A Two- Party Stalemate In the 1890s, the groups of potential voters who were disenfranchised were...
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Transcript of A Two- Party Stalemate In the 1890s, the groups of potential voters who were disenfranchised were...
A Two-A Two-Party Party
StalemateStalemate
A Two-A Two-Party Party
StalemateStalemate
In the 1890s, the groups of potential voters who were disenfranchised were
A. all of the answers below
B. most women
C. poor Southern women
D. blacks in the South
E. almost all blacks
CONGRESS
TRUSTS
CONGRESS CONTROLLED BY Lib. Rep’s or Dem’s AS
REP’S SPLIT THEIR VOTES
CONKLING STALWARTS
BLAINE
HALFBREEDS
REFORMERS
“MUGWUMPS”
“Liberal Republicans”
The Presidency as a The Presidency as a Symbolic OfficeSymbolic Office
The Presidency as a The Presidency as a Symbolic OfficeSymbolic Office
Party bosses ruled.
Presidents should avoid offending any factions within their own party. The President just doled out federal jobs. Senator Roscoe Conkling
1865 53,000 people worked for the federal govt.
1890 166,000 “ “ “ “ “ “
PRESIDENCY:NOMINATED BY PARTY BOSSES
FOR PURELY POLITICAL REASONS (swing states &
“Nobodies”) these men let Congress be in charge
• Machiavelli said in 1500 that you can not have great leaders in times of peace
• After the “excesses” of federal power during the Civil War, America was ready to curb its growth again.
• During periods of economic growth Americans prefer “hands off” presidents.
During the late 1800s, the function of the president was to
A. use his position as leader of both his party and the nation to control Congress
B. spend much of his time making political appointments
C. persuade Congress to agree on the subjects under debate and make the government's position clear to the press
D. suggest legislation to Congress and mediate the conflicts between the two political parties
E. create major fiscal and military policies
Liberal Republicans
Just Give Him Graft And Corruption Hourly--Cleveland
The Rogues Gallery• Johnson Rep???• Grant Rep• Hayes Rep• Garfield Rep• Arthur Rep• Cleveland Dem• Harrison Rep• Cleveland Again Dem
ECONOMIC GROWTH EXCEPT 1873-76 AND 1893-1897.
HUGE FEDERAL SURPLUSES--SO MAKE UP JOBS AND BUY
VOTES. $20.00 PER VOTE, G.A.R. PENSIONS, 80% VOTER
TURNOUT, ETHNIC DIVISIONS, ETC.
• WEALTHY• MIDDLE CLASS• BLACKS (when they could
vote)• HIGH TARIFFS• Some LARGE CITIES• HARD $ MEN• GAR• Sold “morality” & and the
gov’t should control BOTH economic and moral affairs of society
• Northern Protestants• Old WASPs
• IMMIGRANTS• NYC, and many other cities
(urban poor)• MW FARMERS• LOW TARRIFF• GREENBACKS. “Ohio Idea”
caused a split in the party, but SLOWLY moved toward softer money
• White SOUTHERNERS especially CSA vets.
• More diverse ethnically and more tolerant of “alternate” lifestyles
• Catholics
REPUBLICANS DEMOCRATS
During the late 1800s, the ONLY significant form of federal assistance (welfare) to individuals was
A. the old-age benefit
B. the retired veterans' pension
C. health care for the poor
D. support for widows and orphans
E. Social Security for retired workers
SWING STATES•NEW YORK******
•ILLINOIS
•INDIANA
•OHIO
90% of ALL presidential and vice-presidential candidates came from these four states.
Tongs of San Francisco
THE REPUBLICAN ELEPHANT
SLEEPS WHILE THE DEMOCRAT DONKEY LEAPS OVER THE CLIFF
OF ECONOMIC CHAOS
ITS ALWAYS ABOUT
$$$$
GRANT’S ADMIN:• Decide Not to annex Dom. Rep.• 15th amendment ratified• Last of “seceded” states admitted 1870• Amnesty for CSA officers 1872• Old Civil War Morrill Tariff reduced• Coinage Act of 1873 removes silver as
a form of specie.• Panic of 1873 hits. Hard-money
policies don’t cause—but exacerbate the Panic
During the late 1800s, the federal government had a reputation for
A. creating conflicts
B. being very active in reform movements
C. being concerned with international affairs
D. being stronger than most national governments
E. doing very little to ease growing problems
• Vetoes Bill to issue more Greenbacks (would have caused inflation—helping debtors and poor).
