Thoughts, essays, and writings on Liberty. Written by the heirs of Patrick Henry.

“You have put your finger on the dilemma of all government, and the reason I am an anarchist. The power to tax, once conceded, has no limits; it contains until it destroys.”     Robert A. Heinlein,    The Moon is a Harsh Mistress

April 5, 2007

Today In History

by Doug Mataconis

The first Presidential veto:

On this day in 1792, George Washington exercised his power to veto legislation for the first time in the nation’s history when he refused to sign a bill designed to apportion members of the House.

He vetoed the bill because he held that the Constitution did not authorize Congress to fix the size of the House of Representatives on a permanent basis as it goes about allocating seats in proportion to a state’s population. As Thomas Jefferson, then Washington’s secretary of state, observed, “if the [ratio of] representation [is] obtained by any process not prescribed in the Constitution, it becomes arbitrary and inadmissible.”

A President who vetoed legislation because he knew it was unconstitutional. Imagine that.

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