[Washington and His Colleagues by Henry Jones Ford]@TWC D-Link book
Washington and His Colleagues

CHAPTER II
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Committees already are the Ministers and while the House indulges a jealousy of encroachment in its functions, which are properly deliberative, it does not perceive that these are impaired and nullified by the monopoly as well as the perversion of information by these committees." Justice Story, who entered Congress in 1808 as a Jeffersonian Republican, noted the process of degradation, and in his _Commentaries_ he pointed out the cause: "The Executive is compelled to resort to secret and unseen influences, to private interviews and private arrangements to accomplish its own appropriate purposes, instead of proposing and sustaining its own duties and measures by a bold and manly appeal to the nation in the face of its representatives." The last of the organic acts of the session was the one establishing the judiciary.

The student will be disappointed if he examines the record to note whether there was any vision of the ascendancy which the judiciary was to obtain in the development of the American constitutional system.
The debates were almost wholly about the possibilities of conflict between the state and the federal courts.

Although Maclay's diary gives a one-sided and distorted account of the proceedings in the Senate, the course of the debate is clear.

Ellsworth of Connecticut had principal charge of the bill.

At the outset Lee and Grayson of Virginia made an ineffectual effort to confine the original jurisdiction of the federal courts to cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, and argued that jurisdiction over other cases involving federal law might be conferred upon state courts.


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