8: The New York Governorship
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In September, 1898, the First Volunteer Cavalry, in company with most
of the rest of the Fifth Army Corps, was disembarked at Montauk Point.
Shortly after it was disbanded, and a few days later, I was nominated
for Governor of New York by the Republican party. Timothy L. Woodruff
was nominated for Lieutenant-Governor. He was my stanch friend
throughout the term of our joint service.
The previous year, the machine or standpat Republicans, who were under
the domination of Senator Platt, had come to a complete break with the
anti-machine element over the New York mayoralty. This had brought the
Republican party to a smash, not only in New York City, but in the
State, where the Democratic candidate for Chief Judge of the Court of
Appeals, Alton B. Parker, was elected by sixty or eighty thousand
majority. Mr. Parker was an able man, a lieutenant of Mr. Hill's,
standing close to the conservative Democrats of the Wall Street type.
These conservative Democrats were planning how to wrest the Democratic
party from the control of Mr. Bryan. They hailed Judge Parker's
victory as a godsend. The Judge at once loomed up as a Presidential
possibility, and was carefully groomed for the position by the New
York Democratic machine, and its financial allies in the New York
business world.
The Republicans realized that the chances were very much against them.
Accordingly the leaders were in a chastened mood and ready to nominate
any candidate with whom they thought there was a chance of winning. I
was the only possibility, and, accordingly, under pressure from
certain of the leaders who recognized this fact, and who responded to
popular pressure, Senator Platt picked me for the nomination. He was
entirely frank in the matter. He made no pretense that he liked me
personally; but he deferred to the judgment of those who insisted that
I was the only man who could be elected, and that therefore I had to
be nominated.
Foremost among the leaders who pressed me on Mr. Platt (who "pestered"
him about me, to use his own words) were Mr. Quigg, Mr. Odell—then
State Chairman of the Republican organization, and afterwards Governor
—and Mr. Hazel, now United States Judge. Judge Hazel did not know me
personally, but felt that the sentiment in his city, Buffalo, demanded
my nomination, and that the then Republican Governor, Mr. Black, could
not be reelected. Mr. Odell, who hardly knew me personally, felt the
same way about Mr. Black's chances, and, as he had just taken the
State Chairmanship, he was very anxious to win a victory. Mr. Quigg
knew me quite well personally; he had been in touch with me for years,
while he was a reporter on the Tribune, and also when he edited a
paper in Montana; he had been on good terms with me while he was in
Congress and I was Civil Service Commissioner, meeting me often in
company with my especial cronies in Congress—men like Lodge, Speaker
Tom Reed, Greenhalge, Butterworth, and Dolliver—and he had urged my
appointment as Police Commissioner on Mayor Strong.
It was Mr. Quigg who called on me at Montauk Point to sound me about
the Governorship; Mr. Platt being by no means enthusiastic over Mr.
Quigg's mission, largely because he disapproved of the Spanish War and
of my part in bringing it about. Mr. Quigg saw me in my tent, in which
he spent a couple of hours with me, my brother-in-law, Douglas
Robinson, being also present. Quigg spoke very frankly to me, stating
that he earnestly desired to see me nominated and believed that the
great body of Republican voters in the State so desired, but that the
organization and the State Convention would finally do what Senator
Platt desired. He said that county leaders were already coming to
Senator Platt, hinting at a close election, expressing doubt of
Governor Black's availability for reelection, and asking why it would
not be a good thing to nominate me; that now that I had returned to
the United States this would go on more and more all the time, and
that he (Quigg) did not wish that these men should be discouraged and
be sent back to their localities to suppress a rising sentiment in my
favor. For this reason he said that he wanted from me a plain
statement as to whether or not I wanted the nomination, and as to what
would be my attitude toward the organization in the event of my
nomination and election, whether or not I would "make war" on Mr.
Platt and his friends, or whether I would confer with them and with
the organization leaders generally, and give fair consideration to
their point of view as to party policy and public interest. He said he
had not come to make me any offer of the nomination, and had no
authority to do so, nor to get any pledges or promises. He simply
wanted a frank definition of my attitude towards existing party
conditions.
To this I replied that I should like to be nominated, and if nominated
would promise to throw myself into the campaign with all possible
energy. I said that I should not make war on Mr. Platt or anybody else
if war could be avoided; that what I wanted was to be Governor and not
a faction leader; that I certainly would confer with the organization
men, as with everybody else who seemed to me to have knowledge of and
interest in public affairs, and that as to Mr. Platt and the
organization leaders, I would do so in the sincere hope that there
might always result harmony of opinion and purpose; but that while I
would try to get on well with the organization, the organization must
with equal sincerity strive to do what I regarded as essential for the
public good; and that in every case, after full consideration of what
everybody had to say who might possess real knowledge of the matter, I
should have to act finally as my own judgment and conscience dictated
and administer the State government as I thought it ought to be
administered. Quigg said that this was precisely what he supposed I
would say, that it was all anybody could expect, and that he would
state it to Senator Platt precisely as I had put it to him, which he
accordingly did; and, throughout my term as Governor, Quigg lived
loyally up to our understanding.(1)
After being nominated, I made a hard and aggressive campaign through
the State. My opponent was a respectable man, a judge, behind whom
stood Mr. Croker, the boss of Tammany Hall. My object was to make the
people understand that it was Croker, and not the nominal candidate,
who was my real opponent; that the choice lay between Crokerism and
myself. Croker was a powerful and truculent man, the autocrat of his
organization, and of a domineering nature. For his own reasons he
insisted upon Tammany's turning down an excellent Democratic judge who
was a candidate for reelection. This gave me my chance. Under my
attack, Croker, who was a stalwart fighting man and who would not take
an attack tamely, himself came to the front. I was able to fix the
contest in the public mind as one between himself and myself; and,
against all probabilities, I won by the rather narrow margin of
eighteen thousand plurality.
As I have already said, there is a lunatic fringe to every reform
movement. At least nine-tenths of all the sincere reformers supported
me; but the ultra-pacifists, the so-called anti-imperialists, or anti-
militarists, or peace-at-any-price men, preferred Croker to me; and
another knot of extremists who had at first ardently insisted that I
must be "forced" on Platt, as soon as Platt supported me themselves
opposed me because he supported me. After election John Hay wrote me
as follows: "While you are Governor, I believe the party can be made
solid as never before. You have already shown that a man may be
absolutely honest and yet practical; a reformer by instinct and a wise
politician; brave, bold, and uncompromising, and yet not a wild ass of
the desert. The exhibition made by the professional independents in
voting against you for no reason on earth except that somebody else
was voting for you, is a lesson that is worth its cost."
At that time boss rule was at its very zenith. Mr. Bryan's candidacy
in 1896 on a free silver platform had threatened such frightful
business disaster as to make the business men, the wage-workers, and
the professional classes generally, turn eagerly to the Republican
party. East of the Mississippi the Republican vote for Mr. McKinley
was larger by far than it had been for Abraham Lincoln in the days
when the life of the Nation was at stake. Mr. Bryan championed many
sorely needed reforms in the interest of the plain people; but many of
his platform proposals, economic and otherwise, were of such a
character that to have put them into practice would have meant to
plunge all our people into conditions far worse than any of those for
which he sought a remedy. The free silver advocates included sincere
and upright men who were able to make a strong case for their
position; but with them and dominating them were all the believers in
the complete or partial repudiation of National, State, and private
debts; and not only the business men but the workingmen grew to feel
that under these circumstances too heavy a price could not be paid to
avert the Democratic triumph. The fear of Mr. Bryan threw almost all
the leading men of all classes into the arms of whoever opposed him.
The Republican bosses, who were already very powerful, and who were
already in fairly close alliance with the privileged interests, now
found everything working to their advantage. Good and high-minded men
of conservative temperament in their panic played into the hands of
the ultra-reactionaries of business and politics. The alliance between
the two kinds of privilege, political and financial, was closely
cemented; and wherever there was any attempt to break it up, the cry
was at once raised that this merely represented another phase of the
assault on National honesty and individual and mercantile integrity.
As so often happens, the excesses and threats of an unwise and extreme
radicalism had resulted in immensely strengthening the position of the
beneficiaries of reaction. This was the era when the Standard Oil
Company achieved a mastery of Pennsylvania politics so far-reaching
and so corrupt that it is difficult to describe it without seeming to
exaggerate.
In New York State, United States Senator Platt was the absolute boss
of the Republican party. "Big business" was back of him; yet at the
time this, the most important element in his strength, was only
imperfectly understood. It was not until I was elected Governor that I
myself came to understand it. We were still accustomed to talking of
the "machine" as if it were something merely political, with which
business had nothing to do. Senator Platt did not use his political
position to advance his private fortunes—therein differing absolutely
from many other political bosses. He lived in hotels and had few
extravagant tastes. Indeed, I could not find that he had any tastes at
all except for politics, and on rare occasions for a very dry theology
wholly divorced from moral implications. But big business men
contributed to him large sums of money, which enabled him to keep his
grip on the machine and secured for them the help of the machine if
they were threatened with adverse legislation. The contributions were
given in the guise of contributions for campaign purposes, of money
for the good of the party; when the money was contributed there was
rarely talk of specific favors in return.(2)
It was simply put into
Mr. Platt's hands and treated by him as in the campaign chest. Then he
distributed it in the districts where it was most needed by the
candidates and organization leaders. Ordinarily no pledge was required
from the latter to the bosses, any more than it was required by the
business men from Mr. Platt or his lieutenants. No pledge was needed.
It was all a "gentlemen's understanding." As the Senator once said to
me, if a man's character was such that it was necessary to get a
promise from him, it was clear proof that his character was such that
the promise would not be worth anything after it was made.
