politics and government and thought in the gilded age
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Politics and Government and Thought in the Gilded Age. "What is the chief end of man?--to get rich. In what way?--dishonestly if we can; honestly if we must." Mark Twain-1871. Mainstream Politics: Politics as Entertainment. Political Theater High Turnout Competition - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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Politics and Government and Thought in the Gilded Age
• "What is the chief end of man?--to get rich. In what way?--dishonestly if we can; honestly if we must."– Mark Twain-1871
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Mainstream Politics: Politics as Entertainment
• Political Theater• High Turnout• Competition• Party Methods: Revivalism Inspired• No Secret Ballot• Veteran Dominated• Women
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Partisanship
• Regionalized Parties• Swing States: NY, NJ, IN, OH• Close Contests• Party Culture
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Republican Factions
• Evangelical Middle-Class Protestants• Middle to Upper Classes (Urban)• Old-stock Americans and Germans• Appealed to:
– Patriotism / Anti-Confederate sentiment– Industrial Economy– Evangelical / Middle-Class Social Control– Nativism
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Democratic Factions
• Catholics• Irish and newer Immigrants• Urban Workers and Southern/Western Farmers• Pro-European Immigrant / Anti-Black and
Chinese• Pro-Memory of Confedracy• Anti-Government Imposition of Morality
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Political Groups
• Machine Politics• Associational Politics
– Labor– Capital
• Women’s Associations– National American Women’s Suffrage Association
(1890)– Labor Reform– Temperance
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The Weaknesses of Government
• The Weak Presidency• Inefficient Congress• Small, Corrupt Bureaucracy• Widening State Action
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Charles J. Guiteau Shot President Garfield
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Dominant Political Issues (I)
• Civil Service Reform– Pendleton Civil Service Act (1883)
• The Tariff– High to protect Industry?– Low to enable cheap imports for workers?– Protect Farm Prices?
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Dominant Political Issues (II):Federal Regulation of Business
• Interstate Commerce Commission (1887)– Maximum Freight Rates Case (1897)
• Sherman Anti-Trust Act (1890)– United States v. E.C. Knight (1895)
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• “The [Interstate Commerce] commission, as its functions have now been limited by the courts is, or can be made, of great use to the railroads. It satisfies the public clamor for a government supervision of railroads, at the same time that that supervision is almost entirely nominal.” -- Richard Olney, Attorney General under Grover Cleveland, advising a railroad president
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Dominant Political Issues (III): Hard vs. Soft Money
• Debtors want inflation– Paper Money or Silver / Free Silver
• Creditors want deflation– Hard Money / Gold / Sound Money
• Sherman Silver Purchase Act (1890)
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Crisis of the 1890s
• Populist or People’s Party (1889)– Greenbacks and free silver– Economy in government– Confiscation of excess railroad lands– Public ownership of the means of
communication and transportation
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Omaha Convention (1890)
• Attacks “The Money Power”• Free Silver• Electoral Reforms• Labor Reforms• Credit and Shipping Reforms• 1892: 1 million out of 17 million votes / 22
electoral votes. But Cleveland wins (D).
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Depression of 1893-7
• 20% Unemployed• Cleveland Does Nothing• Coxey’s Army (1894)• Labor Turmoil: 1400 Strikes with 700,000
workers in 1894
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Currency Crisis
• Unused Silver piling up / Bank Rush beginning
• SSPA is repealed by Cleveland• Shows he helps bankers, lets everyone else
go die• JP Morgan now has to bail out the feds
financially.
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• “Though the people support the government; the government should not support the people.” -- Grover Cleveland
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JP Morgan
• I've got to get to the top of the hill. -- John Pierpont Morgan, Final Words
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• “No one can earn a million dollars honestly.” -- William Jennings Bryan
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Bryan’s 1896 Campaign
• William Jennings Bryan• Currency Conflict• “A CROSS OF GOLD”• Populist / Democratic Fusion• Gold Democrats• Campaigning Styles• McKinley wins, ushering in Republican rule
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Reform Movements
• Women’s Christian Temperance Union• Settlement Houses• Florence Kelly• Illinois Consumer’s League (1898)
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Radical Thought
• Socialism– Marxist Stages– Non-Marxist– Socialist Parties– Conservative Reaction
• Anarchism• Henry George• Edward Bellamy--Looking Backwards
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• "The life of the law has not been logic, but experience.” -- Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.
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Intellectuals
• William James• John Dewey• Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. • Louis Brandeis• Political Science and Economists• Social Gospel