The Censure/Expunging Resolution

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Calhoun and Massachusetts' Daniel Webster, vote the same way and rarely in a losing cause. Jackson's popularity helps enough people get elected so when he calls in a favor, he gets the desired result. The President gets pretty much anything he wants from Congress, but this censure resolution is beyond his purview. This is one political fight he must leave to others. Jackson can indirectly make a difference and bring pressure to bear but can't vote in the Senate; he can exert outward influence but not participate directly.(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});

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For years, Missouri Senator Thomas Hart Benton tries to remove the resolution of censure by the United States Senate against President Andrew Jackson. The Senate, following Jackson's removal of the federal government's deposits, says that all fiscal matters must originate in the House of Representatives, votes 26 to 20 on March 28, 1834 to censure the president for his actions, saying, "Resolved that the President in the late Executive proceedings in relation to the public revenue, has assumed upon himself authority and power not conferred by the Constitution and laws but in derogation of both." Jackson, in a rage, sent a written dissent against it, which the Senate declined to accept.

Three years later, Thomas Hart Benton has the pledged votes to remove the censure and introduces legislation on the floor of the Senate to do so. The opponents of Benton move for adjournment before the vote is taken but are outvoted. Benton, the eyes and ears of the President in the Senate (despite being related to political rival Henry Clay by marriage [cousin of Lucretia Hart Clay]), is like a dog with a bone; he won't let it go. Each session he introduces the expunging resolution but lacks the votes for passage.

The resolution of censure passes the Senate 26 to 20 but things change politically. Seldom do all three of the Great Triumvirate, Kentucky's Henry Clay, South Carolina's John C. Calhoun and Massachusetts' Daniel Webster, vote the same way and rarely in a losing cause. Jackson's popularity helps enough people get elected so when he calls in a favor, he gets the desired result. The President gets pretty much anything he wants from Congress, but this censure resolution is beyond his purview. buy votes for online contest