The Federalist authorities and their supporters claimed that the laws were motivated by the need to protect the nation against destabilizing foreign factors in such a revolutionary era (Neuman 54). However, the Republican opposition thought that the true reason was domestic politics. At the time, the split of politics to the federalist and democratic sides made the government uncomfortable, especially considering that immigrants were also political. The Naturalization Act for instance was therefore meant to deal with French and Irish immigrants who tended to engage themselves a lot in republican political activity (Neuman 53). The other alien acts were also supposed to intimidate foreign critics and the Sedition Act to suppress the media and therefore protect the federalist …show more content…
They countered it by adopting a narrow definition of the freedoms, drawn from English law. Here, the freedoms only existed prior to expression of an idea (Neuman 52). After one had spoken words or published information, people could however still be punished by government if proven to have defamed the government or king. Proponents argued that speech could naturally qualify to be seditious irrespective of the amount of sincerity or truth in it. Limitation of speech could also be justified basing on the priorities of the government at the time. For instance, according to the sedition act, there has to be a scandalous, false, or malicious element in the writing or speech. In conclusion, the Alien and Sedition Acts were pushed by a federalist administration that was keen on minimizing immigrant support for the republican side. The reason informing the law was by itself a major debate issue. Other issues included their constitutionality, whether they were right or wrong, as well as whether limitation of speech could ever be justified. While the federalist administration argued that the legislations were best for the nation, the democratic republican opposition thought that everything was unfair and