U u 1 1 V - r . : f , BY S. J JtOW. CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1868. VOL. 14.-AT0. 24. : ill i?a- e w. w fi isi w izn,m- THE ISSUE! SEUATOS MOETON'S GEEAT SPELCH. ' Delivered January 24, 1868. Mr. President, if I had not been referred to by my honorable friend from Wisconsin Mr. Doolittle) in the debate yesterday, I should not desire to .speak 011 this question, especially at this time. 1 fear that I shall not have the strength to say what I wish to. The issue here to-day is' the same which Erevails throughout the country, which will e the issue of this canvass, and perhaps for years to come. To repeat what 1 have had occasion to say elsewhere, it is between two paramount ideas, each struggling tor the su premacy. One is, that the war to suppress the rebellion was right and just on our part ; that the rebels forfeited their civil and po litical rights.and can only be restored to them upon such conditions as the nation may pre scribe for it future safety and prosperity. The other idea is, that the rebellion was not sinful, but was-vight ; that those engaged in it forfeited no rights, civil or political, and have a right to take charge of their State governments and be restored to their repre sentation in Congress just as if there had been no rebellion and nothing had occurred. The immediate issue before the Senate now is between the existing State governments established under the policy of the President of the United States in the rebel States and the plan of reconstruction presented by Con gress. ' When a surveyor first enters a new territory lie endeavors to ascertain the exact latitude and longitude of a given spot, and from that an safely begin his survey ; and so I will endeavor lo ascertain a proposition in this debate upon which parties are agreed, and start from that proposition. That- proposi tion is, that at the end of the war, in the spring of I860, the rebel States were without State governments of any kind. The loyal State-governments existing at the beginning of the war had been ovei turned by the reb els; the rebel State governments erected daring the war had been overturned by our armies, aud at the end of the war there were no governments of any kind existing in those States. This fact was recognized distinctly by the President of the United States in his proclamation under which the work of re construction was commenced in North Caro lina in 1865, to which I beg leave to refer. The others wete mere copies of thus procla luatiou. In that proclamation he says : -'And whereas, the rebellion which has been waged by a portion of the people of the United States against the properly constituted authori ties of the Government thereof, in the most vio lent and revolting form, but whose organized and armed forces have now been almost entirely over come, has in its revolutionary progress deprived the people of the State of North Carolina of all civil government." - ; Here the President must be allowed to speak for his party,and I shall accept this as a proposition agreed upon on both tides : that at the end of the war there were no govern ments of any kind existing in those States. 'ihe fourth section of the fou: th art icle of the Constitution declares that "the UuitedStates i-hall guarauty to every State iu this Union a republican form of government." This pro vision contains a vast, undefined power that has never yet been ascertained-a great super-' visory "power given the United States to keep the States in theirorbits, preserve them from anarchy, revolution, a fid rebellion. The meas ure of power thus conferred upon the Gov ernment of the United States can only be determined by that which is requisite to guaranty or maintain in each State a legal and republican form of government. What ever power, therefore, may be necessary to enable the Government of the UuitedStates thus to maintain in each State a republicau irm of government is conveyed by this pro vision. "' ; Now, Mr. President, when the war ended and these States were found without govern ments of any kind, the jurisdiction of the United States, under this provision of the Constitution at once attached ; the power to reorganize State governments, to use the common word, to reconstruct, to maintain and guaranty republican State governments in those Slates, at once attached under this j revision. Upon this proposition there is a!o a concurrence of the two parties. Tha President has distinctly' recognized the fart that its jurisdiction'attached when those States were found without republican State Governments, and he himself claimed to act. under this clause of the Constitution. I will read the preamble of the President's proclamation : . ' Whereas, the fourth section of the fourth arti cle of the Constitution of the United States de clares that the United States shall guarantee to fery State in the Union a republican form of 'jvernment, and shall protect each of them against iomiun and domestic violence ; and whereas the President of the United States is, by the Constitu tion, made Commander-ln chief of the Army and -Navy as well at chief civil executive officer ot the United States, and Is bound by solemn oath faith fully to execute the office of President of the Uni ted States, and to take care that the laws , be faithfully executed ; and whereas,. the rebellion Mch has been