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Progressivism in America: 1890s to 1920s. The Progressives. Believed efficient government could protect public interest and restore order to society. The Progressives. Specific issues for reform :. The break-up or regulation of trusts Killing political machines
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The Progressives • Believed efficient government could protect public interest and restore order to society
The Progressives Specific issues for reform: • The break-up or regulation of trusts • Killing political machines • Reduce threat of socialism (by improving workers’ lives) • Improve squalid conditions in the cities • Improve working conditions for female labor & end child labor • Consumer protection • Voting reform • Conservation • Banking Reform • Labor reform (working conditions & unionization) • Prohibition of alcohol • Female suffrage
The Muckrakers Term coined by Teddy Roosevelt: “In Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress you may recall the description of the Man with the Muck-rake, the man who could look no way but downward with the muck-rake in his hands; Who was offered a celestial crown for his muck-rake, but who would neither look up nor regard the crown he was offered, but continued to rake to himself the filth of the floor.”
The Muckrakers • Journalists who attempted to expose the evils of society • Popular magazines such as McClure’s and Cosmopolitan (owned by Hearst), and Collier’s emerged
Progressive Activists • Jane Addams (Hull House) • Florence Kelley (child labor reforms)
Political Reforms • Robert La Follette(R)-Wisconsin • Regulated public utilities, esp. railroads • Direct primary • Initiative, referendum, recall • Direct election of senators (led to passage of 17th Amendment in 1913) • State income tax • Civil service reform • Australian ballot (secret ballot) • Commission System • Cities run by 5 commissioners w/a city manager; reduced the power of machine politics
Teddy Roosevelt’s Progressive Legacy “Square Deal” for capital, labor, & the public A. Regulation of Corporations (distinguished good trusts from bad trusts) 1. Anthracite Coal Strike-TR pressured end to strike; threatened to seize mines & operate them with federal troops if owners refused compromise -owners consented to arbitration 2. Created Department of Commerce & Labor 3. Attacked Northern Securities Company to break up alleged railroad trust; TR seen as “trustbuster” 4. Elkins Act: railroad co’s had to keep to advertised rates; no rebates 5. Hepburn Act: expanded power of the ICC which could now set max. RxR rates & restrict rebates
Teddy Roosevelt’s Progressive Legacy B. Consumer Protection 1b. Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle prompted TR to support federal regulations 2. Meat Inspection Act 3. Pure Food & Drug Act C. Conservation 1b. Gifford Pinchot 2. Newlands Reclamation Act: federal gov’t more active in water management & land reclamation 3. Forest protection
Panic of 1907 Causes: speculation & mismanagement in Wall St. banks & trusts; overextension of credit Results: showed need for elastic money supply -paved way for est. of Federal Reserve Act of 1913
Taft Becomes President • Roosevelt chose not to run for reelection in 1908; supported his Sec. of War, William Howard Taft for Republican nomination • Taft defeated Democratic nominee William Jennings Bryan
President Taft • More cautious progressive agenda than T.R. • Continued as a trustbuster -1911, US v. American Tobacco Co. • Was much more passive toward Congress than T.R.
Split in the Republican Party Payne-Aldrich Tariff, 1909: most important cause for split ofRepublican Party. 1. Taft pushed to reduce tariff (key reform for progressives & a campaign promise) 2. House passed moderately reductive bill but Senate revised it back upwards 3. Taft signed the Payne-Aldrich Tariff thus betraying his campaign promises to support a lower tariff
Split in the Republican Party Ballinger-Pinchot controversy(1910) • Secretary of Interior Ballinger opened public lands in WY, MT, Alaska to corporate development • Gifford Pinchot, chief of Agriculture Department's Division of Forestry and strong TR supporter criticized Ballinger • Taft fired Pinchot for insubordination. • Storm of protest arose from conservationists & Roosevelt’s friends. -- A congressional committee ruled Pinchot not guilty of wrong-doing. • Contributed to growing split between Taft and TR.
Split in the Republican Party Ballinger-Pinchot controversy (1910)
Roosevelt’s “New Nationalism” • Teddy’s domestic program which sought continued consolidation of trusts & labor unions, & growth of powerful regulatory agencies in Washington; taxation of businesses & more efficient government
Split in the Republican Party • Split over conservation & tariff issues, Republicans lost control of the House of Reps in the 1910 midterm elections (1st time in 18 years the Dems gained control) • Taft also pushed an anti-trust suit against J.P. Morgan’s U.S. Steel Co., infuriating TR
Split in the Republican Party • 1911, National Progressive Republican Leagueformed • TR becomes its candidate for 1912 presidential election -he reasoned that the 3rd-term tradition applied to three consecutive terms “My hat is in the ring!”
