A Just and Generous Nation

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A Just and Generous Nation Page 20

by Harold Holzer


  Roosevelt set forth a new agenda, bold in both principle and detail. He called for the federal government to “assume power of supervision and regulation over all corporations doing interstate business” and asked for amendments to strengthen the Interstate Commerce Act to achieve this goal. In doing so, he hoped to use the federal government’s power to regulate interstate commerce to limit the power of corporations using monopolistic methods. He proposed the creation of a new cabinet secretary of commerce and industry with jurisdiction over commerce and labor matters. He called for reform of the government’s labor policies, including legislation to limit women and child labor hours and a factory law for the District of Columbia. He praised the labor movement and suggested that government action would be necessary to protect unions.

  Like Lincoln before him, Roosevelt well understood the power of his presidential statements: the “sermons” he delivered from his “bully pulpit.” His rhetoric would prove as important as his policies. His new tone and vision had a galvanizing effect on the nation. His statements echoed the feelings of an increasingly worried and conscience-stricken middle class and unleashed the pent-up energies of a whole generation of idealists and crusaders.

  In the process, Roosevelt radically redefined the role and vastly expanded the prerogatives of the federal government. Taking advantage of the long-dormant provisions of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act, his administration pursued a series of highly visible prosecutions against the trusts, beginning with a case against the Northern Securities Company in 1902. Federal prosecutors were successful in breaking up the Standard Oil of New Jersey Trust and the American Tobacco Company Trust. In 1906 and 1908—following the publication of Upton Sinclair’s novel The Jungle, exposing in gruesome detail the abusive and unsanitary practices in Chicago’s meatpacking industry—Roosevelt signed the Pure Food and Drug Act and the Meat Inspection Act, the first real consumer protection legislation. He also sponsored a series of laws aimed at conservation of the natural environment.

  The cartoon Led by Lincoln’s Principles suggested that the sixteenth president had all but encouraged the twenty-sixth to make another run for the White House as a third-party Progressive candidate in 1912. TR would have agreed.

  LINCOLN MEMORIAL UNIVERSITY, HARROGATE, TN

  Roosevelt described the philosophic roots of his progressive beliefs in a speech in 1910 outside Osawatomie, Kansas, where John Brown had fought the Missouri Riders in 1856. Addressing himself to the Civil War veterans in his audience, Roosevelt said, “There have been two great crises in our country’s history: first when it was formed, and then again when it was perpetuated” by Lincoln. Now, he said, there was a looming third crisis that could be met only by the wisdom of Abraham Lincoln. He explained that Lincoln had rallied the public behind a commitment to support laborers in the battles between those who produce and those who profit. Roosevelt quoted Lincoln’s economic belief that “Labor is the superior of Capital.” He insisted property rights were secondary to the rights of the common welfare.

  Roosevelt went on to contend that he was applying Lincoln’s vision to America as it existed in 1910: “The essence of any struggle for healthy liberty has always been . . . to take from some one man or class of men the right to enjoy power, or wealth, or position, or immunity, which has not been earned by service to his or their fellows.”

  Roosevelt asserted that corporate owners were buying favors from local political bosses and national members of Congress. He added: “The Constitution guarantees protections to property and we must make that promise good. But it does not give the right of suffrage to any corporation. . . . The citizens of the United States must effectively control the mighty commercial forces which they have themselves called into being.”

  Executives and “especially” the board members of such corporations, he insisted, should be held responsible for breaches of antitrust law. Roosevelt cited one of the proudest creations of his own administration, the Federal Bureau of Corporations, and said that it and the Interstate Commerce Commission should be handed greater powers. He further advocated a judiciary accountable to changing social and economic conditions; comprehensive workmen’s compensation acts; higher safety and sanitary standards in the workplace; public scrutiny of all political campaign spending, both before and after elections; and graduated income and inheritance taxes on big fortunes.

  Lincoln had made the initial commitment to government for the people in 1863. Roosevelt took Lincoln’s commitment a long step forward in 1910. He called his approach a “New Nationalism.” One of its principal features would be a judiciary, responding to changing social and economic conditions by favoring people’s rights over property rights. In effect, Roosevelt was trying to undo some of the damage the Supreme Court had done in the 1880s and 1890s to protect big businesses from government regulation of their political influence. Roosevelt concluded his speech in 1910 with the following words: “If our political institutions were perfect, they would absolutely prevent the political domination of money in any part of our affairs. We need to make our political representatives more quickly and sensitively responsive to the people whose servants they are. . . . It is particularly important that all moneys received or expended for campaign purposes should be publicly accounted for, not only after election, but before election as well.”

  Three weeks before the end of his second term in 1909, Roosevelt went off to visit Lincoln’s log-cabin birthplace in Kentucky. Even in retirement, Roosevelt was not going to abandon the Lincoln centennial to anyone else, including his chosen Republican successor, William Howard Taft.

