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The Politics of Expansion, 1840-1846

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Title: The Politics of Expansion, 1840-1846


1
The Politics of Expansion, 1840-1846
  • By product of westward expansion
  • Major issue should U.S. annex the independent
    Texas republic?
  • 1830s were unsettled with issues relating to
    California, New Mexico, and Oregon
  • 1840 -1842 economic recovery was the top
    political issue
  • Only after politicians failed to answer economic
    issues were opportunist able to thrust issues
    relating to expansion to the forefront of the
    political agenda

2
The Politics of Expansion, 1840-1846
  • The Whig Ascendancy
  • The election of 1840 brought Whig candidate
    William Henry Harrison to the presidency
  • Installed Whig majorities in both houses of
    Congress
  • Whigs had come to power based on Henry Clays
    American System, (stimulate economic recovery)
  • Quickly repealed Van Burens Independent Treasury
  • They planned to substitute some type of fiscal
    agent, which like the no longer function Bank of
    the US was a private corporation, chartered by
    congress, and regulating the currency.

3
The Politics of Expansion, 1840-1846
  • The Whig Ascendancy
  • Whigs also favored a tariff (but a different kind
    of tariff).
  • Instead of being set high to protect US
    manufacturers, it would be modified to be a
    revenue tariff high enough to provide
    incidental protection for American industries
    (foreign products could enter the US).
  • Duties collected on these imports would accrue to
    the federal government as revenue.
  • The revenue would then be distributed to the
    states for internal improvements.
  • Just as popular among southern and western Whigs
    as the tariff was among northern Whigs.

4
The Politics of Expansion, 1840-1846
  • The Whig Ascendancy
  • All might have been well and moved quickly if it
    had not been for the untimely death of Harrison
    just one month after entering office.

5
The Politics of Expansion, 1840-1846
  • The Whig Ascendancy
  • Vice President John Tyler, an upper crust from
    Virginia, who had only been added to the ticket
    to strengthen the Whigs appeal in the South.
  • Tyler was a former Democrat who had split with
    Jackson over nullification, but he continued to
    favor the Democratic philosophy of states
    rights.
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