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Published byGervase Weaver Modified over 9 years ago
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Gilded Age Politics 1870 - 1900
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A Two Party Stalemate
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Few economic differences between Democrats and Republicans
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Well-Defined Voting Blocs Democrats White Southerners Catholics Recent Immigrants Urban Pro-Labor Farmers Republicans Northern Protestants Anti-Immigration Nativists Middle-Class
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This caused high voter turnout and partisan voting!
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Laissez-faire Federal Government 1870 - 1900 Accomplished little domestically Main duties of the Federal Government Delivered Mail Maintained Military Collected Taxes and Tariffs Conducted Foreign Policy Administered Civil War Veteran’s Pension
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Issues Monetary Policy Regulation of Big Business Tariff Policy Railroad Regulations Labor Regulations Women’s Suffrage Farm Problems Civil Service Reform American Imperialism
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Presidency as Symbolic Office Party bosses ruled! President should avoid offending factions within their own party. Doled out federal jobs. “The President should merely obey and enforce the law.” –Senator John Sherman of Ohio
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How was it that leaders who failed to address the ‘real issues’ of the day presided over the most highly organized and politically active electorate in American history?
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No chief executive between Lincoln and T. Roosevelt could be described as a strong president!
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1865- 53,000 people worked for the federal government 1890 – 166,000 people worked for the federal government
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1876 Election- one of the most disputed and controversial elections in US History
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Hayes Prevails
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Sammy Tilden— Boo-Hoo! Ruthy Hayes’s got my Presidency, and he won’t give it to me!
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Rutherford B. Hayes (R) 1877 - 1881 “Compromise of 1877” - end of Reconstruction “Party of Morality” Limited Vision of Government’s Role Great RR Strike of 1877 1878 --> Bland-Allison Act
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Lemonade Lucy
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Split within the Republican Party Stalwarts Sen. Roscoe Conkling (New York) Wanted Grant for 3 rd Term Favored Machine Politics/ Spoils System Half-Breeds Sen. James Blaine (Maine) Support for Civil Service Reform
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James A. Garfield (R) 1881 compromise candidate assassinated
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Chester A. Arthur (R) 1881 - 1884 1882 --> Tariff Commission 1883 --> Pendleton Act (Civil Reform)
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Grover Cleveland (D) 1885 - 1888 “Ma, Ma, where’s my Pa? Gone to the White House, ha, ha, ha!” laissez-faire Democrat attacked tariffs 1886 --> Haymarket Riot 1887 --> Interstate Commerce Act
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Election of 1888 Tariffs major issue of election
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Benjamin Harrison (R) 1889 - 1892 1889 --> Farmers Alliance curbs on big business (1890): 1. Sherman Anti-Trust Act 2. McKinley Tariff Act 3. Sherman Silver Purchase Act 1892 --> Homestead Strike
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Billion Dollar Congress
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Grover Cleveland (D) 1893 - 1896 Panic of 1893 [BIG depression!] 1894 --> Pullman Strike 1894 --> Wilson- Gorman Tariff 1895 --> E. C. Knight Co. v. US
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William McKinley (R) 1887 - 1901 1898 --> Spanish- American War 1899 --> Gold Standard Act 1899 --> Open Door Policy 1900 --> Boxer Rebellion in China 1901 --> assassinated
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