Speech at the Auditorium, Chicago, III., June 17, 1912
MY FRIENDS AND FELLOW CITIZENS:
I ADDRESS you as my fellow Republicans, but I also and
primarily address you as fellow Americans citizens, for this has now become much more than
an ordinary party fight. The issue is both simpler and larger than that involved in the
personality of any man, or than that involved in any factional or in any ordinary party
contest. We are standing for the great fundamental rights upon which all successful free
government must be based. We are standing for elementary decency in politics. We are
fighting for honesty against naked robbery; and where robbery is concerned the
all-important question is not the identity of the man robbed, but the crime itself.
As far as Mr. Taft and I are personally concerned it little matters what
the fate of either may be. But with Mr. Taft's acquiescence or by his direction, and in
his interest, his followers have raised an issue which is all-important to this country.
It is not a partisan issue; it is more than a political issue; it is a great moral issue.
If we condone political theft, if we do not resent the kinds of wrong and injustice that
injuriously affect the whole nation, not merely our Democratic form of government but our
civilization itself cannot endure. If the methods adopted by the national committee are
approved by the convention which is about to assemble, a great crime will have been
committed. The triumph of such proceedings at the moment would mean the wreck of the
Republican party; and if such proceedings became habitual, it would mean the wreck of
popular government. The actions of the Taft leaders in the national committee, taken with
the active aid of Mr. Taft's private secretary and of one of Mr. Taft's Cabinet officers,
are monstrous, and they should be indignantly condemned by the moral sentiment of the
whole country.
Tonight we come together to protest against a crime
which strikes straight at the heart of every principle of political decency and honesty, a
crime which represents treason to the people, and the usurpation of the sovereignty of the
people by irresponsible political bosses, inspired by the sinister influences of moneyed
privilege. We here in this hall are engaged not only in a fight for the rights of every
decent Republican, we are engaged in a fight for the rights of every decent American
whatsoever his party may be. And, oh, my friends, for one thing at least we should-be
profoundly grateful. We are more fortunate than our fathers in that there is no slightest
tinge of sectionalism in the fight we are now waging. The principles for which we stand
are as vital for the South as for the North, for the East as for the West. We make our
appeal to all honest, far-sighted, and patriotic Americans, no matter where they may
dwell.
When in February last I made up my mind that it was my
duty to enter this fight, it was after long and careful deliberation. I had become
convinced that Mr. Taft had definitely and completely abandoned the cause off the people
and had surrendered himself wholly to the biddings of the professional political bosses
and of the great privileged interests standing behind them. I had also become convinced
that unless I did make the fight it could not be made at all, and that Mr. Taft's
nomination would come to him without serious opposition. The event has justified both my
beliefs. I very earnestly ask our fellow Progressives who have supported other candidates
to remember that one of the cardinal principles of the doctrines which we hold in common
is our duty normally, loyally, and in good faith to abide by the wellthought-out and
honestly expressed action of a majority. The overwhelming majority of the Republican
Progressives have declared for me. It has become clear beyond shadow of doubt that if I
had not made the Progressive fight it would have completely broken down, and there would
have been no substantial opposition to the forces of reaction and of political
crookedness. Let those Progressives who stand for principle and who are concerned with the
fortunes of any particular man only as a means for securing the triumph of principle,
ponder these facts and refrain in this crisis from playing into the hands of our enemies.
Mr. Taft at first denied that he represented the bosses.
His denial was of little consequence, for his deeds belied his words. But I doubt if at
present he would venture to repeat the denial. As it has become constantly more and more
evident that the people are against him, he has more and more undisguisedly thrown himself
into the arms of the bosses. Here in Chicago at this moment he has never had one
chance of success save what was given him by the action of Messrs. Crane, Barnes, Brooker,
Penrose, Murphy, Guggenheim, Mulvane, Smoot, New, and their associates in cheating the
people out of their rights. He was beaten so overwhelmingly by the people themselves in
the States where primaries were held that in the last State in which he spoke, in New
Jersey, he permitted himself to be betrayed into the frank admission that he expected to
be nominated because he believed the national committee would stand by him. One member of
his own Cabinet, representing a State that has just repudiated him, has been working hand
in glove with the other Taft members of the national committee, under the lead of Mr.
Crane, of Massachusetts, Mr. Penrose, of Pennsylvania, of Mr. Mulvane, of Kansas, of Mr.
Murphy, of New Jersey, and Mr. Scott, of West Virginia of all of whom have just been
repudiated by their own States steal to steal from the people the victory which the people
have won. Last February it was evident that Mr. Taft was the accepted representative of
the bosses, of the men who upheld the combination of crooked politics and crooked business
which has been the chief source not only of our political but of our social and industrial
corruption. It has now, alas, become evident that Mr. Taft is willing to acquiesce in and
to condone and to accept the fruits of any course of action on which these men embark,
even though such action represent treason, as well as destruction, to the Republican party
to which they nominally belong, and also treason to the cause of the American people as a
whole.
Among the national committeemen who have taken part in
this conspiracy there are a number of men who in the ordinary relations of life are
doubtless decent and reputable. Probably these men excuse themselves to themselves for
what they are now doing on the ground that they are not committing what the law recognizes
as a crime. It may well be doubted whether on the whole our country does not suffer more
from the misdeeds of men who recognize as binding on their consciences only the
obligations of law-honesty, than it suffers from the misdeeds of actual criminals. Men
like Messrs. Crane, of Massachusetts, Brooker, of Connecticut, and Nagel, of Missouri, who
trail behind their bolder associates such as Messrs. Penrose, Murphy, and Mulvane, are
doubtless genuinely shocked at the misconduct of a defaulting bank cashier or at the
action of some small election official who on election day falsifies the returns. Yet the
wrong to the American people, the damage to the country, by such action as these national
committeemen have taken in deliberately seeking to nullify and overthrow the will of the
people legitimately expressed as to their choice for President is infinitely greater than
the wrong done by the tempted cashier or the bribed election official.
