Politicians at Washington very generally
failed to realize that the advent of President Hayes
marked the dismissal of the issues of war and reconstruction.
They regarded as an episode what turned out to be the
close of an era. They saw, indeed, that public
interest in the old issues had waned, but they were
confident that this lack of interest was transient.
They admitted that the emotional fervor excited by
the war and by the issues of human right involved
in its results was somewhat damped, but they believed
that the settlement of those issues was still so incomplete
that public interest would surely rekindle. For
many years the ruling thought of the Republican party
leaders was to be watchful of any opportunity to ply
the bellows on the embers. Besides genuine concern
over the way in which the negroes had been divested
of political privileges conferred by national legislation,
the Republicans felt a tingling sense of party injury.
The most eminent party leaders at
this time both standing high as presidential
possibilities were James G. Blaine and John
Sherman. In a magazine article published in 1880
Mr. Blaine wrote: “As the matter stands,
all violence in the South inures to the benefit of
one political party.... Our institutions have
been tried by the fiery test of war, and have survived.
It remains to be seen whether the attempt to govern
the country by the power of a ‘solid South,’
unlawfully consolidated, can be successful....
The republic must be strong enough, and shall be strong
enough, to protect the weakest of its citizens in all
their rights.” And so late as 1884, Mr.
Sherman earnestly contended for the principle of national
intervention in the conduct of state elections.
“The war,” he said, “emancipated
and made citizens of five million people who had been
slaves. This was a national act and whether wisely
or imprudently done it must be respected by the people
of all the States. If sought to be reversed in
any degree by the people of any locality it is the
duty of the national government to make their act
respected by all its citizens.”
Republican party platforms reiterated
such opinions long after their practical futility
had become manifest. Indeed, it was a matter of
common knowledge that negro suffrage had been undone
by force and fraud; hardly more than a perfunctory
denial of the fact was ever made in Congress, and
meanwhile it was a source of jest and anecdote among
members of all parties behind the scenes. Republican
members were bantered by Democratic colleagues upon
the way in which provision for Republican party advantage
in the South had actually given to the Democratic
party a solid block of sure electoral votes. The
time at last came when a Southern Senator, Benjamin
Tillman of South Carolina, blurted out in the open
what had for years been common talk in private.
“We took the government away,” he asserted.
“We stuffed ballot boxes. We shot them.
We are not ashamed of it.... With that system force,
tissue ballots, etc. we got tired
ourselves. So we called a constitutional convention,
and we eliminated, as I said, all of the colored people
we could under the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments....
The brotherhood of man exists no longer, because you
shoot negroes in Illinois, when they come in competition
with your labor, and we shoot them in South Carolina,
when they come in competition with us in the matter
of elections.”
Such a miscarriage of Republican policy
was long a bitter grievance to the leaders of the
party and incited them to action. If they could
have had their desire, they would have used stringent
means to remedy the situation. Measures to enforce
the political rights of the freedmen were frequently
agitated, but every force bill which was presented
had to encounter a deep and pervasive opposition not
confined by party lines but manifested even within
the Republican party itself. Party platforms
insisted upon the issue, but public opinion steadily
disregarded it. Apparently a fine opportunity
to redress this grievance was afforded by the election
of President Harrison in 1888 upon a platform declaring
that the national power of the Democratic party was
due to “the suppression of the ballot by a criminal
nullification of the Constitution and laws of the
United States,” and demanding “effective
legislation to secure integrity and purity of elections.”
But, although they were victorious at the polls that
year, the Republican leaders were unable to embody
in legislation the ideal proposed in their platform.
Of the causes of this failure, George F. Hoar gives
an instructive account in his “Autobiography.”
As chairman of the Senate committee on privileges
and elections he was in a position to know all the
details of the legislative attempts, the failure of
which compelled the Republican leaders to acquiesce
in the decision of public opinion against the old
issues and in favor of new issues.