waged by a portion of the people f the Lnited Stateagainst the properly consti tuted authorities of the Government thereof in the most violent and revolting form, but whose organized nnd armed forces have now been al 0iX entirely overcome, ha in its revolutionary progress deprived the people of tbe State of North Carolina of all civil government ;. and whereas, 't becomes necessary and proper to carry out and etiforoe the obligations of the United states to the People of North Carolina in securing them in the "j'jyment of a republican form of government. I read this, Mr. President, for the purpose lowing that the President of the United tates.in his policy of reconstruction, started it with a distinct recognition of the appli cability of this clause of the Constitution, and that he based his system of reconstruc tion upon it. It is true he recites in this proclamation that he is the Commander-in-chief of the Army of the United States ; but at the same time he puta his plan of recon struction, not upon the exercise of the mil 1Ul7 power which is called to its aid, but on the execution of the guarantee provided by 1 I tbe clause of the Constitution to which I have : referred. He appoints a Governor for North ; Carolina aud for these other States, the of- I fice being civil in its character, but military j in its effects. This Governor has all the ! power of one of the district commanders, j and, in fact, far greater power than was con- '. ferred upon Gen. Pope or Gen. Sheridan or any general in command of a district ; for it ; is further provided : "That the military commander of the depart ment, and all the officers and persons in the luili- i tary and naval set vice, aid and assist the said i provisional Governor in carrying into effect this proclamation." We are then agreed upon the second prop osition, that the power of the United States to reconstruct and guarantee lepub'.ican forms of government at once applied when these States were found in the condition in which they were at the end of the war. Then, sir, being agreed upon these two propositions, we are brought to the question as to the proper form of exercising this power and ly whom it shall be exercised. The Constitu tion says that "the United States bhali guar antee to every State in this Union a republi can form of .government." IJy the phrase "United States" here is meant the Govern ment of the United States. The United States can only act through the Government, and the clause would, mean precisely the same thing if it read "the Government of the United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a republican lorm of government.''' Then, as the Government of the United States is to execute this guarantee, the ques tion arises, what constitutes the Government of the United States? The President does not constitute the Gavcrnuienr. ; the Con gress does not constitute the Government ; the judiciary does not constitute the Gov ernment ; but all three together constitute the Government ; and as this guaranty is to be executed by the Government of the Uni ted States, it follows necessarily that it must be a legislative act. Tbe President could not assume to execute the guarantee without assuming that he was the Unite! States within the meaning of that provision, with out assuming that he was the Government of the United States. Congre-1 could not of itself assume to execute the guarantee without assuming that it was the Govern ment of th UuitedStates; nor could the judiciary without a like assumption. Tin? act must be (he act o the (jovernment, ami therefore it must be a legislative act, a law passed by Congress, submitted lo the Presi dent for his approval, and perhaps, in im proper case, subject to be reviewed by the judiciary. Mr. President, that this is necessarily the case from the simple reading of the Consti tution seems tome cannot bo for a moment denied. The President, in assuming to ex ecute this guarantee hiniseif, is assuming to be the Government of (he United Stales, which he dearly- is not, but only one of its co-ordinate branches ; and. therefore, as this guarantee must be a legislative act.it fol lows that the attempt on the p.irt of the President to execute the guarantee was with out authority, and that the guarantee can only be executed in the form of a law, first to be passed by Congress and then to be sub mitted to the President for his approval, and if he does not approve it then to he Dao 1 over his head by a .piujority of twr-thirds in each House. That law, then, bocomes the execution of the guarantee and is the act of j the Government of the United Slates. Mr. President, this is not an open qnes- j tion. I send to the Secretary anJ. ask him , to read a part of rhe decision of the Supreme Court of tho Urited States in the case of. Luther vs. Borden, as reported in 7 Howard. The Secretary read as follows : '.Moreover.the Constitution of the United St.ite as far as it has provided for an emergency of this kind, and authorized the General Governm nt to interfere- in tbe domestic concerns of a State, has treated the subject as political in its na ure and placed the power in the hands of that department. "The fourth section of tbe fourth article of tbe i Constitution of the United States provides that the United States shall guarantee to every State in : the Union a republican form of government, and ' shall protect each of them against invasions ; and , upon tho application of the Legislature or of the , executive (wben the Legislature cannot be con vened) against domestic vio ence. 