  By the time the 1912 election rolled around, TR was ready to take back the presidency from Taft, a man he felt had failed in living up to his—and to Lincoln’s—vision. He attempted a comeback as the presidential candidate of the new Progressive Party, but by then he was not alone in linking himself to Lincoln. The competition to claim Lincoln had embraced all political faiths and candidates, Republican, Progressive, and Democrat alike. Taft went off to Vermont, there to receive the endorsement of Lincoln’s son Robert. To seal the blessing, they played golf together! Roosevelt fought back by declaring that his “progressive platform of today is but an application of Lincoln’s” and dismissing Lincoln’s rich son as incapable of understanding such things. Democratic candidate Woodrow Wilson created an association of his own with the great man. Explaining that he was in search of the unique inspiration only Lincoln could provide, the Democratic presidential nominee made his own pilgrimage to the sacred and hitherto exclusively Republican mecca of Springfield, Illinois, Lincoln’s hometown.

  Running mates? A Teddy Roosevelt for President pin dating to his 1904 campaign for a full White House term (and the golden anniversary of the Republican Party) makes an explicit link to Lincoln.

  FROM THE LINCOLN FINANCIAL FOUNDATION COLLECTION, COURTESY OF THE ALLEN COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY AND INDIANA STATE MUSEUM AND HISTORIC SITES

  Comparisons between Roosevelt and Lincoln reached a new level when a gun-toting assassin attacked TR during the campaign. Roosevelt survived because he had folded his long speech inside his breast pocket. The bullet stuck within the thick manuscript, saving his life. One only wonders what might have happened had TR been prone to making brief speeches like Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address.

  Still, Roosevelt finished second that year, although the total Republican vote far exceeded the Democrats. But Wilson prevailed—benefiting from the split opposition—just as Lincoln had in 1860 against a divided Democratic opposition.

  Woodrow Wilson became president of the United States in 1913. He was a Southerner by birth and inclination and retained the dominant Southern racial prejudices. In his first year as president, Wilson presided over the fiftieth anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg—giving a Gettysburg Address of his own that suggested that Union and Confederate veterans both deserved tribute and honor. On racial matters, Wilson could not shake his Southern heritage. He made no mention of the relevance of Lincoln’s “new birth of
freedom” to the condition of African Americans in 1914. Nor did he mention the importance of the Union’s victory in the Civil War.

  Wilson was not at all inclined to look to Lincoln for guidance in addressing the increasing pattern of segregation of the African American population. Indeed, he insisted that segregation be practiced in all departments of the federal government. Wilson held the basic Southern prosegregationist view that African Americans were an inferior race. He was sympathetic to the Southern view that the Confederate states had engaged not in a rebellion but rather in a “lost cause” to maintain a superior society. In the South, lost-cause proponents had conducted a sentimental campaign for a half century to overcome the memory of defeat in the Civil War. Their message was clear: the war had nothing to do with slavery. The Southerners had fought against tyranny and more particularly against the tyranny of the federal government to violate the constitutional rights of the Southern states. They presented themselves as valiant underdogs fighting to overcome unwarranted aggression.

  Lincoln Steadying Wilson’s Hand suggests that the nineteenth-­century president continued to influence his twentieth-­century successors regardless of party, in this case Democrat Woodrow Wilson, a late-blooming Lincoln enthusiast who simultaneously embraced the racist film Birth of a Nation. Here Lincoln steels Wilson to restrain a craven politician.

  LINCOLN MEMORIAL UNIVERSITY, HARROGATE, TN

  The lost-cause proponents in the South were aided in their efforts by movie producers and book publishers in the North. D. W. Griffith’s highly successful 1915 film, Birth of a Nation, portrayed the resurgent, repressive, and lynch-prone Ku Klux Klan as a heroic force protecting Southern women from sexually aggressive African American males. President Woodrow Wilson was so enamored of the film that he hosted a private screening of it in the White House.

  Despite Wilson’s Southern proclivities, it is remarkable that his campaign speeches in 1912 amounted to a self-conscious effort to revive Lincoln’s vision of a middle-class society. Theodore Roosevelt had spoken candidly about social evils and had used federal action and new laws to address many of them. But Roosevelt’s perspective on the issues during his presidency was always a top-down vision, the view of a patrician, of an aristocrat who felt a responsibility for his society out of a sense of noblesse oblige. His progressive agenda was fully elaborated only after he left office when he was engaged in his unsuccessful campaign for the presidency between 1910 and 1912. By contrast, Wilson looked to Lincoln from the beginning of his presidency when he initiated a series of programs guided by Lincoln’s commitment to a middle-class economy and society. Like Lincoln, Wilson reenvisioned the nation’s problems, as it were, from the bottom up. He adopted the perspective of the ordinary citizen, the common worker struggling to manage under the existing conditions of the economy and the political system. Citing Lincoln as a model, Wilson explicitly linked his progressive agenda to the cause of reviving America’s commitment to social mobility and restoring equality of economic opportunity. For Wilson, it was precisely Lincoln’s understanding of the meaning of America as an antiaristocratic middle-class society that needed to be restored. Lincoln, he said, was “a man who rose out of the ranks and interpreted America better than any man had interpreted it who had risen out of the privileged classes or the educated classes of America.”

