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To: GOPcapitalist; capitan_refugio; M. Espinola; Non-Sequitur

Here is another favorable review of the work.


Did Lincoln Violate the Constitution?:
A Review of Daniel Farber's Lincoln's Constitution
By RODGER D. CITRON
----
Friday, July 18, 2003

Daniel Farber, Lincoln's Constitution (University of Chicago Press 2003)

For students of constitutional law and history, Abraham Lincoln is perhaps our most compelling president - for he wrestled, and forces us to wrestle, with some of the most fundamental, and momentous questions of constitutional law.

In his slender volume Lincoln's Constitution, Daniel Farber, a law professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and the University of Minnesota, takes on these very questions.

Did the Southern States, like the Founding Fathers, have the right to secede? Farber says no, though he also contends that the case for secession was not frivolous.

Did Lincoln violate the Constitution when, in his efforts to preserve the Union, he suspended habeas corpus, and in taking certain actions without Congressional authorization? Farber argues that nearly all of Lincoln's actions were permissible under the Constitution. Moreover, when he did infringe the Constitution, his trespasses were, at least, not egregious.

In Lincoln's Constitution, Farber offers a concise synthesis of the pertinent history, extended discussion of Lincoln's reasons for his actions, and elegant analysis of the relevant issues. For these reasons alone, the book is worth reading.

But Farber also goes further, to address the potential contemporary relevance of some of the issues that Lincoln face. Thus, he gracefully integrates into his discussion recent cases raising similar questions concerning civil liberties, federalism, and separation of powers.

Especially with civil liberties issues repeatedly arising, now that the war on terrorism is in progress, it may be instructive to look back at the constitutional questions Lincoln confronted so long ago.

The Unpersuasive Case For Secession - and the "Compact Theory"

In evaluating the case for secession, Farber traces the debate over state sovereignty back to the Framers' era. Although the Framers did not have a "clear consensus" about "the status of the states before the Constitution," the author shows that it nevertheless is clear that they sought to enhance federal power, and in fact curtailed state autonomy.

The most interesting part of this account is Farber's discussion of the 1995 Supreme Court decision in U.S. Term Limits, Inc. v. Thornton - which invalidated an amendment to the Arkansas Constitution establishing term limits for Arkansas Congresspersons. In Term Limits, the Supreme Court continued to debate the nature of state sovereignty.

In his opinion for the majority, Justice Stevens contended that since the Constitution limited state sovereignty, states could not interfere with the "direct link" that representation in Congress provided "between the National Government and the people of the United States."

In dissent, Justice Thomas - joined by Justices Rehnquist, Scalia, and O'Connor -insisted that, on the contrary, the term limits amendment was a permissible exercise of power reserved to the states. After all, "the people of each State retained their separate political identities" under the Constitution, and thus they could choose to regulate the terms for which their Congresspersons served.

Farber parallels the dissenters' argument with the case for secession presented by Jefferson Davis in the Civil War - noting that both embrace the "compact theory" of states' rights. This theory holds that the Union was a treaty-like compact among the states that joined it - one that any state could leave, in the same way that a nation might withdraw from a multinational treaty.

Farber himself takes strong issue with the "compact theory." He points out that the Constitution replaced "a regime of multilateral negotiation with the democratic rule of law." In the new regime, federal legislation was "'the supreme law of the land[,]'" and the new system featured "nationwide democratic institutions and authoritative dispute resolution by the federal courts." Given these features, Farber contends, the Constitution must be seen as far more than a treaty among the states.

Farber also makes a more specific case against the legality of secession, citing the structure of the Constitution and arguments made by James Madison in the Federalist Papers. He concludes, based on these sources, that once bound by the Constitution, individual states did not enjoy the unilateral right to withdraw from the Union.

Accordingly, on the legal merits (as well as on the battlefield), Farber makes clear that the correct party prevailed on the secession issue in the Civil War.

The Case For the Constitutionality of Lincoln's Conduct Of The War

Due to the unprecedented nature of the crisis caused by the Civil War, Lincoln was compelled to exercise executive authority in a remarkably broad manner. Inevitably, his actions led to clashes with other branches of government over the assertion of his authority.

