Jason Sands

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Representatives of the southern slave states regarded the protection of slavery as a matter of existential importance. Their principal demand was, in the words of the historian Sean Wilentz, to “keep slavery completely outside the national government’s reach,” or, at the very least, to “make it impossible for the government to enact anything concerning slavery without the slaveholding states’ consent.”
Tyranny of the Minority: Why American Democracy Reached the Breaking Point
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