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Special pages :
The Debate on Jacoby's Motion
Source: Marx and Engels: Articles from the Neue Rheinische Zeitung, Moscow 1972, pp. 63 â 66
Neue Rheinische Zeitung No. 48, July 18, 1848[edit source]
Cologne, July 17. Again a âgreat debate,â to use an expression of Herr Camphausen, has taken place, a debate which lasted two full days.
The substance of the debate is well known â the reservations the government advanced regarding the immediate validity of the decisions passed by the National Assembly and Jacobyâs motion asserting the Assemblyâs right to pass legally binding decisions requiring no oneâs consent, and at the same time objecting to the resolution on the central authority.
That a debate on this subject was possible at all may seem incomprehensible to other nations. But we live in a land of oaks and lime-trees where nothing should surprise us.
The people send their representatives to Frankfurt with the mandate that the Assembly assume sovereign power over the whole of Germany and all her governments, and, by virtue of the sovereignty the people have vested in the Assembly, adopt a constitution for Germany.
Instead of immediately proclaiming its sovereignty in respect to the separate states and the Federal Diet, the Assembly timidly avoids any question relating to this subject and maintains an irresolute and vacillating attitude.
Finally it is confronted with a decisive issue â the appointment of a provisional central authority. Seemingly independent, but in fact guided by the governments with the help of Gagern, the Assembly elects as Vice Regent of the Empire a man whom these governments had in advance designated for this post.
The Federal Diet recognizes the election, pretending, as it were, that only its confirmation makes the election valid.
Reservations are nevertheless made by Hannover and even by Prussia, and it is the Prussian reservation that has caused the debate of the 11th and 12th.
This time, therefore, it is not so much the fault of the Chamber in Berlin that the debates are vague and hazy. The irresolute, weak-kneed, ineffectual Frankfurt National Assembly itself is to blame for the fact that its decisions can only be described as so much twaddle.
Jacoby introduces his motion with a brief speech made with his usual precision. He makes things very difficult for the speakers of the Left, because he says everything that can be said about the motion if one is to avoid enlarging upon the origin of the central authority, whose history is rather discreditable to the National Assembly.
In fact, the deputies of the Left who follow him advance hardly any new arguments, while those of the Right fare much worse â they lapse either into sheer twaddle or juridical hair-splitting. Both sides endlessly repeat themselves.
The honor of first presenting the case for the Right devolves on Deputy Schneider.
He begins with the grand argument that the motion is self-contradictory. On the one hand, the motion recognizes the sovereignty of the National Assembly, on the other hand, it calls upon the Chamber of conciliation to censure the National Assembly, thus placing itself above it. Any individual could express his disapproval but not the Chamber.
This subtle argument, of which the Right seems to be very proud seeing that it recurs in all the speeches of its deputies, advances an entirely new theory. According to this theory, the Chamber has fewer rights with regard to the National Assembly than an individual.
This first grand argument is followed by a republican one. Germany consists for the most part of constitutional monarchies, and must therefore be headed by a constitutional, irresponsible authority and not by a republican, responsible one. This argument was rebutted on the second day by Herr Stein, who said that Germany, under her federal constitution, had always been a republic, indeed a very edifying republic.
âWe have been given a mandate,â says Herr Schneider, âto agree on a constitutional monarchy, and those in Frankfurt have been given a similar mandate, i.e., to agree with the German governments on a constitution for Germany.â
The reaction indulges in wishful thinking. When, by order of the so-called Preparliament â an assembly having no valid mandate â the trembling Federal Diet convened the German National Assembly, there was no question at the time of any agreement; the National Assembly was then considered to be a sovereign power. But things now have changed. The June events in Paris have revived the hopes of both the big bourgeoisie and the supporters of the overthrown system. Every country bumpkin of a squire hopes to see the old rule of the knout re-established, and a clamour for âan agreed German constitutionâ is already arising from the imperial court at Innsbruck to the ancestral castle of Henry LXXII. The Frankfurt Assembly has no one but itself to blame for this.
