[Daniel Webster by Henry Cabot Lodge]@TWC D-Link bookDaniel Webster CHAPTER VII 36/51
This tendency is quite as dangerous as that of which Jackson was the exponent, if not more so.
The executive department has been crippled; and the influence and power of Congress, and especially of the Senate, have become far greater than they should be, under the system of proportion and balance embodied in the Constitution.
Despite Jackson's victory there is, to-day, far more danger of undue encroachments on the part of the Senate than on that of the President. At the next session the principal subject of discussion was the trouble with France.
Irritated at the neglect of the French government to provide funds for the payment of their debt to us, Jackson sent in a message severely criticising them, and recommending the passage of a law authorizing reprisals on French property.
The President and his immediate followers were eager for war, Calhoun and his faction regarded the whole question as only matter for "an action of assumpsit," while Mr.Webster and Mr.Clay desired to avoid hostilities, but wished the country to maintain a firm and dignified attitude.
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