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- From: nyt%nyxfer%igc.apc.org@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu (NY Transfer News)
- Subject: HIST: How Capitalism Rules/Pt.23
- Message-ID: <1992Nov20.215750.14376@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Date: Fri, 20 Nov 1992 21:57:50 GMT
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- Via The NY Transfer News Service * All the News that Doesn't Fit
-
- How Capitalists Rule
-
- The Republocrats Series:
- Part 23:
-
- 1912--THE PARTIES IN DISARRAY
-
- By Vince Copeland
-
- ROCKEFELLER FOR TAFT
-
- John D. Rockefeller publicly declared his support for William
- Howard Taft almost the moment Taft got the Republican nomination in
- 1908. This was motivated as much by the Democratic candidacy of
- William Jennings Bryan as by Rockefeller's belief that Taft would
- be kind to Standard Oil.
-
- The Morgan group came through with hefty campaign donations for
- Taft. The J.P. Morgan Co. itself gave $20,000, Andrew Carnegie
- another $20,000. E.T. Stotesbury, a Morgan partner and future
- father-in-law of Gen. Douglas MacArthur, gave $15,000; Frank
- Munsey, the publisher and stock market manipulator, and George
- Perkins, the ex-partner but still Morgan-oriented amateur
- politician, $5,000 each. And so on and so on.
-
- The stock market went up when Taft took the oath of office as
- president and the financial fraternity felt that the country was in
- good hands at that point. Theodore Roosevelt felt the new president
- would continue to carry out his policies, and Taft was very
- grateful to Roosevelt for practically bestowing the presidency upon
- him. But in a few months there was a cooling off in the friendship
- of the two men and Taft was in trouble as president.
-
- What went wrong in his relationship with Roosevelt?
-
- It was not that Taft stopped Roosevelt's anti-trust campaign. As a
- matter of fact, his administration initiated suits against 45
- trusts, as against Roosevelt's 25. But he made less noise about it
- and aimed at different trusts.
-
- Ferdinand Lundberg ("America's 60 Families") and others show that
- Taft favored Rockefeller over Morgan. Both were Republicans but
- were nevertheless in sharp competition in some fields. The breakup
- of the Standard Oil trust, which did not hurt the Rockefeller
- fortune although it checked the growth of his oil company somewhat,
- was not due to any act or policy inaugurated by Taft.
-
- It appears that Taft actually tried to carry out the Roosevelt
- policies. He at first identified himself with the so-called
- "insurgent" Senators who were sponsoring legislation for corporate
- regulation and conservation. But his instincts and his methods were
- in another field altogether. His associations were closer to the
- Rockefellers and some of the more reactionary in big business. And
- he shrank from the kind of fighting and posturing that Roosevelt
- was so happy with.
-
- HIS COLONEL BLIMP PERSONALITY
-
- Taft's dignity was important to him. And thankful as he was to
- Roosevelt for the chance to be president, he insisted upon living
- the same life and conducting himself in the same way he had in
- private. This was not fundamental, perhaps, and did not upset most
- Republicans. But it indicates a human obstacle in the course of
- government.
-
- "Plagued by the rebellious progressive Republicans, who were
- infuriated by ... the general abandonment of Roosevelt's policies,
- Taft indulged in furtive golf games with Henry Clay Frick [a
- reactionary lord of the steel industry] as the summer of 1910 wore
- on." Mrs. Taft had "prevented Will from playing golf with John D.
- Rockefeller the year before--all felt that `Frick is a bad name to
- have coupled with that of the president.' Taft stubbornly insisted
- that `he likes Frick and there is an end to what one can say or do
- in matters of this kind.'" (William Manners, "TR & Will," p. 174)
-
- This change in style was also a change in substance. Fully as
- convinced an imperialist as Roosevelt, he lacked his predecessor's
- broader understanding of government and had no feel for active
- politics, not to mention effective demagogy.
-
- He hardly blinked at the wildly protectionist Payne-Aldrich Act
- that raised the tariff on 600 items, signing it as "a fine piece of
- legislation." He liked Senator Aldrich personally, even though the
- latter had been thoroughly excoriated and exposed in the Hearst
- press as a venal politician in the direct pay of big business.
