Reconstruction Act The Reconstruction Act began as a bill introduced by Representative
John Bingham of Ohio on February 26, 1865, on behalf of the Joint Select Committee on Reconstruction as part of the same package as the initial proposal for the Fourteenth Amendment. It would have restored states that ratified the new amendment to representation in Congress upon its adoption. Until that time, the reconstructed governments established under Lincoln and Johnson would continue to function subject to military oversight and without congressional approval. However, when Congress met in December 1866, only the civilian government of Tennessee had ratified the proposed amendment, and every other Southern state had rejected it. The Rebel States under military rule were grouped into five military districts or occupation departments: • Virginia • North and South Carolina • Georgia, Alabama, and Florida • Mississippi and Arkansas • Texas and Louisiana Tennessee did not have occupation government, because it had ratified the 14th Amendment. On January 3, 1867, Representatives
Thaddeus Stevens and
James Mitchell Ashley introduced a pair of substitutes for the Bingham bill which provided procedures for the creation of new state governments in the seceded states. Both proposals required universal manhood suffrage, disfranchisement and disqualification of certain former Confederate officials, and a guarantee of equal civil rights as conditions for readmission. Stevens and Ashley agreed that the existing reconstruction governments were illegitimate and ought to be replaced. The Bingham, Stevens, and Ashley proposals were all referred back to the Joint Committee on Reconstruction on January 28 for further study. The bill was reintroduced on behalf of the Joint Committee by Senator
George Henry Williams of Oregon on February 6. Rather than establish requirements for readmission of civilian governments, the committee draft made the states "subject to the military authority of the United States" in order to "protect all persons in their rights of person and property, to suppress insurrection, disorder, and violence, and to punish ... all disturbers of the public peace and criminals." The bill was attacked on the grounds that it violated the
guarantee clause of the
United States Constitution and sought to try civilians in military courts. Supporters cited the principle of
vae victis and the Constitution's
necessary and proper clause, arguing that martial law would be a temporary means to preserve order until republican governments could be established. Amendments proposed by Representatives Bingham and
James G. Blaine of Maine which sought to ensure that military control was terminated upon adoption of a republican constitution, universal manhood suffrage, and adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment failed badly, and the bill passed the House as a purely military measure for the preservation of order. In the Senate, the bill passed with the Blaine amendment establishing the conditions for the end of military rule and readmission (as proposed by Senator
John Sherman of Ohio). It was returned to the House, where the amendment was objected to. It eventually passed the House with two further amendments, one disfranchising those rebels who would be excluded from office under the insurrection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and another declaring existing reconstructed state governments "provisional" and subject to military authority. President Johnson vetoed the bill, arguing that its premises were false and it was unconstitutional, but both houses of Congress overrode his veto to make the Reconstruction Act law on March 2, 1867.
Supplementary laws The Reconstruction Act was supplemented on March 23, only three weeks after its passage, in order to provide a machinery for establishing the new state governments required for readmission. This supplementary act provided for registration of qualified voters, election of delegates to a constitutional convention (if the people voted to hold one), and submission of the resulting constitution for public approval, all under military supervision and enforcement. Upon enactment of such a constitution, Congress would determine whether it reflected the people's will and conformed to the first Reconstruction Act. Johnson vetoed the supplementary bill along similar lines, and opponents raised similar objections; his veto was quickly overridden. Following passage of the two Reconstruction Acts,
United States Attorney General Henry Stanbery, a Johnson appointee and leading proponent of presidential reconstruction, adopted a narrow interpretation of the Acts, especially with regard to military authority. Stanbery also interpreted the disfranchisement provision to require only an oath of loyalty to the United States Constitution. Congress responded with a second supplemental statute in July 1867 which empowered military commanders to suspend or remove any state officer (including municipal officers) and to provide for the performance of his duties either "by the detail of some competent officer or soldier of the army, or by the appointment of some other person, and to fill vacancies occasioned by death, resignation, or otherwise," subject to review by the
General of the Army, who was then
Ulysses S. Grant. The second supplemental Act also explicitly authorized state boards of voter registration, which were established by the military, to determine for themselves whether any voter was eligible under the disfranchisement provision; in practice, this severely restricted the pool of voters eligible to participate in the establishment of new governments. In a direct blow at Stanbery, the second supplemental Act provided that "[n]o district commander or member of the board of registration, or any of the officers or appointees acting under them, shall be bound in his action by any opinion of any civil officer of the United States," effectively exempting the military from civilian oversight other than by the President as commander-in-chief. Johnson again vetoed the bill on grounds of unconstitutionality, citing the same justifications as for his vetoes of the two earlier bills, as well as the
vesting clause of
Article Two of the United States Constitution, which provides that Congress may "by law vest the appointment of such inferior officers as they think proper in the President alone, in the courts of law, or in the heads of Departments". In
Mississippi, where the State's
proposed Constitution was overwhelmingly hated by the public, the opponents of the new Constitution refused to vote, making it impossible for a majority of
registered voters to approve of the State Constitution. In response, Congress passed another Reconstruction Act, requiring only a majority of actual voters to approve a new constitution. == Constitutionality ==