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{universal interest being part and parcel of his own personal interest, will
therefore in so far as his conception of it is correct and adequate, exercise on his
conduct an influence, at any rate not inferior to that which would be exercised on it
by any such purely personal interest as would, in his eyes, be of equal value.}
Resolved
17. {15. That} /that/, by the Representatives of the people, the sense of the people
whose Representatives they are, can never be truly represented and conformed to,
otherwise than is so far as, for their continuance in such their situation, they have
been rendered, and remain dependent upon the wishes – the real and genuine wishes and
desires – of such their Constituents, as expressed by their suffrages, delivered as
above.
18. That, though to give to this dependence that utmost point of perfection, of
which, considered in itself and without regard to any other object, it would be
susceptible, it would be necessary, that at all times it should be in the power of
every such Electoral body as above, to remove its Representative, in the same manner
as it is in the power of every individual who has granted to another a power of
Attorney, to revoke the same, {*} yet forasmuch as, in such a
state of things, instead of deputing representatives to manage such their public
concerns, the people would thus be, in their own persons, continually occupied in the
management of those same concerns, whereby that proportion of time and labour would
be occupied and engrossed, without which the business of private life, in respect of
the provision of the means of subsistence, could not be carried on, - hence it
becomes necessary, that this same power of removal should not be called into
exercise, otherwise than at certain stated, and more or less distant periods.
19. That, forasmuch as the degree of dependence so established will be the more
perfect, the shorter the term is, during which each such representative remains
exempt from removal at the hands of his Constituents, - it is therefore expedient
that this term should be as short as any regularly established term, which, without
practical inconvenience in respect of its shortness, has ever, in the practice of the
constitution, been seen exemplified: which said term is, as appears by divers
Statutes, the term of one year.
{ 16. That, for the due exercise of that power, by which, as above, it is expedient,
that the people, as divided into such Electoral bodies as aforesaid, should keep such
their Representatives in dependence, - it is necessary that by every Member of each
such Electoral body, the conduct of its Representative in the exercise of such his
trust should, at all times, and on all occasions, be capable of being known and taken
into consideration, in so far as the sense of need suggests itself, and the quantity
of time applicable to this purpose permitts
17. That, forasmuch as by no power lodged in the hands of constituents, can any
dependence, on the part of their respective Representatives, be in any degree created
or maintained, except in so far as the good and evil about to be eventually produced
by the exercise of such power is, at all times, in the expectation of the
representative, greater than any that can be made to accrue to him, by any other
person or persons, whose interest or supposed interest, and consequent endeavour, it
may be to engage him in a violation of such his trust, it is accordingly necessary,
that, by all practicable means, every Representative of the people be rendered as}
{* It may be proper perhaps to apply this likewise to Instructions. J.B.}
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