âIn electing a constitutional head the National Assembly has therefore acted according to its mandate. But it has also acted in accordance with the will of the people; the great majority want a constitutional monarchy. Indeed, had the National Assembly come to a different decision, I would have regarded it as a misfortune. Not because I am against the republic; in principle I admit that the republic â and I have quite definitely made up my mind about it â is the most perfect and lofty form of polity, but in reality we are still very far from it. We cannot have the form unless we have the spirit. We cannot have a republic while we lack republicans, that is to say, noble minds capable, at all times, with a clear conscience and noble selflessness, and not only in a fit of enthusiasm, of sinking their own interests in the common interest.â
Can anyone ask for better proof of the virtues represented in the Berlin Chamber than these noble and modest words of Deputy Schneider? Surely, if any doubt still existed about the fitness of the Germans to set up a republic, it must have completely vanished in face of these examples of true civic virtue, of the noble and most modest self-sacrifice of our Cincinnatus-Schneider. Let Cincinnatus pluck up courage and have faith in himself and the numerous noble citizens of Germany who likewise regard the republic as the most noble political form but consider themselves bad republicans â they are ripe for the republic, they would endure the republic with the same equanimity with which they have endured the absolute monarchy. The republic of worthies would be the happiest republic that ever existed â a republic without Brutus and Catiline, without Marat and upheavals like those of June, it would be a republic of well-fed virtue and solvent morality.
How mistaken is Cincinnatus-Schneider when he exclaims:
âA republican mentality cannot be formed under absolutism; it is not possible to create a republican spirit offhand, we must first educate our children and grandchildren in this way. At present I would regard a republic as the greatest calamity, for it would be anarchy under the desecrated name of republic, despotism under the cloak of liberty.â
On the contrary, as Herr Vogt (from Giessen) said in the National Assembly, the Germans are republicans by nature, and to educate his children in the republican spirit Cincinnatus-Schneider could do no better than bring them up in the old German discipline, tradition of modesty and God-fearing piety, the way he himself grew up. Not anarchy and despotism, but those cozy beer-swilling proceedings, in which Cincinnatus-Schneider excels, would be brought to the highest perfection in the republic of worthies. Far removed from all the atrocities and crimes which defiled the first French republic, unstained by blood, and detesting the red flag, the republic of worthies would make possible something hitherto unattainable: it would enable every respectable burgher to lead a quiet, peaceful life marked by godliness and propriety. The republic of worthies might even revive the guilds together with all the amusing trials of non-guild artisans. This republic of worthies is by no means a fanciful dream; it is a reality existing in Bremen, Hamburg, LĂŒbeck and Frankfurt, and even in some parts of Switzerland. But its existence is everywhere threatened by the contemporary storms, which bid fair to engulf it everywhere.
Therefore rise up, Cincinnatus-Schneider, leave your plough and turnip field, your beer and conciliation, mount your steed and save the threatened republic, your republic, the republic of worthies!
Neue Rheinische Zeitung No. 49, July 19, 1848[edit source]
Cologne, July 18. Herr Waldeck takes the floor after Herr Schneider, in support of the Motion.
âThe present position of the Prussian state is surely quite without precedent, and one really cannot conceal the fact that it is also somewhat precarious.â
This beginning is likewise somewhat precarious. We get the impression that we are still listening to Deputy Schneider:
âIt must be said that Prussia was destined to exercise hegemony in Germany.â
This is the same old-Prussian illusion, the cherished dream of merging Germany in Prussia and of declaring Berlin the German Paris. Herr Waldeck, it is true, sees this cherished hope dwindling, but he hankers after it with painful feelings, and he blames both the ,previous and the present Government for the fact that Prussia is not at the head of Germany.
Unfortunately the fine days have passed when the Customs Union paved the way for Prussian hegemony in Germany, days when provincial patriots could believe that âthe Brandenburg stock has determined the fate of Germany for 200 yearsâ and will continue to do so in the future, the fine days when the disintegrating Germany of the Federal Diet could regard even the Prussian bureaucratic strait jacket as a last means of maintaining some sort of cohesion.
