Had a discussion
last evening with McCulloch and Doolittle in the council-room, the President
being by, respecting the preamble and resolution of Congress in regard to
Tennessee. McCulloch thought it might injure the President or help the Radicals
if he did not sign it. I preferred that he should not, especially that he
should not give his assent to the preamble. My own course would be to approve
of neither, for it would be claimed as a precedent in future toward the other
States. If it were an isolated instance, the resolution affirming that the
State might send Representatives would, perhaps, be harmless, but the precedent
in the present state of things would be bad. The President listened and then
read a dispatch from the Speaker, saying he would not sign a certificate that
the Amendment had been ratified.
Admiral Farragut and
myself have been busy to-day on promotions under the recent law.
SOURCE: Gideon
Welles, Diary of Gideon Welles, Secretary of the Navy Under Lincoln and
Johnson, Vol. 2: April 1, 1864 — December 31, 1866, p. 559
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