In contemporary constitutional politics, Section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment—which includes the citizenship, privileges and immunities, due process, and equal protection clauses—is the star of the show. But this was not the focus for the Republican members of the Thirty-Ninth Congress. Their interest was instead in Sections 2, 3, and 4. Today we tend to think the purpose of the Fourteenth Amendment was to protect persons of color. But the Republicans engaged in Reconstruction saw its purpose as preventing “rebel rule” by punishing treason and rewarding loyalty, particularly the loyalty of white men who remained faithful to the Union during the Civil War.
In this first of three planned volumes for the University Press of Kansas’s Constitutional Thinking series, Mark A. Graber aims to restore to contemporary memory the Fourteenth Amendment drafted by those Republican and Unionist members of Congress who supported congressional reconstruction.
In Punish Treason, Reward Loyalty, Graber breaks new ground researching Reconstruction, the Fourteenth Amendment, and constitutionalism by highlighting the importance of Sections 2, 3, and 4 to the representatives in the Thirty-Ninth Congress and their relative indifference to Section 1. His work underscores the importance and impact that legislative primacy and partisan supremacy had to Republican constitutional thinking about constitutional authority immediately after the Civil War.
Centered on Reconstruction and constitutional reform, Graber shows anew the Republican effort to prevent rebel rule by empowering and protecting loyalty.
Tabela de Conteúdo
Text of Amendment XIV (1868)
Series Foreword
Acknowledgments
A Preface to the Forgotten Fourteenth Amendment Series
Introduction: Three Republican Soloists and the Republican Chorus
1. The Exclusion Debate
2. The Problem of Rebel Rule
3. Protecting and Empowering the Loyal
4. Guarantees
5. To Colorado and Beyond
Conclusion: Rebels, Loyalists, and Racial Equality
Appendixes
Table A.1: House Votes on the Fourteenth Amendment, the Exclusion Resolution, and Statehood for Colorado and Nebraska
Table A.2: Senate Votes on the Fourteenth Amendment, the Exclusion Resolution, and Statehood for Colorado and Nebraska
Table A.3: References to “:Rebel” and “Loyal” in the House of Representatives
Table A.4: References to “Rebel” and “Loyal” in the Senate
Table A.5: References Paired with “Rebel” in the Thirty-Ninth Congress, First Session: All
Table A.6: References Paired with “Rebel” in the Thirty-Ninth Congress, First Session: Opponents of the Fourteenth Amendment
Table A.7: Conditions for Readmission of Former Confederate States: Members of Congress
Table A.8: Conditions of Readmission of Former Confederate States: Petitions
Calendar of the Thirty-Ninth Congress, First Session
Notes
Index
Sobre o autor
Mark A. Graber is Regents Professor at the University of Maryland Carey School of Law and author of A New Introduction to American Constitutionalism, Dred Scott and the Problem of Constitutional Evil, and Rethinking Abortion, among other books.