âThe Federal Diet, on which public opinion has passed judgment long since, is disappearing and suddenly the Constituent National Assembly in Frankfurt emerges before the eyes of an astonished world!â
The âworldâ was naturally âastonishedâ when it saw this Constituent National Assembly. One need only read the French, English and Italian newspapers to understand this.
Herr Waldeck then explains at some length that he is against the idea of a German emperor and gives up his place on the rostrum to Herr Reichensperger II.
Herr Reichensperger II declares the supporters of Jacobyâs motion to be republicans and desires them to state their aims as candidly as did the republicans in Frankfurt. Then he too asserts that Germany is not yet in possession of the
âfull measure of civic and political virtues which have been described by a great political scientist [Montesquieu] as the essential precondition for a republicâ.
If Reichensperger, the patriot, says this, Germany must be in a bad way!
Herr Reichensperger continues, the Government has made no reservations (!) but merely expressed wishes. There was reason enough for this and I also hope that the National Assembly will not always ignore the opinions of governments when making decisions. it is outside our competence to lay down the sphere of competence of the Frankfurt National Assembly; the National Assembly itself has refused to advance theories concerning its own competence; it has acted in a practical manner when necessity has demanded action.
In other words, at the time when the Frankfurt Assembly was omnipotent, it failed during the revolutionary agitation to settle the inevitable conflict with the German governments with one decisive stroke. It has preferred to postpone the decision and to fight small skirmishes with one or another Government over each individual resolution, skirmishes which weaken the Assembly the further it recedes from the time of the revolution and the more it compromises itself in the eyes of the people by its feeble actions. And in this respect, Herr Reichensperger is quite right: it is not worth our while to come to the aid of an Assembly which has forsaken itself!
But it is touching when Herr Reichensperger says:
âIt is therefore unstatesmanlike to discuss such questions of competence; what matters is simply to solve practical questions as they arise.â
It is indeed âunstatesmanlikeâ to dispose of these âpractical questionsâ once and for all by means of a forceful decision; it is ..unstatesmanlikeâ if, in the face of reactionary attempts to halt the movement, the revolutionary mandate were asserted, a mandate which every Assembly that has come into being as a result of barricade fighting possesses. Cromwell, Mirabeau, Danton, Napoleon and the entire English and French revolutions were indeed exceedingly âunstatesmanlikeâ, but Bassermann, Biedermann, Eisenmann, Wiedenmann and Dahlmann behave in a very âstatesmanlikeâ manner! âStatesmenâ disappear altogether when a revolution takes place, and the revolution must be temporarily dormant for âstatesmenâ to re-emerge, and, moreover, statesmen of the calibre of Herr Reichensperger II, the deputy for the Kempen district.
âIf you depart from this system, it will be difficult to avoid conflicts with the German National Assembly and with the governments of individual [German] states; at any rate you will unfortunately promote discord and, as a result of discord, anarchy will raise its head and nothing will then save us from civil war. Civil war, however, marks the beginning of still greater misfortune.... It is not out of the question that people may in that case say order has been restored in Germany, by our Eastern and Western friends!
Herr Reichensperger may be right. If the Assembly engages in a discussion of competence, it may give rise to clashes, possibly leading to a civil war and intervention by the French and the Russians. If the Assembly does not discuss this, however, and, in fact, it has not done so, a civil war is even more certain. The conflicts which, at the beginning of the revolution, were still fairly simple, every day become more involved, and the longer the decision is delayed, the more difficult and the more bloody will be the solution.
