"I hear with distress and anguish the word 'secession,' especially when it falls from the lips of those who are patriotic... Secession! Peaceable secession! Sir, your eyes and mine are never destined to see that miracle. The dismemberment of this vast country without convulsion! The breaking up of the fountains of the great deep without ruffling the surface! Who is so foolish, I close my eyes of this day, as to expect that this Union can be demolished by a peaceable secession? ...
Then, Sir, there are the complaints of the South... about the failure of the North to perform its constitutional obligations in regard to the return of runaway slaves. I think that the North has been in the wrong here. It has not felt the gravity of the constitutional obligation. The Constitution of the United States says, in the most distinct manner, that persons bound to service in one State, escaping into another, 'shall be delivered up.' ... I say that the South is right in this complaint, and the North is wrong."
— Senator Daniel Webster, speech to the United States Senate, March 7, 1850
Which of the following best describes the primary political strategy advocated by the speaker in the excerpt to address sectional tensions?
- Prioritizing the preservation of the constitutional Union by enforcing federal concessions to Southern slaveholders.Cevap
- BFocusing political debates on resolving import tariff disagreements rather than addressing the legal status of slavery.
- CPromoting the doctrine of popular sovereignty to allow local voters in the territories to decide the legal status of fugitive slaves.
- DEquating the legal status of escaping enslaved laborers to that of European indentured servants under colonial contracts.