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Dive into the Presidential debates between Theodore Roosevelt and William Taft in this engaging class review. Learn about Roosevelt's progressive reforms, such as the Square Deal and Taft's challenges with the Payne-Aldrich Tariff and Ballinger-Pinchot Controversy. Join in on the interactive Kahoot session and finish up creative Billboards while preparing for the Smackdown debates!
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Happy Presidential and Kahoot Wednesday • Hint you will need all of this week's notes on tomorrow. (Review your notes) We have just 1 more day of school this week.
Today’s Agenda • Bell Ringer – No video – Kahoot instead. You will need to record the place you finish in and your score on your google doc (Top 3 get a cold treat) • Guided Notes • Class Review – Block Questions • Finish Presentations • Finish Billboards • Presidential debates (smack down)
The remainder of class • Finish Billboards (Make sure they’re creative • Presidential debates (smack down) Teams!
Presidential Smackdown debates • William Taft ……….. Theodore Roosevelt Maliek Emily Ashley Karmen Jordyn Andrew Colin Abigail F Juan Grace Michael Taylor
Presidential debates (smack down) • William Taft : Aspen, Alex, Reagan, Cameron • Theodore Roosevelt : Miles, Jernaya , Thaila, Jordan
-Like a baseball game, wars are not over till they are over. Wars don't run on a clock like football. No previous generation was so hopelessly unrealistic that this had to be explained to them.-Thomas Sowell
7.02 Analyze how different groups of Americans made economic and political gains in the Progressive Period.
Theodore Roosevelt • 1858 – 1919 • 26th President (1901-09) • Republican • The Trust Buster! • Promoted his platform, the “Square Deal”: promise to treat both citizens and businesses fairly – protect consumers from the dangers of “bad” trusts, but also protect businesses from unreasonable labor demands
“When I say I believe in a square deal, I do not mean to give every man the best hand. If good cards do not come to any man, or if they do come, and he has got the power to play them, that is his affair. All I mean is there should be no crookedness in how the cards are dealt.”~ Theodore Roosevelt describing his square deal.
Anthracite Coal Mine Strike • 1902: 150,000 Pennsylvania coal miners went on strike for higher pay, reduced hours, and union recognition • Roosevelt offered arbitration when the strike threatened to leave the nation without coal for the winter; union accepted, but mine owners refused • Roosevelt threatened to seize the mines, forcing owners to the bargaining table • In the end, miners got more pay and fewer hours, but owners were not required to recognize the miners’ union
Elkins Act of 1903 • Banned railroads from giving rebates to “preferred” shippers – railroads had to charge everyone the same shipping rates • Strengthened the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) by giving it the ability to impose fines for violations
US v. Northern Securities • 1901: Three major railroads joined forces under a holding company called Northern Securities, essentially creating a dangerous monopoly • Roosevelt sued, claiming a violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act • 1904: Supreme Court ruled in Roosevelt’s favor, ordered breakup of Northern Securities
Hepburn Act of 1906 • Further strengthened the ICC by giving it the authority to set railroad rates rather than just regulate them • Actually helped the railroads because the ICC worked with them to ensure railroads were profitable while also making it difficult for new railroads to enter the marketplace
Meat Inspection Act of 1906 • Required the inspection of meat sold through interstate commerce and required the United States Dept. of Agriculture (USDA) to set standards of cleanliness in meatpacking plants
Pure Food & Drug Act of 1906 • Prohibited the manufacture, sale, or shipment of impure or falsely labeled food and drugs • Products containing drugs like alcohol, caffeine, or cocaine had to be labeled with contents and dosage
Land Conservation • Roosevelt supported conservation of the nation’s natural resources through limiting consumption • Set aside 230 million of acres of public lands for national parks, forests, and wildlife preserves • Created 150 national parks
William Howard Taft • 1857 – 1930 • 27th President (1909-13) • Republican • Later became Chief Justice of the Supreme Court (1921-30) • Hand-picked by Roosevelt to succeed him as President, but was Roosevelt’s opposite in personality
Payne-Aldrich Tariff of 1909 • Progressives and Taft (but not most Republicans) supported lowering tariffs • Taft tried to get a lower tariff passed, but ended up being forced to accept the Payne-Aldrich Tariff which actually raised tariffs on most goods • This angered & disappointed Progressives, including Teddy Roosevelt, and badly hurt Taft’s reputation
Ballinger-Pinchot Controversy • 1909: Taft’s Secretary of the Interior, Richard Ballinger, was accused by head of the US Forest Service (and close friend of Roosevelt) Gifford Pinchot of corruption • Taft’s Attorney General dismissed the charges, so Pinchot leaked his story to the press • Taft fired the popular Pinchot, angering Progressives • Ballinger was later cleared of any wrongdoing by congressional investigators
Taft the “Trustbuster” • Roosevelt was perceived as being a more efficient trustbuster than Taft, but Taft actually prosecuted twice as many antitrust cases in his 1 term as president as Roosevelt did in 2 terms!
