Why
Progressives Won the Presidency – They Had Better Slogans
by
Robert Higgs
by Robert Higgs
DIGG THIS
A lot of brainpower
has gone into explaining the collectivist political thrust of the
past century, which culminated in the election of energetic progressive
presidents who steered the United States away from free enterprise
and individual freedom and toward greater government control of
economic and social affairs. Some analysts have traced this trend
to ideological changes that go back to Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels
and extend through such influential writers as John Dewey and John
Kenneth Galbraith. Others have blamed the secondhand dealers in
ideas – opinion leaders such as Walter Lippmann and James Reston.
Still others have emphasized how great social and political upheavals,
especially the world wars and the Great Depression, fostered the
general public's embrace of collectivist ideas. All of these theories
are wrong.
The simple
fact is that the most prominent progressive candidates for the presidency
had better slogans, and their opponents proved to be completely
tone deaf in attempts to sing their own siren songs to the electorate.
Everybody
knows that William McKinley was a reactionary. All the history books
tell us so, and the evidence is beyond dispute. McKinley was the
willing puppet of Mark Hanna, a master fixer for the plutocrats
at the turn of the twentieth century. In those days, the plutocrats
knew how to have a good time without agonizing over appearances.
If you doubt it, just go read about Mrs. Stuyvesant Fish's lavish
dinner party for dogs at her mansion in Newport, Rhode Island. So,
if Hanna was McKinley's brain – a man who was to the American establishment
of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries what Jim Baker
is to the American establishment of the present day – we can be
sure that McKinley's heart did not bleed for the poor and the downtrodden,
notwithstanding the Christian airs he put on from time to time.
We also
know that McKinley, unlike Dick Cheney, did not wear a bulletproof
vest everywhere he went, which turned out to be his undoing. His
assassination was hardly a godsend for the country, however, because
it elevated the psychopath Theodore Roosevelt to the presidency.
Teddy enjoyed
being president very much, and he wanted to keep the job. Reelection
turned out to be a snap for him in 1904 because the Democrats nominated
Alton Brooks Parker, a New York judge and one of the saddest-looking
individuals ever to blemish the political arena. Nowadays Parker
would stand no chance of such a nomination because of his lack of
an appealing TV image. In 1904, however, television's influence
was still somewhat limited, inasmuch as most voters had no electricity
and the television had not yet been invented. Nevertheless, even
though few voters ever laid eyes on Parker and therefore may not
have held his melancholy countenance against him, Teddy trounced
the lackluster judge in the election.
Astute
political observers saw this result coming from the campaign's very
beginning, for one simple reason: Roosevelt promised the electorate
a Square Deal. Parker, in contrast, declared that he wouldn't
engage in a bidding war for votes. Taking liberties with the only
honorable statement William Tecumseh Sherman ever made in his long,
despicable career, Parker declared: "If elected, I will not deal."
This promise went over like a lead balloon. He carried only thirteen
states, with 140 electoral votes. No one knows what happened to
Parker after his defeat; but, then, no one knew what had happened
to him previously, either. He goes down in history as one of the
most forgettable – and forgotten – figures ever to have wasted his
time running for the presidency.
Woodrow
Wilson was no dummy. We know he wasn't because from 1902 to 1910
he was president of Princeton University, and everybody says that
Princeton is a high-class school. Proof of this claim resides, for
example, in Princeton's current retention of the famous pseudo-economist
Paul Krugman on the faculty of its Woodrow Wilson School of Public
and International Affairs. (If you think I'm being too hard on Professor
Krugman, you haven't been reading his columns in the New York Times.)
In any event, Wilson was too smart to make the same mistake Alton
Parker had made. He knew that in order to win the presidential election
in 1912, he had to have a winning slogan, and so he concocted one.
