The crier of Parliament shall stand without the door of the Parliament, and the doorkeeper shall announce to him what he shall proclaim. The King used to send his serjeant at arms to stand amid the great space without the door of Parliament to keep the door, so that none should make assaults or tumults about the doors by which the Parliament might be disturbed under the pain of caption of their bodies, because by right the door of Parliament ought not to be shut but guarded by the doorkeepers and king's serjeants at arms.
January 6, 2021, was the first day in American history that a riot penetrated the United States Capitol while the national legislature was in session. The United States Congress assembled that day to debate the certification of the Electoral College vote in the 2020 Presidential Election.
H.R. 24 (Jan. 11, 2021); U.S. H.R., T
Inflamed by this splash of vitriol, thousands of Trump supporters formed a mob and marched on the Capitol. Some intended to riot for weeks. Others joined the fray on impulse. The assailants hurled themselves over the walls, stormed the halls, and overwhelmed security. Members of Congress fled their floors and hid for their lives. The certification stalled. The authorities eventually restored order, but not before the rabble committed gross indignities against the honor of the national assembly. Two rioters died during the assault. Five Capitol police officers later perished from health complications or suicide. The disturbance shook the nation. The United States Department of Justice brought criminal charges against over 750 rioters across 45 states. The legislature attempted to impeach Trump for incitement but failed due to partisan gridlock.
U.S. Dep’t of Justice,
Elements of populism and nationalism are often at the heart of political disturbances like the Trump Riot. In my view, these elements are not dichotomous, but rather akin to a choral counterpoint in music: harmonically interdependent yet melodically independent. You can visualize them singing along in the same march or broadsiding back and forth against each other across a picket line. These elements frequented the steps of the Palace of Westminster long before they did so at the Capitol. Eighteenth century English demagogues like John Wilkes and Lord George Gordon stood at the helm of mass movements motivated by class-based grievances against propertied elites. Although not every riot at the doors of Parliament was necessarily “populist” or “nationalist,” for those terms are anachronistic, the rhythm of larger eighteenth century metropolitan disturbances once manifested at least aspects of what those terms mean today. Those disturbances often coincided with popular causes, including the petitioning movement, resistance to general warrants, anti-popery, etc. Parliamentary precedents for responding to riots and insurrections at the seat of government in Great Britain provide not only institutional best practices for handling them in the United States today, but also yield insights into the social, economic, and political factors that motivate them in the first place.
On June 30, 2021, the United States House of Representatives approved House Resolution 503, creating the Select Committee to Investigate the January 6 Attack on the United States Capitol (the “Select Committee”). The Select Committee held hearings, conducted discovery, and published a final report.
U.S. H.R. Res. 503 (June 30, 2021);
The mission of the Select Committee was justified. Congress must develop policies for responding to riots on Capitol grounds and preventing them in the future. Although contempt and impeachment proceedings are rare devices, they are indispensable to the legislative power the Select Committee represented. To know that power, we must return to its origins. As we trace the footsteps of King Mob—a famed personification of urban riots well known in the eighteenth century—we shall see that his followers marched to a tempo eerily reminiscent of populist and nationalist rhythms animating contemporary politics. That similarity suggests that far from being exceptional, the Trump Riot was only the most recent explosion of tumultuous elements percolating at the core of the Anglo-American political tradition.
The British Constitution is not a written instrument crafted at a particular point in time. It was induced over a thousand years from both written and unwritten sources of law: natural law, customary law, and positive law. Anglo-Norman custom ripened into more mature forms of law by the thirteenth century. Two are of particular importance here. The first was the common law (
The origin of “contempt power” is traditionally ascribed to two thirteenth century instruments at the core of the English constitutional canon—the Great Charter of 1215 (Magna Carta) and the Statute of Westminster Second of 1285. These instruments prohibited disobedience of the law of the land.
Magna Carta, art. 39; Second Statute of Westminster of 1285, 13 Edw. I c. 39; W W H H
Parliament operated under its own law, the M
The experience of Parliament crystalized the contours of its contempt power gradually over time as usages became precedents, precedents became customs, and customs became tradition. Contempt liability extended to members of the public as well as sitting Members of Parliament (“MPs”). Contemptuous conduct encompassed a range of disruptive behavior including any misconduct in the presence of either House or their committees, misconduct committed by members or officers, obstruction of members or officers in their execution of their duties, obstruction of witnesses or other persons involved in parliamentary matters, disobedience of rules or orders, premature or fraudulent publication of parliamentary proceedings, violations of the privileges of either House, etc.
The contempts of interest here are direct assaults on Parliament itself by riotous mobs.
M
Eric Hobsbawm defined the mob as “the movement of all classes of the urban poor for the achievement of economic or political changes by direction action.”
E
Although the contemporary scholarship of Ronald P. Formisano and Michael Kazin defining populism is impressive, neither sufficiently examines the connection between modern populism and the politics of the urban masses in eighteenth century Britain.
The clamoring of metropolitan mobs over issues of labor, dogma, and creed, whether one characterizes them as populist or nationalist by today's standards, were politically significant but often tainted by violence. The depredations of King Mob during the eighteenth century, especially in the vicinity of Westminster Palace, created a distinct body of precedent supporting the notion that a riot or affray in the presence of the legislature is contempt of the legislature as such. Parliament found that riots or insurrections that threatened the political process were especially dangerous to the national welfare and therefore constituted contempt of the British Constitution itself as well as high crimes and misdemeanors subject to impeachment.
Piratin's and Lucy's Case, 202 H.C. Jo. 91 (Feb. 10, 1947); Carlisle's Case, 41 H.L. Deb. 1024, 1026, 1237–39 (Aug. 9, 1920); Stranger's Case, 86 H.C. Jo. 323, 325 (Feb. 28, 1831); Clifford's Case, 85 H.C. Jo. 461 (May 24, 1830); King v. Lord George Gordon [1781], 99 Eng. Rep. 372, 2 Dougl. 590, 592 (Eng.); Ratcliffe v. Eden [1776], 98 Eng. Rep. 1200, 2 Cowp. 485 (Eng.); Rowe's and Atkinson's Case, 20 H.C. Jo. 185 (Apr. 2, 1723); Purser Rioters’ Case, 13 H.C. Jo. 228, 230–31 (Mar. 27, 1699); Silk Rioters’ Case, 11 H.C. Jo. 667–68 (Jan. 21, 1697); Proceedings Related to the Silk Riot of 1697,
An incident in early April 1733 is exemplary. A mob assembled in different parts of the House of Commons, including the lobby and the Court of Requests, for the purpose of expressing political grievances. On April 12, 1733, the House responded by issuing a resolution condemning the mob's behavior as contemptuous of parliamentary privilege and an assault on the rule of law.
Case of the Tumultuous Crowd, 22 H.C. Jo. 115–116 (Apr. 12, 1733).
These resolutions are representative of the kind of resolutions Parliament promulgated in wake of tumultuous assemblies at its gates throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
Lord George Gordon's Case, 37 H.C. Jo. 902 (June 6, 1780); Case of the Tumultuous Crowd, 31 H.L. 209 (May 17, 1765); Case of Tumultuous Crowd, 22 H.C. Jo. 115–116 (Apr. 12, 1733); Silk Rioters’ Case, 11 H.C. Jo.667–68 (January 21, 1697).
During the Hanoverian period, defeated parties commonly contested the outcome of elections through petitions to Parliament on allegations of election interference or bribery. Petitions, however, could catalyze violent interference with the political process.
F
On March 27, 1699, the House of Commons considered a petition of Royal Navy pursers—warrant officers responsible for handling money onboard naval vessels. The pursers complained of physical abuse by their commanders while they served at sea. An angry mob consisting of seamen and their wives gathered outside the House during session. The House summoned the justices of the peace for Middlesex and Westminster to attend the House, bring constables with them, and disperse the mob. The authorities took one James Gardener into custody for inciting a riot by uttering insolent words. Gardener was promptly convicted and committed to the Gatehouse for his contempt. This is the earliest precedent I found confirming contempt liability lies for inciting a disturbance at the seat of government.
