Authors: Professor Michael Hardt,Antonio Negri
Tags: #Philosophy, #Political, #Political Science, #General, #American Government
sive era, straddling the turn ofthe century, from the imperialist
doctrine ofTheodore Roosevelt to Woodrow Wilson’s interna-
tional reformism; a third phase moves from the New Deal and the
Second World War through the height ofthe cold war; and finally,
a fourth phase is inaugurated with the social movements of the
1960s and continues through the dissolution ofthe Soviet Union and
its Eastern European bloc. Each ofthese phases ofU.S. constitutional
history marks a step toward the realization ofimperial sovereignty.
In the first phase ofthe Constitution, between the presidencies
of Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson, the open space of the
frontier became the conceptual terrain of republican democracy:
this opening afforded the Constitution its first strong definition.
The declarations off
reedom made sense in a space where the
constitution ofthe state was seen as an open process, a collective
self-making.14 Most important, this American terrain was free of
the forms of centralization and hierarchy typical of Europe. Tocque-
ville and Marx, from opposite perspectives, agree on this point:
American civil society does not develop within the heavy shackles
of feudal and aristocratic power but starts off from a separate and
very different foundation.15 An ancient dream seems newly possible.
An unbounded territory is open to the desire
(cupiditas)
ofhumanity, and this humanity can thus avoid the crisis ofthe relationship
between virtue
(virtus)
and fortune
(fortuna)
that had ambushed and derailed the humanist and democratic revolution in Europe. From
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the perspective ofthe new United States, the obstacles to human
development are posed by nature, not history—and nature does
not present insuperable antagonisms or fixed social relationships. It
is a terrain to transform and traverse.
Already in this first phase, then, a new principle ofsovereignty
is affirmed, different from the European one: liberty is made sover-
eign and sovereignty is defined as radically democratic within an
open and continuous process of expansion. The frontier is a frontier
ofliberty. How hollow the rhetoric ofthe Federalists would have
been and how inadequate their own ‘‘new political science’’ had
they not presupposed this vast and mobile threshold ofthe frontier!
The very idea ofscarcity that—like the idea ofwar—had been at
the center ofthe European concept ofmodern sovereignty is a
priori stripped away from the constitutive processes of the American
experience. Jefferson and Jackson both understood the materiality
ofthe frontier and recognized it as the basis that supported the
expansiveness ofdemocracy.16 Liberty and the frontier stand in a
relationship ofreciprocal implication: every difficulty, every limit
ofliberty is an obstacle to overcome, a threshold to pass through.
From the Atlantic to the Pacific extended a terrain ofwealth and
freedom, constantly open to new lines of flight. In this framework
there is at least a partial displacement or resolution ofthat ambiguous
dialectic we saw developing within the American Constitution
that subordinated the immanent principles ofthe Declaration of
Independence to a transcendent order ofconstitutional self
-
reflection. Across the great open spaces the constituent tendency
wins out over the constitutional decree, the tendency ofthe imma-
nence ofthe principle over regulative reflection, and the initiative
ofthe multitude over the centralization ofpower.
This utopia ofopen spaces that plays such an important role
in the first phase ofAmerican constitutional history, however, al-
ready hides ingenuously a brutal form of subordination. The North
American terrain can be imagined as empty only by willfully ignor-
ing the existence ofthe Native Americans—or really conceiving
them as a different order of human being, as subhuman, part of the
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natural environment. Just as the land must be cleared oftrees and
rocks in order to farm it, so too the terrain must be cleared of the
native inhabitants. Just as the frontier people must gird themselves
against the severe winters, so too they must arm themselves against
the indigenous populations. Native Americans were regarded as
merely a particularly thorny element ofnature, and a continuous
war was aimed at their expulsion and/or elimination. Here we are
faced with a contradiction that could not be absorbed within the
constitutional machine: the Native Americans could not be inte-
grated in the expansive movement ofthe frontier as part ofthe
constitutional tendency; rather, they had to be excluded from the
terrain to open its spaces and make expansion possible. Ifthey had
been recognized, there would have been no real frontier on the
continent and no open spaces to fill. They existed outside the
Constitution as its negative foundation: in other words, their exclu-
sion and elimination were essential conditions ofthe functioning
ofthe Constitution itself. This contradiction may not even properly
be conceived as a crisis since Native Americans are so dramatically
excluded from and external to the workings of the constitutional ma-
chine.
In this first phase that runs from the founding of the democratic
republic to the Civil War, the constitutional dynamic did go into
crisis as a result ofan internal contradiction. Whereas Native Ameri-
cans were cast outside the Constitution, African Americans were
from the beginning posed within it. The conception of frontier
and the idea and practice ofan open space ofdemocracy were in
fact woven together with an equally open and dynamic concept of
people, multitude, and
gens.
The republican people is a new people,
a people in exodus
populating the empty (or emptied) new territories.
From the beginning, American space was not only an extensive,
unbounded space but also an intensive space: a space ofcrossings,
a ‘‘melting pot’’ ofcontinuous hybridization. The first real crisis of
American liberty was determined on this internal, intensive space.
