
Inaugural Address of James K. Polk
(circa 1845)
March 4, 1845 :
Fellow citizens:
Without solicitation on my part, I have been chosen by the free and voluntary suffrages
of my countrymen to the most honorable and most responsible office on earth. I am deeply
impressed with gratitude for the confidence reposed in me. Honored with this distinguished
consideration at an earlier period of life than any of my predecessors, I can not disguise
the diffidence with which I am about to enter on the discharge of my official duties.
If the more aged and experienced men who have filled the office of President of the
United States even in the infancy of the Republic distrusted their ability to discharge
the duties of that exalted station, what ought not to be the apprehensions of one so much
younger and less endowed now that our domain extends from ocean to ocean, that our people
have so greatly increased in numbers, and at a time when so great diversity of opinion
prevails in regard to the principles and policy which should characterize the
administration of our Government? Well may the boldest fear and the wisest tremble when
incurring responsibilities on which may depend our country's peace and prosperity, and in
some degree the hopes and happiness of the whole human family.
In assuming responsibilities so vast I fervently invoke the aid of that Almighty Ruler
of the Universe in whose hands are the destinies of nations and of men to guard this
Heaven favored land against the mischiefs which without His guidance might arise from an
unwise public policy. With a firm reliance upon the wisdom of Omnipotence to sustain and
direct me in the path of duty which I am appointed to pursue, I stand in the presence of
this assembled multitude of my countrymen to take upon myself the solemn obligation
to the best of my ability to preserve, protect, and defend the
Constitution of the United States.
A concise enumeration of the principles which will guide me in the administrative
policy of the Government is not only in accordance with the examples set me by all my
predecessors, but is eminently befitting the occasion.
The Constitution itself, plainly written as it is, the
safeguard of our federative compact, the offspring of concession and compromise, binding
together in the bonds of peace and union this great and increasing family of free and
independent States, will be the chart by which I shall be directed.
It will be my first care to administer the Government in the true spirit of that
instrument, and to assume no powers not expressly granted or clearly implied in its terms.
The Government of the United States is one of delegated and limited powers, and it is by a
strict adherence to the clearly granted powers and by abstaining from the exercise of
doubtful or unauthorized implied powers that we have the only sure guaranty against the
recurrence of those unfortunate collisions between the Federal and State authorities which
have occasionally so much disturbed the harmony of our system and even threatened the
perpetuity of our glorious Union.
To the States, respectively, or to the
people have been reserved the powers not delegated to the United States by the
Constitution nor prohibited by it to the States. Each State is a complete
sovereignty within the sphere of its reserved powers. The Government of the Union, acting
within the sphere of its delegated authority, is also a complete sovereignty. While the
General Government should abstain from the exercise of authority not clearly delegated to
it, the States should be equally careful that in the maintenance of their rights they do
not overstep the limits of powers reserved to them. One of the most distinguished of my
predecessors attached deserved importance to "the support of the State governments in
all their rights, as the most competent administration for our domestic concerns and the
surest bulwark against antirepublican tendencies," and to the preservation of
the General Government in its whole constitutional vigor, as the sheet anchor of our peace
at home and safety abroad.
To the Government of the United States has been intrusted the exclusive management of
our foreign affairs. Beyond that it wields a few general enumerated powers. It does not
force reform on the States. It leaves individuals, over whom it casts its protecting
influence, entirely free to improve their own condition by the legitimate exercise of all
their mental and physical powers. It is a common protector of each and all the States; of
every man who lives upon our soil, whether of native or foreign birth; of every religious
sect, in their worship of the Almighty according to the dictates of their own conscience;
of every shade of opinion, and the most free inquiry; of every art, trade, and occupation
consistent with the laws of the States. And we rejoice in the general happiness,
prosperity, and advancement of our country, which have been the offspring of freedom, and
not of power.