Purser Rioters’ Case, 13 H.C. Jo. 228, 230–31 (Mar. 27, 1699).
Angry sailors would find their way back to Westminster in the course of the following century. They faced difficulties with unemployment and wage rates following the end of the Seven Years War. In May 1768, for example, somewhere between five and fifteen thousand of them presented a petition to Parliament conveying their grievances. After they did so, however, they simply gave three cheers and dispersed. I am not aware of any historian who would label these disturbances as incidents of “populism” per se. In fact, most petition movements in the eighteenth century, whether they involved riots or not, appear to be simply trade lobbying by other means. The next two disturbances, in my view, however, did savor of populism and nationalism, were of a much greater magnitude, and left an indelible mark on the political landscape.
G
There was no figure in the annals of Hanoverian London whose personality was more flamboyant or whose politics were more electrifying than John Wilkes. Wilkes was born to a wealthy distiller in London on October 17, 1725. He married well, served as High Sheriff of Buckinghamshire in 1754, and was elected as MP for Aylesbury in 1757. He was a notorious libertine with an earthly appetite. He was, for example, a member of the Hellfire Club, a secret society that carried out orgiastic rituals at Medmenham Abbey, and filled his belly at the Sublime Society of Beefsteaks in Covent Garden. Edmund Burke characterized him as a “lively agreeable man, but of no prudence and no principle.” Benjamin Franklin called him “an outlaw and exile of bad personal character, not worth a farthing.” In 1762, he cofounded an opposition paper, R
Controversy did not hold off for long. On April 23, 1763, John Wilkes’ Case [1763], 19 Howell's St. Tr. 981, 990, 993 (1816); R
The Court of Common Pleas granted a writ of habeas corpus and called Wilkes to the bar on May 3. Wilkes played to the crowd in court, declaring that “the liberty of an Englishman should ‘not be sported away with impunity.’”
R Definitive Treaty of Peace Between Great Britain, France and Spain (1763),
“Wilkes and Liberty” was a genius slogan and a populist one by today's standards. It evoked patriotic tropes expressed in songs like “The Roast Beef of Old England.” It embodied popular political totems like Magna Charta, Alfred the Great, “the true born Englishman,” etc. It reflected Wilkes’ rhetoric of liberty that addressed the people's passion for English constitutionalism, fervor for fundamental freedoms, and resistance to arbitrary power. It played upon a resentment and suspicion against propertied elites harbored by the working classes during the eighteenth century that fueled the force of opposition to the government. Wilkes’ wit and charisma won him a large following as a favored Radical in those demographics. He manipulated them with the help of external interests of wealthier merchants, manufacturers, and tradesmen to fulfill his own political ambitions much like the demagogues of today.
Wilkes also owed his success to his penchant for political playfulness, and attracted complimentary slogans like “Beef and Liberty,” no doubt inspired by the “sublime society” of which he was a member. That he was an ugly, witty, devious rake made him even more glamorous. He refused to play the lamb and struck back hard against the government for subjecting him to effectively what constituted a political trial by ordeal. He filed a civil suit and recouped £2,900 in damages for false imprisonment. Despite the technicality of the Court's reasoning, the mob believed that the judgment vindicated their disapproval of general warrants. Wilkes was their man, a mirror for both reflecting and projecting their contempt for the government.
R
Wilkes did not surrender his pen. He helped to publish an obscene poem parodying Alexander Pope's “Essay on Man,” entitled “Essay on Woman,” later that year. Both Houses of Parliament balked at the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas. Incensed by Wilkes’ continuing insolence, they debated a resolution to exclude libelous conduct from the protection of the parliamentary privilege from arrest when they resumed session on November 15, 1763. Members of the House of Lords found the “Essay on Woman,” in particular, to be a “most scandalous, obscene, and impious libel,” and possibly grounds for expulsion. John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich, delivered the complaint to the House of Lords seeking Wilkes’ expulsion on November 16, 1763. As a fellow member of the Hellfire Club, Montagu was by no means disinterested. He sought retaliation for a prank Wilkes played on him during a séance at one of their meetings.
Proceedings in the Lords Against Mr. Wilkes for Publishing the Essay on Woman (Nov. 15, 17, 1763; Dec. 14, 1763; Jan. 24, 1764),
On November 24, the House of Commons approved the following resolution by a vote of 258 to 133: “That Privilege of Parliament does not extend to the case of writing and publishing seditious Libels, nor ought to be allowed to obstruct the ordinary course of the laws, in the speedy and effectual prosecution of so heinous and dangerous an offence.” William Pitt the Elder, 1st Earl of Chatham, spoke out strongly against this retreat of privilege. “This proposed sacrifice of privilege,” he said, “was putting every member of parliament, who did not vote with the minister, under a perpetual terror of imprisonment.” Lord Richard Grenville-Temple, 2nd Earl Temple, led a similar resistance in the upper chamber. But all was for naught. The House of Lords did not agree with the Great Commoner or Grenville-Temple. It passed a concurring resolution on November 29 supporting the Commons instead. Expulsion proceedings began on December 9. Wilkes fled to Paris, so he was tried The Lords’ Report of Precedents and Punishments for Breaches of Privilege and Contempts of Their House (Mar. 8, 1764),
Pressured by his debts, Wilkes was forced to return to England in 1768. He stood for election to Parliament in Middlesex and won. In the interim, Sir John Pratt, Lord Chief Justice of the Court of King's Bench, ruled that general warrants were illegal.
Entick v. Carrington [1765], 19 Howell's St. Tr. 1029 (1816).
The next day, Parliament opened session. The thirteenth assembly was inaugurated by a demonstration at King's Bench prison and later at St. George's Fields by as many as forty thousand people. The Wilkites grew restless as the day went on. Justice Samuel Gillam, a magistrate of Surrey, eventually read the Riot Act. The feverish mass, undeterred, eventually compelled the soldiers to open fire. Five or six people in the crowd were killed and fifteen were wounded, casualties for whom the whole ordeal was later named “The St. George's Field Massacre.” Disorder spread to other parts of the capital, including the seat of government itself. A riot formed in Old Palace Yard and outside of the House of Lords. One John Biggs was later found criminally liable for disturbing the peace.
R
Though the riots were violent and ugly, Wilkes gained even greater political momentum from the power asymmetry between the military and the mob. The troops who fired on the crowd belonged to a Scottish regiment, doubly detested by Londoners both as soldiers and as foreigners (Celts). The coroner returned a guilty verdict for intentional homicide against a soldier who shot a boy named Allen. On May 16, both Houses of Parliament gave thanks to the Lord Mayor for suppressing the riots notwithstanding the civilian casualties sustained. A standing order enacted during the previous Parliament refusing admission to any spectators in the gallery of the House of Commons continued in force.
King v. Wilkes [1770], 98 Eng. Rep. 327, 353, 4 Burr. 2527, 2574.
On November 14, 1768, the House of Commons initiated expulsion proceedings against Wilkes for the second time and eventually succeeded in removing him on February 3 of the following year. Undaunted, Wilkes stood for reelection three more times—in February, March, and April—the so-called “Middlesex Election Affair of 1769.” Each time, the “working classes” of Middlesex championed their hero. Each time his enemies sought to void the result. Wilkes’ position was that since he submitted to criminal judgment, he should not be doubly punished for his prior conduct by losing his (new) seats as well. Those who took Wilkes’ side in the House also emphasized that expulsion for seditious libel was unprecedented. “Let him who has not sinned cast the first stone” was another sentiment presented in favor of Wilkes. If this new precedent was allowed, so the argument went, Parliament would slide down a slippery slope of constant dissolution on account of the improprieties of its members. “The arguments for his expulsion were founded on the badness of the man, and the impropriety of suffering such a one to be part of the legislature.”