Farber reviews a number of actions taken by Lincoln in response to the military crisis - such as "calling up the militia, deploying the military, and imposing a blockade." In each case, he concludes that Lincoln either acted in accord with his authority under Article II of the Constitution, or soon (albeit subsequently) obtained authorization from Congress after acting - rendering his constitutional infringement comparatively slight.

Farber also examines Lincoln's record with respect to civil liberties. Again, he is supportive of many of the president's contested actions. And he concludes that "[m]any of the acts denounced as dictatorial - the suspension of habeas at the beginning of the war, emancipation, military trials of civilians in contested or occupied territory - seem in retrospect to have reasonably good constitutional justifications under the war power."

Farber does acknowledges that, on occasion, the actions of Lincoln or the military were excessive. As examples, he cites measures to suppress free speech - and in particular, a case in which a gentleman opposed to the Civil War was convicted and sentenced to death for what may have been no more than associating with another individual who wanted to take armed action against the Union. After the war, in Ex Parte Milligan, the Supreme Court granted the gentleman's habeas corpus petition.

Learning From Lincoln: How to Wage War And Still Respect the Constitution

Lincoln's Constitution concludes with a brief discussion of the current relevance of the constitutional questions surrounding Lincoln's Presidency.

Farber believes that Lincoln's conduct of the war demonstrates the need for a strong federal government in wartime. But he also contends that it is strong evidence that we need not circumvent the rule of law, or ignore constitutional protections, in dealing with such a crisis.

During our greatest constitutional crisis, Farber demonstrates, the nation was extremely fortunate to have Lincoln as its leader. He recognized the significance of the challenge posed by secession; acted decisively in responding to it; and nevertheless maintained a sense of perspective about the proper institutional role of the presidency.

In the midst of the war on terrorism, at least one disputed issue in the Civil War - how to balance individuals' constitutional rights against governmental claims of national security - remains quite germane. Regardless of one's political affiliation, it is undisputed that Lincoln set the bar rather high for his successors.
http://writ.news.findlaw.com/books/reviews/20030718_citron.html#bio


4,452 posted on 04/06/2005 10:44:29 PM PDT by fortheDeclaration
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To: GOPcapitalist

Some more pro-reviews of the work.

famous historian visited my undergraduate university half a century ago and announced that, except for a minor item or two such as a history of the quartermaster corps, the major work on the Civil War was completed. Since then several significant books have been published. Daniel Farber's Lincoln's Constitution is one of them.
Reviewed by: Donald K. Pickens, Department of History, University of North Texas.
Published by: H-USA (December, 2003)
http://www.h-net.msu.edu/reviews/showrev.cgi?path=103401078008870


Farber's Lincoln's Constitution deserves a place in this roster of important legal-constitutional history titles. Farber both restates the complex issues facing the bifurcating Union, 1861–65, and connects some, including federalism, judicial review, and presidents' crisis powers, to their prewar evolutions, wartime uses, and post-9/11 reappearances, thereby offering readers many useful insights. For example, he concludes correctly that "In practical terms ... the key issue [in the southern states' decisions for secession] was not sovereignty but power" (44).

Harold M. Hyman
Rice University


http://www.historycooperative.org/journals/lhr/22.3/br_10.html


4,454 posted on 04/06/2005 11:02:12 PM PDT by fortheDeclaration
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To: fortheDeclaration; GOPcapitalist; capitan_refugio; M. Espinola
Here is another favorable review of the work.

But Citron has got to be a Godless Commie Socialist bastard, or at the very least incredibly biased. Just ask GOP.

4,465 posted on 04/07/2005 3:42:17 AM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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To: fortheDeclaration
Here is another favorable review of the work.

Yes, but is it scholarly? Gutzman's review was by a credentialed scholar and appeared in a scholarly peer reviewed journal. This Citron fellow seems to be nothing more than your run of the mill lawyer who agrees with Farber's legal brief for Lincoln and let us know in a webzine.

4,486 posted on 04/07/2005 8:36:05 AM PDT by GOPcapitalist ("Marxism finds it easy to ally with Islamic zealotism" - Ludwig von Mises)
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To: fortheDeclaration
I note with interest that in reply to this post, another poster cites a "book review" in a "peer-reviewed" journal. As that poster is known for providing amateur Internet book reviews, he should be well aware that they are not, in themselves, peer-reviewed. Some, like his, aren't even edited for content.
4,572 posted on 04/08/2005 12:54:04 AM PDT by capitan_refugio
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