Wilson
trumpeted a New Freedom, which served as the umbrella under
which he kept his plans for a more activist federal government out
of the rain. Wilson told the voters that the old freedom had been
good enough for the horse-and-buggy age, but the country had now
entered a new-fangled, Model T Ford age, in which the old freedom
would no longer suffice.
Wilson's
electoral opponents, the incumbent Republican William H. Taft and
the Progressive Party's Theodore Roosevelt (yes, the indignant Teddy
had taken his football and signed on with a new party), made fatal
missteps in their choices of slogans. Taft, a well-fed politico
who topped the scales at more than 300 pounds, promptly announced
that political slogans were childish and, besides, the old freedom
was plenty good enough. Roosevelt, hyper-salivating to reoccupy
the White House, campaigned on a proto-fascist program known as
the New Nationalism, the basic tenets of which were that
the country needed an energetic dictator and that Teddy was just
the man for the job.
Hampered
by a bad slogan or by the absence of any slogan at all, Wilson's
opponents succeeded only in splitting the majority, non-Democratic
vote, enabling the New Freedom's champion to gain office on the
strength of just 42 percent of the popular vote, but 435 electoral
votes, compared to 88 for Roosevelt and 8 for Taft. Every one of
Taft's Electoral College voters was required simply to remove the
oversized bath tub he had installed in the White House.
Slogans
languished after Wilson left office (actually, his comatose body
was stealthily removed in the dark of night under Mrs. Wilson's
keen-eyed supervision), and the next two presidents kicked back,
which was probably why the economy roared during the Twenties. One
might recall however, that in those days the circus traveled from
town to town to put on its shows, and the roars that so many people
reported hearing during that decade may have come from escaped lions
– historians are still actively debating this matter. No matter.
However robust the economy may have seemed at the time, the populace
clearly suffered a sort of malaise. Because energy was cheap and
abundant in those days, and neither Warren Harding nor Calvin Coolidge
ever suggested that citizens should reduce their heating and wear
sweaters at home, the malaise apparently originated in the absence
of an appealing presidential campaign slogan. Return to Normalcy
was all well and good, except for English teachers, who knew that
the correct word is "normality," but it failed to inspire the masses.
For some reason, political complacency has always held greater charm
for the aristocrats than for the peasantry.
So, the
people felt an immense sense of relief when Franklin D. Roosevelt
gained the Democratic nomination in 1932 and proceeded to make his
pitch for a New Deal. It was scarcely necessary to count
the votes in November, because besides the fact that nearly everybody
was unemployed, bankrupt, or living in dread of soon joining the
ranks of those who were, Herbert Hoover made the elementary mistake
of campaigning on the slogan Same Old Deal. He told the voters
that what was good enough for their grandparents was good enough
for them, too, by God, but the booboisie wasn't buying any crap
about the Good Old Days this time around.
Hoover
lost in a landslide, and his name became a byword for do-nothing
policy in the face of an economic debacle – an injustice to this
worthy if dour man because in truth his excessive activism, in raising
income taxes, increasing tariffs, propping up nominal wages, and
taking countless other wrong turns, had much to do with transforming
the recession of 1929 into the Great Contraction of 192933.
But who knew? The people at large hated him because he had administered
poisonous medicine to them by the pint when they wanted it by the
gallon.
During
Franklin D. Roosevelt's many years as president, he knocked down
a series of hapless challengers who had the cheek to run against
him. Of course, every one of them failed for want of a decent slogan.
In 1936, Alf Landon thought it was easier to stay home and relax
than to waste his time in futile campaigning and sloganeering. His
instincts were sound: he won only two states, with 8 electoral votes,
compared to FDR's 523, prompting Democratic ringmaster James Farley
to quip: "As Maine goes, so goes Vermont." In 1940, Wendell Willkie
blundered by disdaining an effective slogan and, instead, associating
himself with his rural Indiana roots, prompting New Deal hatchet
man Harold Ickes to deride him as a "barefoot boy from Wall Street."