Proceedings in the Commons on the Expulsion of Mr. Wilkes (Feb. 2, 1769), R
Wilkes’ supporters rioted once again, and on April 29, in response to the judgment of the House of Lords, submitted a petition for him to be readmitted to the Commons. Parliament considered the petition on May 8 but nevertheless resolved by a vote of 221 to 152 that Colonel Luttrell, Wilkes’ latest opponent, was duly elected. Though Wilkes’ gambit to sit in Parliament was initially frustrated, his political career survived. He sat in the House of Commons from 1774 to 1790, served as Lord Mayor of London from 1774 to 1775, and held the position of Chamberlain of the City of London from 1779 until his death in 1797. His crusade against general warrants, campaign for free speech, and rhetoric of liberty, confirm his place as one of the greatest demagogues of all time. He is, in my estimation, the first father of modern populism.
Akin to an old adage about the American Civil War, one could rightly ask whether the Gordon Riots were the last carnivalesque revolt, or the first industrial insurrection. The Gordon Riots are in fact the closest analogy to the Trump Riot and therefore require a more extensive discussion. The ostensible cause of the Gordon Riots was contempt for papal supremacy. The coals of religious tension between protestant and Catholic smoldered long after the fires of the English Civil War burned out. During the years when Protestants were in power, Parliament passed two statutes to thwart the spread of “Popery.” The Jesuits Act of 1584 dictated that any Roman Catholic priest that did not leave the Kingdom within forty days would be punished for high treason unless he swore an oath to obey Queen Elizabeth I.
An Act Against Jesuits, Seminary Priests, and Such Other Like Disobedient Persons of 1584, 27 Eliz. 1, c. 2. An Act for the Further Preventing the Growth of Popery of 1698, 11 Will. III c. 4.
The Papists Act of 1778 accomplished greater toleration by allowing Roman Catholics to serve in the military and purchase land if they swore an oath of allegiance. That legislation, however, unleashed widespread disapproval. The land was rife with anti-popery. A popular conspiracy even touted that there were twenty-thousand Jesuits hidden in underground tunnels by the Thames waiting for an order from the Holy See to flood the city of London in a manner reminiscent of the tactic used by Cyrus the Great to seize Babylon.
He was a fanatic for the constitution and saw toleration as an existential threat to its existence. The Catholic question became his favorite cause, and so he formed the Protestant Association, an ecumenical arrangement of Anglican and dissenting middle class subjects, for the purposes of seeking the repeal of the Papists Act of 1778. He was brash and base. He insulted the King while pleading his aversion to Catholic toleration in a private audience. He insulted the courts. “The Judges,” he said, “are the mirrors by which the King's image is reflected.” His character was a foul portent of the degradations to come in a more decadent age.
H
On June 2, 1780, Gordon marched at the head of a crowd 60,000 strong to Parliament to submit a formal petition to repeal the Papists Act of 1778. Philip Jennings Clerke, a bystander, later remarked that the crowd was composed of “ King v. Lord George Gordon (1781), 21 Howell's St. Tr. 485, 578 (T.B. Howell ed. 1816) (emphasis added).
The Commons considered Gordon's petition but divided; when it came to a vote, the “Yeas” could not be counted because some of the mob gathered in the lobby to disturb the proceedings. The Serjeant-at-Arms informed the House that he could not lift the siege. Field Marshal Henry Seymour Conway grew irate with the ordeal and talked of drawing swords with the horde outside like the three hundred Spartans at Thermopylae. “I am a military man and I shall protect the freedom of debate with my sword,” he said in a loud voice, “Do not imagine that we will be intimidated by a rabble. The entry into the House is a narrow one. Reflect that men of honour may defend this pass.”
As quoted in H
On June 6, 1780, the Commons briefly reassembled and appointed a committee to inquire into the causes of the riot that penetrated the lobby. But the mob descended on Parliament once again and compelled the Commons to adjourn. “The phrase Read the Riot Act” originates form the requirement that magistrates in these times read the Riot Act of 1714 out loud. If the mob did not disperse within the hour its members were guilty of a felony punishable by death. The Riot Act was read in this instance but to no avail. The mob moved on to assault Newgate, Old Bailey, Clerkenwell, Bridewell, and the New Prison, and set their captives free. It sacked the home of William Murray, 1st Earl of Mansfield, Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench. The following day—“Black Wednesday”—the mob continued to destroy Roman Catholic businesses and residences, Fleet Prison, King's Bench Prison, the New Gaol, the Southwark and the Surrey Houses of Correction, and the Marshalsea debtor's prison. It was finally repulsed when it attempted to storm the Bank of England. To their credit, both Lord George Gordon and John Wilkes took up arms in defense of the Old Lady.
An Act for Preventing Tumults and Riotous Assemblies, and for the More Speedy and Effectual Punishing the Rioters of 1714, 1 Geo. 1, c. 5; Lord Gordon's Case, 37 H.C. Jo. 902–03 (June 6, 1780); George Rudé,
On June 8, 1780, George III issued a proclamation that called in the army. Ten thousand troops swept clean the streets of London. Martial power restored civil order. The most common crimes committed by the rioters were destruction of movable objects and setting bonfires in the streets, not looting or theft. That is not to say that there was not a great loss of property. The damage inflicted on public buildings is estimated at £30,000. The cost to human life was even more tragic. The death toll stood at 458 civilians and 210 soldiers, with scores more maimed and wounded. There was a righteous demand for a reckoning. Yet some urged caution. The dialogue between Edmund Burke and Frederick North, 2nd Earl of Guilford, resembled the tension between George Washington and Alexander Hamilton in handling the Whiskey Rebellion fourteen years later: the former feared inciting more violence by over-playing the government's hand; the latter desired to stamp out the fire of insurrection so that it should never light again.
The Gordon Riots proceedings in the Old Bailey expressed a conservative reflex to purge disorder through discipline and punishment. Out of the 450 people who were arrested for riot-related crimes, 160 appeared for trial. Of those that appeared, sixty-two were given death sentences (though only twenty-five were ultimately hanged), twelve were given terms of imprisonment ranging from one month to five years, and one was privately whipped. Another eighty-five arrestees were found not guilty. The executions were cathartic.
On June 19, 1780, the Commons convened and was informed that the King would prosecute the Mad Scotchman for high treason. After being summoned to hear a royal address in the House of Lords, the Commons made a resolution in thanks. The Commons also drew up a formal response to King, thanking him again for the measures he implemented as “the Guardian of the Public Safety, […] in the Hour of extreme and imminent Necessity, for the immediate and effectual Suppression of those rebellious Insurrections.” Lord George Gordon's petition was overwhelmingly voted down. His jury ultimately found him Lord George Gordon's Case, 37 H.C. Jo. 903–910 (June 19, 1780); King v. Lord George Gordon, 21 St. Tr. 485, 647–48; R
The Gordon Riots were a powerful inflection point in British history. The real impetus, in my view, was not so much puritanical bigotry as plebeian
Sometimes a pinch of humor could dispel a rioter's rage. A mob raised its fists, cried the refrain of “No Popery,” and prepared to assault the home of an Italian entertainer named Grimaldi for refusing to respond in kind. But the performer cleverly put his head out of the second story window, made comical grimaces, and screamed “Genteelmen in dis hose dere be no religion at all!” The mob laughed, gave him three cheers, and moved on to the next victim. That episode nearly says it all so far as the true religious “convictions” of the rioters were concerned.
King Mob exploited other tribal differences, but often for similarly base motives that had nothing to do with theology. Jews scrawled “This house is a true Protestant” on their doors so that the Spirit of Democracy would pass overhead without inflicting punishment. King Mob made his rounds through the city with the efficiency of a slum lord well versed in the art of calling to collect. Christopher Hibbert recounts that rioters left notes on the doors of each home he visited for future reference: O—meant the “contribution” was poor; Ŏ—meant a “contribution” was refused so the house should be destroyed; ✓—meant the “contribution” was so generous a second loot might be worthwhile; and ⊙⊙ meant that there was a woman in the house. King Mob was therefore apparently rapacious in more ways than one.