Election of 1912 • Woodrow Wilson nominated by Democrats -Platform: antitrust, monetary changes, tariff reductions • Wilson’s domestic platform referred to as the “New Freedom”: - pro-small enterprise, entrepreneurship, free competitive economy w/out monopoly; strong states’ rights -trustbusting was a campaign promise -wanted less gov’t interference in human affairs (social issues)
Election of 1912 B. Teddy Roosevelt nominated by Progressive-Republican party (Bull Moose Party) • "New Nationalism":Teddy’s domestic program which sought continued consolidation of trusts & labor unions, & growth of powerful regulatory agencies in Washington; taxation of businesses & more efficient government
Election of 1912 New Nationalism • Sought to set liberal agenda for next 50 years. • Like Wilson, Roosevelt favored active gov’t role in economic affairs; but favored both good trusts AND regulation. • supported women’s suffrage, graduated income tax, lower tariffs, campaign spending limits, currency reform; and broad program of social welfare: minimum-wage laws, abolition of child labor, and workers' compensation.
Election of 1912 C. Taft was nominated by the Republicans -he didn’t campaign & was primarily supported by the Republican “Old Guard”
Election of 1912 • Wilson won with only 41% of the popular vote • TR’s party fatally split the Republican vote and gave the election to Wilson (TR & Taft combined for over 1.25 million more popular votes than Wilson!)
Woodrow Wilson’s Presidency Wilson’s Background: -Born in VA -didn't support efforts to improve rights for blacks. -worked as lawyer, history professor (!), president of Princeton University, & Gov. of NJ -”New Freedom” program included his plan to attack the trusts, tariffs, and high finance -attacked the “triple wall of privilege”: high tariff, the banks, the trusts
Wilson & Taxation -successfully lobbied Congress to cut tariff (Underwood Tariff Bill, 1913 substantially reduced tariff from 37-40% to 29% & eliminated it entirely for about 100 items; 1st tariff decrease since Civil War) -oversaw ratification of the 16th Amendment(legalized graduated federal income tax which taxed individual earnings & corporate profits)
Wilson & the Federal Reserve Signed off on Federal Reserve Act of 1913: -created Federal Reserve System -sought to establish decentralized private banking system under federal control -divided nation into 12 districts w/regional central bank in each district -could issue paper currency in times of emergency, transfer funds to member banks in trouble -failed in preventing economic depressions ***still serves as basis of the U.S. banking system
Wilson’s Key Anti-Trust Legislation Federal Trade Commission Actof 1914 -Empowered presidential-appointed commission (FTC) to monitor industries in interstate commerce (e.g. meat packers) • cease and desist orders: Commissioners could end unfair trade practices: unlawful competition, false advertising, mislabeling, adulteration, & bribery.
Wilson’s Key Antitrust Legislation cont. Clayton Anti-Trust Act of 1914 Purpose: strengthen Sherman Anti-Trust Act -banned co’s from acquiring stock of another if doing so would create a monopoly; co. officers could be prosecuted if found guilty of this - labor unions & agricultural organizations wouldn’t be subject to antitrust prosecution -legalized strikes and peaceful picketing. i. AFL leader Samuel Gompers hailed act as the "Magna Carta of labor" -- weakness: didn’t explicitly state what was and what wasn't legal union activity; Wilson refused to go further.
Prohibition of Alcohol 18th Amendment: banned sale, transport, manufacture, or consumption of alcohol Volstead Act: passed to enforce 19th Amendment
Women’s Suffrage during Wilson’s Presidency *By 1910, woman had federal voting rights in WY, UT, CO, WA, and ID *Carrie Chapman Cattsucceeded Susan B. Anthony as president of National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) -Increased pressure on gov’t by organizing more support, lobbying, & using ladylike behavior -More radical women’s org’s used picketing & hunger strikes to increase pressure
Women’s Suffrage during Wilson’s Presidency -Alice Paul’s Congressional Union -militant women’s rights protestors -Put forth Equal Rights Amendment after 1920; never succeeded in getting it passed.
Women’s Suffrage during Wilson’s Presidency • Women’s support for the war effort during WWI was rewarded by increased support for suffrage • Suffrage bill put forth in House by Jeannette Rankin • 1919, Congress passed 19th Amendment granting women the right to vote
Failures of Progressivism: Civil Rights • Great Migration resulted in violent race riots • Wilson spoke out against lynching in his 1912 campaign but opposed federal anti-lynching legislation once in office • Segregation in federal bureaucracy increased Lynching in 1930
Civil Rights: W.E.B. DuBois • Advocated for immediate inclusion of the top 10% of African-Americans into American life • Wrote Souls of Black Folk, rejected Booker T. Washington’s gradual approach to equality • Founded Niagara Movement; advocated civil rights for African-Americans • Demanded “talented tenth” of black community get immediate access to equality • Early member of NAACP; advocated for civil rights • Editor for The Crisis; magazine intended to increase awareness of need for civil rights
Civil Rights: Booker T. Washington • Advocated acceptance of segregation in the short-term; believed African-Americans should work hard and earn the respect of whites • In Atlanta Compromise speech, suggested African-Americans should forego political equality, civil right, and higher education for the time being; focus on industrial education and accumulating wealth • Founded Tuskegee Institute as school for industrial education