'Under this article ot the Constitution it rests with Congress to decide what government is the established one in a State, For as the United States guarantees to each State a republican gov- J eminent, Congress mvst necessarily decide wnat ! government is established in the State before it j can determine whether it is republican or not. i And when tbe Senators and Representatives of a State are admitted into the councils of the Union the authority of the government under which they are appointed, as well as its republican char- acter. is. recognized by the proper constitutional authority. And itsdecision is bindinz upon every other department of the Government, and could i not be questioned in a judicial tribunal. . Iis true that the contest in this case did not' last long , enough to bring the matter to this ifsue; and as no SenatorsorKapresentatives wereelected under the authority of the Government of which Mr : Dorr was the head, Congress was not cailed upon to decide the controversy. Yet the right to decide is placed there, and not in the courts." .' j Mr. Morton. In this opinion of the Su- j prcme Court of the United States, delivered ; many years ago, the right to execute the guarantee provided for in this clause of the j Constitution is placed in Congress and no-f where else, and therefore the necessary read- j ing of the Constitution is confirmed by the -highest judicial authority which we have. j Mr. Johnson. Do you read from the o- ; pinion delivered by the Chief Justice? Mr. Morton. Yes,- sir ; the opinion of. Chief Justice Taney. He decides that this power is not judicial; that it is one of the nigh powers conferred upon Congress ; that j it is not subject to be reviewed by the Su- i preme Court, because it is political in its na-! ture. It is a distinct enunciation of the fact i that this guarantee is net to oe executed by ; the President, or by the Supreme Court, but ' by the Congress of the United States, j" the form of a law to be passed by that body anil to be submitted to tne President for his ip- J proval ;' and should he disapprove it, it may become a law by being passed by a two-thirds majority over Lis head. Now, I will cad theattenliou of myfriend from Wisconsin to some other authority. As ry- lie been pieasnd to refer to a former s speech of mine to show that lam not quite consistent.,! wiil refer to a vote given bv him CO in iG4 on a very important provision. On the 1st of July, 1804, the Senate having uu der consideration, as in Committee of the whole, "a bill to guarantee to certain States whose governments have been usurped or overthrown a republican form of govern ment," Mr. Jirown, ot Missouri, offered an amendment to strike out all of the bill after the enacting clauseand to insert a substitute, which I will ak the Secretary to read. The Secretary read as follows : "That when the inhabitants ofany State have been declared in a state of insurrection against the United States by proclamation of the Presi dent, by force and virtueof th act entitled 'an act further to provide lor the collect ion of duties on imports,and for other purposes.' approved July 13. Ihtil, they shull be and aro hereby declared to be incapable of casting any vote for electors of i'refcidentor Vice President of the United States, or of electing Senators or Hepresentutives in Con gress until said insurrection lo t-aid State is sup pressed or abandoned, and said inhabitants have returned to their obedience to the Government of tbe United States, and until such return to obedi ence shall be declared by proclamation of tbe President, issued by virtue of . an uct of Congress hereafter to bo passed, authorizing the same. ' Mr. Morton. The honorable Senator from Wisconsin voted for that in Committee of the whole aud on its tinal passage. I call attcutioa to the amendment, which declares that tliey shall be "i ccapuble or casting any vote for electors of President or Yioe President of the United States or of electing Seuators or liepf osentatives in Con gTess until said insurrection in said State is sup pressed or abandoned, and said inhabitants bave returned to their obedience to the Government of tbe United States, and until such return and obe dience shall be declared by proclamation of the President, issued by virtue ot an act of Congress hereafter to be pa.-seJ, authorizing (he same." Recognizing that a state of war shall be re garded as continuing until ital.all be declar ed no longer to exist by the President, in virtue of an act of Congress to be hereafter parsed. I am glad to find by looking at the vote that the distinguished Senator from Maryland Mr. Johnson 1 voted for this pro position, and thus recognized the doctriue for which I am now contending ; that the power to execute the guarantee invested in Congres alone, and that it is for Congress :al-iie to determine the stains and conditioa: of those States, and that the President , bus no power to proclaim peace or to declare tho political condition of those States until he shall first have, been thereunto authorized by an act of Congress. I therefore, Mr. President, take the pro position as conclusively established, both by