The Protestant Association was, by and large, a body made up of people belonging to the working classes, and, like so many associations similarly composed, suffered from bad leadership, lost sight of its core values, and allowed baser elements to corrupt its energy into a maelstrom of destruction. E.P. Thompson broke down the petition march into three phases encompassing a process of cascading degradation from a revolutionary crowd consisting of well-behaved tradesmen—to a mob reminiscent of the Wilkite era engaged in “licensed spontaneity”—to an unprecedented and unlicensed insurrection beyond the pale of even what eighteenth century standards would tolerate in terms of “activism by other means.”
There is a difference of opinion among the historians of the period about the extent to which the insurrectionary phase of the petition was the fault of members of the working classes vis-à-vis members of the London criminal underbelly. E.P. Thompson correctly characterizes that difference as depending upon the source of information given primacy. George Rudé gives priority to criminal records yielding statistical evidence that the rioters were indeed members of the working classes, therefore, this was an insurrection of “sober workmen.” Christopher Hibbert and J. Paul Castro emphasize eyewitness accounts and anecdotal evidence indicating that the insurrectionaries were lowlifes, thugs, criminals, and prostitutes. Both sources are imperfect. The criminal data from that time is limited, incomplete, and not necessarily representative. Anecdotal evidence and eyewitness accounts notoriously have their own problems: prejudice, issues with recollection, etc. The exact composition of the rioters is impossible to tell, but from my viewpoint, the evidence of their criminal character is overwhelming—to the extent tradesmen were involved, it seems that they were the converse of the kind observed in the initial march of the Protestant Association—tradesmen of the “lesser sort.”
The disaffection of the rioters for the British Empire put symbols of nationalism like the Bank of England right in their crosshairs. Just as the Irish day-laborers of Moorfields and Spitalfields were not necessarily targeted for their Roman Catholicism as such, but as a symbol of economic competition, the Roman Catholic Church itself was an institutional target not simply on its own terms, but for its association with the wild exploits of John Bull. The motives for tolerance bills were not pure; they were designed to swell the ranks of armies engaged in conflicts in North America and elsewhere, wars that the middling and lower classes simply did not want. Many detested Britain's services as a “nurse of liberty throughout the world” and the cultural feedback that colonial émigrés and colonized peoples returned to the homeland.
I take the view that the Gordon Riots manifested populist and nationalist elements simultaneously. The sentiments of “Don’t tread on me” and “My nation first” often run together. This is because populism and nationalism are, in my view, paradoxically intertwined, not dichotomous. As Dana Rabin persuasively demonstrated in her work on the Gordon Riots, nationalism and imperialism are cosmopolitan forces. Empire was made by the elite, for the elite. Yet the incidental effect of empire was to introduce demographic change through conquest, colonization, and commerce. Cosmopolitan chauvinism was, ironically, a force for diversity and inclusion. The law of nature is that great nations, like great heat, expand. Populists wanted their nation to be great; yet they desired to conserve its identity by consolidating its culture and retracting its foreign entanglements. Horace Walpole recognized the costs of empire were not merely economic or martial, but also cultural and constitutional.
In the final analysis, neither the Protestant Association nor Protestantism as a whole can be blamed. The riot was not the work of the nucleus of the petition movement. Perhaps the most striking fact of this whole episode is that out of the 44,000 signatories to Lord George Gordon petition, not a single one was arrested, let alone tried and convicted, for any crime related to the riots. There is no evidence of a coordinated plan of action from any source, George Rudé concluded, such as that imagined by Charles Dickens in
Let it not be supposed that what transpired was squarely the fault of the Tories or the Whigs. Neither the leaders of the government nor the opposition were swayed by Lord George Gordon. Consider the example of Edmund Burke, that venerable champion of conservatism, who put an end to his own friendly relations with the “Mad Scotchman.” Lord Gordon himself wrote that Burke “never once shewed the smallest sign of that acquaintance or familiarity which had formerly subsisted between us for some years.’” Like any decent student of the classical tradition, Burke recognized that the end of friendship was
We might wonder why the Gordon Riots did not send St. James's Palace into a death spiral as the French Revolution did for Versailles. Britain supposedly had a proletariat too, after all, didn’t it? The answer, funnily enough, might be that Britain had better elites. The dexterity of the British Constitution and the character of its best men, though far from perfect, navigated the crisis to a swift resolution. The casualties inflicted by the army could have been far higher if the troops had not been so hesitant to fire on civilians. Even in the heat of the greatest terror to antagonize London since the Great Fire of 1666, leading statesmen kept an ever-watchful eye on the civil liberties of their fellow subjects. Burke urged against “establishing a military on the ruins of the civil government,” for the London he saw filled with troops looked more like “Paris, Berlin or Petersburg then the capital of government by law.” The Anglo-Saxon political sensibility suffered neither the stamping Prussian jackboot nor the Napoleonic whiff of grapeshot. In insurrections as in government, Great Britain was more moderate than Europe.
Over the centuries the scope, mode, and policy of the
The House of Commons resolved in 1978 that, going forward, it would exercise its contempt power as sparingly as possible and only when satisfied that doing so is necessary to provide reasonable protection for its members, officers, and processes.
E Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act of 2011, Part 3, ss 142–149; Civil Contingencies Act of 2004, c. 36; Representation of the People Act of 1983, c. 2, ss 65–67; Metropolitan Police Act of 1839, 2 & 3 Vict. c. 47, s. 52.
No Act of Parliament, resolution of either House, or judicial decision of any court of common law explicitly abrogated Parliament's power to punish riotous mobs interfering with its proceedings or elections through contempt proceedings.
E Public Order Act of 1986, c. 64; Treason Act of 1351, 25 Edw. 3, c. 2, s. 5.
The United States Constitution establishes a republican system of government in seven concise articles. A portion of it is yet unwritten, for as the pre-Socratic philosophers well observed in the
Article I establishes the legislative branch of government. Several sections relate to the contempt power of Congress. Article I, Sections 2 and 3, in conjunction with Article II, Section 4, outline the congressional impeachment process: the House of Representatives investigates and charges impeachable offenses; the Senate then sits as a Court of Impeachment and tries those charges. Article I, Section 5 provides that each House is to be the judge of its own elections, returns, and qualifications of its own members; moreover, each House can punish its own members and expel them by a two-thirds majority. Article I, Section 6 notes that both Houses enjoy parliamentary privileges. Two are explicitly enumerated: freedom from arrest while attending session and freedom of speech and debate. There are many privileges incidental to Section 6 as well.
Since the Founding, the national legislature relied on the
Contempt proceedings are
A congressional committee has a variety of tools for enforcing its prerogatives. The Senate has authority, by rule, to pursue the enforcement of its orders and subpoenas through a civil action in federal court. Though the House of Representatives lacks a comparable rule, it presumably has the same authority under its inherent power.
Sen. R. XXIX.5. U.S. C
The danger of politically motivated riots directly assaulting the coordinate branches of government is well precedented. In 1689, for example, a demagogue by the name of John Coode spread a rumor in the Province of Maryland that Catholic elites were conspiring with the Indians to exterminate the Protestant majority. He led an insurrection to the doors of the State House and overthrew the provincial government.
The Narrative of Colonel Henry Darnall, 8 Md. Arch. 155, 156 (Dec. 31, 1689);
The Trump Riot provides an excellent illustration of the fact that even distinguished veterans are capable of perfidious behavior. The same was true at the birth of the Republic. On December 14, 1782, George Washington informed Joseph Jones by letter that “the temper of the Army is much soured, and has become more irritable than at any period since the commencement of the War.”
George Washington, 24 Cont. Cong. Jo. 399–401 (June 17, 1783).
The mutineers bivouacked in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Both Congress and the Supreme Executive Council of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania were located in Philadelphia at the Pennsylvania State House, a building that later came to be known as Independence Hall. The serpent of disorder slithered their way, but Congress was helpless because it had no direct control over the military under the Articles of Confederation. It was entirely dependent on state militias for protection. No militia was on call to quickly suppress the threat. Delegate John Dickinson (Pennsylvania) explained that “without some outrages on persons or property, the militia could not be relied on.
