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The Progressive Movement

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The Progressive Movement Attacks against the rich. Henry Demarest Lloyd - Wealth against Commonwealth. Standard Oil. Bloated Trusts. Thorstein Veblen - The Theory of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Progressive Movement


1
The Progressive Movement
2
Attacks against the rich.
  • Henry Demarest Lloyd - Wealth against
    Commonwealth. Standard Oil. Bloated Trusts.
  • Thorstein Veblen - The Theory of the Leisure
    Class. predatory wealth conspicuous
    consumption.
  • Jacob A. Riis - How the other half lives. New
    York slums.

3
Muckrakers
  • Journalism.
  • McClures, Cosmopolitan, Colliers, Everbodys.
  • Exposure of public wrongs.
  • More democracy would cure the ills.

4
Democracy in action
  • Initiative A procedure whereby ordinary
    citizens could propose laws for consideration by
    their state legislatures.
  • Referendum A procedure whereby citizens could
    vote directly on whether to approve public laws.
  • Recall A public official could be removed from
    office by a direct vote of the citizens.

5
More Demo
  • Secret Ballot Public voting and voter records
    were kept until this time.
  • Direct primary Party candidates chosen by
    rank-and-file party members instead of party
    bosses.
  • Direct election of US Senators Seventeenth
    Amendment. (1913)
  • Womens Suffrage Nineteenth Amendment. (1920)

6
Efficiency
  • City manager system. Paid professional
    administrators ran the day-day affairs of the
    city.
  • Centralization of decision-making process.
    Streamline government.
  • Movements to eliminate government corruption.

7
Regulation of Large Corporations and Monopolies
  • Laissez-Faire Let the market decide.
  • Trust-busting Suppression of competition.
  • Regulation Some large corporations or
    monopolies are inevitable and maybe even
    desirable, but they need supervision.
  • Socialism Government should acquire ownership of
    large corporations and run them for the public
    good.

8
Social Justice
  • Development of professional social workers.
    Welfare and charity work should be done by
    professionals.
  • The building of Settlement Houses. Raise the
    standard of living by providing schools, day care
    centers and cultural enrichment programs.
  • Child Labor Laws School vice work.

9
Social Justice cont
  • Support for the goals of organized labor. Eight
    hour work day, improved health and safety
    conditions, workmans compensation, minimum wage,
    Unionization.
  • Prohibition laws. Eighteenth Amendment (1919)

10
Odds and ends
  • TRs square deal.
  • Panic of 1907.
  • Conservation.
  • Election of 1908.
  • Taft as president.
  • Dollar diplomacy.
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