  According to Wilson, what had been lost in the Gilded Age—and in the Republican Party—was precisely Lincoln’s profound sense that America was all about the fate of the average person, about opportunities for the ordinary worker to get ahead. Wilson chided the Republicans for their elitism. “It is amazing,” he said, “how quickly the political party which had Lincoln for its first leader, Lincoln, who not only denied, but in his own person so completely disproved the aristocratic theory,—it is amazing how quickly that party, founded on faith in the people, forgot the precepts of Lincoln and fell under the delusion that the ‘masses’ needed the guardianship of ‘men of affairs.’”

  Wilson rejected outright the Gospel of Wealth notion that the industrial magnate was to be revered as the engine of the nation’s prosperity, “[F]or indeed, if you stop to think about it, nothing could be a greater departure from original Americanism, from faith in the ability of a confident, resourceful, and independent people, than the discouraging doctrine that somebody has got to provide prosperity for the rest of us.”

  Lincoln had spoken of the “prudent, penniless beginner.” Wilson spoke similarly of the “beginner,” the man “with only a little capital.” But industrial America was no longer Lincoln’s America. “American industry is not free, as once it was free,” Wilson said. “American enterprise is not free; the man with only a little capital is finding it harder to get into the field, more and more impossible to compete with the big fellow. Why? Because the laws of this country do not prevent the strong from crushing the weak.” Like Lincoln, Wilson believed that America needed to be a middle-class nation, a nation that assimilated beginners to the middle class. There needed to be “the constant renewal of society from the bottom.” The “middle class is being more and more squeezed out by the processes which we have been taught to call processes of prosperity,” he said. The whole point of American democracy was to provide the humble with access to the American Dream, and government should act to ensure this access. “Anything that depresses, anything that makes the organization greater than the man, anything that blocks, discourages, dismays the humble man, is against the principles of progress.” This was vintage Lincoln.

  Wilson sought to keep his connection to Lincoln alive. He formally accepted Lincoln’s log-cabin birthplace as a donation to the US government in 1916, declaring Lincoln a “typical” American yet a singularly “great” leader. As a historian, the young Wilson had complained that Lincoln had “made the presidency his government.” But once he assumed the presidency himself, Wilson suddenly felt “the closest kinship” to Lincoln “in principle and political” lineage.

  During World War I, Wilson encouraged the use of Lincoln’s image on war-bond and recruitment posters, quoting him to justify American involvement in a new conflict. What seems to have eluded Wilson was the irony of his quoting the Great Emancipator while resegregating the federal bureaucracy. It is no surprise that he never mentioned freedom or equality for African Americans in any of his tributes to his suddenly useful predecessor.

  But Wilson’s commitment to using the federal government to support a society for the people was indeed vintage Lincoln. And his specific policies went far beyond both Lincoln and Roosevelt in proposing government action to improve the economic condition of underadvantaged Americans. The legislative record of Wilson’s first term was unparalleled. The list of his domestic achievements was stunning and amounted to a comprehensive new set of government economic policies.

  First came tariff reform. Increasingly, progressives had come to see tariff laws as, in effect, a regressive tax on consumers. Notoriously shaped by the efforts of lobbyists, the tariffs protected the trusts from foreign competition and kept prices high. Consumers footed the bill. Legislation during Wilson’s first year as president essentially overturned the tariff regime of the nineteenth century, radically reducing rates on hundreds of items (while raising rates on certain luxury goods) and, following Lincoln’s lead, reinstituting a graduated income tax to provide a new revenue base for the government. In effect, the law shifted the source of federal revenues from a regressive consumption tax in the form of tariffs to a progressive tax on income. In 1916 the tax was significantly raised to cover war preparedness (after US entry into World War I income taxes were raised again), and, for the first time, a federal estate tax on large inheritances was established (the latter was a long-­standing item on the progressive agenda, advocated by Roosevelt as early as 1906). This was both a new technical approach to and a new philosophy of taxation, an effort to gain lower prices for most Americans through tariff reductions and simultaneously shift the burden of taxation away from lower- and middle-income Am
ericans to upper-income Americans.

  During Wilson’s first term, he was fortunate to enjoy Democratic majorities in both houses of Congress. This gave him the opportunity to follow Lincoln’s approach and use the power of the federal government for the people. With the support of Congress he established worker’s compensation and child labor laws, created the Federal Trade Commission and the Federal Reserve Board, and secured passage of the “trust-busting” Clayton Anti-Trust Act.

  It is tempting to conclude that Lincoln’s vision of America as a middle-class society had made a permanent comeback. Conditions were clearly improving. Once unleashed, the impetus for genuine reform had proved unstoppable. Ironically, Lincoln’s torch had been passed to Wilson and the Democrats, who now boasted a comprehensive progressive agenda to support their long-standing claim to the mantle of “champion of the common people.” Through his policies, Wilson had restored the essence of Lincoln’s economic vision, and he was vocal about doing so. In speech after speech, he made it clear to his fellow citizens that Lincoln was his model.

 

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