Eighty armed mutineers arrived in Philadelphia on the night of June 20 and merged with local soldiers stationed at the city barracks. The mob, now totaling around 500 men, surrounded the State House the next day, and blocked the door, preventing the members of the Congress of Confederation from leaving. The situation brought a new meaning to the term “House arrest.” Although they demonstrated no initial willingness to engage in violence, the mob uttered offensive language, recklessly pointed their muskets at the windows, and drank to “hasty excesses” from nearby “tippling houses.” Bayonets were fixed. Moods were hot. The mob sent a note to the session, demanding that Congress appoint officers to represent their grievances since the mutineers’ own officers had strong enough mettle to avoid the ruckus.
25 Cont. Cong. Jo. 973 (June 21, 1783); 20 Letters of Delegates to Congress 349–350 (June 21, 1783).
Constance McLaughlin Green downplays the danger of the mutiny in her classic history of the capital.
25 Cont. Cong. Jo. 974 (June 21, 1783). 20 Letters of Delegates to Congress 349–350 (June 21, 1783). 20 Letters of Delegates to Congress 350–52 (June 21, 1783).
On June 21, Oliver Ellsworth (Connecticut) and Alexander Hamilton conferred with the Supreme Executive Council. Congress reported to the Council “[t]hat though they had declined a specification of the measures which they would deem effectual, it was their sense, that a number of the militia should be immediately called out, sufficient to suppress the revolt.” The Council's reply was infuriating. The local militia was unwilling to intervene until someone was shot or the State House was torched. These militia were fellow Pennsylvanians. They were no more disposed to fire on their own countrymen than the British regulars were in the Gordon Riots three years earlier. The glory of relieving the legislators from their misery instead fell to Cincinnatus.
Upon receiving word of the mutiny on June 24, President George Washington dispatched 1,500 soldiers under the command of Generals William Heath and Robert Howe. Hamilton proposed that this force assume a constabulary role—to discover, disarm, and detain anyone who participated in the mutiny. The mutiny actually disbanded before the troops arrived. This was in part because Congress managed to remove itself (with indignation) to Princeton, New Jersey. The removal succeeded for two reasons. First, Benjamin Rush, a fellow Pennsylvanian, skillfully negotiated with the mutineers about their grievances. Second, the storm ran its course. The mutineers had enough and went home. The troops sent by President Washington were discharged on August 21.
24 Cont. Cong. Jo. 517–18 & n. 1 (Aug. 21, 1783); 24 Cont. Cong. Jo. 411–21 (July 1, 1783); 24 Cont. Cong. Jo. 411 & n.1 (June 30, 1783); Bowling,
The Council maintained that it was just as dishonored as Congress. But that was not true.
24 Cont. Cong. Jo. 423–33 (July 15, 1783); 24 Cont. Cong. Jo. 425 (July 4, 1783); 24 Cont. Cong. Jo. 423–25 (July 2, 1783). 24 Cont. Cong. Jo. 452–53 (July 28, 1783). 24 Cont. Cong. Jo. 540–41 & n.1 (Sept. 9, 1783); 24 Cont. Cong. Jo. 535 (Sept. 4, 1783); 24 Cont. Cong. Jo. 533 & n.1 (Sept. 2, 1783); Bowling,
Although the offenses committed by the mutineers were prosecuted under military justice, not civil justice or any inherent authority of the Confederation Congress, I believe they were in the genre of contempt and proper crimes at common law. Hamilton was livid with Pennsylvania's “weak and disgusting position,” during the mutiny. “New governments emerging out of a revolution, are naturally deficient in authority,” he later reflected, “This observation applies with peculiar force to the government of the union; the constitutional imbecility of which must be apparent to every man of reflection.”
The trauma of the Philadelphia Mutiny moved Congress to explore a deeper question: How could it better protect itself from riots, tumults, and insurrections in the future? It appointed a committee to consider defining a jurisdiction where the national legislature could reside, and thereby exercise full control over its own security.
24 Cont. Cong. Jo. 428 & n.1 (July 8, 1783).
The next major episode occurred at the peak of the Anti-Mason movement. It all started in 1826, when one William Morgan, a printer from Batavia, New York, published a piece attacking the Free-Masons and then disappeared. The public raised its eyebrows. Did the Masonic Order kidnap Morgan, or worse? The incident stirred up public suspicions. At the turn of the century, there were eleven grand Masonic lodges and 16,000 members across the country. The Freemasons were indeed a powerful organization, with important connections in politics and the press.
Over the next five years, legal proceedings related to Morgan's disappearance resulted in several indictments. These proceedings were tainted by the fact that Masonic witnesses refused to appear; moreover, several jurors and judges in these cases were Masons themselves. It came to light that the Masons did indeed abduct Morgan and (probably) murdered him. The public also learned that Eli Bruce, Sheriff for Niagara County, New York, was a Mason and not only participated in the abduction, but packed juries to frustrate its investigation and prosecution. Bruce and two others were ultimately convicted of kidnapping in 1828.
The Morgan affair inflamed the anxiety of constituencies around the country. The Masons were widely perceived to be a danger to the American family because of their machinations to suppress public criticism, their grip on positions of power and influence, their exclusion of women, and their reputation for intemperance. As a result, a faction known as the “Anti-Masons” formed on planks that appealed to many voters among the working classes: an evangelical perspective on family values, temperance, and theological orthodoxy, plus a contempt for Masonic-Democratic elites.
Anti-Mason fervor, the “Blessed Spirit,” found a warm political reception in the Keystone State. The Pennsylvania House of Representatives began investigating the Masonic order across the state in 1835. Anti-Masonic candidate Joseph Ritner was elected Governor. His “humble farmer” image and antipathy for Masonic domination of elite public offices were agreeable to populist sentiments animating the electorate. Pennsylvania adopted a new constitution in 1838 curbing the Governor's appointment power by, among other things, requiring the Senate to confirm judicial nominations. Ritner was re-nominated that same year and supported by a coalition of the Whigs and Anti-Masons. The Democrats put up a desperate fight. The final tally showed that the Democratic candidate, David R. Porter, was the winner by a mere 5,540 votes. The Blessed Spirit was reduced but not retired.
The struggle for the executive was finished. But the struggle for the legislature had just begun. The Fall election of 1838 for the Pennsylvania General Assembly was tight. The Democrats and Whig/Anti-Mason coalition contested eight seats in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives. The Whig/Anti-Mason coalition needed those seats to win a majority in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives. They already won a majority in the Senate. Those seats therefore not only represented control of the General Assembly, but possession of a seat in the United States Senate for their faction as well. During the course of those contested elections, the Democrats threw out all the votes from the Northern Liberties precinct of Philadelphia, a working-class district, on the grounds of election fraud.
Egle & Ritner,
On December 4, 1838, the Pennsylvania House of Representatives came to order. There were one hundred representatives. The Democrats held forty-eight seats in other quarters besides the eight contested in Philadelphia. The Anti-Masons and Whigs held forty-four seats. The contest for the eight seats from Philadelphia prevented the constitution of a lawful quorum, a condition precedent for electing a Speaker of the House. Both factions were so incensed by each other that they began electing
The rancor in the Pennsylvania Senate was even worse. The lobbies in the rear of the upper chamber began to fill with the mob of “concerned citizens” that trained in from Philadelphia. Charles B. Penrose (Anti-Mason, Philadelphia) presided as Speaker. Two members of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives were present on the floor of the Senate at that time: Thaddeus Stevens (Anti-Mason, Adams County) and Thomas H. Burrowes (Anti-Mason, Lancaster County). Representative Burrowes also served as the Secretary of the Commonwealth; in the past he served on the Anti-Mason State Committee as well. He was given the task of reading the returns for the contested elections.
Senator Charles Brown (Anti-Mason, Philadelphia) interrupted Burrowes, protested that one of the returns was false, and presented a substitute document that he claimed was the “true” return. This created an uproar in the gallery. “The scene now became one of fearful confusion, disorder, and terror. . . .”
