The Development of Populism; Farmers in the Political Sphere Fatima Irfan A.P. US History Dr. Greenwald June 13, 2016 Fatima Irfan Dr. Greenwald A.P US History June 13, 2016 The autumn of 1896 marked the end of the short-lived movement of the Populist party. Having found a new method of protesting big bankers and unjust economic disparities, these agrarian leaders vied for changes in legislature regarding banking practices, railroad regulation, and the usage of the gold-based dollar. However, due to a lack of widespread support and the immersion of Populist ideas into the Democrats’ platform, the party collapsed, though not without making a name for itself. Populist rhetoric has become …show more content…
A second faction known as the ‘mid-roaders’ arose to counter this notion. Comprised of radical Populists like Tom Watson, they resisted the viewpoint of the ‘fusionists’, seeing it as a sell-out (Edwards). Despite this, Populists backed Democratic William Jennings Bryan in the election of 1896. However, the election of William McKinley, a Republican, gave way to an era that countered the positions that the Populists had held on protective tariffs and the gold standard. Rather than pulling them together, incorporation into the Democratic Party dispersed the Populists and caused them to find themselves comfortably in their old position of apathy of political involvement. Their loss reinforced the notion held by the public and other politicians that Populism was just an encompassing name for an assortment of movements whose agendas were too lofty to make an impact (“A Party of Patches”). Though economic tensions were what brought the Populists together, the tie was not strong enough to last the harsh winds of such a defeating loss. Though the election of 1896 killed the Populist Party, their ideas were kept alive by a more educated and politically experienced party created by Theodore Roosevelt, known as the Bull-Moose Progressive …show more content…
Mullins, Phillip. “The Decline of the Cotton Farmer.” The Ancestors of George and Hazel Mullins. George Mullins, 1 February 2016. Peffer, W.A. The Mission of the Populist Party. Cedar Falls: University of Northern Iowa, 1893. 5 February 2016. "Populism." Digital History. N.p., n.d. Web. 31 May 2016. Postel, Charles. "The Populist Education Campaign." American Populism, 1876-1896:. N.p., 2015. Web. 06 June 2016. "The Rise and Fall of Jim Crow." PBS. PBS, n.d. Web. 31 May 2016. "The Yoeman." The Yoeman. N.p., n.d. Web. 13 June 2016. Primary Sources Gompers, Samuel. Organized Labor in the Campaign. Cedar Falls: University of Northern Iowa, 1892. 5 February 2016. "Interstate Commerce Act (1887)." Our Documents. N.p., n.d. Web. 6 June 2016. "A Party of Patches." Judge [Kansas City] n.d.: n. pag. Print. Peffer, W.A. The Passing of the People’s Party. Cedar Falls: University of Northern Iowa, 1898. 5 February 2016. People’s Party Campaign Poster. 1892. Library of Congress. The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History. Web. 2 June 2016. State Executive Committee of the People’s Party of North Carolina. People’s Party Hand-Book of Facts. Raleigh: Capital Printing Company, 1898. 5 February
There was a social change in which women also fought for suffrage. The populists were pretty much the victims of economic distress and their arguments were founded on the basis of progressive movements. One of the populist failure was that they lost the national election when the farmers united to insist on economic reform.
During the Progressive Era, Americans faced the challenge of choosing between four strong candidates of the election of 1912. Each candidate held concrete platforms that would have different effects on progressivism. Americans could chose the conservative presidential incumbent William Howard Taft(R), the New Jersey governor Woodrow Wilson (D), the long-time fighter for social reform-Eugene V. Debs (S), or the former president Theodore Roosevelt of the newly formed Bull Moose Party (Progressive Party). Through this election many steps were taken to change the face of the election
The Populist Party was the people’s party, hence the name Populist, the party was created in the late 1800s when the Southern Famer alliance contacted Powderly, the head of The Knights of Labor. The party’s first platform was called the Omaha Platform which called for the abolition of the national bank, graduated income tax, direct election of senators, civil service reform, an eight hour work week, and the gov’t control of railroads, telegraphs and telephones. The Populists supported the Prohibition
Farmers united to protect their interests, even creating a major political party. The party was called the peoples party which became known as the populist party. Populists drew its strength from rural areas. Populists tended to be poor and uneducated. They had ideas such as government ownership of major industries. The Populists supported labors demand for an eight
This illustrates that the Senate is controlled by big business, and how easily wealthy people had power over the government. Moreover, the railroad presidents were seen as kings, they could delay lawsuits, control the government and the people, corrupt communities, and control the press (DOC B). Important railroad companies dictated government policies because the legal system favored railroad interests. Further, trying to better the political system, the Populist Party made themselves known. Their platform demanded that the government be restored to the hands of the “plain people.” They wanted to end oppression, injustice, and poverty (DOC F). Evidently, they were dedicated to political and social reform, and urged that the government be strengthened and take responsibility of the people.
The period between 1870 and 1900 was a time to change politics. The country was for once free from war and was united as one nation. However, as these decades passed by, the American farmer found it harder to live comfortably. Crops such as cotton and wheat, once the cash crop of agriculture, were selling at prices so low that it was nearly impossible for farmers to make a profit. Improvements in transportation allowed larger competitors to sell more easily and more cheaply, making it harder for American yeoman farmers to sell their crops. Finally, years of drought in the Midwest and the fall of business in the 1890s devastated the farming community. Most notably, the Populist Party arose to fight what farmers saw as the issues affecting
The Omaha Platform was established because Southern and Midwestern farmers believed they were treated unfairly by the Democrats and the Republicans. The populists proposed a national currency, coinage of silver to gold at a ratio of sixteen to one, federal loans to farmers, graduated income tax, abolish national banks, government ownership of railroads, telephone and telegraph systems, prohibition of alien land ownership, a secret ballot system, civil service reform, immigration restriction, an eight-hour day, abolition of the Pinkerton system, the right of initiative and referendum, one term for the office of the President and Vice-President, and direct election of Senators.