It must not be forgotten that some of the worst practices of the
machine in dealings of this kind represented merely virtues in the
wrong place, virtues wrenched out of proper relation to their
surroundings. A man in a doubtful district might win only because of
the help Mr. Platt gave him; he might be a decent young fellow without
money enough to finance his own campaign, who was able to finance it
only because Platt of his own accord found out or was apprised of his
need and advanced the money. Such a man felt grateful, and, because of
his good qualities, joined with the purely sordid and corrupt heelers
and crooked politicians to become part of the Platt machine. In his
turn Mr. Platt was recognized by the business men, the big
contributors, as an honorable man; not only a man of his word, but a
man who, whenever he received a favor, could be trusted to do his best
to repay it on any occasion that arose. I believe that usually the
contributors, and the recipient, sincerely felt that the transaction
was proper and subserved the cause of good politics and good business;
and, indeed, as regards the major part of the contributions, it is
probable that this was the fact, and that the only criticism that
could properly be made about the contributions was that they were not
made with publicity—and at that time neither the parties nor the
public had any realization that publicity was necessary, or any
adequate understanding of the dangers of the "invisible empire" which
throve by what was done in secrecy. Many, probably most, of the
contributors of this type never wished anything personal in exchange
for their contributions, and made them with sincere patriotism,
desiring in return only that the Government should be conducted on a
proper basis. Unfortunately, it was, in practice, exceedingly
difficult to distinguish these men from the others who contributed big
sums to the various party bosses with the expectation of gaining
concrete and personal advantages (in which the bosses shared) at the
expense of the general public. It was very hard to draw the line
between these two types of contributions.
There was but one kind of money contributions as to which it seemed to
me absolutely impossible for either the contributor or the recipient
to disguise to themselves the evil meaning of the contribution. This
was where a big corporation contributed to both political parties. I
knew of one such case where in a State campaign a big corporation
which had many dealings with public officials frankly contributed in
the neighborhood of a hundred thousand dollars to one campaign fund
and fifty thousand dollars to the campaign fund of the other side—
and, I believe, made some further substantial contributions in the
same ratio of two dollars to one side for every one dollar given to
the other. The contributors were Democrats, and the big contributions
went to the Democratic managers. The Republican was elected, and after
his election, when a matter came up affecting the company, in which
its interests were hostile to those of the general public, the
successful candidate, then holding a high State office, was approached
by his campaign managers and the situation put frankly before him. He
was less disturbed than astonished, and remarked, "Why, I thought So-
and-so and his associates were Democrats and subscribed to the
Democratic campaign fund." "So they did," was the answer; "they
subscribed to them twice as much as they subscribed to us, but if they
had had any idea that you intended doing what you now say you will do,
they would have subscribed it all to the other side, and more too."
The State official in his turn answered that he was very sorry if any
one had subscribed under a misapprehension, that it was no fault of
his, for he had stated definitely and clearly his position, that he of
course had no money wherewith himself to return what without his
knowledge had been contributed, and that all he could say was that any
man who had subscribed to his campaign fund under the impression that
the receipt of the subscription would be a bar to the performance of
public duty was sadly mistaken.
The control by Mr. Platt and his lieutenants over the organization was
well-nigh complete. There were splits among the bosses, and insurgent
movements now and then, but the ordinary citizens had no control over
the political machinery except in a very few districts. There were,
however, plenty of good men in politics, men who either came from
districts where there was popular control, or who represented a
genuine aspiration towards good citizenship on the part of some boss
or group of bosses, or else who had been nominated frankly for reasons
of expediency by bosses whose attitude towards good citizenship was at
best one of Gallio-like indifference. At the time when I was nominated
for Governor, as later when Mr. Hughes was nominated and renominated
for Governor, there was no possibility of securing the nomination
unless the bosses permitted it. In each case the bosses, the machine
leaders, took a man for whom they did not care, because he was the
only man with whom they could win. In the case of Mr. Hughes there was
of course also the fact of pressure from the National Administration.
But the bosses were never overcome in a fair fight, when they had made
up their minds to fight, until the Saratoga Convention in 1910, when
Mr. Stimson was nominated for Governor.
Senator Platt had the same inborn capacity for the kind of politics
which he liked that many big Wall Street men have shown for not wholly
dissimilar types of finance. It was his chief interest, and he applied
himself to it unremittingly. He handled his private business
successfully; but it was politics in which he was absorbed, and he
concerned himself therewith every day in the year. He had built up an
excellent system of organization, and the necessary funds came from
corporations and men of wealth who contributed as I have described
above. The majority of the men with a natural capacity for
organization leadership of the type which has generally been prevalent
in New York politics turned to Senator Platt as their natural chief
and helped build up the organization, until under his leadership it
became more powerful and in a position of greater control than any
other Republican machine in the country, excepting in Pennsylvania.
The Democratic machines in some of the big cities, as in New York and
Boston, and the country Democratic machine of New York under David B.
Hill, were probably even more efficient, representing an even more
complete mastery by the bosses, and an even greater degree of drilled
obedience among the henchmen. It would be an entire mistake to suppose
that Mr. Platt's lieutenants were either all bad men or all influenced
by unworthy motives. He was constantly doing favors for men. He had
won the gratitude of many good men. In the country districts
especially, there were many places where his machine included the
majority of the best citizens, the leading and substantial citizens,
among the inhabitants. Some of his strongest and most efficient
lieutenants were disinterested men of high character.
There had always been a good deal of opposition to Mr. Platt and the
machine, but the leadership of this opposition was apt to be found
only among those whom Abraham Lincoln called the "silk stockings," and
much of it excited almost as much derision among the plain people as
the machine itself excited anger or dislike. Very many of Mr. Platt's
opponents really disliked him and his methods, for aesthetic rather
than for moral reasons, and the bulk of the people half-consciously
felt this and refused to submit to their leadership. The men who
opposed him in this manner were good citizens according to their
lights, prominent in the social clubs and in philanthropic circles,
men of means and often men of business standing. They disliked coarse
and vulgar politicians, and they sincerely reprobated all the
shortcomings that were recognized by, and were offensive to, people of
their own caste. They had not the slightest understanding of the
needs, interests, ways of thought, and convictions of the average
small man; and the small man felt this, although he could not express
it, and sensed that they were really not concerned with his welfare,
and that they did not offer him anything materially better from his
point of view than the machine.
When reformers of this type attempted to oppose Mr. Platt, they
usually put up either some rather inefficient, well-meaning person,
who bathed every day, and didn't steal, but whose only good point was
"respectability," and who knew nothing of the great fundamental
questions looming before us; or else they put up some big business man
or corporation lawyer who was wedded to the gross wrong and injustice
of our economic system, and who neither by personality nor by
programme gave the ordinary plain people any belief that there was
promise of vital good to them in the change. The correctness of their
view was proved by the fact that as soon as fundamental economic and
social reforms were at stake the aesthetic, as distinguished from the
genuinely moral, reformers, for the most part sided with the bosses
against the people.
When I became Governor, the conscience of the people was in no way or
shape aroused, as it has since become roused. The people accepted and
practiced in a matter-of-course way as quite proper things which they
would not now tolerate. They had no definite and clearly outlined
conception of what they wished in the way of reform. They on the whole
tolerated, and indeed approved of, the machine; and there had been no
development on any considerable scale of reformers with the vision to
see what the needs of the people were, and the high purpose sanely to
achieve what was necessary in order to meet these needs. I knew both
the machine and the silk-stocking reformers fairly well, from many
years' close association with them. The machine as such had no ideals
at all, although many of the men composing it did have. On the other
hand, the ideals of very many of the silk-stocking reformers did not
relate to the questions of real and vital interest to our people; and,
singularly enough, in international matters, these same silk-stockings
were no more to be trusted than the average ignorant demagogue or
shortsighted spoils politicians. I felt that these men would be broken
reeds to which to trust in any vital contest for betterment of social
and industrial conditions.
I had neither the training nor the capacity that would have enabled me
to match Mr. Platt and his machine people on their own ground. Nor did
I believe that the effort to build up a machine of my own under the
then existing conditions would meet the needs of the situation so far
as the people were concerned. I therefore made no effort to create a
machine of my own, and consistently adopted the plan of going over the
heads of the men holding public office and of the men in control of
the organization, and appealing directly to the people behind them.
The machine, for instance, had a more or less strong control over the
great bulk of the members of the State Legislature; but in the last
resort the people behind these legislators had a still greater control
over them. I made up my mind that the only way I could beat the bosses
whenever the need to do so arose (and unless there was such need I did
not wish to try) was, not by attempting to manipulate the machinery,
and not by trusting merely to the professional reformers, but by
making my appeal as directly and as emphatically as I knew how to the
mass of voters themselves, to the people, to the men who if waked up
would be able to impose their will on their representatives. My
success depended upon getting the people in the different districts to
look at matters in my way, and getting them to take such an active
interest in affairs as to enable them to exercise control over their
representatives.
There were a few of the Senators and Assemblymen whom I could reach by
seeing them personally and putting before them my arguments; but most
of them were too much under the control of the machine for me to shake
them loose unless they knew that the people were actively behind me.
In making my appeal to the people as a whole I was dealing with an
entirely different constituency from that which, especially in the big
cities, liked to think of itself as the "better element," the
particular exponent of reform and good citizenship. I was dealing with
shrewd, hard-headed, kindly men and women, chiefly concerned with the
absorbing work of earning their own living, and impatient of fads, who
had grown to feel that the associations with the word "reformer" were
not much better than the associations with the word "politician." I
had to convince these men and women of my good faith, and, moreover,
of my common sense and efficiency. They were most of them strong
partisans, and an outrage had to be very real and very great to shake
them even partially loose from their party affiliations. Moreover,
they took little interest in any fight of mere personalities. They
were not influenced in the least by the silk-stocking reform view of
Mr. Platt. I knew that if they were persuaded that I was engaged in a
mere faction fight against him, that it was a mere issue between his
ambition and mine, they would at once become indifferent, and my fight
would be lost.
