The Campaign of 1900 [excerpt]
The winter of 1900,
with the presidency settled, with all fears of repudiation expelled,
and with four more years of administrative continuity assured, has
had no equal among periods of industrial confidence. Both capital
and labor looked forward to a future of unchecked development, and
the organizations of both the trusts and the unions were [271][272]
increased in size and projected further throughout the people. The
feeling of assurance pervading the country was partly based upon
the absence of any disturbing national program. The two things for
which the Republican Party had perfected its organization in 1896
had been accomplished. The Dingley tariff of 1897 was producing
an abundant revenue. The gold standard had been proclaimed as the
official basis of national commerce. No great legislative programs
involving fundamental change were pending. The national need for
a canal at Panama was within reach of gratification. The defects
in administrative organization that the Spanish War had disclosed
were in process of correction under the wise control of Elihu Root.
John Hay was extending American ideals of fair play across the Pacific.
The inaugural ceremony of March 4,
1901, was the most imposing ceremonial of its kind that had been
seen, but lacked significance as a public event. The Cabinet of
McKinley needed no reorganization and received none. The second
term seemed likely to inspire only the uninteresting annals of a
happy people. This happiness was increased when toward the end of
March the insurgent leader Aguinaldo was taken prisoner, bringing
the Philippine revolt so nearly to an end that it was possible to
think of establishing civil government in the islands.
The assassination of McKinley at Buffalo
in September, 1901, destroyed this certainty at a single stroke.
It brought into the presidency on September 14 a new personality
that spoke for a later generation and a different era. It removed
the basis for the rigid political organization of which Senator
Hanna was the chief engineer, and opened the way for aspiring politicians
in the Middle West to push upon the party councils their demands
that a program of national and social betterment be formulated and
adopted.
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