It has to me been both a sad and a strange thing to see
men hitherto esteemed reputable take part in such action and to see it sustained by
similar men outside. I suppose the explanation must be found in the fact that in the slow
but general moral advance certain men lag a little behind the rate of progress of the
community as a whole; and where their own real or fancied interests are concerned such men
fail to recognize generally accepted standards of right and wrong until long after they
have been recognized by the majority of their fellows. There was a period when piracy and
wrecking I were esteemed honorable occupations, and long after the community as a whole
had grown to reprehend them there were l still backward persons who failed to regard them
as improper In the same way, as late as thirty years ago, there were many men in public
life who while they would refuse to receive bribe did not think it objectionable to give a
bribe; although now the sentiment in the community has grown so strong that it is no
longer possible to excuse the bribe-giver at more than the bribe-taker.
In the same way there are still in certain parts of this country
representatives of a class far from uncommon a quarter of a century ago, a class which
regards an election as game without rules in which it is merely a sign of cleverness to
swindle and cheat. Evidently the majority of the m. whose actions we complain of on the
national committee still hold this attitude toward nominations, although some of the may
have passed beyond it as regards elections. But on the committee, and associated with the
men who assume to respectable, there are certain representatives of Mr. Taft who presence
gives us cause to wonder whether there are not far worse influences behind the action of
the committee than any at which I have guessed. Mr. Stevenson, of Colorado, has appeared
on the committee, now holding the proxy of one Mr. Taft's delegates, now that of another.
Judge Ben Lindsey, in his book "The Beast and the Jungle," has given a very
graphic account of Mr. Stevenson's political activities in Denver. I very greatly wish
that every decent man this country, every plain right-thinking citizen who is in doubt as
to what the representatives of Mr. Taft have done on the national committee, would read
this book of Judge Lindsey In especial, let him study the part in which Judge Lindsey
refers to Mr. Stevenson, and then let him think for himself just what it means when Mr.
Taft and his associates accept the help of Mr. Stevenson, and import him from his own
State of Colorado, to act for other States on the national committee, as one of the ablest
men engaged in the movement to rob the people of their right to rule themselves.
Our opponents here in Chicago today have waged such a
bitter and unscrupulous fight for the very reason that this is no ordinary factional
contest. The big bosses who control the national committee represent not merely the led
captains of mercenary politics but the great crooked financiers who stand behind these led
captains. These political bosses are obnoxious in themselves, but they are even more
obnoxious because they represent privilege in its most sordid and dangerous form. The
majority of the national committee in deciding the cases before them have practiced
political theft in every form, from highway robbery to petty larceny; and political theft
is as dishonest as, and more damaging than, ordinary theft. There is no law to reach the
offenses they have committed, but morally these offenses are far more serious from the
standpoint of the national interest than any of the ordinary commercial or political
offenses which expose the perpetrators to be brought before the courts of justice. The
committeemen responsible for such action need to be taught that the national committee was
created to be the servant and not the master of the plain men and women who make up the
bulk of the Republican party. The party belongs to the millions of the rank and file. It
does not belong to the handful of politicians who have assumed fraudulently to upset the
will of the rank and file. The action of these men is in no sense "regular," as
they claim it to be. They in no way represent the people, they in no way represent the
rank and file of the Republican party; and theft and dishonesty cannot give and never
shall give a title to regularity.
One thousand and seventy-eight men are to meet here in
convention to decide the future of the Republican party. At least seven out of eight of
those among them who really represent the people are against the nomination of Mr. Taft.
It is the duty of all of them, their first duty, to throw out of the convention every man
fraudulently seated there by the national committee. The fraudulent Taft delegates whom
tee national committee seated for instance from California, from Washington, from Indiana,
from Kentucky, from Michigan from Arizona, from Alabama, from Texas, represent nothing but
the deliberate attempt by certain discredited bosses to upset the free and honest
expression of the people's will These fraudulent Taft delegates were beaten by the voters
of Washington, of California, of Texas, of Arizona, of Indiana, of Kentucky, and then they
were seated by the discredited political bosses who had just themselves been beaten by the
people of their own States, in Massachusetts, in New Jersey in Pennsylvania, in West
Virginia, in Kansas, in Missouri Messrs. Crane, Penrose, and Company were so discredited
in the eyes of the Republicans of their own States that the were beaten as delegates to
the convention, and yet they arrogate gate to themselves the right to seat in the
convention the delegates whom the States of Washington, California, Arizona, Texas, and
the rest have just beaten at the polls! I the convention proves false to the cause of the
people, if records the will of the bosses, whether yet unbeaten as New York and Colorado,
or beaten as in Massachusetts an New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Kansas, it will wreck the
Republican party, it will put back the cause of democracy, it will be false to every
principle of honor and justice. It cannot with honesty or propriety stand in any shape or
way for the action of the national committee, either by accepting the committee's nominee
for temporary chairman, nor by accepting its decision as to the seating and unseating of
contested delegations.
