(It has been brought to my attention that this is the birthday of Jefferson Davis. Suspension of habeas corpus is in the news, so time to dust off the below post:)
Continuing on with our examination of the suspension of habeas corpus during the Civil War, the first part of which may be read here, we turn to Jefferson Davis and the suspension of habeas corpus in the Confederacy. The Confederate Constitution provided for the suspension of habeas corpus:
Sec. 9 (3) The privilege of the writ of habeas corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in cases of rebellion or invasion the public safety may require it.
On February 27, 1862 the Confederate Congress vested in Davis the power to suspend Habeas Corpus. On March 1, 1862 Davis used this power, suspending the writ of Habeas Corpus and declaring martial law in a ten-mile radius around the City of Richmond.
Davis would use this power throughout the War, especially in regions where Unionist sentiment was strong, for example in East Tennessee where martial law was imposed and the writ of habeas corpus suspended in 1862.
Confederate habeas corpus commissioners from the beginning of the War had the power outside of the normal judicial system to order the military imprisonment of civilians or to free them, without any involvement by the state or Confederate courts.
As in the North, these measures raised a fair amount of opposition. Alexander Stephens denounced President Davis as a dictator in 1864 and returned home to Georgia, where he delivered a speech on March 16, 1864 to the Georgia legislature attacking various acts of the Davis administration, including the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus.
Davis was not a dictator, but rather a man at the head of a nation fighting against the odds to establish independence. Like Lincoln, Davis was forced by circumstances to circumscribe liberties in wartime in hopes that victory would cause the need for such measures to end.
“On February 27, 1862 the Confederate Congress vested in Davis the power to suspend Habeas Corpus. ” “… Congress vested in Davis the power to suspend Habeas Corpus.” Obama took the power to suspend Habeas Corpus of his own initiative through the National Defense Authorization Act signed on Christmas Eve in Hawaii…and with our tax money, without our informed consent. Taxation without representation. Nasty totalitarianism.
What Congress does, Congress can undo. In this case. Obama has told both, Congress, that they may not review his executive orders for six months, and the Supreme Court of the United States of America to do his bidding.
-EXECUTIVE ORDER 11310 grants authority to the Department of Justice to enforce the plans set out in Executive Orders, to institute industrial support, to establish judicial and legislative liaison, to control all aliens, to operate penal and correctional institutions, and to advise and assist the President.
-EXECUTIVE ORDER 11921 allows the Federal Emergency Preparedness Agency to develop plans to establish control over the mechanisms of production and distribution, of energy sources, wages, salaries, credit and the flow of money in U.S. financial institution in any undefined national emergency. It also provides that when a state of emergency is declared by the President, Congress cannot review the action for six months.
In the US Constitution, the power to suspend Habeas Corpus is vested in the legislative branch. Lincoln did not have the authority to suspend Habeas Corpus. Lincoln did it anyway. Obama is following Lincoln’s lead.
Congress authorized Lincoln after the fact to suspend habeas corpus in the Habeas Corpus Suspension Act of 1863. I wish Obama were trying to follow in the footsteps of Lincoln, the greatest President, after Washington, that this nation has had.
[…] Analysis, Punditry, and News:Jefferson Davis & the Suspension of Habeas Corpus – Donald R. McClarey, J.D., at […]
It’s interesting that some Confederate state high courts (particularly GA and NC) had no hesitation in challenging Davis’s suspension. Any pertinence today?
Davis said that if the Confederacy failed it should have written on its tombstone: “Died of a Theory”. A strong centralized government was essential for the war effort and anathema for states rights advocates who were dominant in the Confederate state governments. This also caused state governments to withhold essential military equipment and supplies for home defense rather than forwarding it to the Confederate government. Whatever the validity of states rights as a political theory in peace time, in war time it was completely counterproductive.
Not much pertinence as to habeas corpus today, as a suspension of it is completely governed by the Federal Constitution and battles about it would be fought out in Federal courts. Although the Confederate Constitution provided for a Confederate judicial system, Confederate district courts were established during the brief life of the Confederacy, but the Confederate Congress never resolved how a Confederate Supreme Court would be organized.