Senator Hoar relates that he made
careful preparation of a bill for holding, under national
authority, separate registrations and elections for
members of Congress. But when he consulted his
party associates in the Senate he found most of them
averse to an arrangement which would double the cost
of elections and would require citizens to register
at different times for federal elections and for state
and municipal elections. Senator Hoar thereupon
abandoned that bill and prepared another which provided
that, upon application to court showing reasonable
grounds, the court should appoint officers from both
parties to supervise the election. The bill adopted
a feature of electoral procedure which in England
has had a salutary effect. It was provided that
in case of a dispute concerning an election certificate,
the circuit court of the United States in which the
district was situated should hear the case and should
award a certificate entitling the one or other of
the contestants to be placed on the clerk’s roll
and to serve until the House should act on the case.
Mr. Hoar stated that the bill “deeply excited
the whole country,” and went on to say that “some
worthy Republican senators became alarmed. They
thought, with a good deal of reason, that it was better
to allow existing evils and conditions to be cured
by time, and the returning conscience and good sense
of the people, rather than have the strife, the result
of which must be quite doubtful, which the enactment
and enforcement of this law, however moderate and
just, would inevitably create.” The existence
of this attitude of mind made party advocacy of the
bill a hopeless undertaking and, though it was favorably
reported on August 7, 1890, no further action was
taken during that session. At the December session
it was taken up for consideration, but after a few
days of debate a motion to lay it aside was carried
by the Democrats with the assistance of enough Republicans
to give them a majority. This was the end of force
bills, and during President Cleveland’s second
term the few remaining statutes giving authority for
federal interference in such matters was repealed
under the lead of Senator Hill of New York. With
the passage of this act, the Republican party leaders
for the first time abandoned all purpose of attempting
to secure by national legislation the political privileges
of the negroes. This determination was announced
is the Senate by Mr. Hoar and was assented to by Senator
Chandler of New Hampshire, who had been a zealous
champion of federal action. According to Mr.
Hoar, “no Republican has dissented from it.”
The facts upon which the force bill
was based were so notorious and the bill itself was
so moderate in its character that the general indifference
of the public seemed to betray moral insensibility
and emotional torpor. Much could be said in favor
of the bill. This latest assertion of national
authority in federal elections involved no new principle.
In legalistic complexion the proposed measure was of
the same character as previous legislation dealing
with this subject, instances of which are the Act
of 1842, requiring the election of members of the
House by districts, and the Act of 1866, regulating
the election of United States Senators. Fraudulent
returns in congressional elections have always been
a notorious evil, and the partisan way in which they
are passed upon is still a gross blemish upon the constitutional
system of the United States, and one which is likely
never to be removed until the principle of judicial
determination of electoral contests has been adopted
in this country as it has been in England. The
truth of the matter appears to be that the public
paid no attention to the merits of the bill.
It was viewed simply as a continuation of the radical
reconstruction policy, the practical results of which
had become intolerable. However great the actual
evils of the situation might be, public opinion held
that it would be wiser to leave them to be dealt with
by state authority than by such incompetent statesmanship
as had been common in Washington. Moreover, the
man in the street resented the indifference of politicians
to all issues save those derived from the Civil War.
Viscount Bryce in his “American
Commonwealth,” the most complete and penetrating
examination of American political conditions written
during this period, gives this account of the party
situation:
“The great parties are the Republicans
and the Democrats. What are their principles,
their distinctive tenets, their tendencies? Which
of them is for tariff reform, for the further extension
of civil service reform, a spirited foreign policy,
for the regulation of railroads and telegraphs by
legislation, for changes in the currency, for any other
of the twenty issues which one hears discussed in
this country as seriously involving its welfare?
This is what a European is always asking of intelligent
Republicans and intelligent Democrats. He is always
asking because he never gets an answer. The replies
leave him deeper in perplexity. After some months
the truth begins to dawn upon him. Neither party
has, as a party, anything definite to say on these
issues; neither party has any clean-cut principles,
any distinctive tenets. Both have traditions.
Both claim to have tendencies. Both certainly
have war cries, organizations, interests, enlisted
in their support. But those interests are in
the main the interests of getting or keeping the patronage
of the government. Tenets and policies, points
of political doctrine and points of political practice
have all but vanished. They have not been thrown
away, but have been stripped away by time and the progress
of events, fulfilling some policies, blotting out
others. All has been lost, except office or the
hope of it.”