-
- At one point he entertained Aldrich, his daughter Abby and
- Aldrich's son-in-law, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., in the White House.
- But he let them in by a back door and told the guard not to
- register them as guests for that day, so he was well aware of the
- unpopularity of his action.
-
- ALASKAN MINES AND WALL STREET MINERS
-
- The falling-out with Roosevelt that received the most publicity was
- the dispute between Secretary of the Interior Ballinger and Chief
- Forester Gifford Pinchot, a close friend of Roosevelt. It was over
- the disposition of extensive coal-mining lands in Alaska. Ballinger
- wanted to give them to the Guggenheims and the Morgans. Pinchot
- vigorously opposed this.
-
- This would make it appear that Roosevelt, who sided with Pinchot,
- was in reality opposing the Morgan interests and that this underlay
- his dispute with Taft. But there was a bigger dispute that was less
- publicized. This was Taft's action against U.S. Steel's acquisition
- of the Tennessee Coal and Iron Company. U.S. Steel at that time was
- the biggest jewel in the Morgan crown.
-
- Roosevelt was particularly incensed because Taft had voted for the
- merger of the two companies when he was Roosevelt's Secretary of
- War. This is given as the main reason for his difference with Taft,
- especially by Lundberg who, as a former financial news writer, was
- very well informed on these things.
-
- There can be no doubt whatsoever that TR had to listen to many
- private complaints about the Taft action on U.S. Steel and queries
- as to why he could not control Taft in this field.
-
- In any case, the general liberal view that Taft and TR's friendship
- had cooled simply because Taft revealed himself to be a
- conservative plodder does not hold much water.
-
- The truth may well be that Roosevelt knew Taft very well indeed and
- expected that after eight years of Taft, the people would turn to
- him, Roosevelt, as the modern savior against the big corporations
- and trusts. But he also thought that Taft would ask his advice on
- all the big things that could hurt the Morgan interests, like the
- U.S. Steel-Tennessee Coal and Iron affair, the International
- Harvester deal and, in a different way, the proposed Alaska coal
- giveaway. This did not happen, or happened only for a short period.
-
- Taft's weak political thrust did indeed make him a voice for
- Roosevelt, but only at first. Later he became a voice for other
- elements, including his own plodding, conservative self. Roosevelt
- could not use him as his alter ego, as he undoubtedly had expected
- to do. Thus, maneuver politics has its limitations in great
- affairs, even when practiced by the mighty.
-
- At any rate, Roosevelt's attempt in 1912 first to take the
- Republican nomination away from Taft and then, when that failed, to
- run independently on the Progressive Party ticket must have been
- motivated by very strong considerations, in which ego played its
- part but was not fundamental, since he must have thought he could
- run in 1916 with a much greater chance of victory.
-
- Nevertheless, we find him in 1912 divorcing himself from the
- Republican Party. With all his undoubtedly great talent for
- politics, with all his great popularity, some of it well deserved,
- and with all his ego and his talent for listening to the political
- pulse of the people, how could he have made such a grievous
- mistake?
-
- ELECTION OF 1912
-
- The election of 1912 was a complicated and exciting affair, quite
- different from most previous contests (except 1860 and 1896). For
- one thing, there were three major candidates plus the Socialist
- nominee. And every candidate in the election appeared to be
- pro-labor, although nobody but the Socialists paid much attention
- to Black Freedom.
-
- Roosevelt ran this time on the Progressive Party ticket, surpassing
- his erstwhile friend and fellow Republican Taft by more than 18
- percent of the vote. But Democrat Woodrow Wilson received the palm
- of victory, and with all the lofty grace that was his political
- trademark.
-
- Eugene Debs polled 900,672 votes for socialism, more than doubling
- his showing of 1908. The Socialist Labor Party (which had predated
- the Debs Socialists by a couple of decades but was now taking a
- sectarian position on several burning issues) polled 28,750.
-
- The Prohibition Party received 206,275 as opposed to 253,840 in
- 1908.