The majority of the national committee has acted with deliberate
dishonesty. A majority composed nearly half of politicians from Territories and States
that never cast a Republican electoral vote, end nearly half of politicians who have just
been repudiated at open primaries by the people of their own States, has stolen from the
rank and file of the Republicans from sixty to eighty lawfully elected delegates,
has substituted for them an equal number of
fraudulent delegates not elected by the people, and
claims the right to nullify the will of the people by
placing these fraudulent delegates on the
temporary roll-call of the national convention,
with the hope thereby of controlling it in the
interest of the candidate and of the bosses, whom
the people have just now emphatically repudiated.
This attempt to bind the convention by an act of
deliberate dishonesty, this attempt to defraud of their rights the plain citizens of the
Republican party, by the bosses whom that party has just repudiated, brings in question
certain elementary principles which lie at the foundation not only of party procedure and
party organization, but of free government and social order.
I hold that the convention itself is of right the only
judge of the qualifications of its own members. From Washington, California, Arizona,
Texas, Kentucky, Indiana, Alabama, and certain other States the people elected certain
delegates who are legally and morally entitled to sit in the convention. The discredited
politicians making up the majority of the national committee with the determination to
nullify the will of the people have substituted for those men certain others who have not
the slightest claim to seats in the convention.
A minority of the national committee, composed of
honorable men, who have voted on every case strictly on its merits, have in each case
protested strongly against the action of the majority, showing beyond the shadow of doubt
that the men thrown off the temporary roll by the majority are entitled to seats by every
consideration of law and of morals.
I have carefully examined the facts in these cases
myself, and I say to you that there is no element of doubt that the men in question were
honorably and lawfully chosen by the people, and that the effort of the majority to unseat
them represents nothing but naked theft, carried on with the sole and evil purpose of
dishonestly substituting the will of the bosses for the deliberately expressed judgment of
the people.
It is for the convention itself to decide these cases,
and by the convention I mean the lawfully elected members of the convention. The men
fraudulently put on the temporary' roll by the dishonest action of the majority of the
national committee must not be allowed to vote on their own cases, and to allow the
beneficiaries of the theft to vote on one another's case is, of course, to allow them
really to vote on their own cases.
By every consideration of real justice, we are entitled
to have these of whom I speak, who were elected by the people, put on the roll-call at
once. But we do not ask this. Although we are deprived of our just rights when these men
are not allowed to vote from the beginning, we ask merely that neither set of contestants
be allowed to vote on any question before the convention until the thousand members of the
convention whose seats have not been contested shall themselves decide which of the
contested delegates are entitled to membership.
I believe that even with the addition of these
fraudulently seated delegates Mr. Taft's supporters are in a substantial minority of the
convention, and I do not merely believe,' I. know, that we have a large majority of the
legally ejected members of the convention. The question involved in the action of the
national committee is of vastly more importance than my nomination or the nomination of
any man. The whole system of the corrupt alliance between crooked business and crooked
politics is at stake in the making up of this temporary roll; it has been made up
crookedly by the majority of the national committee, with the purpose of perpetuating the
of the corrupt political boss, even when the people have declared against him.
If these methods were allowed to prevail the Republican party would come
to an end, for it would cease to be the party of the people. It would pass under the
control of an oligarchy of the representatives of privilege, and no method of overthrowing
that control would remain available to the people. If this action by the majority of the
national committee is allowed to stand, primaries are a farce and election the idle
exercise of a useless privilege.
We refuse to recognize or abide by this theft of the
rights of the people by the national committee. It is the duty of all honest members of
the convention to fight that action from the moment the convention assembles. It is our
duty to the rank and file of the Republican party, it is our duty to the people of this
country to insist that no action of the convention which is based on the votes of these
fraudulently seated delegates binds the Republican party or imposes any obligation upon
any Republican.
The man nominated by the national committee as temporary
chairman, whoever he may be, must, under these circumstances, be considered as merely an
instrument chosen by them to put in effect their purposes. If such a man whether he
be Mr. Root or any one else, and whatever his previous career is willing to accept
an election by the aid of those fraudulently selected delegates, he at once becomes the
representative of forces which no honorable man, no loyal Republican, can afford to see
triumph, whether within the party or in our national life.
The big, evil politicians who are a curse to their land
derive the major part of their strength from the fact that in any crisis a number
of respectable men, although they oppose the evil, do it feebly and dare not carry the
fight to the end. We who are in this fight are not feeble, and we intend to carry the
fight to the end. We ask that, before the convention proceeds to organize, the groups of
contested delegates stand aside and allow their title to be passed upon by the remaining
uncontested delegates. This will be not only in strict accordance with common sense and
justice, but in accordance with the practice prevalent under the rules of Congress in the
organization of the House in the matter of contested seats.
We will abide by the decision of any honest and
impartial tribunal in this matter, but we will not permit the fraudulently seated
delegates to sit as judges on their own cases, and perhaps as a result to overthrow in the
interests of certain bosses and of the beneficiaries of privilege the clearly and
deliberately expressed judgment of the plain citizens who make up the rank and file of the
Republican party.
We rest our case, not only before the Republican voters, but before the
American people, upon the proposition, first, that the national committee cannot defeat
the wishes of the rank and file of the Republican voters by unseating delegates honestly
elected and, second, that those who are dishonestly substituted for them by the national
committee must not be permitted to vote on their own cases and to be the beneficiaries of
franc committed in their own behalf.
There never has been a clearer line-up than this between the plain
people of the country on the one side, and on the other the powers that prey, the
representatives of special privilege in the world of business and their tools and
instruments in the world of politics. There can be no compromise in such a contest. It is
natural that the representatives of special privilege, who know that special privilege
cannot continue if the people really rule, should resort unblushingly to every kind of
trickery and dishonesty in order to perpetuate their hold upon the party, and should be
eager callously to destroy the party if necessary to prevent its being controlled by its
rank, and file. But for this very reason we feel we have a right solemnly to appeal to all
honest men to stand with us on what has now become a naked issue of right and wrong. There
can be no yielding, no flinching on our part. We have the people behind us overwhelmingly.
