One of the most influential philosophers of liberalism turns his
attention to the complexity of Lincoln s political thought. At the
center of Lincoln s career is an intense passion for equality, a
passion that runs so deep in the speeches, messages, and letters
that it has the force of religious conviction for Lincoln. George
Kateb examines these writings to reveal that this passion explains
Lincoln s reverence for both the Constitution and the Union.
The abolition of slavery was not originally a tenet of Lincoln s
political religion. He affirmed almost to the end of his life that
the preservation of the Union was more important than ending
slavery. This attitude was consistent with his judgment that at the
founding, the agreement to incorporate slaveholding into the
Constitution, and thus secure a Constitution, was more vital to the
cause of equality than struggling to keep slavery out of the new
nation. In Kateb s reading, Lincoln destroys the Constitution
twice, by suspending it as a wartime measure and then by enacting
the Thirteenth Amendment to abolish slavery. The first instance was
an effort to save the Constitution; the second was an effort to
transform it, by making it answer the Declaration s promises of
equality.
The man who emerges in Kateb s account proves himself adequate
to the most terrible political situation in American history.
Lincoln s political life, however, illustrates the unsettling truth
that in democratic politics perhaps in all politics it is nearly
impossible to do the right thing for the right reasons, honestly
stated."
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