But I felt that I could count on their support wherever I could show
them that the fight was not made just for the sake of the row, that it
was not made merely as a factional contest against Senator Platt and
the organization, but was waged from a sense of duty for real and
tangible causes such as the promotion of governmental efficiency and
honesty, and forcing powerful moneyed men to take the proper attitude
toward the community at large. They stood by me when I insisted upon
having the canal department, the insurance department, and the various
departments of the State Government run with efficiency and honesty;
they stood by me when I insisted upon making wealthy men who owned
franchises pay the State what they properly ought to pay; they stood
by me when, in connection with the strikes on the Croton Aqueduct and
in Buffalo, I promptly used the military power of the State to put a
stop to rioting and violence.
In the latter case my chief opponents and critics were local
politicians who were truckling to the labor vote; but in all cases
coming under the first two categories I had serious trouble with the
State leaders of the machine. I always did my best, in good faith, to
get Mr. Platt and the other heads of the machine to accept my views,
and to convince them, by repeated private conversations, that I was
right. I never wantonly antagonized or humiliated them. I did not wish
to humiliate them or to seem victorious over them; what I wished was
to secure the things that I thought it essential to the men and women
of the State to secure. If I could finally persuade them to support
me, well and good; in such case I continued to work with them in the
friendliest manner.
If after repeated and persistent effort I failed to get them to
support me, then I made a fair fight in the open, and in a majority of
cases I carried my point and succeeded in getting through the
legislation which I wished. In theory the Executive has nothing to do
with legislation. In practice, as things now are, the Executive is or
ought to be peculiarly representative of the people as a whole. As
often as not the action of the Executive offers the only means by
which the people can get the legislation they demand and ought to
have. Therefore a good executive under the present conditions of
American political life must take a very active interest in getting
the right kind of legislation, in addition to performing his executive
duties with an eye single to the public welfare. More than half of my
work as Governor was in the direction of getting needed and important
legislation. I accomplished this only by arousing the people, and
riveting their attention on what was done.
Gradually the people began to wake up more and more to the fact that
the machine politicians were not giving them the kind of government
which they wished. As this waking up grew more general, not merely in
New York or any other one State, but throughout most of the Nation,
the power of the bosses waned. Then a curious thing happened. The
professional reformers who had most loudly criticized these bosses
began to change toward them. Newspaper editors, college presidents,
corporation lawyers, and big business men, all alike, had denounced
the bosses and had taken part in reform movements against them so long
as these reforms dealt only with things that were superficial, or with
fundamental things that did not affect themselves and their
associates. But the majority of these men turned to the support of the
bosses when the great new movement began clearly to make itself
evident as one against privilege in business no less than against
privilege in politics, as one for social and industrial no less than
for political righteousness and fair dealing. The big corporation
lawyer who had antagonized the boss in matters which he regarded as
purely political stood shoulder to shoulder with the boss when the
movement for betterment took shape in direct attack on the combination
of business with politics and with the judiciary which has done so
much to enthrone privilege in the economic world.
The reformers who denounced political corruption and fraud when shown
at the expense of their own candidates by machine ward heelers of a
low type hysterically applauded similar corrupt trickery when
practiced by these same politicians against men with whose political
and industrial programme the reformers were not in sympathy. I had
always been instinctively and by nature a democrat, but if I had
needed conversion to the democratic ideal here in America the stimulus
would have been supplied by what I saw of the attitude, not merely of
the bulk of the men of greatest wealth, but of the bulk of the men who
most prided themselves upon their education and culture, when we began
in good faith to grapple with the wrong and injustice of our social
and industrial system, and to hit at the men responsible for the
wrong, no matter how high they stood in business or in politics, at
the bar or on the bench. It was while I was Governor, and especially
in connection with the franchise tax legislation, that I first became
thoroughly aware of the real causes of this attitude among the men of
great wealth and among the men who took their tone from the men of
great wealth.
Very soon after my victory in the race for Governor I had one or two
experiences with Senator Platt which showed in amusing fashion how
absolute the rule of the boss was in the politics of that day. Senator
Platt, who was always most kind and friendly in his personal relations
with me, asked me in one day to talk over what was to be done at
Albany. He had the two or three nominal heads of the organization with
him. They were his lieutenants, who counseled and influenced him,
whose advice he often followed, but who, when he had finally made up
his mind, merely registered and carried out his decrees. After a
little conversation the Senator asked if I had any member of the
Assembly whom I wished to have put on any committee, explaining that
the committees were being arranged. I answered no, and expressed my
surprise at what he had said, because I had not understood the Speaker
who appointed the committees had himself been agreed upon by the
members-elect. "Oh!" responded the Senator, with a tolerant smile, "He
has not been chosen yet, but of course whoever we choose as Speaker
will agree beforehand to make the appointments we wish." I made a
mental note to the effect that if they attempted the same process with
the Governor-elect they would find themselves mistaken.
In a few days the opportunity to prove this arrived. Under the
preceding Administration there had been grave scandals about the Erie
Canal, the trans-State Canal, and these scandals had been one of the
chief issues in the campaign for the Governorship. The construction of
this work was under the control of the Superintendent of Public Works.
In the actual state of affairs his office was by far the most
important office under me, and I intended to appoint to it some man of
high character and capacity who could be trusted to do the work not
merely honestly and efficiently, but without regard to politics. A
week or so after the Speakership incident Senator Platt asked me to
come and see him (he was an old and physically feeble man, able to
move about only with extreme difficulty).
On arrival I found the Lieutenant-Governor elect, Mr. Woodruff, who
had also been asked to come. The Senator informed me that he was glad
to say that I would have a most admirable man as Superintendent of
Public Works, as he had just received a telegram from a certain
gentleman, whom he named, saying that he would accept the position! He
handed me the telegram. The man in question was a man I liked; later I
appointed him to an important office in which he did well. But he came
from a city along the line of the canal, so that I did not think it
best that he should be appointed anyhow; and, moreover, what was far
more important, it was necessary to have it understood at the very
outset that the Administration was my Administration and was no one
else's but mine. So I told the Senator very politely that I was sorry,
but that I could not appoint his man. This produced an explosion, but
I declined to lose my temper, merely repeating that I must decline to
accept any man chosen for me, and that I must choose the man myself.
Although I was very polite, I was also very firm, and Mr. Platt and
his friends finally abandoned their position.
I appointed an engineer from Brooklyn, a veteran of the Civil War,
Colonel Partridge, who had served in Mayor Low's administration. He
was an excellent man in every way. He chose as his assistant, actively
to superintend the work, a Cornell graduate named Elon Hooker, a man
with no political backing at all, picked simply because he was the
best equipped man for the place. The office, the most important office
under me, was run in admirable fashion throughout my Administration; I
doubt if there ever was an important department of the New York State
Government run with a higher standard of efficiency and integrity.
But this was not all that had to be done about the canals. Evidently
the whole policy hitherto pursued had been foolish and inadequate. I
appointed a first-class non-partisan commission of business men and
expert engineers who went into the matter exhaustively, and their
report served as the basis upon which our entire present canal system
is based. There remained the question of determining whether the canal
officials who were in office before I became Governor, and whom I had
declined to reappoint, had been guilty of any action because of which
it would be possible to proceed against them criminally or otherwise
under the law. Such criminal action had been freely charged against
them during the campaign by the Democratic (including the so-called
mugwump) press. To determine this matter I appointed two Democratic
lawyers, Messrs. Fox and MacFarlane (the latter Federal District
Attorney for New York under President Cleveland), and put the whole
investigation in their hands. These gentlemen made an exhaustive
investigation lasting several months. They reported that there had
been grave delinquency in the prosecution of the work, delinquency
which justified public condemnation of those responsible for it (who
were out of office), but that there was no ground for criminal
prosecution. I laid their report before the Legislature with a message
in which I said: "There is probably no lawyer of high standing in the
State who, after studying the report of counsel in this case and the
testimony taken by the investigating commission, would disagree with
them as to the impracticability of a successful prosecution. Under
such circumstances the one remedy was a thorough change in the methods
and management. This change has been made."
When my successor in the Governorship took office, Colonel Partridge
retired, and Elon Hooker, finding that he could no longer act with
entire disregard of politics and with an eye single to the efficiency
of the work, also left. A dozen years later—having in the meantime
made a marked success in a business career—he became the Treasurer of
the National Progressive party.
My action in regard to the canals, and the management of his office,
the most important office under me, by Colonel Partridge, established
my relations with Mr. Platt from the outset on pretty nearly the right
basis. But, besides various small difficulties, we had one or two
serious bits of trouble before my duties as Governor ceased. It must
be remembered that Mr. Platt was to all intents and purposes a large
part of, and sometimes a majority of, the Legislature. There were a
few entirely independent men such as Nathaniel Elsberg, Regis Post,
and Alford Cooley, in each of the two houses; the remainder were under
the control of the Republican and Democratic bosses, but could also be
more or less influenced by an aroused public opinion. The two machines
were apt to make common cause if their vital interests were touched.
It was my business to devise methods by which either the two machines
could be kept apart or else overthrown if they came together.
My desire was to achieve results, and not merely to issue manifestoes
of virtue. It is very easy to be efficient if the efficiency is based
on unscrupulousness, and it is still easier to be virtuous if one is
content with the purely negative virtue which consists in not doing
anything wrong, but being wholly unable to accomplish anything
positive for good. My favorite quotation from Josh Billings again
applies: It is so much easier to be a harmless dove than a wise
serpent. My duty was to combine both idealism and efficiency. At that
time the public conscience was still dormant as regards many species
of political and business misconduct, as to which during the next
decade it became sensitive. I had to work with the tools at hand and
to take into account the feeling of the people, which I have already
described. My aim was persistently to refuse to be put in a position
where what I did would seem to be a mere faction struggle against
Senator Platt. My aim was to make a fight only when I could so manage
it that there could be no question in the minds of honest men that my
prime purpose was not to attack Mr. Platt or any one else except as a
necessary incident to securing clean and efficient government.