This most admirable and wisest system of well regulated self-government among men ever
devised by human minds has been tested by its successful operation for more than half a
century, and if preserved from the usurpations of the Federal Government on the one hand
and the exercise by the States of powers not reserved to them on the other, will, I
fervently hope and believe, endure for ages to come and dispense the blessings of civil
and religious liberty to distant generations. To effect objects so dear to every patriot I
shall devote myself with anxious solicitude. It will be my desire to guard against that
most fruitful source of danger to the harmonious action of our system which consists in
substituting the mere discretion and caprice of the Executive or of majorities in the
legislative department of the Government for powers which have been withheld from the
Federal Government by the Constitution. By the theory of our Government majorities rule,
but this right is not an arbitrary or unlimited one. It is a right to be exercised in
subordination to the Constitution and in conformity to it. One great object of the
Constitution was to restrain majorities from oppressing minorities or encroaching upon their
just rights. Minorities have a right to appeal to the Constitution as a shield against such
oppression.
That the blessings of liberty which our Constitution
secures may be enjoyed alike by minorities and majorities, the Executive has been wisely
invested with a qualified veto upon the acts of the Legislature. It is a negative power,
and is conservative in its character. It arrests for the time hasty, inconsiderate, or
unconstitutional legislation, invites reconsideration, and
transfers questions at issue between the legislative and executive departments to the
tribunal of the people. Like all other powers, it is subject to be abused. When
judiciously and properly exercised, the Constitution itself may be saved from
infraction and the rights of all preserved and protected.
The inestimable value of our Federal Union is felt and acknowledged by all. By this
system of united and confederated States our people are permitted collectively and
individually to seek their own happiness in their own way, and the consequences have been
most auspicious. Since the Union was formed the number of the States has increased from
thirteen to twenty-eight; two of these have taken their position as members of the
Confederacy within the last week. Our population has increased from three to twenty
millions. New communities and States are seeking protection under its aegis, and
multitudes from the Old World are flocking to our shores to participate in its blessings.
Beneath its benign sway peace and prosperity prevail. Freed from the burdens and miseries
of war, our trade and intercourse have extended throughout the world. Mind, no longer
tasked in devising means to accomplish or resist schemes of ambition, usurpation, or
conquest, is devoting itself to man's true interests in developing his faculties and
powers and the capacity of nature to minister to his enjoyments. Genius is free to
announce its inventions and discoveries, and the hand is free to accomplish whatever the
head conceives not incompatible with the rights of a fellow being. All distinctions of
birth or of rank have been abolished. All citizens, whether native or adopted, are placed
upon terms of precise equality. All are entitled to equal rights and equal protection. No
union exists between church and state, and perfect freedom of opinion is guaranteed to all
sects and creeds.
These are some of the blessings secured to our happy land by our Federal Union. To
perpetuate them it is our sacred duty to preserve it. Who shall assign limits to the
achievements of free minds and free hands under the protection of this glorious Union? No
treason to mankind since the organization of society would be equal in atrocity to that of
him who would lift his hand to destroy it. He would overthrow the noblest structure of
human wisdom, which protects himself and his fellow-man. He would stop the progress of
free government and involve his country either in anarchy or despotism. He would
extinguish the fire of liberty, which warms and animates the hearts of happy millions and
invites all the nations of the earth to imitate our example. If he say that error and
wrong are committed in the administration of the Government, let him remember that nothing
human can be perfect, and that under no other system of government revealed by Heaven or
devised by man has reason been allowed so free and broad a scope to combat error. Has the
sword of despots proved to be a safer or surer instrument of reform in government than
enlightened reason? Does he expect to find among the ruins of this Union a happier abode
for our swarming millions than they now have under it? Every lover of his country must
shudder at the thought of the possibility of its dissolution, and will be ready to adopt
the patriotic sentiment; Our Federal Union, it must be preserved. To preserve
it the compromises which alone enabled our fathers to form a common
Constitution for the government and protection of so many
States and distinct communities, of such diversified habits, interests, and domestic
institutions, must be sacredly and religiously observed. Any attempt to disturb or destroy
these compromises, being terms of the compact of union, can lead to none other than the
most ruinous and disastrous consequences.
It is a source of deep regret that in some sections of our country misguided persons
have occasionally indulged in schemes and agitations whose object is the destruction of
domestic institutions existing in other sections; institutions which existed at the
adoption of the Constitution and were recognized and
protected by it. All must see that if it were possible for them to be successful in
attaining their object the dissolution of the Union and the consequent destruction of our
happy form of government must speedily follow.
I am happy to believe that at every period of our existence as a nation there has
existed, and continues to exist, among the great mass of our people a devotion to the
Union of the States which will shield and protect it against the moral treason of any who
would seriously contemplate its destruction. To secure a continuance of that devotion the
compromises of the Constitution must not only be
preserved, but sectional jealousies and heartburnings must be discountenanced, and all
should remember that they are members of the same political family, having a common
destiny. To increase the attachment of our people to the Union, our laws should be just.