That such a situation could actually
exist in the face of public disapproval is a demonstration
of the defects of Congress as an organ of national
representation. Normally, a representative assembly
is a school of statesmanship which is drawn upon for
filling the great posts of administration. Not
only is this the case under the parliamentary system
in vogue in England, but it is equally the case in
Switzerland whose constitution agrees with that of
the United States in forbidding members of Congress
to hold executive office. But somehow the American
Congress fails to produce capable statesmen.
It attracts politicians who display affability, shrewdness,
dexterity, and eloquence, but who are lacking in discernment
of public needs and in ability to provide for them,
so that power and opportunity are often associated
with gross political incompetency. The solutions
of the great political problems of the United States
are accomplished by transferring to Washington men
like Hayes and Cleveland whose political experience
has been gained in other fields.
The system of congressional government
was subjected to some scrutiny in 1880-81 through
the efforts of Senator George H. Pendleton of Ohio,
an old statesman who had returned to public life after
long absence. He had been prominent in the Democratic
party before the war and in 1864 he was the party
candidate for Vice-President. In 1868 he was the
leading candidate for the presidential nomination
on a number of ballots, but he was defeated.
In 1869 he was a candidate for Governor of Ohio but
was defeated; he then retired from public life until
1879 when he was elected to the United States Senate.
As a member of that body, he devoted himself to the
betterment of political conditions. His efforts
in this direction were facilitated not only by his
wide political experience but also by the tact and
urbanity of his manners, which had gained for him
in Ohio politics the nickname of “Gentleman George.”
In agreement with opinions long previously
expressed in Story’s “Commentaries,”
Senator Pendleton attributed the inefficiency of national
government to the sharp separation of Congress from
the Administration a separation not required
by the Constitution but made by Congress itself and
subject to change at its discretion. He proposed
to admit the heads of executive departments to participation
in the proceedings of Congress. “This system,”
said he, “will require the selection of the
strongest men to be heads of departments, and will
require them to be well equipped with the knowledge
of their offices. It will also require the strongest
men to be the leaders of Congress and participate
in the debate. It will bring those strong men
in contact, perhaps into conflict, to advance the
public weal and thus stimulate their abilities and
their efforts, and will thus assuredly result to the
good of the country." The report signed
by such party leaders as Allison, Blaine, and Ingalls
among the Republicans, and by Pendleton and Voorhees
among the Democrats reviewed the history
of relations between the executive and legislative
branches and closed with the expression of the unanimous
belief of the committee that the adoption of the measure
“will be the first step towards a sound civil
service reform, which will secure a larger wisdom
in the adoption of policies, and a better system in
their execution.”
No action was taken on this proposal,
notwithstanding the favor with which it was regarded
by many close students of the political institutions
of the country. Public opinion, preoccupied with
more specific issues, seemed indifferent to a reform
that aimed simply at general improvement in governmental
machinery. The legislative calendars are always
so heaped with projects that to reach and act upon
any particular measure is impossible, except when
there is brought to bear such energetic pressure as
to produce special arrangements for the purpose, and
in this case no such pressure was developed. A
companion measure for civil service reform which was
proposed by Senator Pendleton long remained in a worse
situation, for it was not merely left under the congressional
midden heap but was deliberately buried by politicians
who were determined that it should never emerge.
That it did emerge is due to a tragedy which aroused
public opinion to an extent that intimidated Congress.
Want of genuine political principles
made factional spirit only the more violent and depraved.
So long as power and opportunity were based not upon
public confidence but upon mere advantage of position,
the contention of party leaders turned upon questions
of appointment to office and the control of party
machinery. The Republican national convention
of 1880 was the scene of a factional struggle which
left deep marks upon public life and caused divisions
lasting until the party leaders of that period were
removed from the scene. In September 1879, General
Grant landed in San Francisco, after a tour around
the world occupying over two years, and as he passed
through the country he was received with a warmth
which showed that popular devotion was abounding.
