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<h2> Chapter XII: Political Associations In The United States </h2>
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<h2> Chapter Summary </h2>
<p>Daily use which the Anglo-Americans make of the right of association—Three
kinds of political associations—In what manner the Americans apply
the representative system to associations—Dangers resulting to the
State—Great Convention of 1831 relative to the Tariff—Legislative
character of this Convention—Why the unlimited exercise of the right
of association is less dangerous in the United States than elsewhere—Why
it may be looked upon as necessary—Utility of associations in a
democratic people.</p>
<p>Political Associations In The United States</p>
<p>In no country in the world has the principle of association been more
successfully used, or more unsparingly applied to a multitude of different
objects, than in America. Besides the permanent associations which are
established by law under the names of townships, cities, and counties, a
vast number of others are formed and maintained by the agency of private
individuals.</p>
<p>The citizen of the United States is taught from his earliest infancy to
rely upon his own exertions in order to resist the evils and the
difficulties of life; he looks upon social authority with an eye of
mistrust and anxiety, and he only claims its assistance when he is quite
unable to shift without it. This habit may even be traced in the schools
of the rising generation, where the children in their games are wont to
submit to rules which they have themselves established, and to punish
misdemeanors which they have themselves defined. The same spirit pervades
every act of social life. If a stoppage occurs in a thoroughfare, and the
circulation of the public is hindered, the neighbors immediately
constitute a deliberative body; and this extemporaneous assembly gives
rise to an executive power which remedies the inconvenience before anybody
has thought of recurring to an authority superior to that of the persons
immediately concerned. If the public pleasures are concerned, an
association is formed to provide for the splendor and the regularity of
the entertainment. Societies are formed to resist enemies which are
exclusively of a moral nature, and to diminish the vice of intemperance:
in the United States associations are established to promote public order,
commerce, industry, morality, and religion; for there is no end which the
human will, seconded by the collective exertions of individuals, despairs
of attaining.</p>
<p>I shall hereafter have occasion to show the effects of association upon
the course of society, and I must confine myself for the present to the
political world. When once the right of association is recognized, the
citizens may employ it in several different ways.</p>
<p>An association consists simply in the public assent which a number of
individuals give to certain doctrines, and in the engagement which they
contract to promote the spread of those doctrines by their exertions. The
right of association with these views is very analogous to the liberty of
unlicensed writing; but societies thus formed possess more authority than
the press. When an opinion is represented by a society, it necessarily
assumes a more exact and explicit form. It numbers its partisans, and
compromises their welfare in its cause: they, on the other hand, become
acquainted with each other, and their zeal is increased by their number.
An association unites the efforts of minds which have a tendency to
diverge in one single channel, and urges them vigorously towards one
single end which it points out.</p>
<p>The second degree in the right of association is the power of meeting.
When an association is allowed to establish centres of action at certain
important points in the country, its activity is increased and its
influence extended. Men have the opportunity of seeing each other; means
of execution are more readily combined, and opinions are maintained with a
degree of warmth and energy which written language cannot approach.</p>
<p>Lastly, in the exercise of the right of political association, there is a
third degree: the partisans of an opinion may unite in electoral bodies,
and choose delegates to represent them in a central assembly. This is,
properly speaking, the application of the representative system to a
party.</p>
<p>Thus, in the first instance, a society is formed between individuals
professing the same opinion, and the tie which keeps it together is of a
purely intellectual nature; in the second case, small assemblies are
formed which only represent a fraction of the party. Lastly, in the third
case, they constitute a separate nation in the midst of the nation, a
government within the Government. Their delegates, like the real delegates
of the majority, represent the entire collective force of their party; and
they enjoy a certain degree of that national dignity and great influence
which belong to the chosen representatives of the people. It is true that
they have not the right of making the laws, but they have the power of
attacking those which are in being, and of drawing up beforehand those
which they may afterwards cause to be adopted.</p>
<p>If, in a people which is imperfectly accustomed to the exercise of
freedom, or which is exposed to violent political passions, a deliberating
minority, which confines itself to the contemplation of future laws, be
placed in juxtaposition to the legislative majority, I cannot but believe
that public tranquillity incurs very great risks in that nation. There is
doubtless a very wide difference between proving that one law is in itself
better than another and proving that the former ought to be substituted
for the latter. But the imagination of the populace is very apt to
overlook this difference, which is so apparent to the minds of thinking
men. It sometimes happens that a nation is divided into two nearly equal
parties, each of which affects to represent the majority. If, in immediate
contiguity to the directing power, another power be established, which
exercises almost as much moral authority as the former, it is not to be
believed that it will long be content to speak without acting; or that it
will always be restrained by the abstract consideration of the nature of
associations which are meant to direct but not to enforce opinions, to
suggest but not to make the laws.</p>
<p>The more we consider the independence of the press in its principal
consequences, the more are we convinced that it is the chief and, so to
speak, the constitutive element of freedom in the modern world. A nation
which is determined to remain free is therefore right in demanding the
unrestrained exercise of this independence. But the unrestrained liberty
of political association cannot be entirely assimilated to the liberty of
the press. The one is at the same time less necessary and more dangerous
than the other. A nation may confine it within certain limits without
forfeiting any part of its self-control; and it may sometimes be obliged
to do so in order to maintain its own authority.</p>
<p>In America the liberty of association for political purposes is unbounded.
