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it was taken for granted that Congress could ban slavery from the territories, a power the slaveholders themselves had acknowledged. But in 1819, for the first time, slaveholders in Congress began to deny that the federal government had the power to impose such a ban. They based this claim on the argument that the fugitive slave clause of the Constitution guaranteed a general right of “property in man.”
The Crooked Path to Abolition: Abraham Lincoln and the Antislavery Constitution
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