A movement in favor of renominating him to the Presidency was started under the
direction of Senator Roscoe Conkling of New York. Grants renown as the greatest
military leader of the Civil War was not his only asset in the eyes of his
supporters. In his career as President he had shown, on occasion, independence
and steadfastness of character. He stayed the greenback movement by his veto
after eminent party leaders had yielded to it. He had endeavored to introduce
civil service reform and, although his measures had been frustrated by the
refusal of Congress to vote the necessary appropriations, his tenacity of
purpose was such that it could scarcely be doubted that with renewed opportunity
he would resume his efforts. The scandals which blemished the conduct of public
affairs during his administration could not be attributed to any lack of
personal honesty on his part. Grant went out of the presidential office poorer
than when he entered it. Since then, his views had been broadened by travel and
by observation, and it was a reasonable supposition that he was now better
qualified than ever before for the duties of the presidential office. He was
only fifty-eight, an age much below that at which an active career should be
expected to close, and certainly an age at which European statesmen are commonly
thought to possess unabated powers. In opposition to him was a tradition
peculiar to American politics, though unsupported by any provision of the
Constitution according to which no one should be elected President for more than
two terms. It may be questioned whether this tradition does not owe its strength
more to the ambition of politicians than to sincere conviction on the part of
the people.
So strong was the movement in favor
of General Grant as President that the united strength
of the other candidates had difficulty in staying
the boom, which, indeed, might have been successful
but for the arrogant methods and tactical blunders
of Senator Conkling. When three of the delegates
voted against a resolution binding all to support the
nominee whoever that nominee might be, he offered
a resolution that those who had voted in the negative
“do not deserve and have forfeited their vote
in this convention.” The feeling excited
by this condemnatory motion was so strong that Conkling
was obliged to withdraw it. He also made a contest
in behalf of the unit rule but was defeated, as the
convention decided that every delegate should have
the right to have his vote counted as he individually
desired. Notwithstanding these defeats of the
chief manager of the movement in his favor, Grant was
the leading candidate with 304 votes on the first
ballot, James G. Blaine standing second with 284.
This was the highest point in the balloting reached
by Blaine, while the Grant vote made slight gains.
Besides Grant and Blaine, four other candidates were
in the field, and the convention drifted into a deadlock
which under ordinary circumstances would have probably
been dissolved by shifts of support to Grant.
But in the preliminary disputes a very favorable impression
had been made upon the convention by General Garfield,
who was not himself a candidate but was supporting
the candidacy of John Sherman, who stood third in the
poll. On the twenty-eighth ballot, two votes
were cast for Garfield; although he protested that
he was not a candidate and was pledged to Sherman.
But it became apparent that no concentration could
be effected on any other candidate to prevent the
nomination of Grant, and votes now turned to Garfield
so rapidly that on the thirty-sixth ballot he received
399, a clear majority of the whole. The adherents
of Grant stuck to him to the end, polling 306 votes
on the last ballot and subsequently deporting themselves
as those who had made a proud record of constancy.
The Democratic national convention
nominated General Hancock, which was, in effect, an
appeal to the memories and sentiments of the past,
as their candidate’s public distinction rested
upon his war record. The canvass was marked by
listlessness and indifference on the part of the general
public, and by a fury of calumny on the part of the
politicians directed against their opponents.
Forgery was resorted to with marked effect on the
Pacific coast, where a letter the famous
Morey letter in which Garfield’s
handwriting was counterfeited, was circulated expressing
unpopular views an the subject of Chinese immigration.
The forgery was issued in the closing days of the
canvass, when there was not time to expose it.
Arrangements had been made for a wide distribution
of facsimiles which exerted a strong influence.
Hancock won five out of the six electoral votes of
California and came near getting the three votes of
Oregon also. In the popular vote of the whole
country, Garfield had a plurality of less than ten
thousand in a total vote of over nine million.
The peculiarities of the party system
which has been developed in American politics, forces
upon the President the occupation of employment agent
as one of his principal engagements. The contention
over official patronage, always strong and ardent upon
the accession of every new President, was aggravated
in Garfield’s case by the factional war of which
his own nomination was a phase. The factions of
the Republican party in New York at this period were
known as the “Stalwarts” and the “Half-Breeds,”
the former adhering to the leadership of Senator Conkling,
the latter to the leadership of Mr. Blaine, whom President
Garfield had appointed to be his Secretary of State.