• Specie Resumption Act. By stockpiling gold to buy back Greenbacks “Contraction” occurred. Deflation increased ($19.42 per capita to $19.37—by 1890 its ONLY up to $22.67),
• But because of this—on Greenback Redemption Day most people just kept their now sound (but scarce) Greenbacks
GRANT CONTINUED
• Hard-money men are happy, but at the polls in 1874 there is a backlash. Democrats came to control the House--& in 1878 the Greenback Labor Party was formed to fight FOR inflation.
• Custer defeated at Little Big Horn• Centennial Expo @ Philly (1876)• Whiskey ring exposed (1874)
Known as “His Fraudulancy” as he had to cheat in order to beat Tilden. Known for his Dry Admin. Said he was much prouder to be a Union General than President
• Electoral Count Act 1877 creates a bi-partisan commission of 8 Rep’s and 7 Dem’s to count the votes in contested states. Hayes “wins”.
• Civil Service reform begun• “Water flowed like champagne” • Reconstruction ENDS 1877• RR Strikes ended by Fed. Troops• Molly McGuires arrested. Infiltrated by
Pinkertons
• KKK and Jim Crow Laws throughout the South. Reconstruction ends in utter failure.
• Right of States to regulate RR’s upheld• Greenback Party @ its height (1878)
• Bland-Allison Act passed over his veto(1878). Puts silver back on specie list—gov’t must buy b/w 2 and 4 million dollars of silver per month (GNP was about $1 billion). Too little to cause the desired (by debtors) inflation needed.
• Specie repayments resumed 1879
Inspecting the Democratic Curiosity ShopInspecting the Democratic Curiosity ShopInspecting the Democratic Curiosity ShopInspecting the Democratic Curiosity Shop
1880 1880 Presidential Presidential
ElectionElection
1880 1880 Presidential Presidential
ElectionElection
1880 Presidential Election: 1880 Presidential Election: RepublicansRepublicans
1880 Presidential Election: 1880 Presidential Election: RepublicansRepublicans
Half BreedsHalf Breeds StalwartsStalwarts
Sen. James G. Blaine Sen. Roscoe Conkling (Maine) (New York)
James A. Garfield Chester A. Arthur (VP)
compromise
1881: Garfield Assassinated!1881: Garfield Assassinated!1881: Garfield Assassinated!1881: Garfield Assassinated!
Charles Guiteau:I Am a Stalwart, and Arthur is President now!
Although A Stalwart Republican (Conkling) he fought against the
Spoils System.• Assassinated for his troubles
(Guiteau—refused gov’t job)
• Calls for reform led to Congressional action
• VP Arthur takes over.
Chester A. Arthur:Chester A. Arthur:The Fox in the Chicken The Fox in the Chicken
Coup?Coup?
Chester A. Arthur:Chester A. Arthur:The Fox in the Chicken The Fox in the Chicken
Coup?Coup?
In the political battles of the late 1800s, the Stalwarts and the Half-Breeds were
A. groups who favored civil service reform
B. the nicknames of the rival Republican and Democratic political machines
C. two rival factions within the Republican party who fought over political patronage
D. the nicknames of the conservative and liberal wings of the Democratic party
E. opposing sides regarding the future of Reconstruction
Arthur’s Term ’81’-’85’ :
• Chinese Exclusion Act (1882)
• Immigration Act (1882) No paupers, criminals, moron, etc.
• 1st US Steel warships
**Pendleton Civil Service Act (1883)
• The “Magna Carta” of civil service reform.
• 1883 14,000 out of 117,000 federal govt. jobs became civil service exam positions.
• 1900 100,000 out of 200,000 civil service federal govt. jobs.
• Tariff Act 1883 (huge fed surplus $$$ but the tariffs kept going up)
In California, anti-Chinese sentiment grew to the point that A. the federal government deported many Chinese
B. the state government banned anti-Chinese political parties
C. the state government passed a special income tax on Chinese only
D. the local governments required Chinese to live separately in Chinatowns
E. the federal government prohibited any further Chinese immigration into the country
Republican “Mugwumps”Republican “Mugwumps”Republican “Mugwumps”Republican “Mugwumps” Reformers who wouldn’t re-nominate Chester A. Arthur.
Reform to them create a disinterested, impartial govt. run by an educated elite like themselves.
Social Darwinists.
Laissez faire government to them:
Favoritism & the spoils system seen as govt. intervention in society.
Their target was ending political corruption, not social or economic reform!
TheTheMugwumpsMugwumps
TheTheMugwumpsMugwumps
Men may come and men may go, but the work of reform shall go on forever. Will support Cleveland in the 1884 election.
