services of that immense and densely popula- ted country (150,000,000 people) are based upon com- petitive examination. * * * Different candidates are examined (according to the different Provinces of India, or the different departments they may wish to enter), in addition to ordinary studies, in jurisprudence, law of evidence, law of India, political economy, his- tory and geography of India, Arabic, Bengali, Hindi, Hindustani, Malayalum, Marathi, Persian, Sanskrit, Tamil, and Telugu." Mr. D. B. Eaton says that natives of France, Canada, Brazil, and the United States have won appointments in the Indian service. Non-competitive examinations were held in British India long before 1853, but they were not very success- ful, notwithstanding the applicants were required to attend Haileybury College for two years. For exam- ple, Mr. Eaton says that in the years 1851 to 1854, both inclusive, 437 applicants were examined for commissions in the Indian army. Nearly a third failed in English and a still greater number in arithmetic. This college, which was conducted on the patronage system plan, was abolished in 1854. In Prussia (Germany) the civil service has been gov- erned since her humiliation in 1806 by the first Napo- leon as scientifically perhaps as has her military ser- vice, which, in turn, in 1870-71, humiliated the third Napoleon, and one has improved and strengthened the government about as much perhaps as the other.* The following speaks for itself (Cyclopedia of Political Sci- * Prussia owes it very much to the high order of efficiency which has been introduced into her civil service that she has risen to be one of the first powers in the world. Improvements in administration have hardly been less in France and Great Britain. — C. C. Andrews, 184 EXAMINAllOlf AND REEXAMINATION. ence, iii, 445) : " Various services are directly subor- dinate to the Ministry of State (council of ministers), such as the official journal, the archives, printing, and various others, notably the Commission of Examination for future functionaries. To be a functionary it is nec- essary to have studied three years at the University, to have passed a period of instruction and preparation for the public service, and to undergo a new examina- tion, called the state examinatio7i, before the Commis- sion. The candidate then obtains the title of Assessor, which confers the right of being employed and compen- sated, but some time elapses before a place with the title of Councilor can be had. The functionaries of lower grade and simple employes, are likewise obliged to pass an examination, but the requirements are not so great. " As to the internal organization of the public ser- vices, some are organized into bureaus ; that is, they have a chief, a sole functionary, and employes. But most of these services have Councils or Committees, in which the President often has a great preponderance, but in which each Councilor has his powers (decernat) clearly defined." In France the civil service is free of politics and piib- lic offices are held during good behavior. Mr. E. F. Waters, who has traveled in France and other parts of Europe, and who was for twenty years an editor of the Bost07i Daily Advertiser, in a pamphlet (issued in 1881) entitled "The Great Struggle in England for Honest Government," says (p. 28) : " It is not con- tended that the English service is the best attainable. The French system is in some respects better. * It is the result of nearly a hundred years of experience. Every officer in it below Minister of Finance, com- menced bis service in a clerkship, or some more subor- GEEAT STABILITY OF SERVICE IN PEANCE. 185 dinate position, and the advancement which his fidelity and ability secured has never been hindered by polit- ical frowns, or even by political revolutions. His ap- pointment was without partiality, and public examina- tions have awarded him his promotions.* For more than fifty years a record has been kept of every man's ofiicial conduct, as reported by different superior of- ficers. * * * Under such a system, it becomes almost impossible for an unworthy man to work his way to a position where his incompetency or corruption can largely prejudice the reputation of the service, or materially affect the revenue of the empire.' " In a letter dated October 10, 1887, Mr. Waters fur- ther says of the French civil service : " It is bureau- cratic, but intelligent, honest, and faithful. Their en- tire idea is to do their duty, and nothing else, and they take an extreme pride in their position. A common track-guard on a State railway is as proud as a King of his position, and although courteous, is unrelenting in carrying out instructions. Nothing can exceed the courtesy of the higher trained ofticials."f Concerning the French diplomatic and consular ser- vices Mr. Abram S. Hewitt says (Cong. Record, 1878, p. 1652) : "A most elaborate scheme of examination is laid down for admission to the permanent consular and diplomatic services. The examinations embrace interna- tional law, diplomatic history, statistics, political ec.9"69-\0AW LD 21A-50m-12,'60 (B6221sl0)476B General Library University of California Berkeley I r YB U04I2 SOM-ift \N * Cfe