A country like Germany, which is forced to work its way up from indescribable fragmentation to unity, which, if it does not want to perish, needs the more stringent revolutionary centralisation, the more divided it has been up to now, a country which contains twenty VendĂ©es, which is sandwiched between the two most powerful and most centralised states of the Continent and surrounded by numerous small neighbours, with whom it is on strained terms, if not at war â such a country cannot, in the present period of universal revolution, avoid either civil war or war with other countries. These wars, which we will certainly have to face, will be the more perilous and devastating, the more irresolute is the conduct of the people and its leaders and the longer the decision is postponed. If Herr Reichenspergerâs âstatesmenâ remain at the helm, we might witness another Thirty Yearsâ War. But, fortunately, the force of events, the German people, the Emperor of Russia and the French people also have a say in the matter.
Neue Rheinische Zeitung No. 53, July 23, 1848[edit source]
Cologne, July 22. Current events, Bills, armistice proposals etc. at last allow us once more to return to our beloved agreement debates. On the rostrum we see Deputy von Berg from JĂŒlich, a man in whom we are interested for two reasons; first, because he is a Rhinelander, and second, because he is a ministerialist of very recent date.
Herr Berg has several reasons for opposing Jacobyâs motion. The first is this:
âThe first part of the motion, which requires us to express our disapproval of a decision made by the German Parliament, this first part is nothing but a protest made in the name of a minority against a legal majority. It is nothing but an attempt by a party which has been defeated within a legislative body to obtain support from outside; it is an attempt whose consequences are bound to lead to civil war.â
Mr. Cobden, with his motion to abolish the Corn Laws, also belonged to the minority in the House of Commons from 1840 to 1845. He belonged to âa party whichâ had âbeen defeated within a legislative bodyâ. What did he do? He sought âsupport from outsideâ. He did not simply state his disapproval of parliamentary decisions, he went much further; he set up and organised the Anti-Corn Law League and the Anti-Corn Law press, in short, the whole enormous agitation against the Corn Laws. According to Herr Berg, this was an attempt that was âbound to lead to civil warâ.
The minority in the erstwhile United Diet likewise sought âsupport from outsideâ. Herr Camphausen, Herr Hansemann and Herr Milde had no scruples whatever over this. The facts that stand as proof of this are well known. It is obvious that the consequences of their conduct, according to Herr Berg, were âbound to lead to civil warâ. They led not to civil war, however, but to the Ministry.
We could cite a hundred more such examples.
The minority in a legislative body, if it does not want to bring about civil war, must not, therefore, seek support from outside. But what then does âfrom outsideâ mean? It means the constituents, i.e. the people who create the legislative body. If one is no longer supposed to obtain âsupportâ by influencing these constituents, where is one to gain support?
Are the speeches of Hansemann, Reichensperger, von Berg and so on, delivered merely for the benefit of the Assembly or also for the public, to whom they are presented in stenographic reports? Are not these speeches likewise means by which this âparty within a legislative bodyâ seeks, or hopes, to obtain âsupport from outside"?
In short, Herr Bergâs principle would lead to the abolition of all political propaganda. For propaganda is simply the practical application of the immunity of advocates of freedom of the press and of freedom of association, i.e. of freedoms which legally exist in Prussia. Whether these freedoms lead to civil war or not is not our concern. It is sufficient that they exist, and we shall see where it âleadsâ, if they continue to be infringed.
âGentlemen, these efforts of the minority to find strength and recognition outside the legislative authority did not begin today or yesterday, they date from the first day of the German uprising. The minority expressed its objections and left the Pre-parliament, and the result was civil war.â
First, as regards Jacobyâs motion, there is no question of a âminority objecting and leavingâ.
Secondly, âthe efforts of the minority to find recognition outside the legislative authorityâ did, it is true, ânot begin today or yesterdayâ, for they date from the moment when legislative authorities and minorities came into being.
Thirdly, it is not the fact that the minority expressed its objections and left the Pre-parliament which led to civil war, but Herr Mittermaierâs âmoral convictionâ that Hecker, Fickler and their associates were traitors to their country, and the measures which the Government of Baden consequently took and which were dictated by the most abject fear.
The civil war argument, which is, of course, apt to throw the German burgher into a dreadful state of alarm, is followed by the argument about the absence of a mandate.
