Does the Presidential Veto Power Infringe on the Separation of
Departments?
"WILLIAM PENN", an anonymous writer appeared in the [Philadelphia]
Independent Gazetteer on January 3, 1788.
… I believe that it is universally agreed upon in this enlightened
country, that all power residing originally in the people, and being derived
from them, they ought to be governed by themselves only, or by their immediate
representatives. I shall not spend any time in explaining a principle so well
and so generally understood, but I shall proceed immediately to that which I
conceive to be the next in order.
The next principle, without which it must be clear that no free government
can ever subsist, is the DIVISION OF POWER among those who are charged with the
execution of it. It has always been the favorite maxim of princes, to divide the
people, in order to govern them. It is now time that the people should avail
themselves of the same maxim, and divide powers among their rulers, in order to
prevent their abusing it. The application of this great political truth, has
long been unknown to the world, and yet it is grounded upon a very plain natural
principle. If, says Montesquieu, the same man, or body of men, is possessed both
of the legislative and executive power, there is NO LIBERTY, because it may be
feared that the same monarch, or the same senate, will enact tyrannical laws, in
order to execute them in a tyrannical manner. Nothing can be clearer, and the
natural disposition of man to ambition and power makes it probable that such
would be the consequence. Suppose for instance, that the same body, which has
the power of raising money by taxes, is also entrusted with the application of
that money, they will very probably raise large sums, and apply them to their
own private uses. If they are empowered to create offices, and appoint the
officers, they will take that opportunity of providing for themselves, and their
friends, and if they have the power of inflicting penalties for offenses, and of
trying the offenders, there will be no bounds to their tyranny. Liberty
therefore can only subsist, where the powers of government are properly divided,
and where the different jurisdictions are inviolably kept distinct and separate.
(1) I shall illustrate this doctrine by an example. A burgher of a certain
borough of Switzerland was elected Bailiff, or Chief Magistrate, for one year,
according to the constitution of the place. Shortly after his appointment, he
sent for one of his neighbors, and ordered him to pull off his boots. The honest
neighbor was astonished, and attempted to remonstrate, but the bailiff was
determined to exert his authority, and threatened to send him to jail, if he did
not yield him an immediate obedience. The poor man was forced to comply, for the
bailiff was vested with power, both legislative and executive. He pulled off his
worship's boots, but said to him, "When I am appointed bailiff in my turn,
you shall pull off my boots and clean them too."
The first and most natural division of the powers of government are into the
legislative and executive branches. These two should never be suffered to have
the least share of each other's jurisdiction, or to intermeddle with it in any
manner. For whichever of the two divides its power with the other, will
certainly be subordinate to it; and if they both have a share of each other's
authority, they will be in fact but one body. Their interest as well as their
powers will be the same, and they will combine together against the people.
It is therefore a political error of the greatest magnitude, to allow the
executive power a negative, or in fact any kind of control over the proceedings
of the legislature. The people of Great Britain have been so sensible of this
truth, that since the days of William III, no king of England has dared to
exercise the negative over the acts of the two houses of parliament, to which he
is clearly entitled by his prerogative.
