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Chester A.
Arthur's 4th Annual Message
Washington, December 1, 1884. |
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To the congress of the United States:
Since the close of your last session the American people, in the
exercise of their highest right of suffrage, have chosen their
Chief Magistrate for the four years ensuing.
When it is remembered that at no period in the country's history
has the long political contest which customarily precedes the
day of the national election been waged with greater fervor and
intensity, it is a subject of general congratulation that after
the controversy at the polls was over, and while the slight
preponderance by which the issue had been determined was as yet
unascertained, the public peace suffered no disturbance, but the
people everywhere patiently and quietly awaited the result.
Nothing could more strikingly illustrate the temper of the
American
citizen, his love of order, and his loyalty to law. Nothing
could more signally demonstrate the strength and wisdom of our
political institutions.
Eight years have passed since a controversy concerning the
result of a national election sharply called the attention of
the Congress to the necessity of providing more precise and
definite regulations for counting the electoral vote.
It is of the gravest importance that this question be solved
before conflicting claims to the Presidency shall again distract
the country, and I am persuaded that by the people at large any
of the measures of relief thus far proposed would be preferred
to continued inaction. |
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