Unpublished Papers «Previous Next»

The Annals of Congress, the Original Public Meaning of the Succession Clause, and the Problem of Constitutional Memory (2009) (unpublished manuscript)

Seth Barrett Tillman

Abstract

The Constitution contains several clauses referring to government “offices” and “officers.” The precise phrasing used in the different clauses is similar but textually distinct. In several recent publications, I have that argued that these fine textual distinctions were purposely drafted by Gouverneur Morris (the Committee of Style’s primary draftsperson) and by the other members of the Federal Convention and that they were also meaningful to the Constitution’s intended audience, even if such distinctions usually pass without analysis or even notice by modern commentators. The purpose of this short Article is not to rehash that debate, or even to present a further substantial defense of the ideas already presented on several prior occasions. Instead, the purpose of this Article is to explain one reason why modern scholarship in this area failed to fully engage the Constitution’s text. My answer is a simple one. Modern scholars treat the Annals of Congress as an official record of contemporaneous congressional debate. That was and is a mistake. Nor is it a mistake limited to those scholars researching obscure constitutional word-choice relating to “office” and “officer.” It is a mistake made by the widest body of scholars, left or right or center, researching virtually each and every provision of the original Constitution of 1787 and its antebellum amendments. My topic here is a narrow one, but it has implications for constitutional scholarship generally.

[first posted December 2009]

[last amended September 15, 2011]

Suggested Citation

Seth Barrett Tillman, The Annals of Congress, the Original Public Meaning of the Succession Clause, and the Problem of Constitutional Memory 1-26 (Dec. 18, 2009) (unpublished manuscript) (on file with author), available at http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1524008, also available at http://works.bepress.com/seth_barrett_tillman/142/.

MCGINNIS.DOJMEMO.pdf (243 kB)
DOJ Memorandum from McGinnis to Thessin (Aug. 29, 1988)

Case_of_Brigham_H_Roberts.pdf (101 kB)
Case of Brigham H. Roberts (1900)

GazetteOfIndia_ElectionOp.pdf (1615 kB)
Gazette of India: Election Qualifications Case (2006)

SCALIA_DOJ_MEMORANDUM.pdf (375 kB)
Asst AG Scalia's OLC Memo on the Incompatibility Clause (1974)

2010.OLC.BARRON.EMOLUMENTS.pdf (50 kB)
Acting Asst AG Barron OLC Memo on Emoluments Clause (2010)

MADISON_TO_PENDLETON_LETTER_FEB1792.pdf (212 kB)
MADISON TO PENDLETON LETTER (Feb. 21, 1792)