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THE TRIUMPH OF WHITE MEN'S DEMOCRACY America: Past and Present Chapter 10
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Democracy in Theory and Practice n Fear that democracy would lead to anarchy wanes in the 1820s and 1830s n Equality of opportunity stressed n America becomes society of winners and losers
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Democracy and Society n Egalitarian expectations despite growing economic inequality n No distinctive domestic servant class n No class distinctions in dress n White male equality before the law radical by European standards n Egalitarian attack on licensed professions n Popular press the source of information and opinion
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Democratic Culture n Artists work for mass, democratic audience rather than for an aristocratic elite n Popular genres include Gothic horror, romantic fiction, melodramas, genre paintings n Serious artists seek to inspire with neoclassical sculpture, landscapes of untamed nature n Only a few truly avant-garde, romantic artists
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Democratic Ferment: Politics of Universal Manhood Suffrage n Nearly all adult white males gain right to vote without property qualification n Appointive offices made elective n Professional politicians emerged n Public benefits of two-party system extolled n Political machines develop at state level
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Democratic Ferment: National Parties n Changes in presidential elections spur party growth n Parties often serve special economic interests n Parties share republican ideology, commitment to equality of opportunity n Parties differ on how to achieve common aims n Neither party seeks to extend rights beyond adult white male constituency n Radical third parties argue the cause of African- Americans, women, working people
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Jackson and the Politics of Democracy n Jackson becomes a symbol of democracy’s triumph n Actions of Jackson and his party refashion national politics in a democratic mold
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The Election of 1824 and J. Q. Adams' Administration n The election of 1824 a five-way race n Jackson wins popular vote n Adams wins in House of Representatives with Henry Clay’s support n Clay’s appointment as Secretary of State leads to charges Adams "bought" the presidency n Mid-term election of 1826 gives Jackson forces control of Congress
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Jackson Comes to Power n Jacksonians organized for election of 1828 – Appeal to sectional self-interest – Make politics exciting to the average man n Jackson wins election as a man of the people n Jackson democratizes presidency – Fires at will officeholders he does not like – Defends by asserting the right of all men to a government post
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Indian Removal n Indian removal policy inherited from prior administrations n Jackson agrees that the federal government had not pushed Indians hard enough n Responds to Cherokee resistance by asking Congress for Indian Removal act of 1830 n 1838--U.S. Army forces Cherokees west along the Trail of Tears
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The Nullification Crisis n John C. Calhoun leads development of intellectual defense of state sovereignty n 1828--tariff passed, South Carolina objects but takes no action n 1832--tariff passed, South Carolina nullifies n Jackson threatens to send army n Both sides retreat – South Carolina gets lower tariff – Jackson demonstrates federal will
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The Bank War and the Second Party System n "The Bank War" a symbolic defense of democratic value n Leads to two important results – Economic disruption – A two-party system
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Mr. Biddle's Bank n Bank of the United States unpopular n Open to charges of special privileges n Manager Nicholas Biddle looks and behaves like an aristocrat n Bank possesses great power and privilege with no accountability to the public
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The Bank Veto and the Election of 1832 n Jackson vaguely threatens Bank in first term n Biddle seeks new charter four years early n Congress passes, but Jackson vetoes – claims the Bank is unconstitutional – defends veto as a blow for equality n Jacksonian victory in 1832 spells Bank’s doom
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Killing the Bank n Jackson destroys Bank by federal deposits n Funds transferred to some state (“pet”) banks n Biddle uses his powers to cause recession, attempts to blame Jackson n Destruction of Bank provokes fears of dictatorship, costs Jackson support in Congress
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The Emergence of the Whigs n Whig party a coalition of two forces – Opponents of Jackson – Anti-Masonic party n Whigs defend activist government in economics, enforcement of “decency” n Democrats weakened by – defection of working-class spokesmen – depression produced by Jackson’s fiscal policies
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The Rise of Van Buren n Martin Van Buren succeeds Jackson in 1836 n Term begins with Panic of 1837 n Laissez-faire philosophy prevents Van Buren from aiding economic distress n Van Buren attempts to save government funds with independent subtreasuries n Whigs block subtreasuries until 1840 n Panic of 1837 blamed on Van Buren
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The Fall of Van Buren n Whigs fully organized by 1840 n Whig candidate William Henry Harrison – image built as a common man who had been born in a log cabin – running mate John Tyler chosen to attract votes from states-rights Democrats n Harrison and Tyler beat Van Buren
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Heyday of the Second Party System n Election of 1840 marks rise of permanent two- party system in the U.S. n Whigs and Democrats evenly divide the electorate for next two decades n Parties offer voters a clear choice – Whigs support a "positive liberal state," community – Democrats support "negative liberal state," individual n Parties share a broad democratic ideology
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Tocqueville’s Wisdom n Alexis de Tocqueville praises most aspects of American democracy n Warns of future disaster if white males refuse to extend liberty to women, African- Americans and Indians.
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