Title: Chapter 8 POLITICS IN THE GILDED AGE
1Chapter 8 POLITICS IN THE GILDED AGE
- Section 1 Political Machines
- Section 2 Restoring Honest Government
- Section 3 The Populist Movement
2SECTION 1
Political Machines
Ways in Which Machines Recruited and Rewarded
Immigrants
Why Immigrants Were Important to Machines
welcomed immigrants upon arrival found
immigrants temporary housing and jobs helped
immigrants become naturalized citizens
helped immigrants with finances, funerals,
and so on
represented a huge supply of supporters and
voters tended to be particularly loyal to
machines/ POLITICAL PARTIES
POLITICAL MACHINES AND IMMIGRANTS
3Political machines
Section 1 Political Machines
- during the late 1800s well-organized political
parties dominated city governments in the U.S.
because of their success in getting their members
elected to local political offices, these parties
were called political machines. - Political machines controlled votes by offering
jobs, political favors, and services to loyal
supporters.
4- I know what Parks (NYC Politician) is doing,
but what do I care? He has raised my wages. Let
him have his (illegal gains) - Bosses may dictate voting patterns, control
appointments, and wield considerable influence in
other political processes. They do not
necessarily hold public office themselves. In
fact, most historical bosses did not.
5Blue Low Red High
6Importance of immigrants
Section 1 Political Machines
- easily accessiblecould be welcomed on arrival
- had many needs for housing, jobs, and services
- represented a huge supply of supporters and
voters - tended to be loyal to machines
7I am the BOSS of this Boat
- YOU CAN CALL ME SKIPPER
- BECAUSE THE WAY I TURN THIS MONEY OVER YOU CAN
CALL ME FLIPPER
8 9Corruption and illegal activities
Section 1 Political Machines
- Machines hired men to vote early and often.
- Bosses took bribes, payoffs, and kickbacks.
10- William Magear "Boss" Tweed (April 3, 1823
April 12, 1878) was an American politician and
head of Tammany Hall, the name given to the
Democratic Party political machine that played a
major role in the history of 19th century New
York City politics. - He was convicted and eventually imprisoned for
stealing millions of dollars from the city
through political corruption. He was of
Scottish-Irish descent.
11Collapse of Tweeds support
Section 1 Political Machines
- Thomas Nasts cartoons revealed Tweeds
corruption, even to people who couldnt read very
well. - The New York Times published a series of articles
exposing Tweed.
12Restoring Honest Government
SECTION 2
13SECTION 2
Restoring Honest Government
14Desire for reform
Section 2 Restoring Honest Government
- Americans wanted political reform and honest
officials because corruption had become so
widespread. This desire split the Republican
Party into the Stalwarts and the Half-Breeds.
15President Arthur
Section 2 Restoring Honest Government
- Arthur began to support reform after the
assassination of President Garfield, and this led
to reform Republicans voting for Cleveland, the
Democratic candidate, in the election of 1884.
16Harrisons response to Clevelands reforms
Section 2 Restoring Honest Government
- returned to political patronage
- spent money on Republican pet projects
17SECTION 3
The Populist Movement
Effortsto Help Farmers
Factorsthat Weakened Efforts
FARMERS ORGANIZATIONS
18Economic hardships for farmers
Section 3 The Populist Movement
- heavy debts
- high freight and machinery costs
- falling crop prices
19Farmers movements
Section 3 The Populist Movement
- hoped to pressure states to regulate freight
andgrain-storage rates - formed cooperatives
- offered low-cost insurance
- lobbied for graduated income tax
- weakened by government limits on the powerof ICC
- weakened by racial segregation
20Money backed by silver
Section 3 The Populist Movement
- Farmers supported money backed by silver because
they wanted to increase the paper money supply.
As long as only gold was allowed to back paper,
the money supply was restricted by how much gold
the treasury had.
21Populist Party issues
Section 3 The Populist Movement
- graduated income tax
- bank regulation
- government ownership of railroad and telegraph
companies - free coinage of silver
- immigration restrictions
- shorter workday
- voting reforms
22The effects of silver
Section 3 The Populist Movement
- Silver was a central issue in the 1896
presidential campaign. - Populists supported Bryan because of his stand on
silver. - William McKinley won the election with the
support of business leaders who opposed free
silver.