reason and authority, that this clause of the Constitution can be executed only by Con cress; and taking that as established, I now proceed to consider what are the power of Congrcss in the execution of the guarantee, how it shall be executed, and what means maybe employed for that purpose. The Constitution does not define the means. It does not say how tho guarantee shall be ex ecuted. All that is left to the determina tion of Congress. As to the particalar char acter of thi iaaans that. must be employed, that, I take it, wil depend upon the pecu liar circumstances of each cae : and the ex tent of the power will depend upon the oth-" er question a to what may be required for the purpose of maintaining or guaranteeing a ioyai republican form of government in each State. I use the word '"loal," al though it is not used ih tha Constitution, because loyal is an inhering qualiSeation, not only in , regard to persons, who are to fill public offices, but in regard to State Governments. and we have no right to recog nize a State Government that is not loyal to tha Government of the United States. Now, st, as to the use of means that are not pre scribed in the Constitution. I call the atten tion of the Senate to the eighteenth clause of", section eihi of the first article of the Constitution of the United States, which de clares that : The Congress shall bave power to make all laws which shall Vie necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing powers and all other powers vested by this Constitution in the Government ot the L nitod btates or any depart ment or officer thereof." Herels a declaration of what would oth erwise be a .general principle anhow. that Congress shall have the power to pass all laws necessary to carry into execution all powers ihat are vested in the Government under the Constitution. As Congress has the power to guarantee or maintain a loyal republican government in each State, it has the right to use whatever means may be necessary for that purpose. As I before re marked, the character of the means will depend upon the character of the case. In one case it may be the use of an army ; in another case perhaps it may be simply pre senting a question to the courts,and having it tested in that way ;; in another case it may go to the very foundation of the Govern ment itself. Atid I now propound this propo sition : that it Congress, after deliberation, after long and bloody experience, shall come to the conclusion that loyal republican State governments cannot be erected and main tained in the rebel States upon the basis of the white population, it has a right to raise up and make voters of a class of men who had no right to vote under the State laws. This is simply the use of the necessary means in the execution of the guarantee. If we have found after repeated trial that loy al republican State governments, govern ments that shall answer the purpose that such governments are intended to answer, cannot be successfully founded upou the ba sis of the white population, because the great majority of that population are disloy al, then Congrtj8 has a right to raise up a new loyal voting population for the pur pose of establishing these governments in . of the guarantee. I think, tne pxeuuLiuu . , .i : : nn sir, this Drooos sition us so r necessary to elaborate it. j quired to find in the Constitution a particu lar grant or pover for this purpose ; but we find a ger t rai grant of power authorizing us to use whatever means may be necessary to execute the first; and we find that the Supreme Court of tke United States has sail that the judgmeut of Congress upou the question shall be conclusive, that it can not !e reviewed by the courts, that it is a. purely political matter ; and therefore the" determination of Congress, that raising up colored men to the right of suffrage "is a means necessary to the execution of that power, is a determination which cannot be reviewed by the courts, and is conclusive upon the people of the country. The President of the United States, as suming that he had the power to exeeutc this guarantee, and basing his proclamation upon it, went forward in the work of rccon-stru-. twin. It ws so announced, if not by himself, at least formally by tha Secretary of State, Mr. Seward, that the governments which ho would erect during the vacation of -Congress "were to be erected as provisional oniy, that his plan of reconstruction and the work that was to be done under it would be submitttd to Coi. gross for its approval or disapproval at the next sci-siou. If the President had adhered to that determination I believe that ail wou'd have been well, and that the present state of things would not exist. Uut, sir, the Executive undertook finally to execute the guarantee himself without the cooperation of Congress. He appointed Provisional Governors, giving to them unlimited power until such lime as the new State governments should be elected. He 'prescribed ui his proclamation who should exercise tho right of suffrage" iu the election of delegates. And allow me for one moment to refer to that. Ife says in his proclamation : "No person shall be quallGel as an elector, or shall he be eligible as a member of such conven tion unless be shall have previously taken and subscribed the oath of amnefty as sot forth in the President's proclamation of May 2U, 