Soon after the inauguration of Garfield it became
manifest that he would favor the “Half-Breeds”;
but under the Constitution appointments are made by
and with the advice and consent of the Senate and both
the Senators from New York were “Stalwarts.”
Although the Constitution contemplates the action
of the entire Senate as the advisory body in matters
of appointment, a practice had been established by
which the Senators from each State were accorded the
right to dictate appointments in their respective
States. According to Senator Hoar, when he entered
public life in 1869, “the Senate claimed almost
the entire control of the executive function of appointment
to office.... What was called ’the courtesy
of the Senate’ was depended upon to enable a
Senator to dictate to the executive all appointments
and removals in his territory.” This practice
was at its greatest height when President Garfield
challenged the system, and he let it be understood
that he would insist upon his constitutional right
to make nominations at his own discretion. When
Senator Conkling obtained from a caucus of his Republican
colleagues an expression of sympathy with his position,
the President let it be known that he regarded such
action as an affront and he withdrew all New York
nominations except those to which exception had been
taken by the New York Senators, thus confronting the
Senate with the issue whether they would stand by
the new Administration or would follow Conkling’s
lead.
On the other hand, Senator Conkling
and his adherents declared the issue to be simply
whether competent public officials should be removed
to make room for factional favorites. This view
of the case was adopted by Vice-President Arthur and
by Postmaster-General James of Garfield’s own
Cabinet, who, with New York Senators Conkling and Platt,
signed a remonstrance in which they declared that
in their belief the interests of the public service
would not be promoted by the changes proposed.
These changes were thus described in a letter of May
14,1881, from the New York Senators to Governor Cornell
of New York:
“Some weeks ago, the President
sent to the Senate in a group the nominations of several
persons for public offices already filled. One
of these offices is the Collectorship of the Port
of New York, now held by General Merritt; another
is the consul generalship at London, now held by General
Badeau; another is Charge d’Affaires to Denmark,
held by Mr. Cramer; another is the mission to Switzerland,
held by Mr. Fish, a son of the former Secretary of
State.... It was proposed to displace them all,
not for any alleged fault of theirs, or for any alleged
need or advantage of the public service, but in order
to give the great offices of Collector of the Port
of New York to Mr. William H. Robertson as a ‘reward’
for certain acts of his, said to have aided in making
the nomination of General Garfield possible....
We have not attempted to ‘dictate,’ nor
have we asked the nomination of one person to any office
in the State.”
Except in the case of their remonstrance
against the Robertson appointment, they had “never
even expressed an opinion to the President in any
case unless questioned in regard to it.”
Along with this statement the New York Senators transmitted
their resignations, saying “we hold it respectful
and becoming to make room for those who may correct
all the errors we have made, and interpret aright all
the duties we have misconceived.”
The New York Legislature was then
in session. Conkling and Platt offered themselves
as candidates for reelection, and a protracted factional
struggle ensued; in the course of which, the nation
was shocked by the news that President Garfield had
been assassinated by a disappointed once seeker in
a Washington railway station on July 2, 1881.
The President died from the effects of the wound on
the 19th of September. Meanwhile, the contest
in the New York Legislature continued until the 22d
of July when the deadlock was broken by the election
of Warner Miller and Elbridge G. Lapham to fill the
vacancies.
The deep disgust with which the nation
regarded this factional war, and the horror inspired
by the assassination of President Garfield, produced
a revulsion of public opinion in favor of civil service
reform so energetic as to overcome congressional antipathy.
Senator Pendleton’s bill to introduce the merit
system, which had been pending for nearly two years,
was passed by the Senate on December 27, 1882, and
by the House on January 4, 1883. The importance
of the act lay in its recognition of the principles
of the reform and in its provision of means by which
the President could apply those principles. A
Civil Service Commission was created, and the President
was authorized to classify the Civil Service and to
provide selection by competitive examination for all
appointments to the service thus classified. The
law was essentially an enabling act, and its practical
efficacy was contingent upon executive discretion.