Any policy which shall tend to favor monopolies or the peculiar interests of sections or
classes must operate to the prejudice of the interest of their fellow- citizens, and
should be avoided. If the compromises of the Constitution be preserved,
if sectional jealousies and heartburnings be discountenanced, if our laws be
just and the Government be practically administered strictly within the limits of power
prescribed to it, we may discard all apprehensions for the safety of the Union.
With these views of the nature, character, and objects of the Government and the value
of the Union, I shall steadily oppose the creation of those institutions and systems which
in their nature tend to pervert it from its legitimate purposes and make it the instrument
of sections, classes, and individuals. We need no national banks or other extraneous
institutions planted around the Government to control or strengthen it in opposition to
the will of its authors. Experience has taught us how unnecessary they are as auxiliaries
of the public authorities; how impotent for good and how powerful for mischief.
Ours was intended to be a plain and frugal government, and I shall regard it to be my
duty to recommend to Congress and, as far as the Executive is concerned, to enforce by all
the means within my power the strictest economy in the expenditure of the public money
which may be compatible with the public interests.
A national debt has become almost an institution of European monarchies. It is viewed
in some of them as an essential prop to existing governments. Melancholy is the condition
of that people whose government can be sustained only by a system which periodically
transfers large amounts from the labor of the many to the coffers of the few. Such a
system is incompatible with the ends for which our republican Government was instituted.
Under a wise policy the debts contracted in our Revolution and during the War of 1812 have
been happily extinguished. By a judicious application of the revenues not required for
other necessary purposes, it is not doubted that the debt which has grown out of the
circumstances of the last few years may be speedily paid off.
I congratulate my fellow-citizens on the entire restoration of the credit of the
General Government of the Union and that of many of the States. Happy would it be for the
indebted States if they were freed from their liabilities, many of which were incautiously
contracted. Although the Government of the Union is neither in a legal nor a moral sense
bound for the debts of the States, and it would be a violation of our compact of union to
assume them, yet we can not but feel a deep interest in seeing all the States meet their
public liabilities and pay off their just debts at the earliest practicable period. That
they will do so as soon as it can be done without imposing too heavy burdens on their
citizens there is no reason to doubt. The sound moral and honorable feeling of the people
of the indebted States can not be questioned, and we are happy to perceive a settled
disposition on their part, as their ability returns after a season of unexampled pecuniary
embarrassment, to pay off all just demands and to acquiesce in any reasonable measures to
accomplish that object.
One of the difficulties which we have had to encounter in the practical administration
of the Government consists in the adjustment of our revenue laws and the levy of the taxes
necessary for the support of Government. In the general proposition that no more money
shall be collected than the necessities of an economical administration shall require all
parties seem to acquiesce. Nor does there seem to be any material difference of opinion as
to the absence of right in the Government to tax one section of country, or one class of
citizens, or one occupation, for the mere profit of another. Justice and sound
policy forbid the Federal Government to foster one branch of industry to the detriment of
another, or to cherish the interests of one portion to the injury of another portion of
our common country. I have heretofore declared to my fellow citizens that, in
my judgment it is the duty of the Government to extend, as far as it may be practicable to
do so, by its revenue laws and all other means within its power, fair and just protection
to all of the great interests of the whole Union, embracing agriculture, manufactures, the
mechanic arts, commerce, and navigation. I have also declared my opinion to be,
in favor of a tariff for revenue; and that, in adjusting the details of
such a tariff I have sanctioned such moderate discriminating duties as would produce the
amount of revenue needed and at the same time afford reasonable incidental protection to
our home industry, and that I was, opposed to a tariff for protection merely,
and not for revenue.
The power, to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts, and excises, was an
indispensable one to be conferred on the Federal Government, which without it would
possess no means of providing for its own support. In executing this power by levying a
tariff of duties for the support of Government, the raising of revenue should be the
object and protection the incident. To reverse this principle and make protection the
object and revenue the incident would be to inflict manifest injustice upon all other than
the protected interests. In levying duties for revenue it is doubtless proper to make such
discriminations within the revenue principle as will afford incidental protection to our
home interests. Within the revenue limit there is a discretion to discriminate; beyond
that limit the rightful exercise of the power is not conceded. The incidental protection
afforded to our home interests by discriminations within the revenue range it is believed
will be ample. In making discriminations all our home interests should as far as
practicable be equally protected. The largest portion of our people are agriculturists.
