As we saw in our
previous discussion on this subject, the 1912 presidential campaign
was blessed — or cursed — with an abundance of parties and candidates,
including a few nobody remembers. There
was only one previous campaign of national importance in United States history
that even came close to the variety of candidates and positions in the public
eye.
There have been a
large number with many more candidates and positions, of course, but not that
achieved national recognition for so many.
That one was the New York City mayoral campaign of 1886. By coincidence, Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. was a
serious contender in both the 1886 New York City campaign and the 1912 national
campaign.
With that as our
segue, then, today we’ll look at the Republican candidate, and the Progressive
Party candidate:
The Candidates: Taft
William Howard Taft |
The candidate for
the Old Guard Republicans was, of course, Taft. Although handpicked by
Roosevelt as his successor to carry the progressive torch, Taft had shown
himself unequal to the task.
Early in his
term, Taft had come under the influence of Senator Nelson Wilmarth Aldrich
(1841-1915), whose primary concern was to maintain power by quashing the
progressive Republican insurgents. Aldrich was the acknowledged leader of the
reactionary Republicans, and hand-in-glove with the Wall Street capitalists who
sought to keep all financial power concentrated in their hands.
It was, however,
the “Ballinger Affair” that triggered the break between Taft and Roosevelt.
This eventually led to the progressive Republicans splitting off, and left Taft
at the mercy of the reactionary elements of the Republican Party.
Briefly, as one
of his first acts as president, Taft replaced Roosevelt’s Secretary of the
Interior, James Rudolph Garfield (1865-1950), son of the murdered James Abram
Garfield (1831-1881), twentieth president of the United States, with Richard
Achilles Ballinger (1858-1922), past mayor of Seattle. Conservationists widely
interpreted this as a break with Roosevelt’s policies.
Gifford Pinchot |
In this they were
justified. Ballinger almost immediately restored more than three million acres
of land set aside for preservation to private use. Gifford Pinchot (1865-1946),
the 1898 appointee of William McKinley (1843-1901) to head the Division of
Forestry who had run the U.S. Forest Service since 1905, believed that
Ballinger’s goal was to end the conservation movement.
Pinchot claimed
that Ballinger was favoring the trusts in water power issues and arranged for a
meeting between Taft and Louis Russell Glavis (1883-1971), head of the
Portland, Oregon, General Land Office. Glavis submitted a report to Taft
alleging that Ballinger had an improper interest in the handling of coalfield
claims in Alaska and had interfered in the investigation of coal claim
purchases in Idaho.
Taft exonerated
Ballinger and fired Glavis for insubordination. Taft’s efforts to placate
Pinchot and convince him that his administration was pro-conservation were
unavailing. Pinchot sent an “open letter” to Senator Jonathan Prentiss Dolliver
(1858-1910) criticizing Taft, praising Glavis, and requesting a Congressional
investigation into Ballinger’s activities.
Taft fired
Pinchot, but investigations were carried out, anyway. Ballinger was cleared
(there remains the possibility that the outcome may have been politically
motivated. . . .), but criticized for subordinating conservationism to private
business interests.
Robert Marion La Follette, Sr. |
The Ballinger
Affair is credited with starting Senator Robert Marion La Follette, Sr.
(1855-1925) on the path that eventually led to La Follette’s reorganization of
the American Party as the Progressive Party, more popularly known as the “Bull
Moose” Party, after a remark by Roosevelt. As a result, Taft was widely perceived
as having abandoned the progressivism that had gotten him elected.
To all intents
and purposes, then, Taft was unelectable — as he was fully aware. Taft had
hated being president, anyway. He remarked years later that his tenure in the
White House was a barely remembered nightmare, reportedly stating, “I don’t remember that I ever
was president.”
Taft’s only
reason to run was to ensure that Roosevelt lost, and he could best do that by
keeping the Old Guard Republicans from joining the progressives. This he could
do without any campaigning at all. In fact, except for his speech of acceptance
for the nomination, Taft refused to do any public speaking. Taft even remarked
that he did not even consider himself a real candidate, as “[t]here are so many
people in the country who don’t like me.”
The Candidates: Roosevelt
Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. |
Despite the
“legend” that has come down to us about how Roosevelt decided to run for
president on a third party ticket in a fit of pique, destroying Taft’s
reelection bid by splitting the Republican Party, the issue was not so simple
or clear-cut as all that. Roosevelt was far from enthusiastic about being
president again. It is not all that certain he particularly enjoyed it the
first time.
Reading the
various biographies of Roosevelt, one is struck by the man’s sense of duty. He
might brag afterwards about something he had done — but you could be sure that
he had done it. Sometimes he seems to have enjoyed having done something more
than doing it.
Still, we do not
recall reading that Roosevelt ever bragged about something he was going to do. Having done something,
however, Roosevelt was not going to hide his light under a bushel, however
irritating that might be to people who preferred to hear less about the
achievements of others, and more about their own.
That is why H.K.
Smith’s recollection of Roosevelt’s decision to run again in 1912 is so
valuable. It is not the speculation of a historian with an ax to grind, or a
politician with an agenda to advance, but an eyewitness account by a man who
knew Roosevelt. As Smith related,
H.K. Smith |
Some time in 1911 I called upon Colonel Roosevelt at the Outlook
office, on leave from Washington. I told him I was going home for a few days.
He pounced down on me instantly: “H.K., don’t you dare go back to Connecticut
and do anything for my nomination for the Presidency in 1912!” Then he said:
“I’ve had eight years of the Presidency. I know all the honor and pleasure of
it and all of its sorrows and dangers. I have nothing more to gain by being
President again and I have a great deal to lose. I am not going to do
it!” — then he went to the window and looked out on Fourth Avenue for some
moments, and turned and added with great emphasis — “unless I get a mandate
from the American people.” I know much now than I did then what was before his
far-seeing eyes as he stood there looking out over the housetops — the fierce
strive ahead, the menacing issues lying within it, the far-reverberating
results that would follow, the sacrifice that would be required of him.
That mandate came. It became desperately clear to all
Progressives early in 1912 that their accomplished advance was in imminent
period of recession. The pressure came down on Colonel Roosevelt, culminating
in the appeal of the seven Governors on February 10, 1912. He accepted the call
of his friends, the challenge of his familiar foes. (Herbert Knox Smith, “The
Great Progressive,” Foreword to Social Justice and Popular Rule, op. cit.,
xiii-xiv.)
The Progressive
Party had its roots in the formation in 1906 of the American Party in Utah by supporters
of Senator Thomas Kearns (1862-1918), a Catholic. Kearns broke from the
Republican Party when he and his followers felt that the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter Day Saints (“Mormons”) had too much influence in Utah politics.
Purged of its
anti-LDS elements, the remnants of the American Party became the core around
which progressives and moderate populists coalesced to form the Progressive
Party in 1912. They virtually forced the nomination on Roosevelt once La
Follette proved to be non-viable as a candidate.
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