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- Subject: HIST:How Capitalists Rule/Pt.14
- Message-ID: <1992Sep14.214504.27073@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Date: Mon, 14 Sep 1992 21:45:04 GMT
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- Via The NY Transfer News Service ~ All the News that Doesn't Fit
-
- How Capitalists Rule:
-
- The Republocrats
- By Vince Copeland
-
- Part 14:
- Rebellion of the Bryan Democrats
-
-
- There was much more to the rebellion at the Chicago Democratic
- convention in 1896 than we have described. The anger of the
- majority of the Democratic Party knew no bounds; there was enough
- energy for a complete revolution. What then prevented them from
- permanently changing the face of the party and breaking the hold of
- the Wall Street financiers?
-
- One could say it was partly their own illusions. For instance, many
- thought that pure majority rule would have its way and the revolt
- would continue until the big rich got tired and threw in the towel.
- But no such thing happened. As we shall see, in later elections the
- status quo ante was restored. The Democrats swung to the right
- again for some time before they sponsored the left-leaning New
- Deal--which also gave way to a rightward trend later on.
-
- McKinley slush was too deep
-
- Another reason was the large amount of money that was by then
- necessary to take any presidential candidacy to the whole country.
- According to the New York World, while the forces of William
- McKinley raised $16 million, those for William Jennings Bryan could
- only muster less than half a million.
-
- Nevertheless, there were 6,502,925 votes for Bryan, the most ever
- polled by a Democrat up to that time. McKinley edged him out with
- just 7,104,779.
-
- Money alone played a tremendous role. But previous tradition and
- indoctrination of not just the masses but particularly their
- leadership had done its work, too.
-
- The failure of the rebels proved that it is at the very least an
- extremely difficult task to take over one of the two big capitalist
- parties for the people themselves. If this kind of rebellion was
- insufficient to do the job, then any mere publicity campaign or
- change in voting procedure can hardly be expected to change the
- basic rules of the game.
-
- "I vote for the man"
-
- Around this time you began to hear the refrain, "I vote for the man
- [the individual], not the party." This came about partly because of
- corruption and the desire to get honest individuals in office to
- reform the government. But it was becoming more evident that the
- parties no longer stood for the same principles they had started
- out with and were better at "throwing the rascals out" than at
- having a consistent program of their own.
-
- A vote for an individual without regard to party implies that the
- individual has some independent power in the legislative or
- executive body. And it implies that this individual's principles
- are so clear and his or her understanding and command of the
- political process so complete that any cooperation or teamwork is
- unnecessary.
-
- How can a single person take on the 535 elected members of
- Congress, plus the executive branch and the Supreme Court? Even an
- organized party firmly united to accomplish some goal will find
- great difficulty doing so. And in order to keep its unity and
- strength, it must have the power to discipline or expel a member
- who refuses to vote with the party. But such is the power of the
- ruling class press that the average voter believes such party power
- is dictatorial and hurtful to the individual, merely by definition.
-
- Suppose the party pledges in its platform to demand a certain
- minimum wage, but some of its representatives in Congress refuse to
- vote for this, or vote for a much smaller amount without party
- agreement. Obviously, these representatives would have let down
- those who put them in office. They should not be in the party and
- should not get the votes of the party supporters.
-
- This system is followed to a degree in some other countries, but
- nowhere very consistently, except perhaps by the communist parties.
-
- Some mistakes and a double-cross
-
- Although the Democratic attempt in 1896 was indeed a genuine
- rebellion, it was not a revolutionary one and it did not open the
- door for a new and independent party representing the workers and
- oppressed people.
-
- Had that happened, the party would not necessarily have won more
- votes. In fact, it might have totalled many fewer votes. And the
- tradition in U.S. politics is to sacrifice everything for victory
- at the given moment, rather than to build a party of opposition.
- This of course leads to many opportunist mistakes and minor and
- major betrayals of friends and allies.
-
- In the case of the Democrats of 1896, it was the Black South that
- was most betrayed, while Northern labor, although not betrayed, was
- neglected more or less unconsciously. That is, the party activists
- thought they were the next best thing to a labor party, but this
- was not really so.
-
- In Bryan's great speech to the convention, in which he told the
- assembled outcasts exactly what they wanted to hear, he called upon
- the delegates to stand up against the capitalist East with the
- knowledge that they too were "businessmen." The farmer was a
- "businessman."
-
- "The man who is employed for wages," he cried, "is as much a
- businessman as his employer; the attorney in a country town is as
- much a businessman as the corporation counsel in the great
- metropolis.... The merchant at the crossroads store ... the farmer
- who goes forth in the morning and toils all day ... who by the
- application of his brain and muscle to the natural resources of the
- country creates wealth, is as much a businessman as the man who
- goes upon the board of trade and bets upon the price of grain...."
-
- The euphoria among the assembled Democrats is described vividly by
- Louis Koenig: "As Bryan advanced to each step of his definition,
- the crowd went berserk with approval and delight. Farmers, when
- they heard themselves classed as businessmen, sailed their hats
- through the air. One enraptured farmer thrashed a vacant seat with
- his coat, exclaiming, `Oh my God! My God!' When Bryan added to his
- definition, `The miners who go down a thousand feet,' he touched
- off a new uproar." ("Bryan" by Louis Koenig, G. P. Putnam Sons,
- 1971, p. 196)
-
- It wasn't a labor party
-
- The idea that everybody was a business person might be interpreted
- as merely a piece of rhetoric not to be pinned down for exact
- quotation or rule-of-thumb tactics. But the truth is that the basic
- drive of the convention was indeed in the direction of tiny,
- oppressed businesses, which were trying to become bigger and more
- prosperous businesses.