Others are employed in manufactures, commerce, navigation, and the mechanic arts. They are
all engaged in their respective pursuits and their joint labors constitute the national or
home industry. To tax one branch of this home industry for the benefit of another would be
unjust. No one of these interests can rightfully claim an advantage over the others, or to
be enriched by impoverishing the others. All are equally entitled to the fostering care
and protection of the Government. In exercising a sound discretion in levying
discriminating duties within the limit prescribed, care should be taken that it be done in
a manner not to benefit the wealthy few at the expense of the toiling millions by taxing
lowest the luxuries of life, or articles of superior quality and high price, which can
only be consumed by the wealthy, and highest the necessaries of life, or articles of
coarse quality and low price, which the poor and great mass of our people must consume.
The burdens of government should as far as practicable be distributed justly and equally
among all classes of our population. These general views, long entertained on this
subject, I have deemed it proper to reiterate. It is a subject upon which conflicting
interests of sections and occupations are supposed to exist, and a spirit of mutual
concession and compromise in adjusting its details should be cherished by every part of
our widespread country as the only means of preserving harmony and a cheerful acquiescence
of all in the operation of our revenue laws. Our patriotic citizens in every part of the
Union will readily submit to the payment of such taxes as shall be needed for the support
of their Government, whether in peace or in war, if they are so levied as to distribute
the burdens as equally as possible among them.
The Republic of Texas has made known her desire to come into our Union, to form a part
of our Confederacy and enjoy with us the blessings of liberty secured and guaranteed by
our Constitution. Texas was once a part of our country, was unwisely ceded away to a foreign
power, is now independent, and possesses an undoubted right to dispose of a part or the whole of her territory and to merge her
sovereignty as a separate and independent state in ours. I congratulate my country that by
an act of the late Congress of the United States the assent of this Government has been
given to the reunion, and it only remains for the two countries to agree upon the terms to
consummate an object so important to both.
I regard the question of annexation as belonging exclusively to the United States and
Texas. They are independent powers competent to contract, and foreign nations have no
right to interfere with them or to take exceptions to their reunion. Foreign powers do not
seem to appreciate the true character of our Government. Our Union is a confederation of
independent States, whose policy is peace with each other and all the world. To enlarge
its limits is to extend the dominions of peace over additional territories and increasing
millions. The world has nothing to fear from military ambition in our Government. While
the Chief Magistrate and the popular branch of Congress are elected for short terms by the
suffrages of those millions who must in their own persons bear all the burdens and
miseries of war, our Government can not be otherwise than pacific. Foreign powers should
therefore look on the annexation of Texas to the United States not as the conquest of a
nation seeking to extend her dominions by arms and violence, but as the peaceful
acquisition of a territory once her own, by adding another member to our confederation,
with the consent of that member, thereby diminishing the chances of war and opening to
them new and ever-increasing markets for their products.
To Texas the reunion is important, because the strong protecting arm of our Government
would be extended over her, and the vast resources of her fertile soil and genial climate
would be speedily developed, while the safety of New Orleans and of our whole southwestern
frontier against hostile aggression, as well as the interests of the whole Union, would be
promoted by it.
In the earlier stages of our national existence the opinion prevailed with some that
our system of confederated States could not operate successfully over an extended
territory, and serious objections have at different times been made to the enlargement of
our boundaries. These objections were earnestly urged when we acquired Louisiana.
Experience has shown that they were not well founded. The title of numerous Indian tribes
to vast tracts of country has been extinguished; new States have been admitted into the
Union; new Territories have been created and our jurisdiction and laws extended over them.
As our population has expanded, the Union has been cemented and strengthened. AS our
boundaries have been enlarged and our agricultural population has been spread over a large
surface, our federative system has acquired additional strength and security. It may well
be doubted whether it would not be in greater danger of overthrow if our present
population were confined to the comparatively narrow limits of the original thirteen
States than it is now that they are sparsely settled over a more expanded territory. It is
confidently believed that our system may be safely extended to the utmost bounds of our
territorial limits, and that as it shall be extended the bonds of our Union, so far from
being weakened, will become stronger.
