How the States Forced Congress to Give Up Control of the Senate

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By the early 1900s, the United States Senate had become a national embarrassment. Seats sat vacant for months—sometimes years—because state legislatures couldn’t agree on whom to appoint. Corporate interests, particularly railroad and mining magnates, openly bribed state legislators to install sympathetic senators, earning the chamber its notorious reputation as the “Millionaires’ Club.” And perhaps most perversely, state legislative races—meant to address local concerns—had been completely hijacked by national politics, with voters choosing their representatives based solely on which U.S. senator candidate they promised to support.

This wasn’t what the Framers had envisioned when they wrote Article I, Section 3 of the Constitution in 1787, establishing that each state’s two senators would be “chosen by the Legislature thereof.” The system was designed to protect states’ rights and serve as a deliberate check against what the Founders feared as “popular passion.” But by the late 19th century, that elegant constitutional mechanism had collapsed under the weight of its own contradictions.

The dysfunction reached its nadir in 1905, when Delaware’s legislature became so hopelessly gridlocked that the state went entirely unrepresented in the U.S. Senate. It wasn’t an isolated incident. Across the country, legislative deadlocks routinely left senate seats empty, depriving states of their voice in national affairs. Meanwhile, the corruption had become so brazen that everyone knew the Senate answered not to the people or even to state governments, but to whoever could afford to buy enough legislative votes.

Reformers had been trying to fix the problem for decades. The first resolution proposing a constitutional amendment for direct election of senators was introduced in the House of Representatives as early as 1826, though it went nowhere. Throughout the late 1800s, similar proposals surfaced and died, blocked by a Senate that had no interest in reforming itself out of power. By the turn of the century, it was clear that waiting for Congress to act voluntarily was futile.

So the states stopped waiting.

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