In each case I did my best to persuade Mr. Platt not to oppose me. I
endeavored to make it clear to him that I was not trying to wrest the
organization from him; and I always gave him in detail the reasons why
I felt I had to take the position I intended to adopt. It was only
after I had exhausted all the resources of my patience that I would
finally, if he still proved obstinate, tell him that I intended to
make the fight anyhow. As I have said, the Senator was an old and
feeble man in physique, and it was possible for him to go about very
little. Until Friday evening he would be kept at his duties at
Washington, while I was in Albany. If I wished to see him it generally
had to be at his hotel in New York on Saturday, and usually I would go
there to breakfast with him. The one thing I would not permit was
anything in the nature of a secret or clandestine meeting. I always
insisted on going openly. Solemn reformers of the tom-fool variety,
who, according to their custom, paid attention to the name and not the
thing, were much exercised over my "breakfasting with Platt." Whenever
I breakfasted with him they became sure that the fact carried with it
some sinister significance. The worthy creatures never took the
trouble to follow the sequence of facts and events for themselves. If
they had done so they would have seen that any series of breakfasts
with Platt always meant that I was going to do something he did not
like, and that I was trying, courteously and frankly, to reconcile him
to it. My object was to make it as easy as possible for him to come
with me. As long as there was no clash between us there was no object
in my seeing him; it was only when the clash came or was imminent that
I had to see him. A series of breakfasts was always the prelude to
some active warfare.(3)
In every instance I substantially carried my
point, although in some cases not in exactly the way in which I had
originally hoped.
There were various measures to which he gave a grudging and querulous
assent without any break being threatened. I secured the reenactment
of the Civil Service Law, which under my predecessor had very
foolishly been repealed. I secured a mass of labor legislation,
including the enactment of laws to increase the number of factory
inspectors, to create a Tenement House Commission (whose findings
resulted in further and excellent legislation to improve housing
conditions), to regulate and improve sweatshop labor, to make the
eight-hour and prevailing rate of wages law effective, to secure the
genuine enforcement of the act relating to the hours of railway
workers, to compel railways to equip freight trains with air-brakes,
to regulate the working hours of women and protect both women and
children from dangerous machinery, to enforce good scaffolding
provisions for workmen on buildings, to provide seats for the use of
waitresses in hotels and restaurants, to reduce the hours of labor for
drug-store clerks, to provide for the registration of laborers for
municipal employment. I tried hard but failed to secure an employers'
liability law and the state control of employment offices. There was
hard fighting over some of these bills, and, what was much more
serious, there was effort to get round the law by trickery and by
securing its inefficient enforcement. I was continually helped by men
with whom I had gotten in touch while in the Police Department; men
such as James Bronson Reynolds, through whom I first became interested
in settlement work on the East Side. Once or twice I went suddenly
down to New York City without warning any one and traversed the
tenement-house quarters, visiting various sweat-shops picked at
random. Jake Riis accompanied me; and as a result of our inspection we
got not only an improvement in the law but a still more marked
improvement in its administration. Thanks chiefly to the activity and
good sense of Dr. John H. Pryor, of Buffalo, and by the use of every
pound of pressure which as Governor I could bring to bear in
legitimate fashion—including a special emergency message—we
succeeded in getting through a bill providing for the first State
hospital for incipient tuberculosis. We got valuable laws for the
farmer; laws preventing the adulteration of food products (which laws
were equally valuable to the consumer), and laws helping the dairyman.
In addition to labor legislation I was able to do a good deal for
forest preservation and the protection of our wild life. All that
later I strove for in the Nation in connection with Conservation was
foreshadowed by what I strove to obtain for New York State when I was
Governor; and I was already working in connection with Gifford Pinchot
and Newell. I secured better administration, and some improvement in
the laws themselves. The improvement in administration, and in the
character of the game and forest wardens, was secured partly as the
result of a conference in the executive chamber which I held with
forty of the best guides and woodsmen of the Adirondacks.
As regards most legislation, even that affecting labor and the
forests, I got on fairly well with the machine. But on the two issues
in which "big business" and the kind of politics which is allied to
big business were most involved we clashed hard—and clashing with
Senator Platt meant clashing with the entire Republican organization,
and with the organized majority in each house of the Legislature. One
clash was in connection with the Superintendent of Insurance, a man
whose office made him a factor of immense importance in the big
business circles of New York. The then incumbent of the office was an
efficient man, the boss of an up-State county, a veteran politician
and one of Mr. Platt's right-hand men. Certain investigations which I
made—in the course of the fight—showed that this Superintendent of
Insurance had been engaged in large business operations in New York
City. These operations had thrown him into a peculiarly intimate
business contact of one sort and another with various financiers with
whom I did not deem it expedient that the Superintendent of Insurance,
while such, should have any intimate and secret money-making
relations. Moreover, the gentleman in question represented the
straitest sect of the old-time spoils politicians. I therefore
determined not to reappoint him. Unless I could get his successor
confirmed, however, he would stay in under the law, and the Republican
machine, with the assistance of Tammany, expected to control far more
than a majority of all the Senators.
Mr. Platt issued an ultimatum to me that the incumbent must be
reappointed or else that he would fight, and that if he chose to fight
the man would stay in anyhow because I could not oust him—for under
the New York Constitution the assent of the Senate was necessary not
only to appoint a man to office but to remove him from office. As
always with Mr. Platt, I persistently refused to lose my temper, no
matter what he said—he was much too old and physically feeble for
there to be any point of honor in taking up any of his remarks—and I
merely explained good-humoredly that I had made up my mind and that
the gentleman in question would not be retained. As for not being able
to get his successor confirmed, I pointed out that as soon as the
Legislature adjourned I could and would appoint another man
temporarily. Mr. Platt then said that the incumbent would be put back
as soon as the Legislature reconvened; I admitted that this was
possible, but added cheerfully that I would remove him again just as
soon as that Legislature adjourned, and that even though I had an
uncomfortable time myself, I would guarantee to make my opponents more
uncomfortable still. We parted without any sign of reaching an
agreement.
There remained some weeks before final action could be taken, and the
Senator was confident that I would have to yield. His most efficient
allies were the pretended reformers, most of them my open or covert
enemies, who loudly insisted that I must make an open fight on the
Senator himself and on the Republican organization. This was what he
wished, for at that time there was no way of upsetting him within the
Republican party; and, as I have said, if I had permitted the contest
to assume the shape of a mere faction fight between the Governor and
the United States Senator, I would have insured the victory of the
machine. So I blandly refused to let the thing become a personal
fight, explaining again and again that I was perfectly willing to
appoint an organization man, and naming two or three whom I was
willing to appoint, but also explaining that I would not retain the
incumbent, and would not appoint any man of his type. Meanwhile
pressure on behalf of the said incumbent began to come from the
business men of New York.
The Superintendent of Insurance was not a man whose ill will the big
life insurance companies cared to incur, and company after company
passed resolutions asking me to reappoint him, although in private
some of the men who signed these resolutions nervously explained that
they did not mean what they had written, and hoped I would remove the
man. A citizen prominent in reform circles, marked by the Cato-like
austerity of his reform professions, had a son who was a counsel for
one of the insurance companies. The father was engaged in writing
letters to the papers demanding in the name of uncompromising virtue
that I should not only get rid of the Superintendent of Insurance, but
in his place should appoint somebody or other personally offensive to
Senator Platt—which last proposition, if adopted, would have meant
that the Superintendent of Insurance would have stayed in, for the
reasons I have already given. Meanwhile the son came to see me on
behalf of the insurance company he represented and told me that the
company was anxious that there should be a change in the
superintendency; that if I really meant to fight, they thought they
had influence with four of the State Senators, Democrats and
Republicans, whom they could get to vote to confirm the man I
nominated, but that they wished to be sure that I would not abandon
the fight, because it would be a very bad thing for them if I started
the fight and then backed down. I told my visitor that he need be
under no apprehensions, that I would certainly see the fight through.
A man who has much to do with that kind of politics which concerns
both New York politicians and New York business men and lawyers is not
easily surprised, and therefore I felt no other emotion than a rather
sardonic amusement when thirty-six hours later I read in the morning
paper an open letter from the officials of the very company who had
been communicating with me in which they enthusiastically advocated
the renomination of the Superintendent. Shortly afterwards my visitor,
the young lawyer, called me up on the telephone and explained that the
officials did not mean what they had said in this letter, that they
had been obliged to write it for fear of the Superintendent, but that
if they got the chance they intended to help me get rid of him. I
thanked him and said I thought I could manage the fight by myself. I
did not hear from him again, though his father continued to write
public demands that I should practice pure virtue, undefiled and
offensive.
Meanwhile Senator Platt declined to yield. I had picked out a man, a
friend of his, who I believed would make an honest and competent
official, and whose position in the organization was such that I did
not believe the Senate would venture to reject him. However, up to the
day before the appointment was to go to the Senate, Mr. Platt remained
unyielding. I saw him that afternoon and tried to get him to yield,
but he said No, that if I insisted, it would be war to the knife, and
my destruction, and perhaps the destruction of the party. I said I was
very sorry, that I could not yield, and if the war came it would have
to come, and that next morning I should send in the name of the
Superintendent's successor. We parted, and soon afterwards I received
from the man who was at the moment Mr. Platt's right-hand lieutenant a
request to know where he could see me that evening. I appointed the
Union League Club. My visitor went over the old ground, explained that
the Senator would under no circumstances yield, that he was certain to
win in the fight, that my reputation would be destroyed, and that he
wished to save me from such a lamentable smash-up as an ending to my
career. I could only repeat what I had already said, and after half an
hour of futile argument I rose and said that nothing was to be gained
by further talk and that I might as well go. My visitor repeated that
I had this last chance, and that ruin was ahead of me if I refused it;
whereas, if I accepted, everything would be made easy. I shook my head
and answered, "There is nothing to add to what I have already said."