Egle & Ritner,
Men who constructed and maintained public works supported by the Governor's policy, like canals and railroads, seized the state arsenal in anticipation of a fight on behalf of their patron. William Cochran, Sheriff of Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, issued a counter-proclamation, asserting that there was no disorder and that the Governor's proclamation was unnecessary. The next day, Governor Ritner ordered Major-General Robert Patterson of the First Division of the Pennsylvania Militia based in Philadelphia to “call out from your command force sufficient to quell this insurrection and march them immediately to the seat of government.”
Governor Ritner appealed to President Martin Van Buren for aid. He contended that the federal government had an obligation to support him because several federal officers lead the insurrection. President Van Buren did not bother to respond personally; rather, he elected the Secretary of War, Joel R. Poinsett, to serve as his mouthpiece. The message was eerily reminiscent of the Pennsylvanian Council's response to the Congress of the Confederation during the mutiny of 1783: There would be no intervention unless it became impossible for the Pennsylvania legislature to reconvene. A dark irony of history indeed. One can imagine Hamilton turning over in his grave. Unsatisfied, Governor Ritner requisitioned Major-General Alexander of the Eleventh Division of the Pennsylvania State Militia, to support him. General Alexander, a staunch Whig, marched out on December 15 and joined the First Division in Harrisburg.
There was no additional violence or insurrectionary activity following the riot on December 4. The only martial arrest, ironically, seems to have stemmed from military rather than civilian sources. The state militias only compounded the political strain rather than relieving it. The city received an influx of soldiers with nothing to do, no enemy to fight. King Mob was nowhere in sight. So, the bored troops enjoyed their time in Harrisburg as “a mere frolic.” The deadlock in the state legislature was eventually broken by compromise. On December 17, three lawfully elected Whig Representatives from Union County defected from the Anti-Masons and joined “Hopkins’ House.” On December 27, a resolution was passed 17 to 16 in the Senate recognizing that this advantage of three votes gave the Democrats a quorum, rendering the House properly constituted and ready to proceed with business. Both Houses reconciled. David R. Porter was officially declared the lawfully elected Governor.
The riot of December 4, in my view, constituted a direct contempt of the Pennsylvania legislature because it occurred on the grounds of the State House itself. The mob in the gallery and the lobbies of the Pennsylvania Senate certainly committed direct contempt of that House by suspending election proceedings and driving public servants out of the windows. Some of the ruffians committed offenses that could be prosecuted by the Pennsylvania executive at common law as well. The federal government could have anticipated and planned for the eventuality of a similar disturbance at the Capitol. But alas, Congress ignored the cry of Pennsylvania, the perennial canary in the coal mine of political unrest. The Buckshot War is nevertheless helpful towards informing the posture of Congress towards direct assaults and interferences with its elections. Although the Buckshot War was not an instance of contempt of Congress per se, it naturally informs congressional posture,
The Age of Jackson was named for one of, if not the greatest, populist personages in American history. In word, President Andrew Jackson took political opposition personally and always wore his heart on his sleeve. In deed, however, President Jackson never directly incited mob violence. He actively suppressed riots of every kind during his tenure, perhaps better than any president before the Civil War. It was the incidental effect of President Jackson's fiery words and brash actions that gave him the veneer of a rabble-rousing kingpin. “[T]he central charge of the Whigs by 1835,” David Grimsted recounts, “was that ‘King Andrew,’ very like that of ‘King Mob,’ was ‘marked by violence, obstinacy, and daring disregard’ for any legal restraints on ‘his violent impulses.’” These tendencies were well on display throughout his administration.
The issue at the heart of the so-called Bank War, which defined the Age of Jackson, was whether the Second Bank of the United States should be dissolved. The national bank was the darling of Alexander Hamilton, the nationalist of his generation. The national republican wing of the Whig Party—an indirect successor to Federalist ideology—long supported the national bank because it was their favored mechanism for financing infrastructure and promoting economic growth. Democratic resistance to the national bank did not, however, qualify this partisan divide as a straightforward clash between nationalist and populist sensibilities. There was division within the Democratic party about the propriety of a national bank. Moreover, the Bank War intersected with other axes of political conflict—the tension, for example, between the money power in the East and the debtor class in the West.
The death blow to the national bank, ironically enough, was delivered neither by Jackson, nor any other Democrat, but rather by a politician who ran on the Whig ticket for the office of President of the United States: John Tyler.
36 H.R. Jo. 383 (Aug. 19, 1841); 36 H.R. Jo. 350 (Aug. 12, 1841); 36 H.R. Jo. 347 (Aug. 11, 1841); 36 H.R. Jo. 307 (Aug. 3, 1841); 32 S. Jo. (Aug. 2, 1841). 32 S. Jo. 165 (Aug. 16, 1841).
The capital up until this point was relatively peaceful. There were rowdy children and some gang activity by fire companies stationed around the district. The authorities were helpless to deal with these issues, however, because there was no municipal police force, only part-time ward constables who rarely patrolled at night. The city was about to pay the price for its threadbare security.
See T
On August 25, 1841, Mayor Seaton submitted a letter to the Speaker of the House of Representatives declaring his regret and indignation over a riot that took place the week prior. He expressed “the anxious wish of the people of Washington that an efficient and vigorous police be established in the city, under the Authority of the Government of the United States.”
36 H.R. Jo. 412 (Aug. 25, 1841).
Congress did not take proactive steps after this incident to protect itself from riots in particular. The riot did motivate Congress, however, to pass legislation promoting the better policing of the District of Columbia as a whole. On May 20, 1842, the House Committee for the District of Columbia reported H.R. No. 468, entitled “An Act to Establish a Police for the Protection of Public and Private Property in the City of Washington, and for Other Purposes.” The bill authorized the establishment of an auxiliary police force. The force initially consisted of one captain and one lieutenant appointed by the President, and thirty men, including five sergeants, to be appointed by the United States Marshall for the District of Columbia. Its purpose was to serve as a night watch. The bill was amended to give the Mayor of the capital the authority to appoint the captain and his subordinates due to concerns that the force would otherwise become a “presidential ‘praetorian guard.’”
Bills and Resolutions, 27th Cong., H.R., 2nd Session, H.R. No. 468 (May 20, 1842). 37 H.R. Jo. 1366 (Aug. 20, 1841); Bills and Resolutions, 27th Cong., H.R., 2nd Session, H.R. No. 468 (May 20, 1842); Cong. Globe, 27th Cong., H.R., 2nd Session 421 (June 2, 1842); 37 H.R. Jo. 1392 (Aug. 23, 1842); G
The Bank Riot is not a congressional contempt precedent per se. There was no direct contempt in the form of a mob, riot, or insurrection committed against Congress itself. It is, however, a meaningful case study representing the possibility of political violence in one quarter of the capital spilling over onto Capitol grounds. Mobs in other places in the city can make their way to the Capitol itself even if the Capitol is not their premeditated target. In the case of insurrections transpiring over the course of several days or weeks, this is especially true, as illustrated by the Gordon Riots. This case is also a meaningful precedent in the annals of congressional efforts to better police the District of Columbia that vicariously impact its capacity for protecting the Capitol and quelling any disorders that arise there.
The efficient policing of the District of Columbia remains a work in progress. Congress was practically naked against immediate threats to the safety of its members and guests during the Early Republic. But it became apparent over time that there should be a Congressional Guard of some kind. On February 4, 1828, Representative Stephen Van Rensselaer III (Anti-Jacksonian, New York) reported from the House Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds a joint resolution to create a police force for the Capitol. The tipping point came when a member of the Presidential family was victimized. Russell Jarvis, a Jacksonian journalist, assaulted John Adams II, the President's son and personal secretary, while he was in the Rotunda on his way to deliver a message to the House of Representatives.
B
Neither House ever held Jarvis in contempt, perhaps because zealous punishment of the man who assaulted the President's son (and employee) would give an appearance of impropriety and incite political backlash. Congress opted to just focus on the overarching security concern instead. By the Public Buildings Appropriations Act passed on May 2, 1828, Congress established the United States Capitol Police. The Capitol Police operates under the auspices of the Sergeants-at-Arms of both Houses; therefore, they are a force that belongs to the legislature, not the executive. Prudence suggested that the legislature required an in-house constabulary to effectuate its prerogatives, including its inherent power. Two Sergeants in modern times were indeed not enough.