We have justice and honesty on our side. We are warring against bossism, against privilege
social and industrial; we are warring for the elemental virtues of honesty and decency, of
fair dealing as between man and man; we are warring to save the Republican party; and the
only reward for which we ask is to put our party in such shape that it shall be of the
highest possible service to the people of the United States.
Now let us consider what this fight has been for. The
issue has been sharply drawn not merely by the words of Mr. Taft and of myself and of our
supporters, but by our several actions. I have stood for the right of the people to rule
and for their duty so to rule as to work for moral, political, and industrial justice. Mr.
Taft has no less explicitly stood for a government of the people by what he calls a
"representative part" of the people; and while he has of course stated in
perfunctory fashion that he favors industrial justice, he has violently opposed every
practical method advanced for actually doing away with industrial injustice, for actually
driving privilege out of its entrenchments, and for actually equalizing opportunity.
At the present moment we see before our eyes here in Chicago just exactly what Mr. Taft's
doctrine of government of the people by a "representative part" of the people
really amounts to. Eight years ago I received electoral votes from thirty-three States; in
twenty of these States direct primaries have been held, or if not direct primaries at
least primaries sufficient to give the people a reasonable chance to express their
preferences. In these twenty States where the rank and file of the Republican party had a
chance to express their preference I won two hundred and, ninety-five delegates, Mr. Taft
sixty-seven, Mr. La Follette thirty-six. That is, in those States which went Republican
tight years ago, Mr. Taft obtained between one-seventh and one-eighth of the delegates
where the people had a chance to express their will. These primary States are scattered
everywhere throughout the country from Maine to California, and it is impossible to doubt
that they give an accurate measure of what the vote in all the Republican States would be
if the people had been allowed a chance to vote. But Mr. Taft's representatives, wherever
possible, prevented the adoption of a primary law. They prevented it in Michigan, for
instance, they prevented it in Montana. Without question Montana and
Michigan would have gone for us at least as strongly as
Illinois and Oregon, had there been a primary law. Before the people of either State Mr.
Taft did not stand the chance to get a single delegate. His led captains recognized this
fact and prevented the people from voting; he and they distrusted the people, with reason;
and, with equal reason, they trusted the professional politicians, and in Montana and
Michigan Mr. Taft won delegates, to the snickering delight of every friend of privilege
and bossism in the land, whose relish is peculiarly keen in seeing delegates won against
the will of the people.
These Republican primary States cast over two-thirds of
the Republican vote in the electoral college. In them the people spoke. They went
overwhelmingly for me, and still more overwhelmingly against Mr. Taft. In the other States
that went Republican eight years ago no primaries were held, and in all but one the
politicians had nearly complete sway. In these States Mr. Taft secured one hundred and
seventy-six votes, I secured forty, Mr. Cummins ten. Of the Republican States, therefore,
I received the overwhelming majority of the delegates wherever the people could express
themselves, and taking these States all told in spite of Mr. Taft's triumphs in the States
where there were no real primaries I received four hundred and thirty-five delegates
(including those which the national committee has stolen) as against the two hundred and
forty-three for Mr. Taft, the thirty-six for Mr. La Follette, and the ten for Mr. Cummins.
To put it in another way, I squarely carried twenty-one of the old Republican States, and
these States cast two hundred and sixty-three vote in the electoral college within
three of a majority of the tote electoral vote. Mr. Taft carried enough States (where
there were no primaries) to give him eighty-two electoral votes Mr. La Follette carried
two States with eighteen electoral votes; Mr. Taft and Mr. Cummins divided one State wit]
thirteen votes. There remain States which although Democratic at the last election contain
a genuine Republican party, States like North Carolina and Oklahoma, where there were
primaries and where I carried every delegate except three.
It thus appears that in the Republican States Mr. Taft
was beaten two to one, and that in the Republican States which hold primaries where the
people could express their desires, he was beaten by over seven to one. I call your
attention to one significant feature in the attitude of the Taft papers in chronicling Mr.
Taft's victories and defeats. Whenever their head-lines announced; a defeat for Mr. Taft
it meant that there had been a vote by the people themselves in a primary State. Whenever
during the last ten days they have announced a victory for Mr. Taft it has meant that Mr.
Taft's representatives in the national committee have thrown out delegates elected by the
people at large to represent them. My victories have been won before the people and by the
people. Mr. Taft's have been won by the bosses and by the representatives of special
privilege, by the national committee and by boss-controlled conventions of machine
politicians. I carried Washington at the polls; he carried it before the national
committee; he never has had, and has not now, a chance with the people; and I have just as
little chance wherever the crooked type of politicians has power. -If I am nominated it
will be because whenever they have had a chance, the verdict of the people, expressed in
millions of votes, has been over two to one in my favor. If Mr. Taft were nominated it
would mean the ruin of the Republican party for the roll-call of his delegates as prepared
by the national committee consists, first of delegates from States that never cast a
Republican electoral vote, second, of boss-controlled delegates from States where the
Republican voters were not allowed to express their preference, third, of delegates stolen
from me, and fourth, and least in importance, of the delegates given him by the people
the last, who are the only delegates to whom he has any claim in right or morals,
representing but one-eighth of his strength, the other seven-eighths representing the
unscrupulous use of patronage in the South, the unscrupulous tactics of unprincipled
machine politicians in the North, and the naked thefts of the national committee.