The purpose of the Pendleton Civil Service Act of 1883 was to
A. establish the first racial quotas for government jobs
B. fill some government jobs on the basis of competitive examinations, to reduce “spoils”.
C. ensure that appointments to government jobs were approved by Congress
D. declare illegal the system of city political machines and boss rule
E. create a board of appeals for labor disputes
1884 Presidential 1884 Presidential ElectionElection
1884 Presidential 1884 Presidential ElectionElection
Grover Cleveland James Blaine * (DEM) (REP)
1884 1884 Presidential Presidential
ElectionElection
1884 1884 Presidential Presidential
ElectionElection
The election of 1884 was typical of national contests in the late 1800s because of its emphasis on
A. public issues rather than personalities
B. change rather than stability
C. abilities rather than party loyalty
D. personalities rather than policies
E. capitalism and socialism
A Dirty A Dirty CampaignCampaign
A Dirty A Dirty CampaignCampaign
Ma, Ma…where’s my pa?He’s going to the White House, ha… ha… ha…!
Little Lost Little Lost MugwumpMugwumpLittle Lost Little Lost MugwumpMugwump
Blaine in 1884 tried to play the role of reformer, and bring the Republican sheep to the ballot box, but…
UGLY HONEST“Public Office is Public Trust”
• Heated and nasty election on the part of James G. Blaine’s Half Breed Republicans.
• “Ma, Ma, where’s Pa? Gone to Washington, Ha Ha Ha!!”
• Blaine Loses when he does not denounce the “Rum, Romanism, and Rebellion” speech. Enough NYC Irish vote democrat in response
• Also hurt by the “Burn this letter” scandal.• Cleveland is elected by the Republican Mugwump
reformers who vote Dem rather than corrupt Blaine.
• BUT NO REAL ISSUES
Cleveland’s Events 1884-1888• Pres. Succession Act 1886• Interstate Commerce Act 1887• Anti-Polygamy Law (Utah)• Vetoed 413 “Pork Bills” in 4 years.• “A Public office is a public TRUST”• His laissez-faire presidency:
– Opposed bills to assist the poor as well as the rich.
– Vetoed over 200 special pension bills for Civil War veterans!
Bravo, Señor Bravo, Señor Clevelando!Clevelando!Bravo, Señor Bravo, Señor Clevelando!Clevelando!
The Tariff IssueThe Tariff IssueThe Tariff IssueThe Tariff Issue After the Civil War, Congress raised tariffs to protect new US industries.
Big business wanted to continue this; consumers did not.
1885 tariffs earned the US $100 mil. In surplus!
Mugwumps opposed it WHY???
President Cleveland’s view on tariffs????
Tariffs became a major issue in the 1888 presidential election.
Filing the Rough Filing the Rough EdgesEdges
Filing the Rough Filing the Rough EdgesEdges
Tariff of 1888
1888 Presidential 1888 Presidential ElectionElection
1888 Presidential 1888 Presidential ElectionElection
Grover Cleveland Benjamin Harrison (DEM) * (REP)
Coming Out for Coming Out for HarrisonHarrison
Coming Out for Coming Out for HarrisonHarrison
The Smallest The Smallest Specimen YetSpecimen YetThe Smallest The Smallest Specimen YetSpecimen Yet
1888 1888 Presidential Presidential
ElectionElection
1888 1888 Presidential Presidential
ElectionElection
Grover Cleveland lost the election of 1888 partly because of the issue of
A. lowering tariffs
B. restricting immigration
C. regulating big business
D. passing civil service legislation
E. supporting civil rights
Changing Public Changing Public OpinionOpinion
Changing Public Changing Public OpinionOpinion Americans wanted the federal govt. to
deal with growing soc. & eco. problems & to curb the power of the trusts:
Interstate Commerce Act – 1887
Sherman Antitrust Act – 1890
McKinley Tariff – 1890
o Based on the theory that prosperity flowed directly from protectionism.
o Increased already high rates another 4%!
Rep. Party suffered big losses in 1890 (even McKinley lost his House seat!).
BIGGEST PROBLEM
HE CAME UP WITH THREEANSWERS
• 1
• 2.
• 3.
IT IS HARRISON’S ADMINISTRATION THATCREATES THE PANIC OF 1893
• Mckinley Tariff Act 48.4% (1890). He had defeated Cleveland on the tariff issue—so he felt compelled to raise it to ridiculous heights.
• Backlash in 1890 puts Dem’s in charge of Congress again.