He responded, "You have made up your mind?" and I said, "I have." He
then said, "You know it means your ruin?" and I answered, "Well, we
will see about that," and walked toward the door. He said, "You
understand, the fight will begin to-morrow and will be carried on to
the bitter end." I said, "Yes," and added, as I reached the door,
"Good night." Then, as the door opened, my opponent, or visitor,
whichever one chooses to call him, whose face was as impassive and as
inscrutable as that of Mr. John Hamlin in a poker game, said: "Hold
on! We accept. Send in So-and-so [the man I had named]. The Senator is
very sorry, but he will make no further opposition!" I never saw a
bluff carried more resolutely through to the final limit. My success
in the affair, coupled with the appointment of Messrs. Partridge and
Hooker, secured me against further effort to interfere with my
handling of the executive departments.
It was in connection with the insurance business that I first met Mr.
George W. Perkins. He came to me with a letter of introduction from
the then Speaker of the National House of Representatives, Tom Reed,
which ran: "Mr. Perkins is a personal friend of mine, whose
straightforwardness and intelligence will commend to you whatever he
has to say. If you will give him proper opportunity to explain his
business, I have no doubt that what he will say will be worthy of your
attention." Mr. Perkins wished to see me with reference to a bill that
had just been introduced in the Legislature, which aimed to limit the
aggregate volume of insurance that any New York State company could
assume. There were then three big insurance companies in New York—the
Mutual Life, Equitable, and New York Life. Mr. Perkins was a Vice-
President of the New York Life Insurance Company and Mr. John A.
McCall was its President. I had just finished my fight against the
Superintendent of Insurance, whom I refused to continue in office. Mr.
McCall had written me a very strong letter urging that he be retained,
and had done everything he could to aid Senator Platt in securing his
retention. The Mutual Life and Equitable people had openly followed
the same course, but in private had hedged. They were both backing the
proposed bill. Mr. McCall was opposed to it; he was in California, and
just before starting thither he had been told by the Mutual Life and
Equitable that the Limitation Bill was favored by me and would be put
through if such a thing were possible. Mr. McCall did not know me, and
on leaving for California told Mr. Perkins that from all he could
learn he was sure I was bent on putting this bill through, and that
nothing he could say to me would change my view; in fact, because he
had fought so hard to retain the old Insurance Superintendent, he felt
that I would be particularly opposed to anything he might wish done.
As a matter of fact, I had no such feeling. I had been carefully
studying the question. I had talked with the Mutual Life and Equitable
people about it, but was not committed to any particular course, and
had grave doubts as to whether it was well to draw the line on size
instead of on conduct. I was therefore very glad to see Perkins and
get a new point of view. I went over the matter with a great deal of
care and at considerable length, and after we had thrashed the matter
out pretty fully and Perkins had laid before me in detail the methods
employed by Austria, Germany, Switzerland, and other European
countries to handle their large insurance companies, I took the
position that there undoubtedly were evils in the insurance business,
but that they did not consist in insuring people's lives, for that
certainly was not an evil; and I did not see how the real evils could
be eradicated by limiting or suppressing a company's ability to
protect an additional number of lives with insurance. I therefore
announced that I would not favor a bill that limited volume of
business, and would not sign it if it were passed; but that I favored
legislation that would make it impossible to place, through agents,
policies that were ambiguous and misleading, or to pay exorbitant
prices to agents for business, or to invest policy-holders' money in
improper securities, or to give power to officers to use the company's
funds for their own personal profit. In reaching this determination I
was helped by Mr. Loeb, then merely a stenographer in my office, but
who had already attracted my attention both by his efficiency and by
his loyalty to his former employers, who were for the most part my
political opponents. Mr. Loeb gave me much information about various
improper practices in the insurance business. I began to gather data
on the subject, with the intention of bringing about corrective
legislation, for at that time I expected to continue in office as
Governor. But in a few weeks I was nominated as Vice-President, and my
successor did nothing about the matter.
So far as I remember, this was the first time the question of
correcting evils in a business by limiting the volume of business to
be done was ever presented to me, and my decision in the matter was on
all fours with the position I have always since taken when any similar
principle was involved. At the time when I made my decision about the
Limitation Bill, I was on friendly terms with the Mutual and Equitable
people who were back of it, whereas I did not know Mr. McCall at all,
and Mr. Perkins only from hearing him discuss the bill.
An interesting feature of the matter developed subsequently. Five
years later, after the insurance investigations took place, the Mutual
Life strongly urged the passage of a Limitation Bill, and, because of
the popular feeling developed by the exposure of the improper
practices of the companies, this bill was generally approved. Governor
Hughes adopted the suggestion, such a bill was passed by the
Legislature, and Governor Hughes signed it. This bill caused the three
great New York companies to reduce markedly the volume of business
they were doing; it threw a great many agents out of employment, and
materially curtailed the foreign business of the companies—which
business was bringing annually a considerable sum of money to this
country for investment. In short, the experiment worked so badly that
before Governor Hughes went out of office one of the very last bills
he signed was one that permitted the life insurance companies to
increase their business each year by an amount representing a certain
percentage of the business they had previously done. This in practice,
within a few years, practically annulled the Limitation Bill that had
been previously passed. The experiment of limiting the size of
business, of legislating against it merely because it was big, had
been tried, and had failed so completely that the authors of the bill
had themselves in effect repealed it. My action in refusing to try the
experiment had been completely justified.
As a sequel to this incident I got Mr. Perkins to serve on the
Palisade Park Commission. At the time I was taking active part in the
effort to save the Palisades from vandalism and destruction by getting
the States of New York and New Jersey jointly to include them in a
public park. It is not easy to get a responsible and capable man of
business to undertake such a task, which is unpaid, which calls on his
part for an immense expenditure of time, money, and energy, which
offers no reward of any kind, and which entails the certainty of abuse
and misrepresentation. Mr. Perkins accepted the position, and has
filled it for the last thirteen years, doing as disinterested,
efficient, and useful a bit of public service as any man in the State
has done throughout these thirteen years.
The case of most importance in which I clashed with Senator Platt
related to a matter of fundamental governmental policy, and was the
first step I ever took toward bringing big corporations under
effective governmental control. In this case I had to fight the
Democratic machine as well as the Republican machine, for Senator Hill
and Senator Platt were equally opposed to my action, and the big
corporation men, the big business men back of both of them, took
precisely the same view of these matters without regard to their party
feelings on other points. What I did convulsed people at that time,
and marked the beginning of the effort, at least in the Eastern
states, to make the great corporations really responsible to popular
wish and governmental command. But we have gone so far past the stage
in which we then were that now it seems well-nigh incredible that
there should have been any opposition at all to what I at that time
proposed.
The substitution of electric power for horse power in the street car
lines of New York offered a fruitful chance for the most noxious type
of dealing between business men and politicians. The franchises
granted by New York were granted without any attempt to secure from
the grantees returns, in the way of taxation or otherwise, for the
value received. The fact that they were thus granted by improper
favoritism, a favoritism which in many cases was unquestionably
secured by downright bribery, led to all kinds of trouble. In return
for the continuance of these improper favors to the corporations the
politicians expected improper favors in the way of excessive campaign
contributions, often contributed by the same corporation at the same
time to two opposing parties. Before I became Governor a bill had been
introduced into the New York Legislature to tax the franchises of
these street railways. It affected a large number of corporations, but
particularly those in New York and Buffalo. It had been suffered to
slumber undisturbed, as none of the people in power dreamed of taking
it seriously, and both the Republican and Democratic machines were
hostile to it. Under the rules of the New York Legislature a bill
could always be taken up out of its turn and passed if the Governor
sent in a special emergency message on its behalf.
After I was elected Governor I had my attention directed to the
franchise tax matter, looked into the subject, and came to the
conclusion that it was a matter of plain decency and honesty that
these companies should pay a tax on their franchises, inasmuch as they
did nothing that could be considered as service rendered the public in
lieu of a tax. This seemed to me so evidently the common-sense and
decent thing to do that I was hardly prepared for the storm of protest
and anger which my proposal aroused. Senator Platt and the other
machine leaders did everything to get me to abandon my intention. As
usual, I saw them, talked the matter all over with them, and did my
best to convert them to my way of thinking. Senator Platt, I believe,
was quite sincere in his opposition. He did not believe in popular
rule, and he did believe that the big business men were entitled to
have things their way. He profoundly distrusted the people—naturally
enough, for the kind of human nature with which a boss comes in
contact is not of an exalted type. He felt that anarchy would come if
there was any interference with a system by which the people in mass
were, under various necessary cloaks, controlled by the leaders in the
political and business worlds. He wrote me a very strong letter of
protest against my attitude, expressed in dignified, friendly, and
temperate language, but using one word in a curious way. This was the
word "altruistic." He stated in his letter that he had not objected to
my being independent in politics, because he had been sure that I had
the good of the party at heart, and meant to act fairly and honorably;
but that he had been warned, before I became a candidate, by a number
of his business friends that I was a dangerous man because I was
"altruistic," and that he now feared that my conduct would justify the
alarm thus expressed. I was interested in this, not only because
Senator Platt was obviously sincere, but because of the way in which
he used "altruistic" as a term of reproach, as if it was Communistic
or Socialistic—the last being a word he did use to me when, as now
and then happened, he thought that my proposals warranted fairly
reckless vituperation.
Senator Platt's letter ran in part as follows:
"When the subject of your nomination was under consideration, there
was one matter that gave me real anxiety. I think you will have no
trouble in appreciating the fact that it was not the matter of
your independence. I think we have got far enough along in our
political acquaintance for you to see that my support in a
convention does not imply subsequent 'demands,' nor any other
relation that may not reasonably exist for the welfare of the
party. . . . The thing that did bother me was this: I had heard
from a good many sources that you were a little loose on the
relations of capital and labor, on trusts and combinations, and,
indeed, on those numerous questions which have recently arisen in
politics affecting the security of earnings and the right of a man
to run his own business in his own way, with due respect of course
to the Ten Commandments and the Penal Code. Or, to get at it even
more clearly, I understood from a number of business men, and
among them many of your own personal friends, that you entertained
various altruistic ideas, all very well in their way, but which
before they could safely be put into law needed very profound
consideration. . . . You have just adjourned a Legislature which
created a good opinion throughout the State. I congratulate you
heartily upon this fact because I sincerely believe, as everybody
else does, that this good impression exists very largely as a
result of your personal influence in the Legislative chambers. But
at the last moment, and to my very great surprise, you did a thing
which has caused the business community of New York to wonder how
far the notions of Populism, as laid down in Kansas and Nebraska,
have taken hold upon the Republican party of the State of New
York."
