Title: Gilded Age Politics
1Gilded Age Politics
- National politics and influence of corporate
power - Agrarian discontent and political issues of the
late nineteenth century
2Politics in the Gilded Age
- Gilded Age - covered with a thin layer of gold
- Wealth and prosperity and progress
- VS.
- Urban, labor, and farming problems and big
business corruption
3Gilded Age Politics
4The Business of Politics
- Laissez-faire
- Government should play a very limited role in
business - Favored high tariffs on imports (to protect
American businesses) - Government subsidies
- payment by government to encourage development of
certain businesses and/or industries (I.e. RR)
5Credit Mobilier Scandal 1873
- Govt awarded Union Pacific (UP) RR loans and
land to build Transcontinental RR - Credit Mobilier company - hired to build RR
- Credit Mobilier charged UP way too much .
- In order for Congress to keep funding, Credit
Mobilier offered cheap shares of stock to
Congressmen who agreed to support continued
funding - Investigated in 1872 - both parties, lots of
indivuduals - guilty
Every Public Question With an Eye Only to the
Public Good
Harper's Weekly March 15, 1873
6Spoils System - Patronage system
- Started in American politics with Andrew Jackson
(1828) - To the victor, go the spoils of war
- Giving of jobs as a reward for loyalty - even to
unqualified people
7Political Parties in the Gilded Age
- Republicans
- Appealed to industrialists, bankers, and eastern
farmers - Strongest in N and upper Midwest
- Favored tight money supply backed by GOLD
- High tariffs
- High pensions for Union soldiers
- Govt aid to RR
- Strict limit on immigration
- Enforcement of blue laws - prohibited private
activities many considered immoral
- Democrats
- Attracted those less privileged
- Northern immigrant workers, laborers, southern
planters, western farmers - Claimed to represent ordinary people
- Favored increased money supply backed by SILVER
- Lower tariffs
- Higher farm prices
- Less govt aid to big business
- Fewer blue laws
8Waving the Bloody Shirt
- Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) organization of
northern Civil War veterans - Campaigned for Republicans
- Called on former Union generals as candidates
9Ethnic Divisions and Gilded Age Politics
- Democrats
- Family tradition Irish, immigrants
- Religious affiliation Catholic
- Appealed to common city laborers
- Local issues prohibition
- Republicans
- Family tradition Protestant, old-stock
northerners, - Religious affiliation Protestant
- African-Americans
- Local issues against vices and for
Prohibition in most cases
10Well-Defined Voting Blocs
DemocraticBloc
RepublicanBloc
- White southerners (preservation of white
supremacy) - Catholics
- Recent immigrants (esp. Jews)
- Urban working poor (pro-labor)
- Most farmers
- Northern whites (pro-business)
- African Americans
- Northern Protestants
- Old WASPs (support for anti-immigrant laws)
- Most of the middle class
11- Figure 18.1 Ethnocultural Voting Patterns in the
Midwest, 18701892 (p. 521)
12- Intense Voter Loyalty to the Two MajorPolitical
Parties - High Levels of Political Participation
13The Money Supply
- Most in gold and silver coinage or U.S.
Treasury notes - Bankers limit supply
- Debtors expand supply
- Panic of 1873
- Greenback Party of 1877 - expanded supply
14Money Supply - continued
- Silver demonetized in 1873
- Silver discovered in huge quantities in 1873 in
Nevada (Comstock Lode) - Sherman Silver Purchase Act of 1890
- Treasury to buy silver monthly
- Issue Treasury notes
- Increased supply some but not enough for
farmers and other debtors
15The 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 161
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.
16Spoils System Reform
- 1877 - President Rutherford B. Hayes refused to
use patronage system - Began attempt at CIVIL SERVICE reform
- Split his party (Republicans) in 1878
17Rutherford B. Hayes and Civil Service Reform
18Republican split
- Stalwarts - Sen. Conkling - defended spoils
system - Half-Breeds - Sen. Blaine - reform spoils system
but maintain party loyalty - Independents - opposed spoils system entirely
(Mugwumps)
19James Garfield 1880-1881
- Elected 1880
- Half-Breed faction - to reform spoils system but
maintain party loyalty - Assassinated by Stalwart supporter - Guiteau -
(who expected a job from Garfield and didnt get
it)
20Garfield and the Pendleton Act
21Chester Arthur
- VP w/ Garfield
- Became president after assassination
- Beneficiary of patronage in NY
- Pendleton Civil Service Act of 1883
22Pendleton Civil Service Act
- Civil Service Commission set up
- Tested applicants
- Fed employees not required to contribute campaign
- Could not be fired for political reasons
23Pendleton Act (1883)
- Civil Service Act.
- 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 200,00 civil service
federal govt. jobs.
24Election of 1884 - Grover Cleveland
- Grover Cleveland - Democrat
- Cleveland heavily criticized
- Issues
- Favored tight money policies
- Opposed high tariffs
- Took back 80 million acres from RR
- Supported more govt regulation of RR
25- Map 18.1 Presidential Elections of 1880, 1884,
and 1888 (p. 517)
26RR Regulation
- Many complaints of questionable RR practices
- Rebates - partial refunds to favored customers
- 1877 - Munn v. Illinois - Supreme Court decision
allowed states to regulate certain businesses
(including RR) - 1886 - decision limited state control in Wabash
v. Illinois (interstate commerce still
unregulated) - The Wabash decision led to the creation in 1887
of the first modern regulatory agency, the
Interstate Commerce Commission. - 1887 - Interstate Commerce Act set up Interstate
Commerce Commission (ICC) - ICC usually had to file suit against RRs and
until 1905, lost 15 of 16 cases before the
Supreme Court
27Cleveland lost bid in 1888 to Republican James
Garfield
- Bandanna, 1888 Election (p. 514)
28The 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 million - In
surplus! - Mugwumps (branch of Republican Party) opposed it
- - President Clevelands view on tariffs
- Tariffs too high and needed to be reduced
- Tariffs became a major issue in the 1888
presidential election.
29President Benjamin Harrison - 1888
- Republican - supported business interests
- Favored an increase in tariffs
- Awarded huge pensions to dependents of Civil War
soldiers - Hurt the economy in the long run
- Major Achievement
- Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890
30- Map 18.1 Presidential Election 1888 (p. 517)
31Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890
- Outlawed any combination for companies that
restrained interstate trade or commerce - Supposed to limit the formation and function of
trusts and monopolies - Proved ineffective for over 15 years
- Vague wording - enforced rarely
- Courts ruled pro-business
32Clevelands second term - 1893-1897 (unpopular)
- Panic of 1893
- Millions of workers lost jobs or had wages
slashed - 1894 - Coxeys army demanded govt create jobs
for unemployed - Repealed Sherman Silver Purchase Act
- Sent federal troops to Chicago during the Pullman
strike of 1894
33Election of 1896
- Populists - Democrats William Jennings Bryan
- Working class and farmers
- Free silver
- Labor reform
- Cross of Gold speech
- Republicans William McKinley
- New tariff bill (raised)
- Stronger gold standard
- A Full Dinner Pail
34Election of 1896
35- Map 18.5 The Election of 1896 (p. 540)
36Election of 1896 Realignment