The Capitol finally had its own force but the district did not. The district was only patrolled by local constables before the Civil War—at first those from other states, and, after the city incorporated, by its own. Reform came in ten-year intervals. In 1851, Congress regularized the salary for local constables. At that time the force was still less than 100 men strong—not nearly enough to secure an entire city. On July 26, 1861, Senator James W. Grimes (Republican, Iowa), a member of the Senate Committee for the District of Columbia, laid before the whole House a petition of the city residents to create a municipal constabulary. Senator Grimes introduced S.B. 49 to do exactly that. The force initially consisted of 1 superintendent, 10 sergeants, 5 commissioners, and not more than 150 officers. On August 6, 1861, the President signed the bill into law, and the Metropolitan Police for the District of Columbia was born.
To this day, there is no comprehensive framework for how Congress might respond to a riot or insurrection imperiling its members or congressional proceedings. The Trump Riot is the first event of its kind; therefore, it presents a case of first impression as to how civil authorities should defend Congress and punish disorder of great magnitude. Congress lacks the experience of Parliament in this arena. It has no contingency plan for coordinating the Capitol Police, other law enforcement agencies, and the militia power in the event of a large-scale attack. It has no general policies governing its inherent contempt power generally or in the case of riot or insurrection specifically. First experiences are the most formative. Congress must address these issues.
The scope of the inherent contempt power of the United States Congress is incoherent and poorly understood. This is largely because it has fallen out of use. There was no need to systematically organize its principles and precepts since the influx of contempt cases during the McCarthy Era. But this power is useful and belongs to the national legislature by right. Congress must ensure that when an appropriate occasion arrives, it will hold to account those persons who treat it with contempt through riot and insurrection. Contempt proceedings provide a unique forum for political accountability.
As the report of the House Select Committee in Rousseau's Case declared in 1866, “An act of violence against a representative is an act of insurrection against the people he represents.”
The intelligence community and law enforcement institutions, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation, must detect the impending assault. If the executive obtains reliable intelligence of a pending attack, there may be enough time for law enforcement to neutralize the threat and in doing so spare the legislature any effort. Alternatively, it may obtain intelligence at least far enough in advance to allow law enforcement time to bolster its defense and facilitate an evacuation. But in the event that the executive fails to provide timely intelligence, and the attack comes as a surprise, it will probably be impossible for the legislature to evacuate most if not all members, staff, and guests. Instead, as illustrated in the case of the Trump Riot, the Capitol will lockdown and hold until relieved. Prudence demands that the members of both Houses adjourn and take refuge until the tumult is suppressed. In either event, Congress must ensure that it has effective evacuation and lockdown protocols.
The Capitol is a fortress of national sovereignty built to last for posterity. When a riot or insurrection threatens the national legislature, the first priority is to eliminate that threat by force of police and, if necessary, militia. The District of Columbia is home to several local and federal law enforcement agencies who can respond when the Capitol is threatened.
Architect of the U.S. Capitol, 2 U.S.C. §§ 1901 et seq; D.C. C
The Capitol Police are the first line of defense. The second line of defense consists of national and local law enforcement units that are available to respond. In the event of a significant emergency, the Mayor of the District of Columbia is compelled give the President of the United States control of the MPD for at least forty-eight hours under Section 740 of the District of Columbia Home Rule Act. This is a substantial force. As of 2008, the MPD had the highest ratio of full-time officers to citizens in the country—34 officers per 100,000 residents. The President can retain control for a longer period if he consults the Chairman and ranking minority members of both Houses’ Committees on the District of Columbia. The legislature and the executive must ensure that there is an effective protocol for communicating to each other about invoking Section 740. The latter must be able to respond to a congressional request quickly; it must also be able to invoke Section 740 on its own if it deems that step prudent. The use of Section 740 is unprecedented.
If the threat is sufficiently serious, the legislature may call upon the executive to send in the National Guard.
The heightened police presence at the Capitol must dissolve after a disturbance resolves and the dust settles. But when? If a militia is called, how long should it remain in place? If defenses are erected around the Capitol, how long should they stand? By default, I think no more than a fortnight. Every act in exigent circumstances must be treated as precedential. A tentative deadline should accompany the authorization of any militia to deploy in response to an emergency and must be enforced absent a proper showing of good cause. Congress must not invite conspiracy and suspicion by walling itself off from the outside world. Recall Edmund Burke's warning during the Gordon Riots against “establishing a military on the ruins of the civil government.” The District of Columbia is not like Paris, Berlin, or Saint Petersburg. In insurrections as in government, the United States, like the Great Britain, is constitutionally more liberal than its European counterparts, to say nothing of other parts of the world.
The rule of thumb in the wake of an attack, as expressed by President Gerald Ford after the Weather Underground bombing of 1971, should be to keep the Capitol “as open as possible. . . .”
Cong. Rec., 92nd Cong., H.R., 1st Session 4216 (Mar. 1, 1971).
Congress is a ceremonial body. It must respond to any riot or insurrection at its gates with one voice. A public pronouncement is not only appropriate but necessary. Both Houses should express their deep disapprobation, both for sake of their dignity and to benefit posterity. Whether or not a committee ultimately recommends that anyone be tried for contempt by either House, Congress should still pass a joint resolution in the spirit of parliamentary tradition so that the People recall their history, and therefore better appreciate the constitutional significance of the moment.
Resolutions of this kind were known to our Founding Fathers. The Congress of Confederation, for example, formally memorialized their disapprobation of the Philadelphia Mutiny of 1783. That resolution is an example that Congress should follow.
Congressional committees are essential to the work of both Houses of Congress in preserving their privileges, digesting their experiences, and implementing reforms. The Founding Fathers understood that just as both Houses of Parliament continually delved into their own history to guide their steps, both Houses of Congress must do the same. Both Houses must therefore preserve tradition and employ the lessons of history by assigning committees to investigate contempts of their prerogatives, discover and digest the facts of what occurred into a coherent record, and then apply their precedents to enact reforms and to prevent like indignities in the future. Although the possibility of foreign interference is plausible, history teaches us that the greatest dangers lie within. The true test of any Congress is its capacity for internal inquisition—to look inward and hold its own accountable.
It is parliamentary for Congress to appoint joint select committees and independent commissions to investigate riots and insurrections assaulting the Capitol. Congress routinely appointed committees for investigating all species of contempt since the Founding. If an assault only antagonizes one particular House, only that House need appoint a Select Committee. Alternatively, in the event that the assault targets and interferes with both Houses—as was the case in the Trump Riot—it is advisable for Congress to appoint a joint select committee or independent commission to investigate the affray.
The charter of a joint select committee should enumerate narrowly tailored objectives that are clear, concise, and time sensitive. It should subpoena discovery and hold hearings to elicit testimony. It should consult with the Architect of the United States Capitol on any security improvements that should be made on the grounds. It should liaise with the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, the Senate Committee on the District of Columbia, and the Council of the District of Columbia in determining how national and local law enforcement and militia forces can better cooperate and settle jurisdictional or methodological differences in the context of responding to a riot or insurrection. Toward this end, the joint select committee should order the Capitol Police to update its strategic plan with a discrete protocol for handling riots and insurrections.
The joint select committee should recommend what disciplinary actions Congress should take, either by trying contempt, certifying contempts for prosecution, or simply leaving punishment to the full discretion of the executive. The joint select committee should also recommend commendations for individuals who committed acts of valor and heroism in the line of duty and memorialize any lives lost in the struggle. The report will not only edify Congress but will also serve the public by providing a consolidated public record of what transpired. That record is the bedrock of placing the riot in historical and political perspective. That record is the foundation of reform. The Select Committee investigating the Trump Riot, for example, used its record to educate the public and cast those responsible in the proper light, particularly Trump and his associates. The fact-finding, truth telling function of the Select Committee is its greatest. A catastrophe that is not properly investigated and documented in a manner that is publicly accessible is otherwise nothing but a foil for partisan grievances.