Let me give you two striking illustrations of how Mr.
Taft's theory of government of the people by a "representative part" of the
people actually turns out to be in practice. In Ohio a primary was held for' the district
delegates; but the Taft managers who had control of the State central committee refused
our request that there should also be a primary vote for the delegates at large. At the
primary I beat Mr. Taft by forty-seven thousand in a vote which was about eighty per cent
of that polled at the last election for governor. It was an overwhelming repudiation of
Mr. Taft by the plain people, by the rank and file of the Republican party of Ohio. But
this did not affect the State convention. Mr. Taft was not above sending an appeal to his
leaders in the State convention begging them' to give him the vote anyhow in spite of the
way in which he had been repudiated by the polls. In that convention the county in which
the city of Cleveland stands had some fifty delegates. That county had gone against Mr.
Taft about three to one; he had even run behind Mr. La Follette. His repudiation by the
people of the county had been so complete that it is to me literally incomprehensible how
any man with any pretensions to honorable feeling could fail to' accept the verdict. But
Mr. Taft's lieutenants undertook to steal from the people their right to deliver what
verdict they chose. Their task was no more reputable than any form of burglary and was far
more damaging to the community than burglary. They were successful. They succeeded in
getting from the city of Cleveland, which had repudiated Mr. Taft three to one at the
polls, a delegation of politicians which, was ten to one in his favor. This delegation
turned the scale at the State convention and earned Mr. Taft's effusive gratitude by
stealing for him from the people of Ohio the six delegates at large. He was not entitled
to these delegates. The people of Ohio who were defrauded in his interest, were' entitled
to them. The people were cheated out of their rights because they were misrepresented by
the convention. Mr. Taft asked the Ohio State convention to misrepresent the people and it
did misrepresent the people. Mr. Taft need never again explain what he means by government
of the people by a "representative part" of the people. He has shown in actual
practice that he means government of the people by politicians who shall misrepresent them
in the selfish interest of some one else.
My second example is the national committee itself. The
recent action of the national committee illustrated well what has happened in our country
in the twisting of nominal representative government away from its original purpose until
it becomes thoroughly unrepresentative and misrepresentative. All this party machinery was
originally designed simply in order to make the will of the party genuinely effective. It
had no other purpose then. It can have no other legitimate purpose now. Until within a
very few years no man would have been brazen enough openly to announce that this was not
its purpose. It has been reserved for Mr. Taft and his friends in this crisis openly to
act on such an assumption. The other day thirty-seven of Mr. Taft's adherents on the
national committee stole from the people of California their right to give the votes of
California to the men of their choice. These thirty-seven politicians, none of whom lived
in California, assumed to override the will of the quarter of a million of California
voters who had recorded their will at the primary. The thirty-seven men who do not live in
California have given seats to two Taft men whom the quarter of a million California
voters had refused to seat. These two Taft delegates have no more right to sit in the
Republican convention than they have to sit in the Democratic convention. They were
defeated in California by about seventy-seven thousand majority; a majority greater than
Mr. Taft's entire vote. Under the act of the legislature all the delegates ran on one
ticket, the Taft and Roosevelt delegates alike binding themselves to abide by the result.
No delegates were elected by districts. Mr. Taft sent an urgent appeal to California just
before the primary election, an appeal which showed his complete action quiescence in what
was done and unless he was prepared then to protest it was dishonorable to protest
afterward. Yet on the plea of a henchman of Mr. Patrick Calhoun's, thirty-seven adherents
of Mr. Taft on the national committee robbed the people of California of their rights and
seated the two Taft-Calhoun delegates. Of these thirty-seven men, four represented the
Territories of Alaska, Hawaii, the Philippines, and Porto Rico. Twelve represented States
that went Democratic four years ago. Fourteen came from Republican States, everyone of
which had repudiated Mr. Taft and his committeemen at the primaries held this spring. In
other words, of the thirty-seven Taft men who in Mr. Taft's interest robbed the
overwhelming majority of the Republican voters of the great Republican State of California
of their rights, sixteen represented no Republican electoral vote whatever and fourteen
represented Republican States whose voters by overwhelming majorities had repudiated the
men themselves and Mr. Taft also at the primaries held this spring. There remain out of
the twenty nine only seven men, six of these representing States where the Republican
voters have had no chance to express their preference for President. In other words, out
of the thirty. seven men on the national committee who in Mr. Taft's interest
disfranchised California so far as two of its delegates art concerned, but one single man
represented a State where the majority was Republican and where when it had had a chance
it had not repudiated both the man himself and Mr. Taft himself. The action of the
committee in seating the Taft delegates from Washington was even worse; and in the
other States I have named it was at least as bad. This is Mr. Taft theory of government of
the people by a "representative part" of the people when it is reduced to
practice. From the practice of this theory, under the pretense of heeding the forms
a democracy, it is but one step farther to cast aside all pretense whatever. and
Mr. Taft's lieutenants have taken this step again and again; from swindling the people by
sharp political tricks they have gone to the point of deliberate theft. Mr. Taft in
encouraging what was done in the Ohio State convention showed his anxious desire to defeat
the will of the people by sharp trickery which kept just within the law. But in electing
and seating the delegates whom the Taft national committeemen have put on the temporary
roll of the convention from California, Washington, Arizona, Kentucky, Indiana, Texas, and
other States a much longer step toward dishonesty has been taken. These delegates
represent deliberate theft, deliberate robbery. The action of Mr. Taft's supporters in
these cases raises a question even more vital than those that have legitimately been
raised, in this campaign. Before discussing questions dealing with the right of the people
to rule and to secure social and industrial justice it is necessary to settle once for all
that when the decision has been made by the people it shall not be reversed by force and
fraud. We have a right to ask every honest man among our opponents, whatever may be his
views as to the principles we advocate, heartily to support us in this fight for the
elementary, the fundamental honesties of politics. The first and greatest issue before us
is the issue of theft. Every honest citizen should join with us in the fight for honesty
against theft and corruption.