The public's amusement with Willkie's "common man" gambit was minimal,
and so was his share of the electoral votes. In 1944, Republican
candidate Thomas E. Dewey made the fatal mistake of having a mustache
rather than a good slogan. He probably erred as well by remarking
to a room full of journalists that the people would be crazy to
"change horses in the middle of the stream."
Harry Truman
was a New Dealer, and he proved his mettle by seizing one company
after another under the pretext of national emergency, by supporting
the continuation of wartime price controls, and then by campaigning
for reelection in 1948 under the banner of the Fair Deal.
(Recall that all successful politicians live by the adage, "Fair
is foul, and foul is fair. Hover through the fog and filthy air.")
Truman's witches ultimately let him down, however, and after he
sent thousands of Americans to be needlessly slaughtered in Korea
on his personal say-so, he ended his presidency as perhaps the most
unpopular president of all time – until the present one, that is.
The passage of time has been kind to old Harry, though. Historians
understand that no matter how lamebrained you and your administration
may have been, your presidential legacy will be magnificent so long
as you had a good campaign slogan.
Dwight
D. Eisenhower was a huge hero, having spent the war in relative
safety in England while his troops were getting acquainted with
the German 88's on the Continent. But, hell, they also serve who
only send others to die. So the electorate rolled over and played
patsy for him in 1952 and 1956, even though Eisenhower's slogan
was the infantile "I like Ike." As they say, nobody ever lost an
election by underestimating the voters' intelligence.
By
1960, however, the people had become restive. They longed for a
leader. We know they did because Jack Kennedy's campaign staff said
so. Those dirty tricksters also said that Jack was the right man
to lead the people bravely onto a New Frontier. By that time,
only extremely superannuated people could recall that the old frontier
had been a mighty unpleasant place, owing to the insects, predators,
poor housing, shortage of fresh food, and absence of central heating.
But the idea of a New Frontier had a romantic ring, and the voters
are nothing if not fools for love. So they narrowly elected Kennedy,
after his daddy helpfully fixed the vote in a few key precincts.
The handsome, witty young president seized the reins of power with
great élan and soon thereafter urged the horses nearly over
the nuclear brink. On second thought, maybe electing an ambitious
young man with limited experience and an excess of testosterone
was not the century's best idea.
Still,
New Frontier was a splendid slogan, clearly better than Great
Society, but this latter one was good enough for a rude, crude,
hyper-ambitious politico who had pulled himself up from his hardscrabble
Texas roots by sheer will, vote tampering, and ample funding from
his buddies at Brown and Root. Well, hell's bells, a man's got to
go along to get along, don't he? Politics is not a garden party,
after all. A good slogan's essential at election time, but once
in office a politician has got to do some deals if he intends to
get anywhere in life. Lyndon understood: he started with nothing,
spent his life in politics, and ended up with millions. One might
wonder, how'd that happen?
After LBJ
left the stage, the age of great collectivist slogans went into
a deep sleep. Some said it was dead, but the coroner has not yet
completed his investigation, so a definite conclusion would be premature.
Anyhow, the next Democratic president assured us with his usual
sincerity that the age of big government was over. Since then the
government has grown by leaps and bounds, but never mind. It's always
in a good cause, especially if you're on the receiving end of some
of the loot. And if the voters ever decide that the present system
is not meeting their needs, all they have to do is to vote for the
next candidate to come along with a really, really good campaign
slogan.
May
23, 2008
Robert
Higgs [send him mail] is
senior fellow in political economy at the Independent
Institute and editor of The
Independent Review. He
is also a columnist for LewRockwell.com. His
most recent book is Neither
Liberty Nor Safety: Fear, Ideology, and the Growth of Government.
He is also the author of Depression,
War, and Cold War: Studies in Political Economy, Resurgence
of the Warfare State: The Crisis Since 9/11 and Against
Leviathan: Government Power and a Free Society.
Copyright
© 2008 Robert Higgs
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