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Title: Progressive Era:


1
Progressive Era
  • Its Politics and Culture

2
Origins of Progressivism
  • What is Progressivism? __________________________
    ________________________________
  • Two Kinds of Progressivism
  • One that came American Populism of the late 19th
    century (rural and values based).
  • Another that came from a movement of
    intellectuals that sought change through
    inclusion and education (urban and intellectual
    based).
  • These two progressive movements sometimes
    overlapped
  • Both movements driven by Protestant beliefs in
    justice and moral imperatives.

3
Types of Progressive Policy
  • 1) Prohibition (banning of alcoholic beverages)
    was a subject of the Progressive movement
  •         Those new found city dwellers once a
    part of rural society saw immigrant abuses of
    alcoholic beverages as a moral cancer, and used
    the Social Gospel as justification for
    Prohibition. (Anti-Saloon League and the Womans
    Temperance Union spearheaded crusades against
    alcohol)
  •         City Progressive intellectuals backed
    Prohibition because alcoholic beverages made city
    bosses and political machines stronger.

4
The Machine and Alcohol
  • ?Machines used alcohol as an instrument of
    leverage with immigrants, even though they
    exploited the immigrant they understood and
    catered to them culturally and personally.
  • ?Not until 1920 does Prohibition takes effect
    with the Volstead Act and the 18th Amendment.

5
Wealth?
  • 2) Uneven distribution of wealth at the end of
    the Gilded Age began to show antagonisms toward
    those who have apparently used competition to
    destroy competition thus, in the words of Walter
    Weyl, The New Democracy, As wealth accumulates,
    moreover, a cleavage of sentiment widens between
    the men who are getting rich and the men who
    richThe widening of this competitive field has
    widened the variation and has sharpened the
    contrast between success and failure, with
    resulting inequality and discontent.
  • The current state of American competition was not
    considered democratic to him and the others at
    the New Republic.

6
Muckrakers
  • Muckrakers, usually journalists, used their
    outlets to fight immoral behavior in city
    politics, economics, and in society as a whole.
  • Lincoln Steffens criticized corruption in city
    politics, Charles Beards An Economic
    Interpretation of the Constitution, and Ida
    Tarbell criticized Standard Oil, novels by people
    like Upton Sinclair lampooned city life.

7
Immigration
  • 3) Immigration illustrates the split in the
    Progressive movement.
  • Some reformers were anti-immigrant and sided with
    American nativists.
  • Some reformers, like Jane Addams, felt
    Americanizing immigrants was the best strategy.
  • Either way together they both (pro and
    anti-immigration types) made up the Progressive
    Era philosophy.

8
Scientific Revolution
  • 4) Scientific Revolution finds its way into
    society in two ways (early industrial revolution
    and 20th century automation)
  • Scientific Management, or the study of industrial
    efficiency, guided people like Frederick Taylor
    to influence Henry Ford. (modern assembly line
    for autos.)
  • Social Sciences influenced people, like John
    Dewey in Democracy and Education (1916), to apply
    pragmatic thinking to how democracy should be run
    in society and in education. (Also an important
    person in the formation of the New Republic)

9
The Vote?
  • 5) Direct Election Reforms both represented the
    Progressive attitude toward popular democracy.
  • First direct democracy (or popular democracy)
    could only work if the public is educated. (With
    no education on democracy people would revert
    back to the comfort of political machines, which
    was a vice to Progressives. By 1920, 20 states
    had accepted one of the following.)
  • a) ____________________ (initiative) A bill
    originated by the people rather than lawmakers,
    and done so by petition.
  • b) ____________________ (referendum) Instances
    where the voters, not state legislatures,
    accepted an initiative by a vote.
  • c) ____________________ (recall) This enabled
    voters to remove public officials from elected
    office by facing another election before their
    term is done.
  • d) ____________________ (Seventeenth Amendment)
    This allowed for the election of US senators by
    the people rather than state legislatures in
    1913.

10
TRs Accomplishments
  • 6) Enlightened public and a Strengthened
    Executive.
  • ?Teddy Roosevelt becomes president after the
    assassination of William McKinley in 1901.
  • ?Teddy urged Americans to Speak softly and carry
    a big stick
  • ?Roosevelts Square Deal which emphasized the
    curbing of trusts (or trust busting).
  • ?Teddy used the Sherman Anti-Trust Act of 1890 as
    justification. Work with mixed success, worked
    with the Northern Securities Companys monopoly
    over northwestern railroads

11
Teddys Accomplishments
  • ?Roosevelt sought federal regulation and pushed
    through regulation of railroads (Hepburn Act of
    1906 gave the Interstate Commerce Commission
    power to set max rates).
  • ?Food and medicine (Meat Inspection Act of 1906
    created federal inspectors and the Pure Food and
    Drug Act of 1906, which halted the sale of
    contaminated foods and medicines as well as
    truthful labels).
  • ?The environment (he used executive power to set
    aside 50 wildlife sanctuaries and national
    parks.) Instead of complete preservation of
    wilderness Roosevelt saw that only some would be
    preserved and other would be developed for the
    common good.)

12
The Progressive Presidents
  • TRs New Nationalism (1901-1908) vs.
  • Taft (1908-1912) vs.
  • Wilsons (1912-1920) New Freedom

13
Trust-Busting
  • Two strains of American thought that demonstrate
    why the Progressive Era progresses the way it
    does. They are represented by
  • 1) Alexis de Tocqueville (Traveled the US in
    the early 1800s) Commented on American democracy
    by saying that the Puritan ethic of hard work in
    the pursuit of salvation (hard work and economic
    success was evidence that ones soul would be
    saved) was dangerous in a democracy like the
    United States.
  • Why? Because this type of individualism (pursuit
    of individual success) would lead to
    self-gratification, and the lack of public virtue
    would lead to political indifference, social
    conformity, and submission to tyranny and
    democratic despotism.