In my answer I pointed out to the Senator that I had as Governor
unhesitatingly acted, at Buffalo and elsewhere, to put down mobs,
without regard to the fact that the professed leaders of labor
furiously denounced me for so doing; but that I could no more tolerate
wrong committed in the name of property than wrong committed against
property. My letter ran in part as follows:
"I knew that you had just the feelings that you describe; that is,
apart from my 'impulsiveness,' you felt that there was a
justifiable anxiety among men of means, and especially men
representing large corporate interests, lest I might feel too
strongly on what you term the 'altruistic' side in matters of
labor and capital and as regards the relations of the State to
great corporations. . . . I know that when parties divide on such
issues [as Bryanism] the tendency is to force everybody into one
of two camps, and to throw out entirely men like myself, who are
as strongly opposed to Populism in every stage as the greatest
representative of corporate wealth, but who also feel strongly
that many of these representatives of enormous corporate wealth
have themselves been responsible for a portion of the conditions
against which Bryanism is in ignorant revolt. I do not believe
that it is wise or safe for us as a party to take refuge in mere
negation and to say that there are no evils to be corrected. It
seems to me that our attitude should be one of correcting the
evils and thereby showing that, whereas the Populists, Socialists,
and others really do not correct the evils at all, or else only do
so at the expense of producing others in aggravated form; on the
contrary we Republicans hold the just balance and set ourselves as
resolutely against improper corporate influence on the one hand as
against demagogy and mob rule on the other. I understand perfectly
that such an attitude of moderation is apt to be misunderstood
when passions are greatly excited and when victory is apt to rest
with the extremists on one side or the other; yet I think it is in
the long run the only wise attitude. . . . I appreciate absolutely
[what Mr. Platt had said] that any applause I get will be too
evanescent for a moment's consideration. I appreciate absolutely
that the people who now loudly approve of my action in the
franchise tax bill will forget all about it in a fortnight, and
that, on the other hand, the very powerful interests adversely
affected will always remember it. . . . [The leaders] urged upon
me that I personally could not afford to take this action, for
under no circumstances could I ever again be nominated for any
public office, as no corporation would subscribe to a campaign
fund if I was on the ticket, and that they would subscribe most
heavily to beat me; and when I asked if this were true of
Republican corporations, the cynical answer was made that the
corporations that subscribed most heavily to the campaign funds
subscribed impartially to both party organizations. Under all
these circumstances, it seemed to me there was no alternative but
to do what I could to secure the passage of the bill."
These two letters, written in the spring of 1899, express clearly the
views of the two elements of the Republican party, whose hostility
gradually grew until it culminated, thirteen years later. In 1912 the
political and financial forces of which Mr. Platt had once been the
spokesman, usurped the control of the party machinery and drove out of
the party the men who were loyally endeavoring to apply the principles
of the founders of the party to the needs and issues of their own day.
I had made up my mind that if I could get a show in the Legislature
the bill would pass, because the people had become interested and the
representatives would scarcely dare to vote the wrong way.
Accordingly, on April 27, 1899, I sent a special message to the
Assembly, certifying that the emergency demanded the immediate passage
of the bill. The machine leaders were bitterly angry, and the Speaker
actually tore up the message without reading it to the Assembly. That
night they were busy trying to arrange some device for the defeat of
the bill—which was not difficult, as the session was about to close.
At seven the next morning I was informed of what had occurred. At
eight I was in the Capitol at the Executive chamber, and sent in
another special message, which opened as follows: "I learn that the
emergency message which I sent last evening to the Assembly on behalf
of the Franchise Tax Bill has not been read. I therefore send hereby
another message on the subject. I need not impress upon the Assembly
the need of passing this bill at once." I sent this message to the
Assembly, by my secretary, William J. Youngs, afterwards United States
District Attorney of Kings, with an intimation that if this were not
promptly read I should come up in person and read it. Then, as so
often happens, the opposition collapsed and the bill went through both
houses with a rush. I had in the House stanch friends, such as Regis
Post and Alford Cooley, men of character and courage, who would have
fought to a finish had the need arisen.
My troubles were not at an end, however. The bill put the taxation in
the hands of the local county boards, and as the railways sometimes
passed through several different counties, this was inadvisable. It
was the end of the session, and the Legislature adjourned. The
corporations affected, through various counsel, and the different
party leaders of both organizations, urged me not to sign the bill,
laying especial stress on this feature, and asking that I wait until
the following year, when a good measure could be put through with this
obnoxious feature struck out. I had thirty days under the law in which
to sign the bill. If I did not sign it by the end of that time it
would not become a law. I answered my political and corporation
friends by telling them that I agreed with them that this feature was
wrong, but that I would rather have the bill with this feature than
not have it at all; and that I was not willing to trust to what might
be done a year later. Therefore, I explained, I would reconvene the
Legislature in special session, and if the legislators chose to amend
the bill by placing the power of taxation in the State instead of in
the county or municipality, I would be glad; but that if they failed
to amend it, or amended it improperly, I would sign the original bill
and let it become law as it was.
When the representatives of Mr. Platt and of the corporations affected
found they could do no better, they assented to this proposition.
Efforts were tentatively made to outwit me, by inserting amendments
that would nullify the effect of the law, or by withdrawing the law
when the Legislature convened; which would at once have deprived me of
the whip hand. On May 12 I wrote Senator Platt, outlining the
amendments I desired, and said: "Of course it must be understood that
I will sign the present bill if the proposed bill containing the
changes outlined above fails to pass." On May 18 I notified the Senate
leader, John Raines, by telegram: "Legislature has no power to
withdraw the Ford bill. If attempt is made to do so, I will sign the
bill at once." On the same day, by telegram, I wired Mr. Odell
concerning the bill the leaders were preparing: "Some provisions of
bill very objectionable. I am at work on bill to show you to-morrow.
The bill must not contain greater changes than those outlined in my
message." My wishes were heeded, and when I had reconvened the
Legislature it amended the bill as I outlined in my message; and in
its amended form the bill became law.
There promptly followed something which afforded an index of the good
faith of the corporations that had been protesting to me. As soon as
the change for which they had begged was inserted in the law, and the
law was signed, they turned round and refused to pay the taxes; and in
the lawsuit that followed, they claimed that the law was
unconstitutional, because it contained the very clause which they had
so clamorously demanded. Senator David B. Hill had appeared before me
on behalf of the corporations to argue for the change; and he then
appeared before the courts to make the argument on the other side. The
suit was carried through to the Supreme Court of the United States,
which declared the law constitutional during the time that I was
President.
One of the painful duties of the chief executive in States like New
York, as well as in the Nation, is the refusing of pardons. Yet I can
imagine nothing more necessary from the standpoint of good citizenship
than the ability to steel one's heart in this matter of granting
pardons. The pressure is always greatest in two classes of cases:
first, that where capital punishment is inflicted; second, that where
the man is prominent socially and in the business world, and where in
consequence his crime is apt to have been one concerned in some way
with finance.
As regards capital cases, the trouble is that emotional men and women
always see only the individual whose fate is up at the moment, and
neither his victim nor the many millions of unknown individuals who
would in the long run be harmed by what they ask. Moreover, almost any
criminal, however brutal, has usually some person, often a person whom
he has greatly wronged, who will plead for him. If the mother is alive
she will always come, and she cannot help feeling that the case in
which she is so concerned is peculiar, that in this case a pardon
should be granted. It was really heartrending to have to see the
kinsfolk and friends of murderers who were condemned to death, and
among the very rare occasions when anything governmental or official
caused me to lose sleep were the times when I had to listen to some
poor mother making a plea for a criminal so wicked, so utterly brutal
and depraved, that it would have been a crime on my part to remit his
punishment.
On the other hand, there were certain crimes where requests for
leniency merely made me angry. Such crimes were, for instance, rape,
or the circulation of indecent literature, or anything connected with
what would now be called the "white slave" traffic, or wife murder, or
gross cruelty to women and children, or seduction and abandonment, or
the action of some man in getting a girl whom he had seduced to commit
abortion. I am speaking in each instance of cases that actually came
before me, either while I was Governor or while I was President. In an
astonishing number of these cases men of high standing signed
petitions or wrote letters asking me to show leniency to the criminal.
In two or three of the cases—one where some young roughs had
committed rape on a helpless immigrant girl, and another in which a
physician of wealth and high standing had seduced a girl and then
induced her to commit abortion—I rather lost my temper, and wrote to
the individuals who had asked for the pardon, saying that I extremely
regretted that it was not in my power to increase the sentence. I then
let the facts be made public, for I thought that my petitioners
deserved public censure. Whether they received this public censure or
not I did not know, but that my action made them very angry I do know,
and their anger gave me real satisfaction. The list of these
petitioners was a fairly long one, and included two United States
Senators, a Governor of a State, two judges, an editor, and some
eminent lawyers and business men.
In the class of cases where the offense was one involving the misuse
of large sums of money the reason for the pressure was different.