US v. American Tobacco • 1911: Supreme Court ruled that James Duke’s American Tobacco Co. had violated the Sherman Antitrust Act by establishing an illegal monopoly on the cigarette industry; Court ordered the company broken up
Mann-Elkins Act of 1910 • Again increased the powers of the Interstate Commerce Commission by giving it more regulatory control • Added communications (telegraph & telephone companies) to the industries overseen by the ICC
Children’s Bureau • Created by Taft in 1912 • Designed to protect children from abuse, both at home and in the workplace and to monitor orphanages, foster care, and adoptions • First federal agency to be headed by a woman (Julia Lathrop)
Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire • March 25, 1911 • Exit doors to the factory were kept locked from the outside to prevent employees from stealing • When fire broke out, workers could not escape and 146 women workers died • Public outrage led to major reforms in working conditions and building codes
So, Teddy Roosevelt was NOT happy with Taft’s performance as President…..What will he do?
Bull Moose Party • Disappointed in Taft, Teddy decided to run for president once again in 1912, but the Republican Party nominated Taft • Roosevelt formed his own Progressive Party, better known as the “Bull Moose” Party and ran as its candidate, splitting the Republican vote • The Bull Moose platform of “New Nationalism” supported a federal government which was powerful enough to regulate corporations • Roosevelt was shot while campaigning, limiting his ability to appear in public over the last several weeks of the election
Election of 1912 • Democratic Party nominated Progressive NJ governor (and political newcomer) Woodrow Wilson • With the Republicans split, Wilson won the election fairly easily
Woodrow Wilson • 1856 – 1924 • 28th President (1913-21) • Ran on the “New Freedom” platform: rather than empower government to regulate monopolies and trusts, simply destroy monopolies to ensure fair competition • Believed in limited government, especially where the economy was concerned
16th Amendment • 1913 • “The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several States, and without regard to any census or enumeration” • US now taxed individuals rather than the states
17th Amendment • 1913 • US Senators had been appointed by state legislatures, but after David Graham Phillips’ articles on corruption in the Senate, the 17th Amendment changed the law to direct election of Senators by the people
Federal Reserve Act of 1913 • Wilson revived the idea of a “national bank” • Federal Reserve Act required private banks to keep a portion of their deposits on reserve in federally run reserve banks to act as a cushion against unexpected losses; federal reserve banks would set national interest rates and regulate the amount of money in circulation, allowing them to control inflation and prevent recessions
Clayton Antitrust Act of 1914 • Strengthened the Sherman Anti-Trust Act • Required businesses to charge all customers the same price for a product • Banned manufacturers from giving price discounts to retailers who bought larger volumes of goods • Declared labor unions to be exempt from antitrust laws
18th Amendment • 1919 • Growing support for the temperance (anti-alcohol) in the US led to a ban on the manufacture, transport, or sale of alcoholic beverages anywhere in the US • 18th Amendment was repealed by the 21st Amendment in 1933
19th Amendment • 1920 • Finally granted women suffrage (the right to vote) in federal elections • Suffrage had been sought by women since the Seneca Falls Convention of 1848!
Robert La Follette • 1855 – 1925 • Leader in Progressive reforms at the state level as governor of Wisconsin • Developed the “Wisconsin idea” of applying scientific methods to the running of state government • Later served in the US Senate and ran for President
Voting Reforms • Direct Primaries: all party members vote for who will be nominated as a candidate rather than just party leadership • Secret ballot: individual’s votes would be kept secret, not published • Referendum: allows citizens to vote directly on important issues rather than leave the issues in the hands of elected officials • Recall: allows voters to remove an elected official from office before their term is up • Initiative: allows voters to force elected officials to vote on a certain issue