âWe have been elected by our constituents in order to establish a Constitution in Prussia; the same constituents have sent other citizens to Frankfurt, to set up a Central Authority there. It cannot be denied that the constituent who gives the mandate is certainly entitled to approve or disapprove the mandataryâs actions, but the constituents have not authorised us to speak on their behalf in this respect.â
This weighty argument has been greatly admired by the legal experts and legal dilettanti in the Assembly. We have no mandate! Nevertheless, two minutes later, the same Herr Berg asserts that the Frankfurt Assembly was âconvoked in order to create the future Constitution of Germany, in concert with the German governmentsâ, and it is to be hoped that the Prussian Government will not, in this case, ratify it without consulting the Agreement Assembly or the Chamber which is to be elected under the new Constitution. The Ministry has nevertheless immediately informed the Assembly of its recognition of the Imperial Regent, [Archduke John of Austria] as well as of its reservations, thereby inviting the Assembly to pronounce its decision.
It is therefore precisely the point of view expressed by Herr Berg, his own speech and Herr Auerswaldâs information which lead to the conclusion that the Assembly certainly has a mandate to deal with the Frankfurt resolutions.
We have no mandate! Hence, if the Frankfurt Assembly reintroduces censorship, if it sends Bavarian and Austrian troops to Prussia to support the Crown in a conflict between the Chamber and the Crown, then Herr Berg has âno mandate"!
What mandate has Herr Berg? Literally only this: âto agree with the Crown upon the Constitutionâ. By no means has he, therefore, a mandate to put down parliamentary questions, and to agree to laws on immunity, on the civic militia, on redemption and to all other laws not mentioned in the Constitution. This is what reactionaries daily assert. Berg himself says:
âEvery step beyond this mandate is a breach of faith, it is an abandonment of the mandate or even a betrayal!â
Nevertheless, under the force of necessity, Herr Berg and the entire Assembly constantly abandon their mandate. The Assembly must do so due to the revolutionary, or rather, at present, reactionary, provisional state of affairs. Because of this provisional state, everything serving to safeguard the achievements of the March revolution falls within the competence of the Assembly and if it can achieve this by exerting moral influence on the Frankfurt Assembly, then the Agreement Chamber is not only entitled, but even obliged, to do so.
Then follows the Rhenish-Prussian argument, which is of special importance for us Rhinelanders, because it shows how we are represented in Berlin.
âWe Rhinelanders and Westphalians and the inhabitants of other provinces as well have absolutely no bond with Prussia other than the fact that we have come under the jurisdiction of the Prussian Crown. If we dissolve this bond, the state disintegrates. I do not understand at all, and I believe most deputies from my province do not understand either, what benefit a Berlin republic would be to us. We might prefer rather a republic in Cologne.â
We shall not discuss at all the idle speculations about what we might preferâ if Prussia is turned into a âBerlin republicâ, nor the new theory about the conditions of existence of the Prussian state etc. As Rhinelanders, we simply protest against the statement that âwe have come under the jurisdiction of the Prussian Crownâ. On the contrary the âPrussian Crownâ has come to us.
The next speaker against the motion is Herr Simons from Elberfeld. He repeats everything that Herr Berg has said.
He is followed by a speaker from the Left and then by Herr ZachariÀ. ZachariÀ repeats everything that Herr Simons has said.
Deputy Duncker repeats everything that Herr ZachariÀ has said, but he also adds a few other things, or he expresses what has been said before in such an extreme way, that we find it advisable to deal briefly with his speech.
âDo we, the Constituent Assembly of 16 million Germans, reinforce the authority of the German Central Government and the authority of the German Parliament in the minds of the people by thus censuring the Constituent Assembly of all Germans? Do we not thereby undermine the willing obedience which the individual nationalities must [accord] it, if it is to work for Germanyâs unity?â
According to Herr Duncker, the authority of the Central Government and the National Assembly and this âwilling obedienceâ exist; the obedience consists in the people submitting blindly to this authority, whereas the individual governments make reservations and, when it suits them, refuse ! to obey.