It is not to be wondered at that our opponents have been
very bitter; for the line-up in this crisis is one that cuts deep to the foundations of
government. Our democracy is now put to a vital test; for the conflict is between human
rights on the one side and on the other special privilege asserted as a property right.
The parting of the ways has come. The Republican party must definitely stand on one side
or the other. It must stand, by deeds, and not merely by empty phrases, for the rights of
humanity, or else it must stand for special privilege. Our opponents are fond of calling
themselves regular Republicans. In reality they have no title to membership in any party
that is true to the principles of Abraham Lincoln. They are fighting for the cause of
special privilege and their chief strength-is drawn from the beneficiaries of intrenched
economic and social injustice. I do not in the least mean that they are all of them or
even a majority of them impelled by improper motives any more than I would say the same
thing of the men in the North who during the Civil War were favorable to slavery and
hostile to the Union. But most of the master spirits among them have a strong selfish
interest in resisting the campaign against industrial wrong. The real masters among our
opponents are often by no means the men nominally in the forefront. These real masters of
the reactionary forces have a tremendous personal interest in perpetuating the right of
the boss in politics with as its necessary accompaniment, the safeguarding of privilege
and the enlarging of the sphere of special interest. They are the men who stand back of
the ordinary political leaders who are against us. They are the men who directly or
indirectly control the majority of the great daily newspapers that are against us. Behind
them comes the host of honest citizens who because the channels of their information are
choked misunderstand our position and believe that in opposing us they are opposing
disturbers of the peace. In addition these are the men who now, as in every age are
intellectually and temperamentally incapable of consenting to progress and who worship at
the shrine of the sanctity of property even though that property be illicitly acquired and
used to the detriment of the community. All of these honest men are sedulously taught by
the big sinister men above them that revolution depends if we strike at even the most
obvious injustice. They are taught to believe that change means destruction. They are
wrong. The men who temperately and with self-restraint but with unflinching resolution and
efficiency strike at in justice, right grievous wrong, and drive intrenched privilege from
its sanctuary, are the men who prevent revolutions. Life means change; where there
is no change, death comes. We who fight sanctity for the rights of the people, for
industrial justice and social reforms are also fighting for material well-being; for
justice is the handmaiden of prosperity; and without justice there can be no lasting
prosperity. We pledge ourselves not only to strive for prosperity but to bring it about;
for it can only come on a basis of fair treatment for all; and on such a basis it shall
come, if the people intrust power to us.
When I undertook this contest I was well aware of the
intense bitterness which my reentry into politics would cause, I knew that the powers that
prey would oppose me, with tenfold the bitterness they would show in opposing any other
Progressive candidate, simply because they do not fear any other Progressive candidate,
whereas they very greatly fear me. I knew also that they would directly or indirectly
influence very many men who pride themselves upon belonging to and indeed typifying what
they regard as the educated and respectable classes. But it has been to me a matter of
melancholy concern to see the effect that these influences have produced upon so many men
in the Northeast, and in cities like New York, Boston, and Philadelphia, who lead lives
that are on the whole rather pleasant, rather soft, and who are free from all possibility
of the pressure of actual want. It has been a matter of concern to me to see how bitter
and irrational has been the opposition to us among a very large proportion of these men,
the men who are to be found in the most noted clubs, in the centers of big business, and
in the places especially resorted to by those whose chief desires are for ease and
pleasure. We have with us a small percentage of the heads of great corporations and of
great corporation lawyers, including I believe almost every man of either class
sufficiently high-minded and far-sighted to see that in the long run privilege spells
destruction, not only to the class harmed by it but the class possessing it. We welcome
the presence of these men. Every honest man whatever his fortune, should be our ally. The
great majority of capitalists, however, and of the big corporation lawyers so intimately
connected with them, are naturally hostile to-us. Their hostility did not surprise me.
The men who are most benefited by privilege unless they are
exceptionally disinterested and far-sighted, cannot be
expected to feel friendly toward those who assail privilege.
But associated with them are many men whose selfish interest
in privilege is far less obvious. I genuinely regret that we have
had with us so small a percentage of the men for whom life has
been easy, who belong to or are intimately associated with the
leisured and monied classes; so small a proportion of the class
which furnishes the bulk of the membership in the larger social business
and professional clubs, and which supplies the majority of the heads of our great
educational institutions and of the men generally, who take the lead in upholding the
cause of virtue when only the minor moralities and the elegancies of life are at issue. My
concern and regret are primarily for these men themselves. They could do us good by
joining with us, for it is earnestly to be wished that this movement for social justice
shall number among its leaders at least a goodly proportion of men whose leadership is
obviously disinterested, who will themselves receive no material benefit from the changes
which as a matter of justice they advocate. Yet the good to the people would be small
compared to the good which these men would do to their own class by casting in their lot
with us as we battle for the rights of humanity, as we battle for social and industrial
justice, is we champion the cause of those who most need champions and for whom champions
have been too few. I have been puzzled at the attitude of the men in question. They are
often the men who in the past have been very severe in their condemnation of corruption,
in their condemnation of bossism, and in railing at injustice and demanding higher ideals
of public service and private life Yet when the supreme test comes they prove false to all
their professions of the past. They fear the people so intensely that they pardon and
uphold every species of political ant business crookedness in the panic-struck hope of
strengthening the boss and special privilege and thereby raising a powerful shield to
protect their own soft personalities from the public. They are foolish creatures; the
people would never harm them; yet they still dread the people. They stand with servile
acquiescence behind the worst representatives of crooked business and crooked politics in
the country, and by speech or by silence they now encourage or condone the efforts of our
opponents to steal from the people the victory they have won and to substitute boss rule
for popular rule. Some of these men have in the past assumed to be teachers of their
fellow men in political matters. Never again can they speak in favor of a high ideal of
honesty and decency in political life, or of the duty to oppose political corruption and
business wrong-doing; for to do so would expose them to the derision of all who abhor
hypocrisy and who condemn fine words that are not translated into honorable deeds.