An example will show in the clearest light to what an extent this
privilege is tolerated.</p>
<p>The question of the tariff, or of free trade, produced a great
manifestation of party feeling in America; the tariff was not only a
subject of debate as a matter of opinion, but it exercised a favorable or
a prejudicial influence upon several very powerful interests of the
States. The North attributed a great portion of its prosperity, and the
South all its sufferings, to this system; insomuch that for a long time
the tariff was the sole source of the political animosities which agitated
the Union.</p>
<p>In 1831, when the dispute was raging with the utmost virulence, a private
citizen of Massachusetts proposed to all the enemies of the tariff, by
means of the public prints, to send delegates to Philadelphia in order to
consult together upon the means which were most fitted to promote freedom
of trade. This proposal circulated in a few days from Maine to New Orleans
by the power of the printing-press: the opponents of the tariff adopted it
with enthusiasm; meetings were formed on all sides, and delegates were
named. The majority of these individuals were well known, and some of them
had earned a considerable degree of celebrity. South Carolina alone, which
afterwards took up arms in the same cause, sent sixty-three delegates. On
October 1, 1831, this assembly, which according to the American custom had
taken the name of a Convention, met at Philadelphia; it consisted of more
than two hundred members. Its debates were public, and they at once
assumed a legislative character; the extent of the powers of Congress, the
theories of free trade, and the different clauses of the tariff, were
discussed in turn. At the end of ten days' deliberation the Convention
broke up, after having published an address to the American people, in
which it declared:</p>
<p>I. That Congress had not the right of making a tariff, and that the
existing tariff was unconstitutional;</p>
<p>II. That the prohibition of free trade was prejudicial to the interests of
all nations, and to that of the American people in particular.</p>
<p>It must be acknowledged that the unrestrained liberty of political
association has not hitherto produced, in the United States, those fatal
consequences which might perhaps be expected from it elsewhere. The right
of association was imported from England, and it has always existed in
America; so that the exercise of this privilege is now amalgamated with
the manners and customs of the people. At the present time the liberty of
association is become a necessary guarantee against the tyranny of the
majority. In the United States, as soon as a party is become preponderant,
all public authority passes under its control; its private supporters
occupy all the places, and have all the force of the administration at
their disposal. As the most distinguished partisans of the other side of
the question are unable to surmount the obstacles which exclude them from
power, they require some means of establishing themselves upon their own
basis, and of opposing the moral authority of the minority to the physical
power which domineers over it. Thus a dangerous expedient is used to
obviate a still more formidable danger.</p>
<p>The omnipotence of the majority appears to me to present such extreme
perils to the American Republics that the dangerous measure which is used
to repress it seems to be more advantageous than prejudicial. And here I
am about to advance a proposition which may remind the reader of what I
said before in speaking of municipal freedom: There are no countries in
which associations are more needed, to prevent the despotism of faction or
the arbitrary power of a prince, than those which are democratically
constituted. In aristocratic nations the body of the nobles and the more
opulent part of the community are in themselves natural associations,
which act as checks upon the abuses of power. In countries in which these
associations do not exist, if private individuals are unable to create an
artificial and a temporary substitute for them, I can imagine no permanent
protection against the most galling tyranny; and a great people may be
oppressed by a small faction, or by a single individual, with impunity.</p>
<p>The meeting of a great political Convention (for there are Conventions of
all kinds), which may frequently become a necessary measure, is always a
serious occurrence, even in America, and one which is never looked forward
to, by the judicious friends of the country, without alarm. This was very
perceptible in the Convention of 1831, at which the exertions of all the
most distinguished members of the Assembly tended to moderate its
language, and to restrain the subjects which it treated within certain
limits. It is probable, in fact, that the Convention of 1831 exercised a
very great influence upon the minds of the malcontents, and prepared them
for the open revolt against the commercial laws of the Union which took
place in 1832.</p>
<p>It cannot be denied that the unrestrained liberty of association for
political purposes is the privilege which a people is longest in learning
how to exercise. If it does not throw the nation into anarchy, it
perpetually augments the chances of that calamity. On one point, however,
this perilous liberty offers a security against dangers of another kind;
in countries where associations are free, secret societies are unknown. In
America there are numerous factions, but no conspiracies.</p>
<p>Different ways in which the right of association is understood in Europe
and in the United States—Different use which is made of it.</p>
<p>The most natural privilege of man, next to the right of acting for
himself, is that of combining his exertions with those of his
fellow-creatures, and of acting in common with them. I am therefore led to
conclude that the right of association is almost as inalienable as the
right of personal liberty. No legislator can attack it without impairing
the very foundations of society. Nevertheless, if the liberty of
association is a fruitful source of advantages and prosperity to some
nations, it may be perverted or carried to excess by others, and the
element of life may be changed into an element of destruction. A
comparison of the different methods which associations pursue in those
countries in which they are managed with discretion, as well as in those
where liberty degenerates into license, may perhaps be thought useful both
to governments and to parties.</p>
<p>The greater part of Europeans look upon an association as a weapon which