Black slavery, a practice inherited from the colonial powers, was
an insurmountable barrier to the formation of a free people. The
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great American
anticolonial
constitution had to integrate this paradigmatic
colonial
institution at its very heart. Native Americans could be excluded because the new republic did not depend on their
labor, but black labor was an essential support ofthe new United
States: African Americans had to be included in the Constitution
but could not be included equally. (Women, ofcourse, occupied
a very similar position.) The Southern constitutionalists had no
trouble demonstrating that the Constitution, in its dialectical, self-
reflective, and ‘ federalist’’ moment, permitted, and even demanded,
this perverse interpretation ofthe social division oflabor that ran
completely counter to the affirmation of equality expressed in the
Declaration ofIndependence.
The delicate nature ofthis contradiction is indicated by the
bizarre compromise in the drafting of the Constitution, arrived at
only through tortuous negotiation, whereby the slave population
does count in the determination ofthe number ofrepresentatives
for each state in the House of Representatives, but at a ratio whereby
one slave equals three-fifths of a free person. (Southern states fought
to make this ratio as high as possible to increase their congressional
power, and Northerners fought to lower it.) The constitutionalists
were forced in effect to
quantify
the constitutional value of different races. The framers thus declared that the number of representatives
‘‘shall be determined by adding to the whole Number off
ree
Persons, including those bound to Service for a Term of Years,
and excluding Indians not taxed, three fifths of all other persons.’’17
One for white and zero for Native Americans poses relatively little
problem, but three fifths is a very awkward number for a Constitu-
tion. African American slaves could be neither completely included
nor entirely excluded. Black slavery was paradoxically both an
exception to and a foundation of the Constitution.
This contradiction posed a crisis for the newly developed U.S.
notion ofsovereignty because it blocked the free circulation, mixing,
and equality that animate its foundation.18 Imperial sovereignty must
always overcome barriers and boundaries both within its domain
and at the frontiers. This continuous overcoming is what makes
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the imperial space open. The enormous internal barriers between
black and white, free and slave, blocked the imperial integration
machine and deflated the ideological pretense to open spaces.
Abraham Lincoln was certainly right when, conducting the
Civil War, he thought ofhimselfas refounding the nation. The
passage ofthe Fourteenth Amendment inaugurated more than a
century ofjuridical struggles over civil rights and African American
equality. Furthermore, the debate over slavery was inextricably tied
to the debates over the new territories. What was in play was a
redefinition ofthe
space
ofthe nation. At stake was the question
whether the free exodus of the multitude, unified in a plural com-
munity, could continue to develop, perfect itself, and realize a new
configuration ofpublic space. The new democracy had to destroy
the transcendental idea ofthe nation with all its racial divisions and
create its own people, defined not by old heritages but by a new
ethics ofthe construction and expansion ofthe community. The
new nation could not but be the product ofthe political and cultural
management ofhybrid identities.
TheClosureof Imperial Space
The great open American spaces eventually ran out. Even pushing
Native Americans farther and farther away, into smaller and smaller
confines, was not enough. In the nineteenth and twentieth centu-
ries, American liberty, its new model ofnetwork power, and its
alternative conception to modern sovereignty all ran up against the
recognition that open terrain was limited. The development ofthe
U.S. Constitution would be from this moment on constantly poised
on a contradictory border. Every time the expansiveness ofthe
constitutional project ran up against its limits, the republic was
tempted to engage in a European-style imperialism. There was
always, however, another option: to return to the project ofimperial
sovereignty and articulate it in a way consistent with the original
‘‘Roman’’ mission ofthe United States. This new drama ofthe
U.S. political project was played out in the Progressive era, from
the 1890s to the First World War.
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This was the same period in which class struggle rose to center
stage in the United States. Class struggle posed the problem of
scarcity, not in absolute terms, but in terms proper to the history
ofcapitalism: that is, as the inequity ofthe division ofthe goods
ofdevelopment along the lines ofthe social division oflabor.
Class division emerged as a limit that threatened to destabilize the
expansive equilibria ofthe constitution. At the same time, capital’s
great trusts began to organize new forms of financial power, delink-
ing wealth from productivity and money from the relations of
production. Whereas in Europe this was experienced as a relatively
continuous development—because finance capital was built on the
social position ofland rent and the aristocracy—in the United States
it was an explosive event. It jeopardized the very possibility ofa
constitution in network, because when a power becomes monopo-
listic, the network itselfis destroyed. Since the expansion ofspace
was no longer possible and thus could no longer be used as a strategy
to resolve conflicts, social conflict appeared directly as a violent and
irreconcilable event. The entrance on the scene ofthe great U.S.
workers’ movement confirmed the closure ofthe constitutional
space ofmediation and the impossibility ofthe spatial displacement
ofconflicts. The Haymarket Square riot and the Pullman strike
stated it loud and clear: there is no more open space, and thus
conflict will result in a direct clash, right here.19 In effect, when
power ran up against its spatial limits, it was constrained to fold
back on itself. This was the new context in which all actions had
to be played out.
The closure ofspace posed a serious challenge to the original
American constitutional spirit, and the path to address this challenge
was treacherous. Never was the drive stronger to transform the
United States into something like a European-style sovereignty.
Our concepts of‘‘reaction,’’ ‘‘active counterrevolution,’’ ‘‘preven-