FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   579   580   581   582   583   584   585   586   587   588   589   590   591   592   593   594   595   596   597   598   599   >>  
an candidate, to 63 for the Democratic, --or in the proportion of nearly five to one. Warned, by this overwhelming defeat, not to flinch from, or avoid, or try to convert the great National question of Tariff, into a merely local one, the National Democratic platform of 1876, at the instigation of the old Rebel leaders of the now fast solidifying South, came out flat-footedly again with the "demand that all Custom-house taxation shall be only for revenue." This time, the electoral vote stood almost evenly divided, viz.: for the Republican candidate, 185; for the Democratic candidate, 184;--a result so extremely close, as to lead to the attempted perpetration of great frauds against the successful candidate; the necessary settlement of the questions growing out of them, by an Electoral commission--created by Congress at the instance of the Democratic Party; great irritation, among the defeated Democracy, over the just findings of that august Tribunal; and to the birth of the alleged Democratic "grievance," aforesaid. The closeness of this vote--their almost triumph, in 1876,--encouraged the Solid South to press upon the National Democratic Convention of 1880, the expediency of adopting a Free-Trade "plank" similar to that with which, in 1876, they had so nearly succeeded. Hence the Democratic platform of 1880, also declared decidedly for "A Tariff for revenue only." The old Rebel leaders, at last in full control of the entire Democratic Party, had now got things pretty much as they wanted them. They had created that close corporation within the Union--that /imperium in imperio/ that oligarchically--governed league of States (within the Republic of the United States) which they termed the "Solid South," and which would vote as a unit, on all questions, as they directed; they had dictated the nomination, by the Democratic Party, of a Presidential candidate who would not dare to act counter to their wishes; and their pet doctrine of Free-Trade was held up, to the whole Democratic front, under the attractive disguise of a Tariff for revenue only. [As Ex-Senator Toombs, of Georgia, wrote: "The old boys of the South will see that 'Hancock' does the fair thing by them. In other words, he will run the machine to suit them, or they will run the thing themselves. They are not going to be played with any longer."] In other words, they had already secured a "Solid South," an "available" candi
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   579   580   581   582   583   584   585   586   587   588   589   590   591   592   593   594   595   596   597   598   599   >>  



Top keywords:

Democratic

 

candidate

 
revenue
 

National

 
Tariff
 

States

 

leaders

 
platform
 

created

 

questions


United

 
imperium
 

Republic

 

termed

 

governed

 

oligarchically

 
league
 

imperio

 

things

 

declared


decidedly
 

control

 
entire
 

secured

 
wanted
 

corporation

 

pretty

 
wishes
 

Georgia

 

Toombs


played

 
Senator
 

machine

 

Hancock

 

disguise

 
counter
 

Presidential

 

longer

 
dictated
 
nomination

attractive
 
doctrine
 
directed
 

Tribunal

 

taxation

 

Custom

 

demand

 
footedly
 
Republican
 

divided