Cases of this kind more frequently came before me when I was
President, but they also came before me when I was Governor, chiefly
in the cases of county treasurers who had embezzled funds. A big bank
president, a railway magnate, an official connected with some big
corporation, or a Government official in a responsible fiduciary
position, necessarily belongs among the men who have succeeded in
life. This means that his family are living in comfort, and perhaps
luxury and refinement, and that his sons and daughters have been well
educated. In such a case the misdeed of the father comes as a crushing
disaster to the wife and children, and the people of the community,
however bitter originally against the man, grow to feel the most
intense sympathy for the bowed-down women and children who suffer for
the man's fault. It is a dreadful thing in life that so much of
atonement for wrong-doing is vicarious. If it were possible in such a
case to think only of the banker's or county treasurer's wife and
children, any man would pardon the offender at once. Unfortunately, it
is not right to think only of the women and children. The very fact
that in cases of this class there is certain to be pressure from high
sources, pressure sometimes by men who have been beneficially, even
though remotely, interested in the man's criminality, no less than
pressure because of honest sympathy with the wife and children, makes
it necessary that the good public servant shall, no matter how deep
his sympathy and regret, steel his heart and do his duty by refusing
to let the wrong-doer out. My experience of the way in which pardons
are often granted is one of the reasons why I do not believe that life
imprisonment for murder and rape is a proper substitute for the death
penalty. The average term of so-called life imprisonment in this
country is only about fourteen years.
Of course there were cases where I either commuted sentences or
pardoned offenders with very real pleasure. For instance, when
President, I frequently commuted sentences for horse stealing in the
Indian Territory because the penalty for stealing a horse was
disproportionate to the penalty for many other crimes, and the offense
was usually committed by some ignorant young fellow who found a half-
wild horse, and really did not commit anything like as serious an
offense as the penalty indicated. The judges would be obliged to give
the minimum penalty, but would forward me memoranda stating that if
there had been a less penalty they would have inflicted it, and I
would then commute the sentence to the penalty thus indicated.
In one case in New York I pardoned outright a man convicted of murder
in the second degree, and I did this on the recommendation of a
friend, Father Doyle of the Paulist Fathers. I had become intimate
with the Paulist Fathers while I was Police Commissioner, and I had
grown to feel confidence in their judgment, for I had found that they
always told me exactly what the facts were about any man, whether he
belonged to their church or not. In this case the convicted man was a
strongly built, respectable old Irishman employed as a watchman around
some big cattle-killing establishments. The young roughs of the
neighborhood, which was then of a rather lawless type, used to try to
destroy the property of the companies. In a conflict with a watchman a
member of one of the gangs was slain. The watchman was acquitted, but
the neighborhood was much wrought up over the acquittal. Shortly
afterwards, a gang of the same roughs attacked another watchman, the
old Irishman in question, and finally, to save his own life, he was
obliged in self-defense to kill one of his assailants. The feeling in
the community, however, was strongly against him, and some of the men
high up in the corporation became frightened and thought that it would
be better to throw over the watchman. He was convicted. Father Doyle
came to me, told me that he knew the man well, that he was one of the
best members of his church, admirable in every way, that he had simply
been forced to fight for his life while loyally doing his duty, and
that the conviction represented the triumph of the tough element of
the district and the abandonment of this man, by those who should have
stood by him, under the influence of an unworthy fear. I looked into
the case, came to the conclusion that Father Doyle was right, and gave
the man a full pardon before he had served thirty days.
The various clashes between myself and the machine, my triumph in
them, and the fact that the people were getting more and more
interested and aroused, brought on a curious situation in the
Republican National Convention at Philadelphia in June, 1900. Senator
Platt and the New York machine leaders had become very anxious to get
me out of the Governorship, chiefly because of the hostility of the
big corporation men towards me; but they had also become convinced
that there was such popular feeling on my behalf that it would be
difficult to refuse me a renomination if I demanded it. They
accordingly decided to push me for Vice-President, taking advantage of
the fact that there was at that time a good deal of feeling for me in
the country at large. [See Appendix B to this chapter.] I myself did
not appreciate that there was any such feeling, and as I greatly
disliked the office of Vice-President and was much interested in the
Governorship, I announced that I would not accept the Vice-Presidency.
I was one of the delegates to Philadelphia. On reaching there I found
that the situation was complicated. Senator Hanna appeared on the
surface to have control of the Convention. He was anxious that I
should not be nominated as Vice-President. Senator Platt was anxious
that I should be nominated as Vice-President, in order to get me out
of the New York Governorship. Each took a position opposite to that of
the other, but each at that time cordially sympathized with the
other's feelings about me—it was the manifestations and not the
feelings that differed. My supporters in New York State did not wish
me nominated for Vice-President because they wished me to continue as
Governor; but in every other State all the people who admired me were
bound that I should be nominated as Vice-President. These people were
almost all desirous of seeing Mr. McKinley renominated as President,
but they became angry at Senator Hanna's opposition to me as Vice-
President. He in his turn suddenly became aware that if he persisted
he might find that in their anger these men would oppose Mr.
McKinley's renomination, and although they could not have prevented
the nomination, such opposition would have been a serious blow in the
campaign which was to follow. Senator Hanna, therefore, began to
waver.
Meanwhile a meeting of the New York delegation was called. Most of the
delegates were under the control of Senator Platt. The Senator
notified me that if I refused to accept the nomination for Vice-
President I would be beaten for the nomination for Governor. I
answered that I would accept the challenge, that we would have a
straight-out fight on the proposition, and that I would begin it at
once by telling the assembled delegates of the threat, and giving fair
warning that I intended to fight for the Governorship nomination, and,
moreover, that I intended to get it. This brought Senator Platt to
terms. The effort to instruct the New York delegation for me was
abandoned, and Lieutenant-Governor Woodruff was presented for
nomination in my place.
I supposed that this closed the incident, and that no further effort
would be made to nominate me for the Vice-Presidency. On the contrary,
the effect was directly the reverse. The upset of the New York machine
increased the feeling of the delegates from other States that it was
necessary to draft me for the nomination. By next day Senator Hanna
himself concluded that this was a necessity, and acquiesced in the
movement. As New York was already committed against me, and as I was
not willing that there should be any chance of supposing that the New
Yorkers had nominated me to get rid of me, the result was that I was
nominated and seconded from outside States. No other candidate was
placed in the field.
By this time the Legislature had adjourned, and most of my work as
Governor of New York was over. One unexpected bit of business arose,
however. It was the year of the Presidential campaign. Tammany, which
had been lukewarm about Bryan in 1896, cordially supported him in
1900; and when Tammany heartily supports a candidate it is well for
the opposing candidate to keep a sharp lookout for election frauds.
The city government was in the hands of Tammany; but I had power to
remove the Mayor, the Sheriff, and the District Attorney for
malfeasance or misfeasance in office. Such power had not been
exercised by any previous Governor, as far as I knew; but it existed,
and if the misfeasance or malfeasance warranted it, and if the
Governor possessed the requisite determination, the power could be,
and ought to be, exercised.
By an Act of the Legislature, a State Bureau of Elections had been
created in New York City, and a Superintendent of Elections appointed
by the Governor. The Chief of the State Bureau of Elections was John
McCullagh, formerly in the Police Department when I was Police
Commissioner. The Chief of Police for the city was William F. Devery,
one of the Tammany leaders, who represented in the Police Department
all that I had warred against while Commissioner. On November 4 Devery
directed his subordinates in the Police Department to disregard the
orders which McCullagh had given to his deputies, orders which were
essential if we were to secure an honest election in the city. I had
just returned from a Western campaign trip, and was at Sagamore Hill.
I had no direct power over Devery; but the Mayor had; and I had power
over the Mayor. Accordingly, I at once wrote to the Mayor of New York,
to the Sheriff of New York, and to the District Attorney of New York
County the following letters:
STATE OF NEW YORK
OYSTER BAY, November 5, 1900.
To the Mayor of the City of New York.
Sir: My attention has been called to the official order issued by
Chief of Police Devery, in which he directs his subordinates to
disregard the Chief of the State Election Bureau, John McCullagh,
and his deputies. Unless you have already taken steps to secure
the recall of this order, it is necessary for me to point out that
I shall be obliged to hold you responsible as the head of the city
government for the action of the Chief of Police, if it should
result in any breach of the peace and intimidation or any crime
whatever against the election laws. The State and city authorities
should work together. I will not fail to call to summary account
either State or city authority in the event of either being guilty
of intimidation or connivance at fraud or of failure to protect
every legal voter in his rights. I therefore hereby notify you
that in the event of any wrong-doing following upon the failure
immediately to recall Chief Devery's order, or upon any action or
inaction on the part of Chief Devery, I must necessarily call you
to account.
Yours, etc.,
THEODORE ROOSEVELT.
STATE OF NEW YORK
OYSTER BAY, November 5, 1900.
To the Sheriff of the County of New York.
Sir: My attention has been called to the official order issued by
Chief of Police Devery in which he directs his subordinates to
disregard the Chief of the State Election Bureau, John McCullagh,
and his deputies.
It is your duty to assist in the orderly enforcement of the law,
and I shall hold you strictly responsible for any breach of the
public peace within your county, or for any failure on your part
to do your full duty in connection with the election to-morrow.
Yours truly,
THEODORE ROOSEVELT.
STATE OF NEW YORK
OYSTER BAY, November 5, 1900.
To the District Attorney of the County of New York.
Sir: My attention has been called to the official order issued by
Chief of Police Devery, in which he directs his subordinates to
disregard the Chief of the State Election Bureau, John McCullagh,
and his deputies.
In view of this order I call your attention to the fact that it is
your duty to assist in the orderly enforcement of the law, and
there must be no failure on your part to do your full duty in the
matter.
Yours truly,
THEODORE ROOSEVELT.
These letters had the desired effect. The Mayor promptly required
Chief Devery to rescind the obnoxious order, which was as promptly
done. The Sheriff also took prompt action. The District Attorney
refused to heed my letter, and assumed an attitude of defiance, and I
removed him from office. On election day there was no clash between
the city and State authorities; the election was orderly and honest.
Appendix
Conservation
As foreshadowing the course I later, as President, followed in this
matter, I give extracts from one of my letters to the Commission, and
from my second (and last) Annual Message. I spent the first months of
my term in investigations to find out just what the situation was.
