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Gilded Age Politics: Crash Course US History #26 - YouTube
Channel: CrashCourse
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Hi, Iâm John Green, this is Crash Course:
US History, and today weâre going to continue
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our look at the Gilded Age by focusing on
political science.
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Mr. Green, Mr. Green, so itâs another history
class where we donât actually talk about
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history?
Oh, Me From the Past, your insistence on trying
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to place academic exploration into little
boxes creates a little box that you yourself
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will live in for the rest of your life if
you donât put your interdisciplinary party
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hat on.
So the Gilded Age takes its name from a book
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by Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner that
was called The Gilded Age: A Tale of Today.
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It was published in 1873 and it was not that
successful, but while The Gilded Age conjures
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up visions of fancy parties and ostentatious
displays of wealth, the book itself was about
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politics, and it gives a very negative appraisal
of the state of American democracy at the
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time.
Which shouldnât come as a huge surprise
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coming from Twain, whose comments about Congress
included, âSuppose you were an idiot. And
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suppose you were a member of Congress. But
I repeat myself.â
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And also, âIt could probably be shown by
facts and figures that there is no distinctly
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Native American criminal class except Congress.â
So when faced with the significant changes
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taking place in the American economy after
the Civil War, Americaâs political system
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both nationally and locally dealt with these
problems in the best way possible: by becoming
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incredibly corrupt.
intro
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Stan says I have to take off my party hat.
Rrrr rrrr rrrrr....
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So House Speaker Tip OâNeill once famously
said that all politics is local and although
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thatâs not actually true, I am going to
start with local politics today, specifically
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with one of Americaâs greatest inventions,
the urban political machine.
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So a political machine is basically an organization
that works to win elections so that it can
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exercise power. The most famous political
machine was New York Cityâs Tammany Hall,
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which dominated Democratic party politics
in the late 19th century, survived until the
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20th, and is keenly associated with corruption.
Oh, itâs already time for the Mystery Document?
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This is highly unorthodox, Stan. Well, the
rules here are simple.
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I guess the author of the Mystery Document.
Iâm usually wrong and I get shocked with
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the shock pen.
Alright, letâs see what weâve got here.
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âMy partyâs in power in the city, and
itâs going to undertake a lot of public
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improvements. Well, Iâm tipped off, say,
that theyâre going to lay out a new park
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at a certain place and I buy up all the land
I can in the neighborhood. Then the board
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of this or that makes its plan public, and
there is a rush to get my land, which nobody
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cared particular for before. Ainât it perfectly
honest to charge a good price and make a profit
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on my investment and foresight. Of course
it is. Thatâs honest graft.â
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Stan, I know this one. Itâs about machine
politics. Itâs from New York. It doesnât
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say itâs from New York, but it is because
it is George Plunkitt. Yes! How do you like
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them apples?
Oh, you wanna know the name of the book? Itâs
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âPlunkitt of Tammany Hall.â Stan, transition
me back to the desk with a Libertage, please.
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Plunkitt became famous for writing a book
describing the way that New York Cityâs
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government actually worked, but he was a small
fish compared with the most famous shark-like
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machine politician of the day, William âBossâ
Tweed, seen here with a head made of money.
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âBossâ Tweed basically ran New York in
the late 1860s and early 1870s, and his greatest
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feat of swindling helps explain how the machine
system worked.
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It revolved around the then-new County Courthouse
that now houses the New York City Department
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of Education.
Building the courthouse was initially estimated
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to cost around $250,000, but ended up costing
$13 million by the time it was finished in
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1871.
Included in that cost was a bill of $180,000
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for three tables and forty chairs, $1.5 million
for lighting fixtures, and $41,000 for brooms
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and cleaning supplies.
A plasterer received $500,000 for his initial
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job and then $1 million to repair his shoddy
work.
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The standard kickback in these situations
was that Tammany Hall received two dollars
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for every one dollar received by the contractor.
That may seem like a bad deal for contractors,
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but remember: That plasterer still got to
keep half a million dollars, which is worth
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about $9 million in todayâs money.
Now of course that makes it sound like political
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machines were pure evil, especially if you
were a taxpayer footing the bill for that
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courthouse.
But machines also provided valuable services
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to immigrants and other poor people in cities.
As Plunkitt explained, Tammany could help
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families in need:
âI donât ask whether they are Republicans
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or Democrats, and I donât refer them to
the Charity Organization Society, which would
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investigate their case in a month or two and
decide they were worthy of help about the
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time they are dead from starvation. I just
get quarters for them, buy clothes for them
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if their clothes were burned up, and fix them
up until they get things running again.â
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In return for this help, Tammany expected
votes so that they could stay in power. Staying
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in power meant control of city jobs as well
as city contracts. Plunkitt claimed to know
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âevery big employer in the district â and
in the whole city, for that matter --- and
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they ainât in the habit of saying no to
me when I ask them for a job.â
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But with all the corruption, sometimes even
that wasnât enough. Fortunately Tammany
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politicians could always fall back on fraud.