âWhat is the point of making theoretical statements in our time, when the force of fact is so immense?"'
Recognition of the sovereignty of the Frankfurt Assembly by the representatives âof 16 million Germansâ is thus merely a âtheoretical statement"!?
âIf, in future, resolution passed in Frankfurt were to be regarded by the Government and Parliament of Prussia as impossible and impracticable, would there then be any possibility of carrying through such a resolution?â
Hence, the mere opinions, the views held by the Prussian Government and Parliament are supposed to be capable of making the resolutions of the National Assembly impossible.
âToday, we may say whatever we like, but the Frankfurt resolutions could not be carried through, if the entire Prussian people, if two-fifths of Germany, refused to submit to them.â
Here we have again all the old Prussian arrogance, the Berlin national patriotism in all its old glory, with the pigtail and crooked stick of old Fritz [King Frederick II of Prussia]. It is true, we are only a minority, only two-fifths (and not even that) but we will certainly show the majority that we are masters in Germany, that we are Prussians!
We do not advise the gentlemen of the Right to provoke a conflict of this kind between âtwo-fifthsâ and âthree-fifthsâ. The numerical balance may prove to be quite different, and many a province may remember that it has been German from time immemorial, but that it has been Prussian for only thirty years.
Herr Duncker has a remedy, however. Those in Frankfurt must, along with us, âpass only those resolutions that express the reasonable collective will, the true opinion of the public, so that they can be approved by the moral consciousness of the nationâ, i.e. resolutions after Deputy Dunckerâs own heart.
âIf we, and those in Frankfurt, pass such resolutions then we are, and they are, sovereign, otherwise we are not sovereign, even if we decree it ten times over.â
After this profound definition of sovereignty, which is in keeping with his moral consciousness, Herr Duncker heaves a sigh: âIn any case, this belongs to the futureâ, and thus concludes his speech.
Lack of space and time prevents us from discussing the speeches of the Left made on the same day. Nevertheless, even from the speeches of the Right presented here, our readers will have realised that Herr Parrisius was not entirely mistaken when he moved the adjournment because âthe temperature in the hall has risen so high that it is impossible to maintain absolute clarity of thought'!
Neue Rheinische Zeitung No. 55, July 25, 1848[edit source]
Cologne, July 24. A few days ago, when the pressure of world events caused us to interrupt our account of the debate, a neighbouring journalist [Karl BrĂŒggemann] was kind enough to carry on the report in our stead. He has already drawn the attention of the public to âthe profusion of penetrating thoughts and bright ideasâ and to âthe fine and healthy feeling for true freedomâ displayed by âthe speakers of the majorityâ, and especially by our incomparable Baumstark, âduring this great debate, which lasted two daysâ.'
We must bring our report of the debate to a hasty close, but cannot refrain from presenting a few examples from the âprofusionâ of âpenetrating thoughts and bright ideasâ expressed by the Right.
Deputy Abegg opened the second day of the debate with a threat to the Assembly: to get to the bottom of this motion, one would have to repeat all the Frankfurt debates in their entirety â and the High Assembly is obviously not entitled to do this! Their constituents âwith their practical tact and practical senseâ would never approve of this! Incidentally, what is to become of German unity, if (now follows a particularly âpenetrating thoughtâ) people âdo not simply confine themselves to making reservationsâ, but express their âfirm approval or disapproval of the Frankfurt resolutionsâ. In this case nothing remains but âpurely formal submissiveness"!
Of course, âpurely formal submissivenessâ can be evaded by âreservationsâ and, if need be, even directly denied â that cannot harm German unity; but to approve or disapprove of these resolutions and to judge them with regard to their style, logic or usefulness â thatâs the limit!
Herr Abegg concludes with the observation that it was for the Frankfurt Assembly, and not the Berlin Assembly, to comment upon the reservations presented to the Assembly in Berlin, not that in Frankfurt. One ought not to anticipate the Frankfurt deputies as this would surely be an insult to them!
