…
Mr. [James] Wilson asserts that never was charge made with less
reason, than that which predicts the institution of a baneful
aristocracy in the federal Senate.' In my first number, I stated that
this body would be a very unequal representation of the several
States, that the members being appointed for the long term of six
years, and there being no exclusion by rotation, they might be
continued for life, which would follow of course from their extensive
means of influence, and that possessing a considerable share in the
executive as well as the legislative, it would become a permanent
aristocracy, and swallow up the other orders in the government.
That these fears are not imaginary, a knowledge of the history
of other nations, where the powers of government have been
injudiciously placed, will fully demonstrate. Mr. Wilson says, "the
senate branches into two characters; the one legislative and the other
executive. In its legislative character it can effect no purpose,
without the co-operation of the house of representatives, and in its
executive character it can accomplish no object without the
concurrence of the president. Thus fettered, I do not know any act
which the senate can of itself perform, and such dependence
necessarily precludes every idea of influence and superiority." This I
confess is very specious, but experience demonstrates that checks in
government, unless accompanied with adequate power and independently
placed, prove merely nominal, and will be inoperative. Is it probable,
that the President of the United States, limited as he is in power,
and dependent on the will of the senate, in appointments to office,
will either have the firmness or inclination to exercise his
prerogative of a conditional control upon the proceedings of that
body, however injurious they may be to the public welfare? It will be
his interest to coincide with the views of the senate, and thus become
the head of the aristocratic junto. The king of England is a
constituent part in the legislature, but although an hereditary
monarch, in possession of the whole executive power, including the
unrestrained appointment to offices, and an immense revenue, enjoys
but in name the prerogative of a negative upon the parliament. Even
the king of England, circumstanced as he is, has not dared to exercise
it for near a century past. The check of the house of representatives
upon the senate will likewise be rendered nugatory for want of due
weight in the democratic branch, and from their constitution they may
become so independent of the people as to be indifferent of its
interests. Nay, as Congress would have the control over the mode and
place of their election, by ordering the representatives of a whole
state to be elected at one place, and that too the most inconvenient,
the ruling powers may govern the choice, and thus the house of
representatives may be composed of the creatures of the senate. Still
the semblance of checks may remain, but without operation.
This mixture of the legislative and executive moreover highly
tends to corruption. The chief improvement in government, in modern
times, has been the complete separation of the great distinctions of
power; placing the legislative in different hands from those which
hold the executive; and again severing the judicial part from the
ordinary administrative. "When the legislative and executive powers
(says Montesquieu) are united in the same person or in the same body
of magistrates, there can be no liberty."