14
Max Weber?
  • 2) Max Weber (late 1800s and early 1900s
    German) worried about the opposite tendency of
    Tocqueville. That instead of individuals acting
    democratically, people will turn to the
    government for protection. Thus, a bureaucratic
    (the people administrating government) monster is
    bornand people will then be less political and
    more bureaucratic pawns.

15
More on TR?
  • Why are the thoughts of Weber and Tocqueville
    important reflections of the Progressive Era?
    ____________________________
  • While president (1901-1908), TR talked of
    trust-busting, but in reality he didnt believe
    in trust-busting (or breaking up monopolies)
  • TR was quoted as saying it was an impossible
    task of restoringthe conditions of business
    sixty years ago by trusting only to the
    succession of lawsuits.
  • TR also said the man who advocates destroying
    the trustsby measures which would paralyze the
    industries of the country is at least a quack and
    at worst an enemy to the Republic

16
More on TR
  • According to TR, trust-busting would not restore
    the old competitive and democratic order.        
  • TR believed the government should not be a
    trust-busting activist, but instead should
    organize to expose big business when its good or
    bad, and subject big business to regulation.
    (Meat Inspection Act (1906) and the Pure Food and
    Drug Act (1906) were all examples of this)

17
TR to Taft
  • So the cornerstone to TRs New Nationalism (not
    so named until the presidential race of 1912) was
    a belief that trusts were not harmful to
    competition as long as they were subject to
    federal regulation.  
  • TRs handpicked candidate William H. Taft ran
    for president in 1908 and won.

18
Taft vs. TR
  • Tafts claim to fame was aggravating TR on the
    trust issue (90 instances of enforcing
    trust-busting). The most famous instance was the
    prosecution of US Steel, Standard Oil Company and
    the American Tobacco Company under anti-trust
    statutes for a business deal that had TRs
    approval. 
  • TR split with Taft and the Republican Party by
    the 1912 election. He went on to assume the
    leadership of the Progressive Party or Bull
    Moose Party (abandoned by Wiscon. Robert La
    Follette).
  • Bull Moose Partys name was derived from the
    characteristics of strength and vigor often used
    by Roosevelt to describe himself.

19
What do you think?
  • How would you view both TR and Taft?______________
    ______________
  • Are they defending what De Tocqueville saw as
    Americas Puritan work ethic or do they represent
    what Weber thought was Americas natural
    progression toward federal regulation and
    administration or do we find both Tocqueville and
    Weber in both TRs and Tafts policies?
    ______________________________
  • Why do you choose what you choose?
    ________________________________________

20
Enter Wilson
  • The Bull Moose ticket polled some 25 percent of
    the popular vote in 1912, which split the
    Republican vote.
  • Woodrow Wilson polled less than 50 of the vote. 
  • Son of a Presbyterian minister, Wilson was
    governor of New Jersey in 1910 and president at
    Princeton University in 1902 before running for
    president in 1912. (He had his law degree and was
    interested in international politics.)

21
Wilsons Politics and Trusts
  • Wilson ran on the New Freedom platform 1)
    conservation, 2) corrupt practices act, 3)
    banking and currency reform, 4) tariff, 5) tended
    to view monopolies as positive evils unfavorable
    to the existence of free competition.  
  • Wilson tried to differentiate between efficient
    monopolies and inefficient monopoliesHe said I
    am for big business and Im against the trusts.
  • Whats the difference between this and TRs view
    of trusts? _________________________

22
New Freedom
  • Once he came into office, Wilsons New Freedom
    platform looked more and more like TRs New
    Nationalism.  
  • Wilson pushed through the Clayton Anti-Trust Act
    (1914) (It enforced the Sherman Anti-Trust Act by
    sayingno price discriminations pertaining to a
    monopoly and no stockholding which would lessen
    competition, almost impossible to prove in Court)
    and the Federal Trade Commission Act (1914)
    (arbiter of unfair trade practices in order to
    prevent monopoly).

23
Wilson and Trusts
  • Wilsons Anti-Trust Division was expanded by only
    8 men, and this was done only after the war
    beganBy 1955, the Securities and Exchange
    Commission needed 1,200 men. By 1913, Wilson was
    actually inviting members of business into the
    White House because a depression had started.
  • Considering these aspects of Wilsons policies,
    was his form of Progress Era progressivism any
    different from TRs? _____________________

24
Progressive Questions
  • Was Wilson defending what De Tocqueville saw as
    Americas Puritan work ethic or does Wilson
    represent what Weber thought was Americas
    natural progression toward federal regulation and
    administration or do we find both Tocqueville and
    Weber in both TRs and Tafts policies?
    __________________________________
  • Why do you choose what you choose?
    __________________________________________________
    ______________________________

25
Wilson and the War
  • Wilsons wartime and post-war policies
    essentially end the domestic forms of Progressive
    Era and the Progressive movement and focus
    attention overseas.
  • Progressivism, though, follows Wilsons
    international policies, and we call this today
    Wilsonianism. 
  • Wilson wins second term in 1916 on a platform
    keeping America out of the war (World War I
    starts in 1914) and neutral, and out of Old
    World politics. His slogan he kept us out of
    war was very effective. By April 1917, this all
    changes.
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