Apparently these men are influenced by a class
consciousness which I had not supposed existed in any such strength. They live softly.
Circumstances for which they are not responsible have removed their lives from the fears
and anxieties of the ordinary men who toil. When a movement is undertaken to make life a
little easier, a little better, for the ordinary man, to give him a better chance, these
men of soft life seem cast into panic lest something that is not rightly theirs may be
taken from them. In unmanly fear they stand against all change, no matter how urgent such
change may be, They not only come far short of their duty when they thus act, but they
show a lamentable short-sightedness. In this country of ours no man can permanently leave
to his descendants the right to live softly; and if he could leave such a right it would
in the end prove to be a right not worth having. The inheritance really worth while which
we can transmit to our children and to our children's children is the ability to do work
that counts, not the means of avoiding work the ability for efficient effort, not
the opportunity for the slothful avoidance of all effort. The leaders in the fight for
industrial and social justice today should be the men to whom much has been given and from
whom we have a right to expect in return much of honesty and of courage, much of
disinterested and valorous effort for the common good. The multimillionaire who opposes us
is the worst foe of his own children and children's children, and, little though he knows
it, we are their benefactors when we strive to make this country one in which, justice
shall prevail; for it is they themselves who would in the end suffer most if in this
country we permitted the average man gradually to grow to feel that fair play was denied
him, that justice was denied to the many and privilege accorded to the few.
We who in this contest are fighting for the rights of the plain people,
we who are fighting for the right of the people to rule themselves, need offer no better
proof of the fact that we are fighting for all citizens, no matter what their politics,
than that which is afforded by the action of that portion of the press which is controlled
by privilege, by the great special interests in business. Newspapers of this type are
found in every part of the country, in San Francisco, in Cincinnati, in Chicago and St.
Louis, in Boston and Philadelphia. But the are strongest in New York. Some of these
newspapers are nominally Democratic, some nominally Republican, some nominally
independent. But in reality they are true only to the real or fancied interests of the
great capitalist class by certain of whose members they are controlled. Sometimes the
interests of this capitalist class are identical with those of the country as a whole, and
in that case these papers serve interests of the commonwealth. Sometimes the interests of
the capitalist class are against the interests of the people a whole, and in that case
these papers are hostile to the interest of the commonwealth. But neither their acting
favorably nor their acting adversely to the interests of the commonwealth is anything more
than an incident to their support of the interests to which they are bound. The great and
far-reaching evil of their action is that they choke and foul the only channels of
information open to so many honest and well-meaning citizens. The most prominent
representatives of these papers in New York and Massachusetts supported Mr. Parker against
me in 1904 Mr. Parker was a Democrat, but he was entirely satisfactory to their masters,
and for the time being they ardently did all they could to overthrow the Republican party
and to elect a Democratic President. But when I began to be seriously talked about for the
Republican nomination this year, these papers one and all turned Republican to the extent
of becoming my furious opponents and the furious champions of Mr. Taft. There is an
element of pure comedy in reading in these papers continual lamentations about the
likelihood of my candidacy breaking up the Republican party. They themselves did all they
could to beat the Republican party when they thought they could elect Mr. Parker. Now
these papers would eagerly champion the Republican party if they could keep Mr. Taft as
its nominee for President. In the past they have not concealed their contempt for Mr.
Taft, and none of them regard him in any way as a leader.
The difference between us and our present-day opponents
is as old as civilized history. In every great crisis of the kind we face to-day, we find
arrayed on one side the men who with fervor and broad sympathy and lofty idealism stand
for the forward movement, the men who stand for the uplift and betterment of mankind, and
who have faith in the people; and! over against them the men of restricted vision and
contracted sympathy, whose souls are not stirred by the wrongs of others Side by side with
the latter, appear the other men who lack all intensity of conviction, who care only for
the pleasure of the day; and also those other men who distrust the people, who if
dishonest wish to keep the people helpless so as to exploit them, and who if honest so
disbelieve in the power of the people to bring about wholesome reform that every appeal to
popular conscience and popular intelligence fills them with an angry terror. According to
their own lights, these men are often very respectable, very worthy, but they live on a
plane of low ideals. In the atmosphere they create impostors flourish, and leadership
comes to be thought of only as success in making money, and the vision of heaven becomes a
sordid vision, and all that is highest and purest in human nature is laughed at, and
honesty is bought and sold in the market-place.