The gentlemen in Berlin are not competent to express an opinion on statements made by their own Ministers.
Let us skip the idols of the small people, such as Baltzer, KÀmpf and GrÀff, and make haste to hear the hero of the day, the incomparable Baumstark.
Deputy Baumstark declares that he would never pronounce himself incompetent, unless he is forced to admit no knowledge of the matter in hand â and surely eight weeks of debate cannot leave one with no knowledge of the matter?
Consequently, Deputy Baumstark is competent. Namely, in the following manner:
âI ask whether, as a result of the wisdom we have shown so far, we are fully entitledâ (i.e. competent) âto confront an Assembly, which has attracted
general interest in Germany,
and the admiration of the whole of Europe,
thanks to its noble-mindedness, its high intelligence
and its moral political standpoint,
that is thanks to everything that has made the name of Germany great and glorious throughout history? I submit to itâ (i.e. I declare myself incompetent) âand wish that the Assembly, sensing the truth (!!), would likewise submitâ (i.e. declare itself incompetent)!
"Gentlemen,â continues the âcompetentâ Deputy Baumstark, âit was stated at yesterdayâs session that there has been talk of a republic etc. which is unphilosophical. But it cannot possibly be unphilosophical to describe the responsibility of the person who heads the state, as a characteristic feature of the republic, in the democratic sense. Gentlemen, it is certain that all political philosophers, from Plato down to Dahlmannâ (Deputy Baumstark could indeed not go further âdownâ), âhave expressed this view, and we must not contradict this more than a thousand-year-old truth (!) and historical fact, without very special reasons, which have yet to be adduced.â
Herr Baumstark thinks, therefore, that sometimes there can be very special reasonsâ to contradict even âhistorical factsâ. Indeed, the gentlemen of the Right usually have no scruples in this respect.
Herr Baumstark, moreover, declares himself once again incompetent, by pushing the competence on to the shoulders of âall political philosophers, from Plato down to Dahlmannâ. Herr Baumstark, of course, does not belong to this category of political philosophers.
âLet us consider this political edifice! One Chamber and a responsible Imperial Regent, and this on the basis of the present electoral law! Further examination will show that it is against all common sense.â
Then Herr Baumstark makes the following penetrating pronouncement which, even on the closest examination, will not be against all âcommon senseâ.
âGentlemen, a republic requires two things, popular opinion and leading personalities. If we make a closer examination of our German popular opinion, we shall find that it contains very little about this republic (namely that of the Imperial Regent previously mentioned).
Thus, Herr Baumstark once more declares himself incompetent, and this time, in his place, it is popular opinion that is competent to judge the republic. Popular opinion, therefore, has more âknowledgeâ about the matter than Deputy Baumstark.
At last, however, the speaker proves that there are also matters about which he has some âknowledgeâ, and first and foremost among these is popular sovereignty.
âGentlemen, history â I have to return to this â proves that we have had popular sovereignty since time immemorial, but it has assumed different forms under different conditions.â
Then follows a series of âextremely penetrating thoughts and bright ideasâ about Brandenburg-Prussian history and popular sovereignty causing the neighbouring journalist to forget all worldly sufferings in a fit of constitutional ecstasy and doctrinaire bliss.
âWhen the Great Elector [Frederick William of Brandenburg] disregarded, and indeed (!) crushedâ (to âcrushâ something is certainly the best way of disregarding it), âthe decaying elements of the estates, which were infected with the poison of French demoralisationâ (the right of the first night had in fact been gradually buried by the âFrench demoralisedâ civilisation), âhe was generally acclaimed by the people, deeply imbued with the moral feeling that this gave strength to the German, and especially the Prussian, political edifice.â
One has to admire the âdeep moral feelingâ of the Brandenburg philistines of the seventeenth century who, profoundly moved by their profits, acclaimed the Elector when he attacked their enemies, the feudal lords, and sold privileges to the philistines â but one has to admire even more the âCommon senseâ and âbright ideasâ of Herr Baumstark, who regards this acclamation as an expression of âpopular sovereignty"!
