Posted by Eugene Volokh:
The Federalists and the Sedition Act:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_02_22-2009_02_28.shtml#1235403725


   The [1]Sedition Act of 1798 famously expired on March 3, 1801, and
   purported to punish [2]false and malicious statements about the
   Federalist President John Adams and the majority-Federalist Congress,
   not about the Democratic-Republican Vice-President Thomas Jefferson.
   This is often mentioned as evidence of the Federalists' partisanship
   in enacting the Act.

   But what I hadn't known until a few days ago is that the Federalists
   tried to reenact the Act in early 1801, when it would have outlawed
   criticism of the newly-elected Democratic-Republican President and
   Congress. The bill was defeated in the House by a 53-49 vote; nearly
   all Federalists voted for it, and all Republicans voted against it.
   The four Federalists who voted against consisted of one (George Dent)
   who voted against the 1798 Act, two who weren't in the House for the
   1798 Act vote, and one who was in the House in 1798 but didn't vote.

   The Federalists' stated arguments seemed to chiefly be (1) malicious
   falsehoods about the government are dangerous and valueless and
   deserve to be suppressed, (2) the Sedition Act had actually been
   enforced properly, and thus merited renewal, and (3) the Act protects
   speech by limiting common-law seditious libel to falsehoods, and by
   fixing a modest penalty for seditious libel. There might have been
   some political posturing there, and perhaps the Federalists thought
   they had to do this to prevent charges of hypocrisy. They might also
   have thought they had little to lose from the renewal, given the
   expectation that the new Administration would not enforce the law,
   given its militant hostility to the law in the past. Still, it struck
   me as worth noting; perhaps it's well-known to others, but it wasn't
   known to me.

References

   1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alien_and_Sedition_Acts
   2. http://avalon.law.yale.edu/18th_century/sedact.asp

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