• 1892 sees the rise of the Populist Party• Sherman Silver Purchase Act• Sherman Anti-Trust Act (1890)• Dependent Pension Act (1890)• Boomer Sooner
Close and Near
Political party loyalties of the late 1800s tended to remain stable because
A. economic issues divided the electorate into well-organized opposing groups
B. voting participation was low and political change slow
C. only one political party garnered any substantial support
D. voting patterns were determined more by sharp cultural and ethnic differences rather than political issues
E. few significant economic or social changes took place, and thus few political issues developed
Populist Platform• Unlimited coinage of silver at 16:1to create inflation
(to help western and southern debtors)• Socialized RR’s, telegraph, and telephone (to help the
West)• A graduated income tax• Direct election of Senators• 1 term limit on the Presidency• Initiative, Referendum and Recall• 10 hour work-day (trying to win labor vote)• Immigration restrictions (trying to win labor vote)• Use of strikes to attack unfair business practices.• Southern alliance of poor black and white farmers (to
win the South)
Despite major gains in 1892…See map on p. 523
• South returns to racism and hatred—last black voters were disenfranchised by Poll Taxes, Literacy Tests, etc.
• Homestead (Carnegie’s Steel factory) strike turns into a “riot” that has to broken by FEDERAL troops.
• Panic of 1893-1897 guts American business. No patience for reform is left.
1892 1892 Presidential Presidential
ElectionElection
1892 1892 Presidential Presidential
ElectionElection
HE INHERITS FROM HARRISON the Panic of 1893 with:
High Inflation (partly due to silver)High unemploymentHigh Misery
BY THE END OF HIS 2nd TERM HE IS THE MOST DISLIKED PRESIDENT OF ALL TIMES.
Cleveland Loses Support Cleveland Loses Support Fast!Fast!
Cleveland Loses Support Cleveland Loses Support Fast!Fast! The only President to serve two
non- consecutive terms.
Blamed for the 1893 Panic.
Defended the gold standard.
Used federal troops in the 1894 Pullman strike.
Repealed the Sherman Silver Purchase Act.
The Silver IssueThe Silver IssueThe Silver IssueThe Silver Issue “Crime of ’73” demonetization of silver (govt. stopped coining silver).
Bland-Allison Act (1878) limited silver coinage to $2-$4 mil. per mo. (based on the 16:1 ratio of silver to gold).
Sherman Silver Purchase Act (1890)
The US Treasury must purchase $4.5 mil. oz. of silver a month.
Govt. deposited most silver in the US Treasury rather than circulation.
Cleveland’s ill-fated attempts to fix the problems
• Overspeculation in factories (addicted to growth during C.W.)
• Labor disorder
• Agricultural depression
• Too much silver caused a drop in the dollar internationally
• Foreign bankers called in loans
The biggest Problem1. U.S gov’t has to buy Silver with paper currency2. The seller then trades their new paper currency for
GOLD.3. Happens every time the gov’t buys silver.4. The rule is the gov’t needs $100 million in gold to
support $350 million in currency.5. By 1894 the gold reserve has dropped to $41
million because of #2.6. Therefore the gov’t should STOP producing paper
$, but that will create a PANIC!!!!
Cleveland’s Solution• He borrows $65 million from banker (Republican) J.P.
Morgan at a $7 million commission for the banker.• Make’s Cleveland look like Morgan’s “errand boy”.• Repeals the Sherman Silver Purchase Act• Replaces the very high McKinley Tariff with the
Wilson-Gorman Tariff, but “riders” to it make it just as high
• He does get a temporary 2% tax on the wealthy, but the S.C. declares it unconstitutional
BUT, ITS REALLY AT THE STATE/LOCAL LEVEL THAT THE WHEELING & DEALING OF POLITICS WAS DONE:
POLITICAL MACHINES• SOLD GOV’T SERVICES TO HIGHEST
BIDDER– SANDBAGGING– KICKBACKS– BRIBERY
• SPOILS SYSTEM
• 80% VOTER TURNOUT
• POLITICS AS A CAREER.
• Politics as organized “Big Bidness”
The urban political machine had all of the following goals except
A. making money for the political boss
B. providing some of the services the new immigrants needed
C. creating jobs in city government for the supporters of the machine
D. finding jobs for the unemployed
E. keeping the Irish Catholics from gaining control of city government
The Bottom of the Socio-
Economic ladder
“Street Arabs”
During the late 1800s, the most significant effect of the change in incomes upon society was that
A. the income of the lower class dropped significantly
B. the middle class grew larger and more prosperous
C. the upper class showed little change in its wealth
D. "real" wages dropped for everyone, despite a rise in "money" wages
E. the upper class lost great amounts of wealth