18oi " which was issued -on the same day and was a part of the same transaction "Ami is a voter qualified as prescribed by the Cousiitutiou and laws of the State of North Car olina in force immediately before the 2uth day of May, 161." The persos having the right to vote must have the right to vote by the laws of the State, aui must, in addition to that, have tuketiLthe oath of amnesty. Th President dif fanchisod in voting tor delegates totlie conventions from two hundred aud fifty thou-and to three hundred tiiousand men. His disfranchisement was far greater than that which was done by Congress. In the proclamation of amnesty he says: 'The following elases of persons are excepted from the benefits of this proclamation" lie then anuounccd fourteen, classes of er sons ' 'I. All who are or shall have been pretended civil or diplomatic officers, or. otherwise domestic or foreign agents, of the -pretended Confederate Government" . . "13. All persons who have voluntarily partici pated in said rebellion, aud the estimated value of whote taxable property is over twenty thou sand dollars." And twelve other classes, estimated to number at least two hurdredand fifty thou sand men, while the disfranchisement that has becu created by Congress docs not ex tend perhaps tC more than forty-five or fifty thousand persons, at the furthest. These provisional governors, undek authority ot the President, were to call conventions; they Mi' ore to hold the elections, and they were to count the votes; they were to exercise all the powers that are being exercised by the military commanders under the recoustruc-. tioa acts of Congress. After these consti tutions were formed the President went for ward and accepted them as Lcing loyal and republicau in their character. He author ized tin voter's under them to proceed to e- lect Legislatures, members to Congress, and Legislatures to elect Senators to take their seats in this body, in orber words, tho 1 President launched those State governments into full life and activity without contulta-! tion with or co-oporatiou on the part of Longi ess. Xow,sir,when it is claimed that these gov ernments are legal, let it be remembered that they took their origin under a proceed ing instituted by tne President of the Uni ted States in the execution of this guaran tee, when it now stands confessed that he could uot execute the guarantee. But even if he had the power, let it be further borne in mind that those constitutions were form ed by conventions that were elected by less thau one third of the white voters in the States at that time ; that the conventions thus formed by a small minority even of the white voters; and that those conventions thus formed by a very small minority have never been submitted to the people of the States for ratification. They are no more the constitutions of those States to-day than the Constitutions formed by the conventions now in session would jbe if we were to proclaim them to be the Constitutions ot those States without haviug submitted them to-the peo ple for ratification. How can it be pretended tor a moment,even admitting that the Presi dent had the power to start forward in the work of reoonstruction, that those State Governments are legally formed by a small minority, never ratified by the people, the people never haviug had a chance to vo' for them. They stand as mere arbitrary constitutions, established not by the people of the States, but simply by force of execu tive power. And, sir,if we shall admit those State to representation on this floor and in the other House under those constisuttons, when the thing shall have got beyond our keeping and they are fully restored to their political rights, they will then rise up and declare that those constitutions are not binding upou them,, that they never made them, and they will throw them off, and with them will go tho:; provisions which ; were inecrporated there in, declaring that slavery should never be re stored and that their war debt was repudia ted. Those provisions were put into those constitutions, but they have never been sanctioned by the people of those States, and they wiil cast them out as, not being their act and deed, as soon as they shall have been restored to political power in this Government. Therefore, I say that even if he concedes that the President had the pow er, which he has not, tostart forward in the execution of this guarantee, there can still be no pretense that those governments are legal and authoiized aud that we are bouud to recognize them. The President of the United States, in his proclamation,' declared that those govern ments were to be formed only by the loyal people of those States; and I beg leavo to call the attention of the Senate to that e'.anse in his proclamation of reconstruction. He says: "And with authority to exercise, within the limits of said State, all the powers necessary and proper to enuble such loyal people of tbe Sta'eof North Carolina to restore raid State to its con stitutional relations with the Federal Government.'