Thursday, April 4, 2013

The Republicans, the present day Tea Party and the colonists of the 1700s


          Thomas Jefferson, in the Declaration of Independence, wrote that "when a long train of abuses and usurpations . . . evinces a design" intended to force a group of people to live "under absolute despotism", then "it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such government . . . ."
          The present day Tea Party members and supporters, as well as other conservative Republicans, like to think of themselves as carrying on in the tradition of the leaders of the American Revolution and fighting for the same freedoms against an equally tyrannical government.  Are they really continuing the good fight to protect the freedoms gained in the American Revolution and guaranteed by the Constitution and Bill of Rights?  Or are they misleading the public by wrapping themselves in the hallowed past but having little understanding as to the "abuses and usurpations" the people living in the colonies objected to in the 1700s?
          To answer that question, it is necessary to understand what some of the "abuses and usurpations" to which Jefferson referred in the Declaration of Independence.  Perhaps the best way to answer that question is to begin at the beginning with a brief explanation of how the colonies were chartered and how the first colonists viewed themselves and their relation to Britain.
          David Ramsay, in his HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION VOLUME ONE, which was originally published in Philadelphia by R.Aitken in 1789 and reprinted in 1990 by Liberty Fund, Inc. in 1990, discussed the initial grants of land to "Thomas Gates and his associates . . . adventurers  . . . empowered to transport thither as many English subjects as should willingly accompany them; and it was declared 'that the colonists and their children should enjoy the same liberties as if they had remained, or were born, within the realm'"(Ramsay HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION, VOLUME ONE, 6).  That declaration specifically guaranteed to all British citizens in the North American continent the same rights as citizens still living in Britain.  The importance of this guarantee cannot be understated.  For it was this promise of retained citizenship which formed the basis for the colonists' belief that initially Parliament, then King George III, had abused their powers and denied the colonists their rights as British citizens.
  One of the most fundamental rights of British citizens was that they could not be taxed without having given their consent through their representatives in Parliament.  If the colonists in remained British citizens and retained their rights, did Parliament have the right to impose taxes on them if they were not represented in Parliament?  The question remained unresolved until 1767.
In that year, Parliament attempted to both answer that question and assert its complete authority over the North American colonies by passing the Townshend Acts.  Many colonists believed the Acts were intended to impose a tax, not a duty.  John Dickinson, in the second in his series of "Letters from a Farmer", wrote that the acts appeared "to me to be unconstitutional, and . . . destructive to the liberty of these colonies . . . ."(Dickinson, in Greene, Colonies to Nation).  He also noted that "never did the British Parliament" until those Acts, "think of imposing duties in America, FOR THE PURPOSE OF RAISING REVENUE"(Dickinson).
Although Parliament had not previously tried a direct tax, the issue of whether Parliament had the authority to do so had been discussed in the early colonial period.  David Ramsay wrote that "Massachusetts had . . .questioned the authority of Parliament to tax them and legislate for them"(Ramsay, 14) before the charter for Pennsylvania had been granted in 1781.
James Otis had addressed the subject of taxation in his "The Rights of the British Colonies Asserted and Proved".  Otis believed that "taxation without representation" was a deprivation of a fundamental basic right and would ultimately lead to the loss of all civil rights.  He further stated "that no parts of His Majesty's dominion can be taxed without their consent; every part had a right to be represented"(Otis, in Greene, Colonies to Nation) and Parliament's denial of representation to every area of the empire "would seem to be a contradiction in practice of the theory of the constitution" (Otis).
Jonathan Mayew, who died before the passage of the Townshend Acts, also commented on the need for British citizens in North America to protect their rights.  Bernard Baiylin, in his book Face of the Revolution, wrote that Mayew, a Congregationalist minister in Boston, clearly believed that "No claim to a natural obedience" to any ruler or ruling body "can or should override a people's 'just concern for their own rights, or legal, constitutional privileges'"(Bailyn, Faces of the Revolution,135).  Like Otis and Dickinson, Mayew urged his listeners to remember their rights as Englishmen and defend those rights whenever the government appeared to be violating them.
"Taxation without representation" was a major issue and a dominant one in the minds of the colonists, but it certainly was not the only reason colonists were angered by the actions of Britain's rulers and their royal agents in the colonies.  John Adams and Harbottle Dorr led very different lives.  Adams would become President of the yet to be created United States.  Dorr would die leaving barely enough assets to cover his accumulated debts.  However, these two men had three things in common.  Both were born in Massachusetts.  Both came from families that were not wealthy.  Both men detested Thomas Hutchinson, the Royal Governor of Massachusetts.
Adams believed that "Royal authority in Massachusetts in the 1760s was coming to rest increasingly . . . in the hands of a single family, the Hutchinsons"(Bailyn, 17) along with their relatives and friends who "were becoming absolute monopolists of public office"(Bailyn, 17).  Adams saw the Hutchinson group as a social elite forming a ruling aristocracy based on birth not ability.  A group who would do whatever would be most beneficial to them and increase their wealth.  A group who would manipulate the facts in reports to the government in London for their own advantage.  That such a group emerged in a country that was, for the most part, devoid of a hierarchical class structure must have infuriated many colonists, particularly those men who believed themselves better able to govern their colonies.
Dorr abhorred Hutchinson.  While preserving an extensive collection of Boston newspapers, Dorr also made made countless numbers of notes on the margins of the various pages.  His "index and commentaries catalogue Hutchinson's errors, correct his misstatements, and warn at every turn of his evil intentions. . . . explodes in the margins when the hated name appears"(Bailyn, 98-9).  Dorr considered the Royal Governor to be villainous.
From the point of view of many of the colonists, chief among the "abuses" was Parliament's attempt, in the opinion of the colonists, to impose a tax without providing for colonial representation in the House of Commons or, at the very least, allowing the colonial legislatures to levy the necessary taxes.  Having long identified themselves not merely as subjects of King George III, but as British citizens, the colonists could never allow even one of their fundamental rights to be taken from them.
Royal governors, like Thomas Hutchinson, who succeeded in creating a ruling aristocracy were guilty, in the eyes of may colonists, of usurping their power.  They were not only interested in pleasing the Crown and Parliament, they were equally concerned with increasing their own wealth and power.  What have President Obama and the Democrats done that is in any way similar to what happened in the colonies?  The Tea Party and the conservative Republicans have more in common with the royal governors.

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