Congress should consider disciplinary measures when order is restored. The balance of relevant historical experience supports a broad reading of inherent congressional power. Contempt power is the strong right hand of the national legislature. Its reach is long.
Inherent power is the principal tool of both chambers to discipline direct contempt of their respective privileges, dignities, and procedures. But what about rioting or insurrection in other quarters of the District of Columbia? What if the Capitol is not penetrated, but encircled by a rabble attempting to intimidate or coerce it in some way? Representative John Forsyth (Democrat-Republican, Georgia) forcefully argued in congressional deliberations underlying Annals of the 15th Cong., H.R., 1st Session 612–24 (Jan. 9, 1818).
When alleged contempts are tried and proven guilty, incarceration and reprimand by the Speaker of the House of Representatives or the President of the Senate are appropriate penalties. When reprimand is justified, the Speaker of the House and the President of the Senate should use substantially similar language to that used in
Congress should take the appropriate steps to ensure that contemnors are given jail space at the District of Columbia prison both during the pendency of their proceedings and upon final conviction. It may be prudent for the legislature to collaborate with the executive for the purpose of adding additional prison space for contempt proceedings. They might also create frameworks for joint ventures between the Capitol Police and other law enforcement institutions around the country in arresting persons of interest sought by the Sergeant-at-Arms. The notion that the lack of an official carceral space for those found guilty of contempt of Congress is an insurmountable obstacle is indeed one of the silliest objections to contempt proceedings. Congress is a lawmaking body. It can make one.
The legislature can of course certify or refer the role of discipline to the executive—to obtain justice through civil litigation and criminal prosecution. But the legislature should not be so quick to shift this burden of responsibility. The privileges of each House must be preserved. A privilege is like a muscle: if it is not used it will be lost. If nothing else, contempt trials are pedagogical: they show the public that privileges are to be taken seriously. They are one of the last vestiges of the ancient folkmoot. They have an ethnic luster, a historic purpose, and a cathartic quality that can ventilate public outrage and provide communal closure. Making an example of those most responsible for inciting a riot on the Capitol through
It is axiomatic that under the doctrine of the separation of powers, the first branch of government, the national legislature, is
Of course, no Supreme Court case ever grappled with how executive privilege squares with the
The affray at the Capitol on January 6 triggered a public debate over where the tipping point between riot and insurrection lies. The exact threshold cannot be formulated with mathematical exactitude. This does not mean, however, that we cannot at least use historical precedents to benchmark and baseline future disturbances. The history of political riots teaches us to consider the scope of the riot, the size of the mob, and the scale of the damage. Not all tumultuous mobs qualify as insurrections or rebellions. A disorganized and spontaneous crowd is a mob. An organized and armed militia or paramilitary force endeavoring to overthrow the government is an insurrection. In the horizon between those two poles, as in all issues of criminality, I believe the more lenient of two or more interpretations is probably the best.
In England during the eighteenth century there was a widely held belief that outbursts of violence like the Wilkes Riots and Gordon Riots stemmed from some kind of conspiracy. “[I]t was almost axiomatic,” George Rudé states, “that a ‘hidden hand’ should be sought behind all outbursts of popular violence.”
Rudé, Rudé,
Today there appear to be many who believe that there was some sort of higher conspiracy provoking the mob that assaulted Congress on January 6. Some even apparently believe that paramilitary groups with representatives in the mob conspired with Trump. But this belief is equally mistaken. Though some radical groups participated in the Trump Riot, they did not control it. I propose that the proportion of a mob that can be convicted of criminal conspiracy presents a compelling test of whether a riot amounts to an insurrection. Of the 750 plus charges brought against participants in the Trump Riot thus far, less than 50 are charged for any kind of criminal conspiracy, and only 11 are for seditious conspiracy in particular. None are charged with conspiracy to commit treason. These proportions are too weak to support the label of “insurrection.” The tumultuous crowd at the Capitol was simply a riot. Nothing more. Nothing less. I believe the plurality if not the outright majority of participants in a disturbance at the seat of government must stem from the same criminal conspiracy for the term “insurrection” to apply.
Populist outbursts like January 6 are well-precedented in the Anglo-American tradition. The history of riots and insurrections at the seat of government should instill both calm and caution. We have a baseline. Relative to today, riots and insurrections were far more frequent in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Objectively speaking, however, riots and insurrections were infrequent even during the Early Modern Period in Great Britain and America.
I do not mean to suggest that Donald Trump is an avatar of John Wilkes. There could be no greater difference between two men in capacity for speech and wit. Those who overreacted to Wilkes in his heyday did so at their peril. Those who do so with demagogues today by indulging absurd historical analogies compound this same mistake with their own errors. For all the right-wing hysteria about impending jihadist, globalist, and socialist takeovers, those on the left have not done any better with their reflexive takes casting January 6 as an augur for the rise of fascism. White supremacy does not explain the election of Trump, the riot on January 6, or the populist phenomenon in the Anglo-American tradition.
Horace Walpole wrongly believed that Britain was on the verge of civil war if Lord Frederick North's government was not dismissed by George III. Those who believe the United States is on the verge of internecine conflict are just as wrong today. Burke, the father of modern political conservatism, shunned Wilkes and Gordon. In fact, Gordon later denounced Burke as Catholic agent for his unwillingness to pander to popular ressentiments. True conservatives today similarly turn their back on Trump in spite of the derision they receive from many who nominally identify with the political right. Yet such is the depravity of human nature that politicians all too easily convert the competing anxieties of their constituencies about extremists on each other's fringes into political shuttlecocks to be batted back and forth, inflaming public sentiments of revanche and self-righteousness. True leadership is not so petty or obtuse.
Populist movements can speak a language that resonates with the people, grapples with legitimate concerns, and yes, offers or inspires, directly or indirectly, serious solutions. In reflecting upon popular petitions of grievances, Benjamin Franklin wisely reflected that disdain for such movements is dangerous: “Nothing can have a better effect in producing the alienation proposed; for though many can forgive injuries, Benjamin Franklin, National Archives, R John Jay, Federalist No. V.
Even if we concede to George Rudé that riot and insurrection was the language of the unheard in the Early Modern Period, that language cannot be so described let alone justified today. Elections are frequent. Suffrage is universal. The People have a greater voice. The House of Representatives is their mouthpiece. The body of the lower chamber is supposed to embody the Spirit of Democracy, to form a breakwater against plutocracy and popular prejudice. As in the famed story of Hans Brinker, however, there is a hole in the dike. Members of the legislative body that was attacked on January 6 stoked the coals of the very conspiracy that caused the conflagration. The demagogic element of populism is always the most dangerous. The Spirit is willing but the body was weak.
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Yet even if we concede Wilkes championed the petitioning movement. He led the resistance to general warrants and the crime of seditious libel. He was also the first MP to propose a bill for universal male suffrage. His legacy illustrates the positive potential for populism sans political violence, and not even necessarily on its own, but rather as one stitch in a more eclectic electoral fabric.
Stripped of its depth and nuance, our nation's founding documents and most precious symbols are harvested by politicians to divide rather than heal. The Democrat-Republican Societies were sympathetic with backcountry sentiments during the Whiskey Rebellion. It is no surprise that populists today typically peddle memes featuring choice quotes from Patrick Henry and Thomas Jefferson. They do so at our peril, for their comments often betray a belief in the old farce that the Constitution is a compact between states, not citizens. I fear that the sails of populism today are propelled by the winds of a renascent Anti-Federalism. The specter of the Old South haunts our land like a lion, seeking whom it may devour.
When popular disapproval erupts into violence at the seat of government, the coercive power of the State must compel honor and obedience to Congress. When rioting threatens the fundamental pillars of our Republic, force and fear are the order of the day. There are few truths so evident in history as that the blood of the rabble dignifies the State. Gravity requires weight. Authority requires danger. For contempt of government, if unchecked, may otherwise break out into mass unrest. A riot is not an insurrection, but it certainly can become one. The very justification for a national government lies in its utility as a safeguard against factious insurrection and internecine conflict.
Alexander Hamilton, Federalist No. IX. J
History and experience prove the following two propositions to be true:
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