This doctrine is not novel in America; it seems on the contrary to be
everywhere well understood and admitted beyond controversy. In the bills of
rights or constitutions of New-Hampshire, Massachusetts, Maryland, Virginia,
North-Carolina and Georgia, it is expressly declared, "That the
legislative, executive and judicial departments, shall be forever separate and
distinct from each other." In Pennsylvania and Delaware, they are
effectually separated without any particular declaration of the principle. In
the other states indeed, the executive branch possesses more or less of the
executive power. And here it must appear singular that the state of
Massachusetts—where the doctrine of a separate jurisdiction is most positively
established, and in whose bill of rights these remarkable words are to be found,
"The executive shall never exercise the legislative and judicial powers, or
either of them, to the end it may be a government of laws and not of men"
(sect. 30)—yet in that commonwealth and New-Hampshire, the executive branch,
which consists of a single magistrate, has more control over the legislature
than in any other state. For there, if the governor refuses his assent to a
bill, it cannot be passed into a law, unless two thirds of the house afterwards
concur. In New York the same power is given to a Council of Revision, consisting
of the Governor, the Chancellor and judges of the Supreme Court, or any three of
them, of which the Governor is to be one. In Rhode-Island and Connecticut, whose
governments were established before the revolution, the Governor has a single
vote as a member of the upper house, and New Jersey has adopted this part of
their constitution. In Georgia the laws are to be revised by the Governor and
Council, but they can do no more than give their opinion upon them. In Maryland
the bills are to be signed by the Governor before they can be enacted; and in
South-Carolina they are to be sealed with the great sea], which is in the
Governor's custody. But in the first of these states, the constitution
prescribes that the Governor shall sign the bills; and in the latter, a joint
committee of both houses of legislature is to wait upon the chief magistrate to
receive and return the great seat, which implies that he is bound to deliver it
to them, for the special purpose of affixing it to the laws of the state.
Pennsylvania has proceeded upon a much more rational ground, their legislature
having a particular seal of their own, and their laws requiring only to be
signed by the speaker. It in Maryland or South-Carolina a difference should ever
arise between the legislature and the Governor, and the latter should refuse to
sign the laws, or to deliver the great seal, the most fatal consequences might
ensue.
Here then we see the great leading principle of the absolute division of the
legislative from the executive jurisdiction, admitted in almost every one of the
American states as a fundamental maxim in the politics of a free country. The
theory of this general doctrine is everywhere established, though a few states
have somewhat swerved from it in the practice. From whence we must conclude,
that even the knowledge and full conviction of a new political truth will not
always immediately conquer inveterate habits and prejudices. The idea of the
negative, which the constitution of England gives to the monarch over the
proceedings of the other branches of parliament, although it has so long become
obsolete, has had an effect upon timid minds, and upon the minds of those who
could not distinguish between the form and spirit of the British constitution.
They would not grant to the executive branch an absolute negative over the
legislature, but yet they tried every method to introduce something similar to
it. They reprobated the doctrine in the most express words, and yet they could
not bear to part entirely with it. It is curious to observe how many different
ways they have endeavored to conciliate truth with prejudice. Of those states
who have allowed the executive branch to intermeddle with the proceedings of the
legislature, no two (New Hampshire and Massachusetts excepted) have done it
exactly in the same manner. They have tried every possible medium, but having
lost sight of the original principle which they had already established, and
which alone could have been their safest guide, they groped about in the dark,
and could not find any solid ground on which to establish a general rule. Like
Noah's dove, being once out of the ark of truth, they could not find elsewhere a
place to rest their feet.
These facts will no doubt afford an interesting page in the history of the
contradictions of the human mind. Unfortunately, they do not stand single, and
this is not the only instance that we find in the constitutions of the different
states, of a general principle being expressly declared as a part of the natural
rights of the citizens, and afterwards being as expressly contradicted in the
practice. Thus we find it declared in every one of our bills of rights,
"that there shall be a perfect liberty of conscience, and that no sect
shall ever be entitled to a preference over the others." Yet in
Massachusetts and Maryland, all the officers of government, and in Pennsylvania
the members of the legislature, are to be of the Christian religion; in
New-Jersey, North-Carolina, and Georgia, the Protestant, and in Delaware, the
trinitarian sects, have an exclusive right to public employment; and in
South-Carolina the constitution goes so far as to declare the creed of the
established church. Virginia and New-York are the only states where there is a
perfect liberty of conscience. I cannot say any thing as to Connecticut and
Rhode-Island, as their constitutions are silent on the subject, and I have not
been informed of their practice.
Whether these religious restrictions are right or wrong, it is not my
intention, nor is it my object to examine in the course of these disquisitions.
I only meant to show, that in laying down a political system it is safer to rely
on principles than upon precedents, because the former are fixed and immutable,
while the latter vary with men, places, times and circumstances.
WILLIAM PENN