-
- Roosevelt's Progressive Party--or "Bull Moose" as it was popularly
- called--split the Republican vote, leaving the party (now called
- "the Wreck") to bind itself together over the next eight years.
-
- Clearly the hold of big business on the parties was at least
- somewhat in disarray. And almost just as clearly the popular
- upheavals were making themselves felt in the programs and
- activities of the parties, big and small.
-
- CLASS STRUGGLE AND SOCIALIST PRESSURE
-
- As the reader might well suspect, the pressure of mass protest,
- struggle, strikes and class conflict was making itself felt,
- however faintly or unsuccessfully, in the corporate boardrooms and
- election boards of the country.
-
- The big moguls of the United States had plenty to worry about in
- the face of a more and more radicalized electorate. The Socialist
- vote of over 900,000 was especially impressive given that the
- incumbent President got 3.5 million and Roosevelt himself 4.1
- million votes.
-
- When one considers the miniscule size of the socialist campaign
- funds, the hostility of all the big newspapers, not to mention the
- magazines, college faculties and big churches, this showing of
- close to a million votes is all the more remarkable.
-
- One writer observed recently that "... much of the activity for
- progressive reform was intended to head off socialism. [One
- authority] talked of `the presence of Socialism as evidenced by its
- growth in colleges, churches, newspapers.' In 1920 Victor Berger
- became the first member of the Socialist Party elected to Congress;
- in 1911, seventy-three Socialist mayors were elected, and 1,200
- lesser officials in 340 cities and towns. The big press spoke of
- the rising tide of Socialism in the United States." (Howard Zinn,
- "A People's History of the United States," Longman, New York, 1980,
- p. 346)
-
- But behind all the optimistic figures and radical flurry were some
- very cynical and hard-boiled calculations, which have to be aired
- and understood if we are to form any opinion of big political party
- development in the 20th century.
-
- A PROBLEM FOR BIG BUSINESS
-
- As 1912 dawned upon the electoral arena, the leaders of big
- business were still confronted with a Democratic Party in partial
- revolt, a party that, strictly speaking, was not under control.
- When Bryan declined to run in 1904 and supported the conservative
- Judge Alton Parker, it was an attempt to patch things up with the
- Eastern Establishment. But it was by no means a complete
- rapprochement or the surrender of the party's new radicalism. This
- was made more evident by Bryan's third candidacy in 1908.
-
- True, Bryan's 1908 program was hardly more radical--in words--than
- Roosevelt's had been. But it was coming from a different
- .MDBO/class.MDNM/ and would be implemented by a different class if
- it were to be victorious in the election. It is also true that much
- of the Eastern Establishment spoke well of Bryan by 1912, but few
- of them would support him. And lurking beneath the surface, ready
- to break out anew, was always the battle cry of "Down with Wall
- Street!"
-
- On the other hand, Theodore Roosevelt was not exactly what big
- business viewed as the ideal president, either. He had become so
- popular and so identified with the Republican Party that much of
- Wall Street would have pinned a medal on any lion that finished him
- off when he embarked on an African safari right after his exit from
- the presidency. (One of the tycoons is supposed to have said: "I
- hope the first lion he meets does his duty.")
-
- J.P. Morgan, in particular, whose minions had helped his early
- political career so much, was incensed at Roosevelt personally, and
- regarded him as an ingrate for his (mostly verbal) attacks on
- Morgan businesses. But Morgan was smart enough to conceal or
- soft-pedal his opposition in the light of TR's extreme popularity.
-
- Notwithstanding many impartial estimates that Roosevelt had been
- basically good for business and certainly was a strong and
- aggressive leader of U.S. business in the field of foreign policy,
- the question for them was how to get rid of Bryan and Bryanism in
- the Democratic Party and how to cut Roosevelt and Rooseveltism out
- of the Republican Party.
-
- (Copyright Workers World Service: Permission to reprint granted if
- source is cited. For more info contact Workers World, 46 W. 21 St.,
- New York, NY 10010; "workers" on PeaceNet; on Internet:
- "workers@mcimail.com".)
-
-
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