Against All Enemies?: Conspiracy in Philadelphia by Gary North
3.
Patrick Henry: “By Whose Authority?”
Patrick
Henry had been invited to attend the Philadelphia Convention, but he had
refused. A year later, he spoke
out against ratification. He had seen the meaning of “We the People,” and he
warned against its implications during the debates over ratification. I quoted
his statement at the beginning of this chapter. It bears repeating.
Give me
leave to demand, what right had they to say, ‘We the
People,’
instead of ‘We the States’? States
are the characteristics, and the soul of a confederation. If the States be not
the agents of this
compact,
it must be one great consolidated national government of
the
people of all the States. . . . Had the delegates, who were sent to
Philadelphia
a power to propose a consolidated government instead
of a
confederacy? Were they not deputed by States, and not by the
people?
The assent of the people, in their collective capacity, is not
necessary
to the formation of a federal government. The people have
no
right to enter into leagues, alliances, or confederations: they are
not the
proper agents for this purpose: States and sovereign powers
are the
only proper agents for this kind of government. Show me an
instance
where the people have exercised this business: has it not al-
ways
gone through the legislatures? . . . This, therefore, ought to de-
pend on
the consent of the legislatures.
Henry said
emphatically of the delegates to the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia,
“The people gave them no power to use their name. That they exceeded their
power is perfectly clear.” In modern terminology, this was a form of property
infringement. He reminded his listeners of the nature of the original authorization
of the Convention: “The federal convention ought to have amended the old
system;
for this purpose they were solely delegated: the object of their mission
extended to no other consideration.”
24
But
because the legislatures authorized the conventions, they in effect had
sanctioned this public transfer of the locus of sovereignty. This transfer was
illegal
21
.
Lienesch,
New
Order
, p.
64.
22
.
The
Annals of America
, 18
vols. (Chicago: Encyclopedia Britannica, 1968), IV,
pp. 62
–
67.
23
. See
Madison’s letter to the
North
American Review
(Aug.
28, 1830), in
Mind of
the
Founder
, p. 540.
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