The Powers and Dangerous Potentials of His Elected Majesty
by
AN OLD WHIG's" essay from The New-York Journal of December 11, 1787.
.… In the first place the office of president of the United States appears
to me to be clothed with such powers as are dangerous. To be the fountain of all
honors in the United States—commander in chief of the army, navy, and militia;
with the power of making treaties and of granting pardons; and to be vested with
an authority to put a negative upon all laws, unless two thirds of both houses
shall persist in enacting it, and put their names down upon calling the yeas and
nays for that purpose—is in reality to be a king, as much a king as the king of
Great Britain, and a king too of the worst kind: an elective king. If such
powers as these are to be trusted in the hands of any man, they ought, for the
sake of preserving the peace of the community, at once to be made hereditary.
Much as I abhor kingly government, yet I venture to pronounce, where kings are
admitted to rule they should most certainly be vested with hereditary power. The
election of a king whether it be in America or Poland, will be a scene of horror
and confusion; and I am perfectly serious when I declare, that, as a friend to
my country, I shall despair of any happiness in the United States until this
office is either reduced to a lower pitch of power, or made perpetual and
hereditary. When I say that our future president will be as much a king as the
king of Great Britain, I only ask of my readers to look into the constitution of
that country, and then tell me what important prerogative the king of Great
Britain is entitled to which does not also belong to the president during his
continuance in office. The king of Great Britain, it is true, can create
nobility which our president cannot; but our president will have the power of
making all the great men, which comes to the same thing. All the difference is,
that we shall be embroiled in contention about the choice of the man, while they
are at peace under the security of an hereditary succession. To be tumbled
headlong from the pinnacle of greatness and be reduced to a shadow of departed
royalty, is a shock almost too great for human nature to endure. It will cost a
man many struggles to resign such eminent powers, and ere long, we shall find
some one who will be very unwilling to part with them. Let us suppose this man
to be a favorite with his army, and that they are unwilling to part with their
beloved commander in chief—or to make the thing familiar, let us suppose a
future president and commander in chief adored by his army and the militia to as
great a degree as our late illustrious commander in chief; and we have only to
suppose one thing more, that this man is without the virtue, the moderation and
love of liberty which possessed the mind of our late general—and this country
will be involved at once in war and tyranny. So far is it from its being
improbable that the man who shall hereafter be in a situation to make the
attempt to perpetuate his own power, should want the virtues of General
Washington, that it is perhaps a chance of one hundred millions to one that the
next age will not furnish an example of so disinterested a use of great power.
We may also suppose, without trespassing upon the bounds of probability, that
this man may not have the means of supporting, in private life, the dignity of
his former station; that like Caesar, he may be at once ambitious and poor, and
deeply involved in debt. Such a man would die a thousand deaths rather than sink
from the heights of splendor and power, into obscurity and wretchedness. We are
certainly about giving our president too much or too little; and in the course
of less than twenty years we shall find that we have given him enough to enable
him to take all. It would be infinitely more prudent to give him at once as much
as would content him, so that we might be able to retain the rest in peace, for
if once power is seized by violence, not the least fragment of liberty will
survive the shock. I would therefore advise my countrymen seriously to ask
themselves this question: Whether they are prepared to receive a king? If they
are, to say so at once, and make the kingly office hereditary; to frame a
constitution that should set bounds to his power, and, as far as possible,
secure the liberty of the subject. If we are not prepared to receive a king, let
us call another convention to revise the proposed constitution, and form it anew
on the principles of a confederacy of free republics; but by no means, under
pretense of a republic, to lay the foundation for a military government, which
is the worst of all tyrannies.
AN OLD WHIG