! Again speaking of the army : 'And tliey are eijoinod to abstain from in any way hindering, impnding or discouraging tbe loyal people from the organization of a Stale gov ernment as herein authorized." Now, sir, so far from those State govern ments having been orgauized by the loyal people, they are organized by the disloyal; every oihce passed into the hands of a reb el, the Union men had lo part or lot in those governments ; aud so far t rom answer ing the purpose for which governments are intended, they failed to extend protection to the loyal men, either white or black. The loyal men were murdered with impunity; and I wiil thank any SeDatorupon this floor to point to a single case in any of the rebe' States where a rebel has beeu tried and brought to punishment by the civil authori ty for the murder of a Union man. Not one case I am told can be found. Those govern ments utterly failed in answering the pur pose of civil governments ; and not only that, but they ..returned the colored people to a condition of quasi slavery ; they made them the slaves of society instead of being, as they were before, the slaves of indvidu als. Under various forms of vagrant laws, they deprived them of the rights of free men, and paced them under the power and control of their rebel masters, who were fill ed with hatred aud revenge. .' -But, Mr. Pre'uient, time passed on. Con gress assembled in December, 1805. For a time it paused. It did not at once annul those governments. ' Jt hesitated. At last, in lSGt, the constitutional amendment, the fourteenth article, was; brought forward as a basis of settlement and reconstruction; and there was a tacit understanding, thougU.it was not embraced in any law or resolution,, that if the Southern people should ratify and agree to that amendment, then their State governments would be accepted. Cut that amendment was rejected, contemptu ously rejected. The Southern people, coun seled and inspired by the Democracy of the North, rejected that amendment. They were told that they were not bound to sub mit to any conditions whatever; that the had forfeited no rights by rebellion. Why, sir, what did we propose by. this amend ment? By the first section we declared that all men born upoa our soil are citizens of the. United States a thing that had long been recognized by every department of the Government uutil the I)red Scott decision was made in 1S57. Th'c second sectiou pro vided that where a class or race of men were excluded from the right of suffrage they should uot be counted in the basis of repre sentation an obvious justice that uo rea sonable man tor a moment could deny : that iffiur million people down South were to have no suffrage, the" men living iu their midst ai.d surrounding them, and depriv-" ing them of all political rights, should not have members of Congress on their account. say the justice or the seconJ clause lias never been successfully impugned by any argument, I care not how ingenious it may be. What was tbe third clause? It was that the leaders of the South, those men who had once taken au official oath to sup port the Constitution of the U. States, and had afterward committed perjury by going into the rebellion, should be made inelgible to any ofiiee under the Government of the United States or of a State. . It was a very small disfranchisement. It was intended to withhold power from those leaders by whose instrumentality we had lost nearly half a million lives and untold treasure. The jus tice of that disfranchisement could not bo disproved. And what was the fourth clause of the amendment? That this government should never assume nor pay any, part ot the rebel debt, that it should never pay the rebels for their slaves. This was bitterly opposed in tne North as well is in the South. How could any man oppose that amendment unless he was in favoi of this Government assuming a portion or all of the relnd debt and iu favor of paying tbe rebels for their slaves? When the Democratic 'party North and South opposed that most importantand perhaps hereaner to be regarded as vital a mendment they were committing themselves irr principle, as they had been before by dec laration, to the doctrine that this Govern ment was bound to pay for the slaves, and that it was ju-c and right that wo should as sume and pay the rebel debt. This amendment, as I have before said, was rejected, and when Congress assembled in December 1866, they were confronted by the fact that every proposition of compro mise had been rejected; every hall-way measure had been spurned by the rebels themselves, and they had nothing left to do but to begin the work of reconstruction themselves; and in February, 1867, Con gress for the first time entered upon the ex ecution of the guarantee provided for in the Constitution by the passage of the recon struction law. A supplementary bill "was found necewary in March; another one in in July, and I believe another is found nec essary at this time ; but the power is with Congress. . Whatever it shall deem necessa ry, whether it be in the way of colored suf frage, whether it be in the way of military power whatever Congress shall deem nec essary in the execution t f this guarantee is conclusive upon the courts, upon every State, and upon the people of this nation Sir, when Congress entered ur on this? work it had become apparent", to all men that loytd State governments could not be e rected and maintained upon the basis of the white population. We had tried them. Congress had attempted the work of recon struction through the constitutional amend ment by leaving the suffrage with the white men.and by leaving with the white people of the South the question as to when the color ed people-should exercise the right of suff rage, it ever; but when it was found that those white men were as rebellious as ever, that they hated this Government more bit terly than ever; when it was found that they persecuted the loyal ueu, both white and black,in their midst; wheh it was found that Northern men who had gone down there were driven out by social tyranny, by a .thousand annoyances, by the insecurity ot life and property, then it became apparent to all men ofintelligenee that reconstruction could not take place upon the basis of the white population, and something else must be none. Now, sir, what was there left to do ? Eith er we must bold the.