In the House , resolutions offered in committee relative to the Judiciary considered, 581 ; resolutions agreed to, 581 ; motion to refer to committee, 581 ; remarks on reference, 581 ; resolutions referred, 583 ; bill from the Senate to repeal considered in House, 596 ; note , 596 ; the people have established three departments for the powers of government, 597 ; tenure by which the judges hold office, 597 ; the words "during good behavior" are a limitation on executive and legislative power, 597 ; examination of these words, 598 ; a subsequent legislature can repeal the acts of a previous one, examined, 598 ; any other construction leads to a concentration of executive and legislative power, 598 ; this is the spirit of innovation which has prostrated the old world, 599 ; expediency of the repeal examined, 599 ; comparison of the present and former system, 600 ; constitutionality of the measure examined, 600 ; delegated powers, 601 ; Judiciary is a check on the legislature, shown, 601 ; the judges are expounders of the constitution and laws, 602 ; they ought to be independent of the other branches of government, particularly the legislative, 602 ; concentration of power is the essence of tyranny, 602 ; as we advance to it, we recede from liberty, 602 ; what was the intention of the framers in introducing the words "good behavior"?, 602 ; origin of parties in this country fundamental, 603 ; manner of growth, 604 ; proceedings of the favorers of patronage, 604 ; the strict letter of the constitution now appealed to, 605 ; will the repeal of this law violate in any respect the salutary or practicable independence of the judges, secured by the constitution?, 605 ; the terms "independence of the judges" or "Judiciary" not found in the constitution, 605 ; relationship between the Executive and Judiciary Departments, 606 ; clauses of the constitution examined, 607 , 608 , 609 ; are not the judges more independent under this view than those of England?, 610 ; it is admitted Congress may increase or diminish the duties of judges, 610 ; preceding arguments for repeal examined in detail, and a defence of the late administration, 611 , 612 , 613 , 614 ; inexpediency of the present bill shown by the expediency of the judicial law of last session, 617 ; the pre-existing system examined, and its defects and evils, as affected by the late act, considered, 617 , 618 , 619 ; changes made by the late law, 620 , 621 ; when did the right of the Executive to recommend modifications of the Judiciary system cease, or of Congress to act?, 622 ; — from Abridgment of the Debates of Congress, from 1789 to 1856, Vol. 2 (of 16) by United States. Congress
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