State of the Union Address eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 202 pages of information about State of the Union Address.

State of the Union Address eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 202 pages of information about State of the Union Address.
original States, but “upon the fundamental condition precedent” that a majority of the people thereof, at an election to be held for that purpose, should, in place of the very large grants of public lands which they had demanded under the ordinance, accept such grants as had been made to Minnesota and other new States.  Under this act, should a majority reject the proposition offered them, “it shall be deemed and held that the people of Kansas do not desire admission into the Union with said constitution under the conditions set forth in said proposition.”  In that event the act authorizes the people of the Territory to elect delegates to form a constitution and State government for themselves “whenever, and not before, it is ascertained by a census, duly and legally taken, that the population of said Territory equals or exceeds the ratio of representation required for a member of the House of Representatives of the Congress of the United States.”  The delegates thus assembled “shall first determine by a vote whether it is the wish of the people of the proposed State to be admitted into the Union at that time, and, if so, shall proceed to form a constitution and take all necessary steps for the establishment of a State government in conformity with the Federal Constitution.”  After this constitution shall have been formed, Congress, carrying out the principles of popular sovereignty and nonintervention, have left “the mode and manner of its approval or ratification by the people of the proposed State” to be “prescribed by law,” and they “shall then be admitted into the Union as a State under such constitution, thus fairly and legally made, with or without slavery, as said constitution may prescribe.”

An election was held throughout Kansas, in pursuance of the provisions of this act, on the 2d day of August last, and it resulted in the rejection by a large majority of the proposition submitted to the people by Congress.  This being the case, they are now authorized to form another constitution, preparatory to admission into the Union, but not until their number, as ascertained by a census, shall equal or exceed the ratio required to elect a member to the House of Representatives.

It is not probable, in the present state of the case, that a third constitution can be lawfully framed and presented to Congress by Kansas before its population shall have reached the designated number.  Nor is it to be presumed that after their sad experience in resisting the Territorial laws they will attempt to adopt a constitution in express violation of the provisions of an act of Congress.  During the session of 1856 much of the time of Congress was occupied on the question of admitting Kansas under the Topeka constitution.  Again, nearly the whole of the last session was devoted to the question of its admission under the Lecompton constitution.  Surely it is not unreasonable to require the people of Kansas to wait before making a third attempt until the number of their inhabitants shall amount to 93,420.  During this brief period the harmony of the States as well as the great business interests of the country demand that the people of the Union shall not for a third time be convulsed by another agitation on the Kansas question.  By waiting for a short time and acting in obedience to law Kansas will glide into the Union without the slightest impediment.

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State of the Union Address from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.