is to be hastily fashioned, and immediately tried in the conflict. A
society is formed for discussion, but the idea of impending action
prevails in the minds of those who constitute it: it is, in fact, an army;
and the time given to parley serves to reckon up the strength and to
animate the courage of the host, after which they direct their march
against the enemy. Resources which lie within the bounds of the law may
suggest themselves to the persons who compose it as means, but never as
the only means, of success.</p>
<p>Such, however, is not the manner in which the right of association is
understood in the United States. In America the citizens who form the
minority associate, in order, in the first place, to show their numerical
strength, and so to diminish the moral authority of the majority; and, in
the second place, to stimulate competition, and to discover those
arguments which are most fitted to act upon the majority; for they always
entertain hopes of drawing over their opponents to their own side, and of
afterwards disposing of the supreme power in their name. Political
associations in the United States are therefore peaceable in their
intentions, and strictly legal in the means which they employ; and they
assert with perfect truth that they only aim at success by lawful
expedients.</p>
<p>The difference which exists between the Americans and ourselves depends on
several causes. In Europe there are numerous parties so diametrically
opposed to the majority that they can never hope to acquire its support,
and at the same time they think that they are sufficiently strong in
themselves to struggle and to defend their cause. When a party of this
kind forms an association, its object is, not to conquer, but to fight. In
America the individuals who hold opinions very much opposed to those of
the majority are no sort of impediment to its power, and all other parties
hope to win it over to their own principles in the end. The exercise of
the right of association becomes dangerous in proportion to the
impossibility which excludes great parties from acquiring the majority. In
a country like the United States, in which the differences of opinion are
mere differences of hue, the right of association may remain unrestrained
without evil consequences. The inexperience of many of the European
nations in the enjoyment of liberty leads them only to look upon the
liberty of association as a right of attacking the Government. The first
notion which presents itself to a party, as well as to an individual, when
it has acquired a consciousness of its own strength, is that of violence:
the notion of persuasion arises at a later period and is only derived from
experience. The English, who are divided into parties which differ most
essentially from each other, rarely abuse the right of association,
because they have long been accustomed to exercise it. In France the
passion for war is so intense that there is no undertaking so mad, or so
injurious to the welfare of the State, that a man does not consider
himself honored in defending it, at the risk of his life.</p>
<p>But perhaps the most powerful of the causes which tend to mitigate the
excesses of political association in the United States is Universal
Suffrage. In countries in which universal suffrage exists the majority is
never doubtful, because neither party can pretend to represent that
portion of the community which has not voted. The associations which are
formed are aware, as well as the nation at large, that they do not
represent the majority: this is, indeed, a condition inseparable from
their existence; for if they did represent the preponderating power, they
would change the law instead of soliciting its reform. The consequence of
this is that the moral influence of the Government which they attack is
very much increased, and their own power is very much enfeebled.</p>
<p>In Europe there are few associations which do not affect to represent the
majority, or which do not believe that they represent it. This conviction
or this pretension tends to augment their force amazingly, and contributes
no less to legalize their measures. Violence may seem to be excusable in
defence of the cause of oppressed right. Thus it is, in the vast labyrinth
of human laws, that extreme liberty sometimes corrects the abuses of
license, and that extreme democracy obviates the dangers of democratic
government. In Europe, associations consider themselves, in some degree,
as the legislative and executive councils of the people, which is unable
to speak for itself. In America, where they only represent a minority of
the nation, they argue and they petition.</p>
<p>The means which the associations of Europe employ are in accordance with
the end which they propose to obtain. As the principal aim of these bodies
is to act, and not to debate, to fight rather than to persuade, they are
naturally led to adopt a form of organization which differs from the
ordinary customs of civil bodies, and which assumes the habits and the
maxims of military life. They centralize the direction of their resources
as much as possible, and they intrust the power of the whole party to a
very small number of leaders.</p>
<p>The members of these associations respond to a watchword, like soldiers on
duty; they profess the doctrine of passive obedience; say rather, that in
uniting together they at once abjure the exercise of their own judgment
and free will; and the tyrannical control which these societies exercise
is often far more insupportable than the authority possessed over society
by the Government which they attack. Their moral force is much diminished
by these excesses, and they lose the powerful interest which is always
excited by a struggle between oppressors and the oppressed. The man who in
given cases consents to obey his fellows with servility, and who submits
his activity and even his opinions to their control, can have no claim to
rank as a free citizen.</p>
<p>The Americans have also established certain forms of government which are
applied to their associations, but these are invariably borrowed from the
forms of the civil administration. The independence of each individual is
formally recognized; the tendency of the members of the association
points, as it does in the body of the community, towards the same end, but
they are not obliged to follow the same track. No one abjures the exercise
of his reason and his free will; but every one exerts that reason and that
will for the benefit of a common undertaking.</p>
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