None can fail to see the danger to our safety and future peace if Texas remains an
independent state or becomes an ally or dependency of some foreign nation more powerful
than herself. Is there one among our citizens who would not prefer perpetual peace with
Texas to occasional wars, which so often occur between bordering independent nations? Is
there one who would not prefer free intercourse with her to high duties on all our
products and manufactures which enter her ports or cross her frontiers? Is there one who
would not prefer an unrestricted communication with her citizens to the frontier
obstructions which must occur if she remains out of the Union? Whatever is good or evil in
the local institutions of Texas will remain her own whether annexed to the United States
or not. None of the present States will be responsible for them any more than they are for
the local institutions of each other. They have confederated together for certain
specified objects. Upon the same principle that they would refuse to form a perpetual
union with Texas because of her local institutions our forefathers would have been
prevented from forming our present Union. Perceiving no valid objection to the measure and
many reasons for its adoption vitally affecting the peace, the safety, and the prosperity
of both countries, I shall on the broad principle which formed the basis and produced the
adoption of our Constitution, and not in any narrow spirit
of sectional policy, endeavor by all Constitutional, honorable, and appropriate means to
consummate the expressed will of the people and Government of the United States by the
reannexation of Texas to our Union at the earliest practicable period.
Nor will it become in a less degree my duty to assert and maintain by all
Constitutional means the right of the United States to that portion of our territory which
lies beyond the Rocky Mountains. Our title to the country of the Oregon is clear and
unquestionable, and already are our people preparing to perfect that title by
occupying it with their wives and children. But eighty years ago our population was
confined on the west by the ridge of the Alleghanies. Within that period, within the
lifetime, I might say of some of my hearers, our people, increasing to many millions,
have filled the eastern valley of the Mississippi, adventurously ascended the Missouri to
its headsprings, and are already engaged in establishing the blessings of self-government
in valleys of which the rivers flow to the Pacific. The world beholds the peaceful
triumphs of the industry of our emigrants. To us belongs the duty of protecting them
adequately wherever they may be upon our soil. The jurisdiction of our laws and the
benefits of our republican institutions should be extended over them in the distant
regions which they have selected for their homes. The increasing facilities of intercourse
will easily bring the States, of which the formation in that part of our territory can not
be long delayed, within the sphere of our federative Union. In the meantime every
obligation imposed by treaty or conventional stipulations should be sacredly respected.
In the management of our foreign relations it will be my aim to observe a careful
respect for the rights of other nations, while our own will be the subject of constant
watchfulness. Equal and exact justice should characterize all our intercourse with foreign
countries. All alliances having a tendency to jeopard the welfare and honor of our country
or sacrifice any one of the national interests will be studiously avoided, and yet no
opportunity will be lost to cultivate a favorable understanding with foreign governments
by which our navigation and commerce may be extended and the ample products of our fertile
soil, as well as the manufactures of our skillful artisans, find a ready market and
remunerating prices in foreign countries.
In taking care that the laws be faithfully executed, a strict performance
of duty will be exacted from all public officers. From those officers, especially, who are
charged with the collection and disbursement of the public revenue will prompt and rigid
accountability be required. Any culpable failure or delay on their part to account for the
moneys intrusted to them at the times and in the manner required by law will in every
instance terminate the official connection of such defaulting officer with the Government.
Although in our country the Chief Magistrate must almost of necessity be chosen by a
party and stand pledged to its principles and measures, yet in his official action he
should not be the President of a part only, but of the whole people of the United States.
While he executes the laws with an impartial hand, shrinks from no proper responsibility,
and faithfully carries out in the executive department of the Government the principles
and policy of those who have chosen him, he should not be unmindful that our
fellowcitizens who have differed with him in opinion are entitled to the full and free
exercise of their opinions and judgments, and that the rights of all are entitled to
respect and regard.
Confidently relying upon the aid and assistance of the coordinate departments of the
Government in conducting our public affairs, I enter upon the discharge of the high duties
which have been assigned me by the people, again humbly supplicating that Divine Being who
has watched over and protected our beloved country from its infancy to the present hour to
continue His gracious benedictions upon us, that we may continue to be a prosperous and
happy people.
- James K. Polk, 1845
|