Throughout the 1880s and 1890s America was going through many changes and many of these were fought by the Populists. Silver being demonetized was another major problem for the Populists and they fought it along with asking for a national government regulated currency as well. The Populist Party also fought against the harsh taxes that were in place at the time in the United States. The biggest concern for many of the Populists was how to handle crop failures and how prices were to be controlled. All in all, the Populist movement was centered on helping out the farmers and improving the ever changing economy.
The ‘Gilded Age’ began from 1870s to 1900s and its politics contributed to the advancement of Capitalism. Entrepreneurs’ business practices were barbaric and unethical, then they were named as the ‘Robber Barons’. The ‘Robber Barons’ established monopolies, mistreated and exploited their workers. These savage practices lead to the establishment of the Antitrust Act which regulates businesses and promote fair competition for the benefit of consumers and diminish business monopolies. Between 1880s and 1890s were the years of significant political crisis. One of the notable political conflict was the farmers’ revolt in the late 19th century. Farmers’ lifestyle was complicated due to drought, boll weevils, rising costs, rising costs, declining prices, and high interest rates. They blamed railroad owners, land monopolists and other businesses. The farmers formed an alliance and the ‘Populist Party’. Populist Party aimed to increase the amount of money in circulation, repay loans with government assistance, reducing tariffs and a graduated income
The Populist Movement ultimately failed to survive because of their desire for inflation and the support for the coinage of silver, as well as the fact that they merged with the Democratic Party to combat the Republicans. The 1896 election undermined agrarian insurgency, and a period of rapidly rising farm prices helped to bring about the dissolution of the Populist Party. Another important factor in the failure of the party was its inability to affect a genuine urban-rural coalition; its program had little appeal for wage earners of the industrial east. Although the populists were not outright socialists, many conservative interests saw the Populists as a threat to the basic economic system of the United States. The Populists’ agenda was
The populist party was almost a continuation of the Grange movement, hardworking farmers angry over the fact that they supported the country with their work, while feeling the negative effects of the wealthy lawmakers in power, feeding the same men who ignore the needs of farmers and laborers in America (Doc A). The populists were aiming towards support of farmers as mutual workers and human beings (Doc B). There was not only a look to the future, but the anger over the amount of power the East Coast states, full of politicians and businessmen, due to the partial representatives in the House and the Senate (Docs F and G).
Due to “…falling agricultural prices and growing economic dependency” (Foner 636) in the mid-nineteenth century, farmers in the South began to face inevitable economic uncertainty. Farmers, both white and black alike, were thrown into poverty due to sharecropping and the fall of the price of cotton, and many faced the fear of losing everything they had due the inability to pay bank loans. Believing that their situation was caused by “…high freight rates…excessive interest rates for loans…and the fiscal policies of the government” (Foner 636), disgruntled farmers hoped to better their lives and conditions through the founding of the Farmers’ Alliance in the 1870s. However, by the 1890s, the Alliance transformed into what became known as the Populist Party. Keeping their roots in mind, the Populists sought to end what they considered political corruption and economic inequality that arose during the Reconstruction. In order to do so, they proposed “…the direct election of U.S. senators, government control of currency, a graduated income tax, a system of low-class public financing…the right of workers to form labor unions…[and a] public ownership of the railroads” (Foner 638). In addition to their propositions, the Populists were considered radical due to their embracement of science and technology, their belief that the
A time of betrayal, uncertainty, confusion, and corruption, the Election of 1912 was a peculiarly exciting bout between four candidates Roosevelt, Wilson, Taft and Debs. Brett Flehinger state in The Election of 1912 and the Power of Progressivism, “The 1912 election was a unique moment in the Progressive Era because it drew together politicians, social reformers, intellectuals, and economists onto a single stage and produced a many-sided national debate.” (Flehinger vii) All were concerned with one central issue: the future of America’s economic, political, and social structures. The role of blacks in society, women’s suffrage, trust busting, and tariffs were some of the major political issues of the 1912 election.
Populism explains the rise of Populism in 1890 across Kansas as a response to the frustrations of adapting crop selections and pest management routines to the sub-humid environment. Farmers raised hell in the fall of 1890, in part, because they had not yet formed the farm management skills that could have prevented such a collapse of operating income. If Populist voters were choked by monopoly power, the party should have done significantly worse in those townships served by several competing railroad lines; but if Populist voters were motivated by a dispirited hunt for capital gains on land through nearness to railway improvements, Populist candidates should have prospered as they moved farthest away from a rail station. Therefore, if Populist voters were motivated simply by bitterness over the fact that their township did not have a rail station then Populist candidates should have done better in a township with no railway station at all. What was most important was 1) whether a township had a railroad station and 2) how far the average farmer had to travel to reach a railhead.
The Populist Party was started by a massive grassroots movement that wanted political reform. The supporters of the Populist Party were usually laborers who were sick of the government supporting big businesses. Because of this support, there were many violent strikes, such as Pullman, Homestead, and Haymarket, where strikers were killed, and the government did nothing. Eventually, the Populist Party combined with the Democratic Party because the Populist Party was limited because of its regional location.