On November 28, 1899, I wrote to the Commission as follows:
". . . I have had very many complaints before this as to the
inefficiency of the game wardens and game protectors, the
complaints usually taking the form that the men have been
appointed and are retained without due regard to the duties to be
performed. I do not wish a man to be retained or appointed who is
not thoroughly fit to perform the duties of game protector. The
Adirondacks are entitled to a peculiar share of the Commission's
attention, both from the standpoint of forestry, and from the less
important, but still very important, standpoint of game and fish
protection. The men who do duty as game protectors in the
Adirondacks should, by preference, be appointed from the locality
itself, and should in all cases be thorough woodsmen. The mere
fact that a game protector has to hire a guide to pilot him
through the woods is enough to show his unfitness for the
position. I want as game protectors men of courage, resolution,
and hardihood, who can handle the rifle, ax, and paddle; who can
camp out in summer or winter; who can go on snow-shoes, if
necessary; who can go through the woods by day or by night without
regard to trails.
"I should like full information about all your employees, as to
their capacities, as to the labor they perform, as to their
distribution from and where they do their work."
Many of the men hitherto appointed owed their positions principally to
political preference. The changes I recommended were promptly made,
and much to the good of the public service. In my Annual Message, in
January, 1900, I said:
"Great progress has been made through the fish hatcheries in the
propagation of valuable food and sporting fish. The laws for the
protection of deer have resulted in their increase. Nevertheless,
as railroads tend to encroach on the wilderness, the temptation to
illegal hunting becomes greater, and the danger from forest fires
increases. There is need of great improvement both in our laws and
in their administration. The game wardens have been too few in
number. More should be provided. None save fit men must be
appointed; and their retention in office must depend purely upon
the zeal, ability, and efficiency with which they perform their
duties. The game wardens in the forests must be woodsmen; and they
should have no outside business. In short, there should be a
thorough reorganization of the work of the Commission. A careful
study of the resources and condition of the forests on State land
must be made. It is certainly not too much to expect that the
State forests should be managed as efficiently as the forests on
private lands in the same neighborhoods. And the measure of
difference in efficiency of management must be the measure of
condemnation or praise of the way the public forests have been
managed.
"The subject of forest preservation is of the utmost importance to
the State. The Adirondacks and Catskills should be great parks
kept in perpetuity for the benefit and enjoyment of our people.
Much has been done of late years towards their preservation, but
very much remains to be done. The provisions of law in reference
to sawmills and wood-pulp mills are defective and should be
changed so as to prohibit dumping dye-stuff, sawdust, or tan-bark,
in any amount whatsoever, into the streams. Reservoirs should be
made, but not where they will tend to destroy large sections of
the forest, and only after a careful and scientific study of the
water resources of the region. The people of the forest regions
are themselves growing more and more to realize the necessity of
preserving both the trees and the game. A live deer in the woods
will attract to the neighborhood ten times the money that could be
obtained for the deer's dead carcass. Timber theft on the State
lands is, of course, a grave offense against the whole public.
"Hardy outdoor sports, like hunting, are in themselves of no small
value to the National character and should be encouraged in every
way. Men who go into the wilderness, indeed, men who take part in
any field sports with horse or rifle, receive a benefit which can
hardly be given by even the most vigorous athletic games.
"There is a further and more immediate and practical end in view. A
primeval forest is a great sponge which absorbs and distills the
rain water. And when it is destroyed the result is apt to be an
alternation of flood and drought. Forest fires ultimately make the
land a desert, and are a detriment to all that portion of the
State tributary to the streams through the woods where they occur.
Every effort should be made to minimize their destructive
influence. We need to have our system of forestry gradually
developed and conducted along scientific principles. When this has
been done it will be possible to allow marketable lumber to be cut
everywhere without damage to the forests—indeed, with positive
advantage to them. But until lumbering is thus conducted, on
strictly scientific principles no less than upon principles of the
strictest honesty toward the State, we cannot afford to suffer it
at all in the State forests. Unrestrained greed means the ruin of
the great woods and the drying up of the sources of the rivers.
"Ultimately the administration of the State lands must be so
centralized as to enable us definitely to place responsibility in
respect to everything concerning them, and to demand the highest
degree of trained intelligence in their use.
"The State should not permit within its limits factories to make
bird skins or bird feathers into articles of ornament or wearing
apparel. Ordinary birds, and especially song birds, should be
rigidly protected. Game birds should never be shot to a greater
extent than will offset the natural rate of increase. . . . Care
should be taken not to encourage the use of cold storage or other
market systems which are a benefit to no one but the wealthy
epicure who can afford to pay a heavy price for luxuries. These
systems tend to the destruction of the game, which would bear most
severely upon the very men whose rapacity has been appealed to in
order to secure its extermination. . . ."
I reorganized the Commission, putting Austin Wadsworth at its head.
Appendix B
The Political Situation in 1900
My general scheme of action as Governor was given in a letter I wrote
one of my supporters among the independent district organization
leaders, Norton Goddard, on April 16, 1900. It runs in part as
follows: "Nobody can tell, and least of all the machine itself,
whether the machine intends to renominate me next fall or not. If for
some reason I should be weak, whether on account of faults or virtues,
doubtless the machine will throw me over, and I think I am not
uncharitable when I say they would feel no acute grief at so doing. It
would be very strange if they did feel such grief. If, for instance,
we had strikes which led to riots, I would of course be obliged to
preserve order and stop the riots. Decent citizens would demand that I
should do it, and in any event I should do it wholly without regard to
their demands. But, once it was done, they would forget all about it,
while a great many laboring men, honest but ignorant and prejudiced,
would bear a grudge against me for doing it. This might put me out of
the running as a candidate. Again, the big corporations undoubtedly
want to beat me. They prefer the chance of being blackmailed to the
certainty that they will not be allowed any more than their due. Of
course they will try to beat me on some entirely different issue, and,
as they are very able and very unscrupulous, nobody can tell that they
won't succeed. . . . I have been trying to stay in with the
organization. I did not do it with the idea that they would renominate
me. I did it with the idea of getting things done, and in that I have
been absolutely successful. Whether Senator Platt and Mr. Odell
endeavor to beat me, or do beat me, for the renomination next fall, is
of very small importance compared to the fact that for my two years I
have been able to make a Republican majority in the Legislature do
good and decent work and have prevented any split within the party.
The task was one of great difficulty, because, on the one hand, I had
to keep clearly before me the fact that it was better to have a split
than to permit bad work to be done, and, on the other hand, the fact
that to have that split would absolutely prevent all good work. The
result has been that I have avoided a split and that as a net result
of my two years and the two sessions of the Legislature, there has
been an enormous improvement in the administration of the Government,
and there has also been a great advance in legislation."
To show my reading of the situation at the time I quote from a letter
of mine to Joseph B. Bishop, then editor of the Commercial
Advertiser, with whom towards the end of my term I had grown into
very close relations, and who, together with two other old friends,
Albert Shaw, of the Review of Reviews, and Silas McBee, now editor
of the Constructive Quarterly, knew the inside of every movement, so
far as I knew it myself. The letter, which is dated April 11, 1900,
runs in part as follows: "The dangerous element as far as I am
concerned comes from the corporations. The [naming certain men] crowd
and those like them have been greatly exasperated by the franchise
tax. They would like to get me out of politics for good, but at the
moment they think the best thing to do is to put me into the Vice-
Presidency. Naturally I will not be opposed openly on the ground of
the corporations' grievance; but every kind of false statement will
continually be made, and men like [naming the editors of certain
newspapers] will attack me, not as the enemy of corporations, but as
their tool! There is no question whatever that if the leaders can they
will upset me."
One position which as Governor (and as President) I consistently took,
seems to me to represent what ought to be a fundamental principle in
American legislative work. I steadfastly refused to advocate any law,
no matter how admirable in theory, if there was good reason to believe
that in practice it would not be executed. I have always sympathized
with the view set forth by Pelatiah Webster in 1783—quoted by Hannis
Taylor in his Genesis of the Supreme Court—"Laws or ordinances of
any kind (especially of august bodies of high dignity and consequence)
which fail of execution, are much worse than none. They weaken the
government, expose it to contempt, destroy the confidence of all men,
native and foreigners, in it, and expose both aggregate bodies and
individuals who have placed confidence in it to many ruinous
disappointments which they would have escaped had no such law or
ordinance been made." This principle, by the way, not only applies to
an internal law which cannot be executed; it applies even more to
international action, such as a universal arbitration treaty which
cannot and will not be kept; and most of all it applies to proposals
to make such universal arbitration treaties at the very time that we
are not keeping our solemn promise to execute limited arbitration
treaties which we have already made. A general arbitration treaty is
merely a promise; it represents merely a debt of honorable obligation;
and nothing is more discreditable, for a nation or an individual, than
to cover up the repudiation of a debt which can be and ought to be
paid, by recklessly promising to incur a new and insecure debt which
no wise man for one moment supposes ever will be paid.
__________
(1)In a letter to me Mr. Quigg states, what I had forgotten, that I
told him to tell the Senator that I would talk freely with him,
and had no intention of becoming a factional leader with a
personal organization, yet that I must have direct personal
relations with everybody, and get their views at first hand
whenever I so desired, because I could not have one man speaking
for all.
(2)
Each nation has its own pet sins to which it is merciful and also
sins which it treats as most abhorrent. In America we are
peculiarly sensitive about big money contributions for which the
donors expect any reward. In England, where in some ways the
standard is higher than here, such contributions are accepted as a
matter of course, nay, as one of the methods by which wealthy men
obtain peerages. It would be well-nigh an impossibility for a man
to secure a seat in the United States Senate by mere campaign
contributions, in the way that seats in the British House of Lords
have often been secured without any scandal being caused thereby.
(3)
To illustrate my meaning I quote from a letter of mine to Senator
Platt of December 13, 1899. He had been trying to get me to
promote a certain Judge X over the head of another Judge Y. I
wrote: "There is a strong feeling among the judges and the leading
members of the bar that Judge Y ought not to have Judge X jumped
over his head, and I do not see my way clear to doing it. I am
inclined to think that the solution I mentioned to you is the
solution I shall have to adopt. Remember the breakfast at Douglas
Robinson's at 8:30."
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