legislators. Would, for instance, the legislature
of the State of New York, or of Pennsylvania, or of
Indiana, or of any State in the Union, in opposition
to the expressed will of a large majority of the people
whom they were chosen to represent, arbitrarily force
upon them as voters all persons of the African or
negro race and make them eligible for office without
any other qualification than a certain term of residence
within the State? In neither of the States named
would the colored population, when acting together,
be able to produce any great social or political result.
Yet in New York, before he can vote, the man of color
must fulfill conditions that are not required of the
white citizen; in Pennsylvania the elective franchise
is restricted to white freemen, while in Indiana negroes
and mulattoes are expressly excluded from the right
of suffrage. It hardly seems consistent with
the principles of right and justice that representatives
of States where suffrage is either denied the colored
man or granted to him on qualifications requiring intelligence
or property should compel the people of the District
of Columbia to try an experiment which their own constituents
have thus far shown an unwillingness to test for themselves.
Nor does it accord with our republican ideas that
the principle of self-government should lose its force
when applied to the residents of the District merely
because their legislators are not, like those of the
States, responsible through the ballot to the people
for whom they are the lawmaking power.
The great object of placing the seat of Government
under the exclusive legislation of Congress was to
secure the entire independence of the General Government
from undue State influence and to enable it to discharge
without danger of interruption or infringement of its
authority the high functions for which it was created
by the people. For this important purpose it
was ceded to the United States by Maryland and Virginia,
and it certainly never could have been contemplated
as one of the objects to be attained by placing it
under the exclusive jurisdiction of Congress that
it would afford to propagandists or political parties
a place for an experimental test of their principles
and theories. While, indeed, the residents of
the seat of Government are not citizens of any State
and are not, therefore, allowed a voice in the electoral
college or representation in the councils of the nation,
they are, nevertheless, American citizens, entitled
as such to every guaranty of the Constitution, to
every benefit of the laws, and to every right which
pertains to citizens of our common country. In
all matters, then, affecting their domestic affairs,
the spirit of our democratic form of government demands
that their wishes should be consulted and respected
and they taught to feel that although not permitted
practically to participate in national concerns, they
are, nevertheless, under a paternal government regardful
of their rights, mindful of their wants, and solicitous