Tammany found bearded men to vote, then took
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them to the barber to shave off the beard,
but left the moustache, so that they could
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vote a second time. And then, they would shave
off the âstache so they could vote for a
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third.
And then of course, there was always violence
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and intimidation. By the end of the century
a Tammany regular lamented the good old days
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when, âIt was wonderful to see my men slug
the opposition to preserve the sanctity of
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the ballot.â
But, corruption wasnât limited to big cities
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like New York and Chicago. Some of the biggest
boondoggles involved the United States Congress
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and the executive branch under president Ulysses
Grant.
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The first big scandal, dubbed the âKing
of Fraudsâ by the New York Sun, involved
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Credit Mobilier, the construction company
that did most of the road building for the
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Union Pacific Railroad.
This two pronged accusation involved, first:
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overcharging the public for construction costs
and siphoning off profits to Credit Mobilier,
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and second: bribery of Congressmen.
Now, this second charge was, of course, much
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juicier and also more partisan because only
Republican congressmen, including the Speaker
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of the House, were implicated in it.
Eventually Massachusetts Congressman Oakes
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Ames was found guilty of giving bribes, but
no one was ever found guilty of receiving
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those bribes. As you can imagine, that did
wonders for the reputation of Congress.
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The second major scandal involved the so-called
Whiskey Ring, which was a group of distillers
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in St. Louis who decided that they didnât
like paying excise taxes on their product,
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perhaps a slightly more noble cause than that
of the 2009 Bling Ring, who just wanted to
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dress like Paris Hilton.
John McDonald, a Grant administration official,
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helped distillers reduce their taxes by intentionally
undercounting the number of kegs of booze.
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But then in 1875, the tax evasion grew out
of control. And McDonald eventually confessed
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and was convicted, thereby tainting the presidency
with corruption just as Credit Mobilier had
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tainted Congress.
That leaves the Supreme Court untainted, but
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donât worry, the Dred Scott decision is
worth at least, like, eighty years of tainting.
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So with all this distrust in government, after
Grant served two terms, presidential elections
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featured a series of one-termers: Hayes, Garfield
(whose term was filled out by Chester Arthur
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after Garfield was assassinated), Cleveland,
Benjamin Harrison, and then Cleveland again.
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McKinley, who was elected twice, but then
he was assassinated.
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As for their parties, Gilded Age Republicans
favored high tariffs, low government spending,
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paying off national debt and reducing the
amount of paper money â or greenbacks â in
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circulation. Democrats opposed the tariffs
and were often linked to New York bankers
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and financiers.
In short, both parties were pro-business,
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but they were pro-different-businesses.
Despite that and the widespread corruption,
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some national reform legislation actually
did get passed in the Gilded Age.
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The Civil Service Act of 1883 â prompted
by Garfieldâs assassination by a disgruntled
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office seeker â created a merit system for
10% of federal employees, who were chosen
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by competitive examination rather than political
favoritism.
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But, this had an unintended effect. It made
American politicians much more dependent on
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donations from big business rather than small
donations from grateful political appointees,
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but, you know, nice idea.
And then in 1890 the Sherman Anti-Trust act
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forbade combinations and practices that restrained
trade, but again it was almost impossible
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to enforce this against the monopolies like
U.S. Steel.
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More often it was used against labor unions,
which were seen to restrain trade in their
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radical lobbying for, like, health insurance
and hard hats.
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But all in all the national Congress was pretty
dysfunctional at the end of the 19th century,
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stop me if that sounds familiar. So state
governments expanded their responsibility
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for public health and welfare. Cities invested
in public works, like transportation, and
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gas, and later, electricity, and the movement
to provide public education continued.
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Some northern states even passed laws limiting
the workday to 8 hours. âWhat is this, France?â
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is what courts would often say when striking
those laws down.
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Reform legislation was less developed in the
South, but they were busy rolling back reconstruction
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and creating laws that limited the civil rights
of African Americans, known as Jim Crow Laws.
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In the west, farmers became politically motivated
over the issue of freight rates. Wait, are
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we talking about railroads? Letâs go to
the ThoughtBubble.
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In the 1870s, farmers formed the Grange movement
to put pressure on state governments to establish
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fair railroad rates and warehouse charges.
Railroads in particular tended to be pretty
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monopolistic: They owned the track going through
town, after all, so it was hard for farmers
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to negotiate fair shipping prices. The Grange
Movement eventually became the Farmerâs
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Alliance movement, which also pushed for economic
cooperation to raise prices, but was split
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into Northern and Southern wings that could
never really get it together. The biggest
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idea to come out of the Farmers Alliance was
the subtreasury plan. Under this plan, farmers
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would store grain in government warehouses
and get low-rate government loans to buy seed
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and equipment, using the stored grain as collateral.