Opposed undyingly to these men are the men of faith and vision, the men
in whom love of righteousness burns like a flaming fire, who spurn lives of soft and
selfish ease, of slothful self-indulgence, who scorn to think only of pleasure for
themselves, who feel for and believe in their fellows, whose high fealty is reserved for
all that is good, that is just, that is honorable. By their very nature these men are
bound to battle for the truth and the right. They do not address themselves only to the
cultured and exclusive few. They prize character even more than intellect. They know well
that conscience is not the privilege merely of the men of wealth and cultivation and they
make their appeal to all men alike in the name of the great fundamental qualities, and
qualities that every man should have, the qualities of generosity and unselfishness, of
fearless honesty and high courage.
We who war against privilege pay heed to no outworn system of
philosophy. We demand of our leaders today understanding of and sympathy with the living
and the vital needs of that in the community whose needs are greatest. We are against
privilege in every form. We believe in striking every bulwark of privilege. Above all we
are against the evil alliance of special privilege in business with special business in
politics. We believe in giving the people a free hand to work in efficient fashion for
true justice. To the big man and to the little men, in all the relations of life, we
pledge justice and fair dealing.
A period of change is upon us. Our opponents, the men of reaction, ask
us to stand still. But we could not stand still if we would; we must either go forward or
go backward. Never was the need more imperative than now for men of 'vision who are also
men of action. Disaster is ahead of if we trust to the leadership of men whose souls are
seared and whose eyes are blinded, men of cold heart and narrow mind, who believe we can
find safety in dull timidity and dull inaction. The unrest cannot be quieted by ingenious
trickery of those who profess to advance by merely marking time, or who seek to drown the
cry for justice by loud and insincere clamor about issues that are false and issues that
are dead. The trumpets sound the advance, and their peal cannot be drowned by repeating
the war-cries of bygone battles, the victory shouts of vanished hosts. Here in this city
of the State of Lincoln I can set forth the principles for which we stand to-day in the
words which Lincoln used fifty-four years ago, when in speaking of the then phase of the
eternal struggles between privilege and justice, between the rights of the many 1 and the
special interest of the few, he said:
"That is the real issue. That is the issue which
will continue in this country when these poor tongues of Judge Douglas and myself shall be
silent. It is the eternal struggle between two principles right and wrong
throughout the world. They are the two principles that have stood face to face from the
beginning of time. The one is the common right of humanity, the other the divine right of
kings. It is the same principle in whatever shape it develops itself. It is the same
spirit that says: 'You toil and work and earn bread, and I will eat it.' No matter in what
shape it comes, whether from the mouth of a king who bestrides the people of his own
nation and lives from the fruit of their labor, or from one race of men as an apology for
enslaving another race, it is the same tyrannical principle."
Were Lincoln alive today he would add that it is also
the same principle which is now at stake when we fight on behalf I of the many against the
oppressor in modern industry whether I the abuse of special privilege be by a man whose
wealth is great or is little, whether by the multimillionaire owner of railways and mines
and factories who forgets his duties to those who earn his bread while earning their own,
or by the owner of the foul little sweat-shop who coins dollars from the excessive and
underpaid labor of haggard women. We who stand for the cause of progress are fighting to
make this country a better place to live in for those who have been harshly treated by
fate; and if we succeed it will also really be a better'] place for those who are already
well off. None of us can really prosper permanently if masses of our fellows are debased
and degraded, if they are ground down and forced to live starved and sordid lives, so that
their souls are crippled like their bodies and the fine edge of their every feeling
blunted. We ask that those of our people to whom fate has been kind shall remember that
each is his brother's keeper, and that all of us whose veins thrill with abounding vigor
shall feel our obligation to the less fortunate who work wearily beside us in the strain
and stress of our eager modern life.
Friends, here in Chicago at this time you have a great task before you.
I wish you to realize deep in your hearts you are not merely facing a crisis in the
history of a party. You are facing a crisis in the history of a nation and what you do
will have an appreciable effect throughout the world at large. Here in America we the
people have a continent or which to work out our destiny, and our faith is great that our
men and women are fit to face the mighty days. Nowhere else in all the world is there such
a chance for the triumph on a gigantic scale of the great cause of Democratic and popular
government. If we fail, the failure will be lamentable, an our heads will be bowed with
shame; for not only shall we fail for ourselves, but our failure will wreck the fond
desires of all throughout the world who look toward us with the for hope that here in this
great Republic it shall be proved from ocean to ocean that the people can rule themselves,
and thus ruling can gain liberty for and do justice both to themselves and to others. We
who stand for the cause of the uplift of humanity and the betterment of mankind are
pledged to eternal war against wrong whether by the few or by the many, by plutocracy or
by a mob. We believe that this country will be a permanently good place for any of us to
live in unless make it a reasonably good place for all of us to live in. The sons of all
of us will pay in the future if we of the present do not do justice to all in the present.
Our cause is the cause of justice for all in the interest of all. The present contest is
but a phase of the larger struggle. Assuredly the fight will go on whether we win or lose;
but it will be a sore disaster to lose. What happens to me is not of the slightest
consequence; I am to be used, as in a doubtful battle any man is-used, to his hurt or not,
so long as he is useful, and is then cast aside or left to die. I wish you to feel this. I
mean it; and I shall need no sympathy when you are through with me, for this fight is far
too great to permit us to concern ourselves about any one man's welfare. If we are true to
ourselves by putting far above our own interests the triumph of the high cause for which
we battle we shall not lose. It would be far better to fail honorably for the cause we
champion than it would be to win by foul methods the foul victory for which our opponents
hope. But the victory shall be ours, and it shall be won as we have already won so many
victories, by clean and honest fighting for the loftiest of causes. We fight in honorable
fashion for the good of mankind; fearless of the future; unheeding of our individual
fates; with unflinching hearts and undimmed eyes; we stand at Armageddon, and we battle
for the Lord. |