-e people coutiunally bv military power, or we must use such ma chincry upon such a uew basis us would en able loyal republican State governments to be raised up ; and in the last resort aud I will say Congress waited long, the nation waited long, experience had to ro me to the rescue of reason before the thing was done in the last resort, and as the last thrng to be done, Congress determined to dig through all the rubbish, dig through the soil and the shifting sands, uud go down to the eter nal rock, and there, upon the basis of the everlasting principle of equal and exact jus tice to all meu, we have planted the column of reconstruction ; and-sir, it will arise slow ly but surely, and "the gates ot hell bhall not prevail against it" Whatever dangers we apprehend from the introduction of the right of suffrage of seven hundred thousand men, just emerged from slavery, were put aside iu the presence of a greater danger. Why, sir, let me say -frankly to ray friend from W ifcoousiu' that 1 approached univer sal colored suffrage in thy South reluctant ly. Not because 1 adhered to the rnisera bie dogma that this was the white man's Govermuent.but because I entertained fears about at once entrust ing a la?ge body of men just from slavery, to whom education had been denied by law, to whom the marriage relation had beeu denied, who had been made the basest and most abject slaves, with political power. ' And as the Senator has relerred titja. speech which 1 made in Indi ana iu ISCo, allow me to bhow the principle that actuated me, for iu that speech I said ; 'Iu regard to the question . of admittiug the freed men of tbe Southern States to vote, while I admit the equal right of all men. and that in time all men wiil have the right to vote, without dis tinction of color or race, I yet believe that in the case of four million of sUves", just freed from bondage, there should be a period of probation and preparation before they are brought to tha exercise of political power." Such was in feeling at that time, for it had not theu been determined by the bloody experience of the last two years that we could not reconstruct upou the basis of the white population, and such wa; the opinion of a great majority of the people of the North ; and it was not until a year and a half after that time that Congress came to the conclu sion that there was no way left but to resort to colored suffrage to all men except those who were disqualified by the commission of high crimes and misdemeanors. Mr. President, we hear much said in the course of this debate and through tho press about the violation or the Constitution. It is said that in the reoon.-irriiiiou measures of Congress we have gone outside of the Constitution, and the remaik of some distin guished statesman of the Kepublican party is quoted to that effect. Sir. if any leading Republican has ever said so he tqioke only for himself, not for another. I deny the statement tii tuto. I insist that these reconstruction measurepare' as fully within the powers of the Constitu tion as any legislation that can be had, not; only by reason, but by authority. And who are the men that are talking so much about the violation of. the Constitution, aud who pretend to be the csjecial friends of that instrument? The great mass of them only three years ago were in arms to overturn the Constitution and establish that of Montgom ery in its place, or were their northern friends, who were aiding aud sympathizing in that undertaking. I had occasion the other day to speak of what was described as a constitutional Union man a man living inside of the Federal lines during the war, sympathising with the rebellion, and who endeavored to aid the rebellion by insisting that every war measure for the purpose of suppressing it was a vio lation of the Constitution of the United States. Now, these men who1 claim to be ihe especial friends of the Constitution t are the men who have sought to destroy if by force of arms,and those throughout the coun try who haye given them aid aud comfort. Sir, you will remember that once a cele brated French woman was being drgged to the scaffold, and as she passed the statne of liborty she exclaimed : "How many rt-itnex have been committed in thy n?me?" and I can say to the Constitution.how many crimes against liberty, humanity and progress are being committed in thy name bv these men who, while they loved not the Constitution, and sought its destruction, now, for party purposes, claim to be its special friends. My friend from Wisconsin yesterday com pared : what ho called the Radical party of the North to, the Radicals of the Southland eONCLUDpP ON FOURTH P4tK