âAt that time, everybody, without exception, paid homage to the absolute monarchyâ (since otherwise he would have been flogged) âand the Great Frederick would never have achieved such importance had he not been supported by genuine popular sovereignty.â
The popular sovereignty of flogging, serfdom and soccage services is, for Herr Baumstark, genuine popular sovereignty. An artless admission!
From genuine popular sovereignty, Herr Baumstark now goes on to consider false popular sovereignties.
âBut there followed a different period, that of constitutional monarchy.â
This is then proved by a long âconstitutional rigmaroleâ in which, to cut a long story short, he asserts that, from 1811 to 1847, the people of Prussia called continuously for a Constitution, and never for a Republic (!). This is naturally followed by the remark that âthe people has turned away in indignationâ from the recent republican insurrection in Southern Germany.
From this it follows quite naturally that the second kind of popular sovereignty (although it is no longer the âgenuineâ one) is the constitutional sovereignty properâ.
âThis is the kind of popular sovereignty which divides political power between the King and the people, it is divided popular sovereigntyâ (let the âpolitical Philosophers, from Plato down to Dahlmannâ, tell us what this is supposed to mean), ..Which the people must receive unimpaired and unconditionally (!!), but without depriving the King of any of his constitutional powerâ (what laws define this power in Prussia since the 19th March?). âThis point is quite clearâ (especially in Deputy Baumstarkâs mind); âthe concept has been determined by the history of the constitutional system and no one can still entertain any doubts about itâ (it is only when one reads Deputy Baumstarkâs speech that, unfortunately, âdoubtsâ arise again).
Finally âthere is a third kind of popular sovereignty, the democratic-republican kind, which is supposed to rest on the so-called broadest basis. What an unfortunate expression is âbroadest basis'!â
Then Herr Baumstark âraises a wordâ against this broadest basis. This basis leads to the decline of countries, to barbarism! We have no Cato, who could give the republic a moral foundation. Herr Baumstark then begins to blow Montesquieuâs old horn of republican virtue â a horn which has long been out of tune and full of dents â and to blow it so loudly that the neighbouring journalist, in transports of admiration, chimes in likewise and, to the astonishment of all Europe, demonstrates brilliantly that it is âprecisely republican virtue ... which leads to constitutionalism"! Meanwhile, Herr Baumstark changes his tune and also comes to constitutionalism but through the absence of republican virtue. The reader can imagine the splendid effect of this duet when, after a series of the most heart-rendingly discordant notes, the two voices finally unite to produce the conciliatory chord of constitutionalism.
After a lengthy argument, Herr Baumstark comes to the conclusion that the Ministers have actually made âno real reservationâ at all, but merely âa slight reservation concerning the futureâ and, in the end, he finds himself on the broadest basis, since he considers only a democratic and constitutional state to be Germanyâs salvation. He is so âoverwhelmed by the prospect of Germanyâs futureâ that he gives vent to his feelings by crying:
âCheers, three cheers for the popular-constitutional, hereditary German monarchy!â
He was indeed quite right when he said â this unfortunate broadest basis!
Several speakers from both sides then take the floor but, after Deputy Baumstark, we dare not present them to our readers. We shall just mention Deputy Wachsmuthâs declaration that his principal tenet is the point made by the noble Stein: The will of free men is the unshakeable support of every throne.
âThat strikes right to the core of the matter!â exclaims our enraptured neighbouring journalist. âNowhere does the will of free men prosper more than in the shelter of the unshakeable throne, and nowhere does the throne rest more securely than on the intelligent love of free men!â [Kölnische Zeitung, July 21, 1848]
Indeed, the âprofusion of penetrating thoughts and bright ideasâ and the âhealthy feeling for true freedomâ displayed by the speakers of the majority in this debate are far from matching the depth and penetration of the thoughts of the neighbouring journalist!