This would allow farmers to bypass the banks
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who increasingly came to be seen, along with
the railroads, as the source of all the farmersâ
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troubles.
Eventually these politically motivated farmers
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and their supporters grew into a political
party, the Peopleâs Party or Populists.
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In 1892 they held a convention in Omaha and
put forth a remarkably reform minded plan,
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particularly given that this was put forth
in Omaha, which included:
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The Sub-Treasury Plan, (which didnât exactly
happen, although the deal farmers ended up
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with was probably better for them) Government
Ownership of Railroads (which sort of happened,
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if you count Amtrak)
Graduated Income Tax (which did happen, after
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the passage of the 16th amendment)
Government Control of the Currency (which
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happened with the creation of the Federal
Reserve System)
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Recognition of the Rights of Laborers to Form
Unions (which happened both at the state and
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federal level)
and Free Coinage of Silver to produce more
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money, which weâll get to in a second
The Peopleâs Party attempted to appeal to
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a broad coalition of âproducing classesâ
especially miners and industrial workers,
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and it was particularly successful with those
groups in Colorado and Idaho. As the preamble
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to the party platform put it:
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âCorruption dominates the ballot box, the
Legislatures, the congress and touches even
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the ermine of the bench ⊠From the same
prolific womb of governmental injustice we
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breed the two great classes â tramps and
millionaires.â
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Thanks, Thought Bubble. So, some western states
were so Populist, they even granted women
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the right to vote in the 1890s, which added
tremendously to the Populistâs electoral
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power.
But most American voters stuck with the two
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main parties. Industrial workers never really
joined in large numbers because the Populist
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calls for free coinage of silver would lead
to inflation, especially in food prices, and
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that would hurt urban laborers.
But if it hadnât been for that threat of
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silver inflation, we might have three major
political parties in the U.S. today. Or at
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least two different ones. Stupid inflation,
always ruining everything.
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Populist leaders also struggled to unify because
racism.
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Some Populist leaders, like Tom Watson, argued
that black and white poor farmers were in
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the same boat, but Southern populists were
not inclined to take up the fight against
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segregation, and even Watson himself later
began spouting anti-Semitic rhetoric.
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But, in the halcyon Populist days of 1892,
their presidential candidate, James Weaver,
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gained 1 million votes as a third party candidate.
He carried 5 western states and got 22 electoral
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votes, which is better than Mondale did.
But the best known Populist candidate was
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actually the Democratic nominee for president
in 1896, William Jennings Bryan.
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Bryan, who once spoke of America as being
crucified on a cross of gold, firmly supported
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free coinage of silver in the hopes that increasing
the amount of money in circulation would raise
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prices for farmers and make it easier for
people to pay off their debts.
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Williams Jennings Bryan is probably better
known for the anti-evolution stance he took
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in the famous Scopes âMonkey Trial,â where
he was up against none other than Clarence
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Darrow.
But he did almost become president. So, the
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Populists were really wary of Bryan as a Democrat,
because they feared that their ideas would
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be reduced to simply âfree silver,â but
they voted for him anyway.
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But Bryan still lost the 1896 election to
William McKinley in what has become known
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as the first modern political campaign, because
the business classes gave McKinleyâs campaign
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an unprecedented $10 million.
Which these days will buy you nine ads in
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Iowa. But back then, it won you an entire
presidential election. He won the electoral
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college in a landslide 271-176.
Bryanâs defeat in 1896 effectively put an
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end to the Populist Party. The corruption
in government, both federal and local, continued,
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and new journalists called Muckrakers began
exposing it in the press.
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Even though they were defeated at the polls,
Populist ideas, especially direct election
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of senators and a progressive income tax,
quickly became mainstream.
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Now, these days we donât necessarily associate
those ideas with Populists, which suggests
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that maybe they were right to worry about
hitching their wagon to Bryanâs star.
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But in the end, would you rather have your
name survive or see your ideas enacted?
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But of course many of the problems that the
Populists were concerned with persisted, as
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did the scourge of Jim Crow. Weâll discuss
those next week when we look at the Progressive
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Era. Thanks for watching.
Crash Course is produced and directed by Stan
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Muller. Our script supervisor is Meredith
Danko. The associate producer is Danica Johnson.
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The show is written by my high school history
teacher, Raoul Meyer, Rosianna Rojas, and
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myself. And our graphics team is Thought Café.
Okay, Iâll make the transition, but I think
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youâll want to keep filming this. Every
week thereâs a new caption for the Libertage.
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If youâd like to suggest one in comments,
you can do so where you can also ask questions
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about todayâs video that will be answered
by our team of historians.
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Thank you for watching Crash Course and as we
say in my hometown, donât forget to be awesome.
You can go back to the homepage right here: Homepage