-
- What's wrong with that? Only that to become big, the small business
- must eventually hire large numbers of laborers at the lowest
- possible rate of pay. Otherwise it goes into bankruptcy as a result
- of other businesses elbowing it out.
-
- This concept also contains an implicit rationalization for the Wall
- Street tycoons themselves. But that was brushed out of the
- consciousness of the Democrats at the time and there was much
- genuine support for labor because labor was oppressed by Wall
- Street just as very small capital was.
-
- Nearly all the leaders of organized labor did support Bryan, except
- for the head of the American Federation of Labor itself, the
- conservative Samuel Gompers, who waffled on the election although
- he supported "free silver." This was in spite of Bryan having
- offered Gompers the post of secretary of labor if elected. (There
- has been no such offer to a labor leader by a major candidate in
- the century since!)
-
- Later in the campaign, Bryan spoke in Madison Square Garden and
- made an appeal to labor that seemed to fall flat. The contradiction
- about business people and perhaps Bryan's own ambivalence about the
- right to get rich lay at the bottom of this relatively poor
- performance. A more immediate reason was Bryan's failure at the
- time to push his party's proposal for an income tax on the rich or
- to lash out at the anti-labor injunctions that were already looming
- so large against union organizing.
-
- It would be wrong, however, to say this is what caused his lower
- vote among the industrial working class. That was caused by the
- all-out takeover of the electoral process by big business and the
- multimillion-dollar brainwashing of the industrial workers along
- with the rest of the population in favor of the Republican
- McKinley. And there was a distinct economic upturn in that election
- year, which generated quite a few more Republican votes.
-
- The Black South is strangled again
-
- The election of 1896 also marked another double-cross for African
- American voting rights. The Black people, who voted Republican when
- they could vote, had been slowly emerging from the political vise
- clamped on them by the white supremacist southern Democrats after
- 1876. The compromises of Booker T. Washington and the apparent
- growth of a sort of modus vivendi that moderated the terror seemed
- to offer the hope of a political revival for the Black people.
-
- But that is not the way it happened.
-
- When the Democrats rebelled and Bryan ran for President, the
- Peoples Party decided to run Bryan, too. This seemed logical
- enough, since Bryan had taken up many of the positions of the
- Populists, although definitely not all, and not so clearly.
-
- But this had a different effect in the South than in the West. The
- establishment party in the West was the Republican Party. The
- Democrats were the "outs" like the Populists, even though not as
- radical. But in the South, the establishment party--of a much more
- dictatorial establishment!--was the Democratic Party.
-
- There were about a million Black farm people in the Southern
- Alliance who were loyal to the Peoples Party. By supporting the
- Democratic candidate for president, regardless of how good or how
- rebellious he might have been, the Peoples Party began to liquidate
- itself and leave the Black Populists helpless against their old
- enemy, the Democrats.
-
- Bryan never apologized for this or made any real attempt to correct
- the situation. In fact, he moved from the West to take up residence
- in the South not long after the election, apparently thinking he
- had a bigger base in the South than in the West.
-
- Oppression of the voteless
-
- With all the whips and scorns of fortune that have been the hard
- lot of the African American people, the elections of 1876 and 1896
- may not be fundamental--except possibly as turning points--but they
- are extremely illustrative of a political relation of forces.
-
- The landless lot of the new Black proletariat and the semi-feudal
- system of sharecropping were the basic instruments of oppression.
- But the denial of the vote was the political _form_ of the
- oppression, even though the vote became less important as the
- Republican Party, which the Black voters still favored, moved to
- the right.
-
- With the great number of segregated villages and towns, the African
- American freedom to vote could have meant a large number of Black
- sheriffs, Black judges and even Black mayors.
-
- So the Southern dictators, even though hamstrung by their Wall
- Street masters, kept the lid firmly closed on this particular
- political cauldron. The lid was kept on by the terror, but the lid
- itself was the Democratic Party. And the Peoples Party now provided
- a facelift for the still super-racist Democrats by supporting them
- in the crucial 1896 vote.
-
- Had the Democrats won the presidential election in 1896, there is
- absolutely nothing to indicate that they would have changed the
- racist rule in the South. The counter-revolutionary deal of 1876-77
- between the Northern bankers and the Southern landowners was still
- very much in effect.
-
- The whole rebellion in the Democratic Party, in other words, helped
- to snuff out a more fundamental rebellion of the Black masses that
- had been taking place more slowly and was now ending for a whole
- historical period.
-
- A modern party takes shape
-
- In some ways, however, the 1896 revolt did foreshadow the
- beginnings of the modern Democratic Party. Bryan was the first
- Democratic presidential candidate to blast the "trickle-down"
- theory and expose its weaknesses. And in spite of the fact that the
- party moved to the right during the years of Woodrow Wilson, giving
- wild support to the First World War, its general social and
- economic aims remained relatively liberal and foreshadowed the much
- more liberal New Deal of Franklin Roosevelt from 1933 to 1941.
-
- -30-
-
- (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@igc.apc.org".)
-
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