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  • One of the things that inevitably comes up when we're talking about the Louisiana Purchase

  • is that Jefferson betrayed his strict constructionist principles when he purchased Louisiana - that

  • he had to stretch out the constitution a little bit more than he did before he became president.

  • Of course, if you're taking a standardized test, note that this controversy exists, but

  • I think this is largely a controversy of Jefferson's own making.

  • When France offered to sell us Louisiana, the first thing that Jefferson did is he went

  • to the Constitution and he's looking for some very specific language. As a strict constructionist,

  • he wants to see, ideally, something in the Constitution that says, "Oh... The United

  • States can add land. That is a power of the federal government." That would make Jefferson

  • happy to see that explicitly as a delegated power, but then again, the Constitution doesn't

  • get that specific. Now, Jefferson is asking these questions and he's wondering, "Is this

  • purchase constitutional?" and he asks his advisors about this and he really grapples

  • and struggles and really agonizes over the constitutionality of this.

  • Now, his advisors, of course, just say, "Hey, look. It's right there in the Constitution.

  • It says that the federal government has the power to approve treaties. And this treaty-making

  • power is what enables the United States to make any treaty - including a land transaction.

  • Now, let's think about what a treaty is. A treaty is an agreement between two nations

  • and if we look back at a few of the treaties of the eighteenth century - think about the

  • Treaty of Paris (1783) that ended the American Revolution. There was a transfer of land in

  • that treaty. Then, we go back to 1763, the end of the French and Indian War, the Treaty

  • of Paris 1763, which also included a land transaction.

  • So, we have a couple of precedents, there. When the Framers were drawing up the Constitution

  • and they wrote that the federal government has the power to make treaties, the last two

  • treaties that the United States had been part of - first, as colonies and then as victors

  • in the American Revolution - both of these treaties included land transactions. So, it's

  • really unquestionable that the Framers' intent included the ability to transact land through

  • treaties because this had happened before.

  • So, really, Jefferson's kind of making this a problem for himself.

  • Instead of looking at Jefferson as betraying his principles, when I look at this situation,

  • I'm thinking, "Hey! I'm glad that he asked. Really, Jefferson's being MORE true to his

  • strict constructionist principles because Jefferson is agonizing over the constitutionality

  • of this measure.

  • Wouldn't it be nice if presidents today agonized like this. You think for a second that George

  • W. Bush agonized over the constitutionality of the Patriot Act? Or that President Obama

  • thought for a second about whether Obamacare is constitutional? OF COURSE NOT! Neither

  • one of these presidents really gave a hoot about whether the legislation they were signing

  • was constitutional or not.

  • Nowadays, politicians tend to sit back and think, "Now, let's just pass what we can,

  • let's sign what we can, let's do what we can and maybe the Supreme Court will come back

  • and declare it unconstitutional. We've really lost sense this day and age of the president's

  • responsibility to interpret the Constitution. This is not just the Supreme Court that is

  • responsible for this, but we tend to be lazy and just let them decide. It is every American's

  • responsibility - and especially people in our government - to consider whether something

  • is constitutional or not.

  • So, I challenge you to re-think the way you look at Jefferson, the Constitution, and the

  • Louisiana Purchase. This guy wasn't a traitor. This guy was a hero - a constitutional hero.

  • And I challenge all of our elected leaders - presidents, senators, representatives - to

  • think before you vote, before you sign, "Is this constitutional?" Because it's everybody's

  • responsibility. And if our leaders spent more time asking these questions and less time

  • thinking about what they can get away with, we as a country would be much better off.

One of the things that inevitably comes up when we're talking about the Louisiana Purchase

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