The New “Era of Good Feeling”
With the second election of William McKinley, as all
qualified observers had noted, we were fairly entered upon an era
of good feeling in which the intensity of mere partisan spirit had
quite disappeared, and [391][392] in
which all sections of the country were happy, harmonious, and confident
as at no previous time. Mr. McKinley had won the confidence and
esteem of the Democratic South, which he had recently visited, and
he was beloved from Maine to California. It was not that he could
be spared;—yet the historians of the future will probably
agree that his death came at a rare moment of culmination, when
his policies had been vindicated and accepted, and his high rank
among American statesmen had been unassailably achieved. The truth
of this was made plain in the hearty and unanimous outburst of approval
with which the country received President Roosevelt’s assurance,
on taking the oath of office, that it was his intention to carry
out absolutely the policies of his predecessor. Those men and newspapers,
indeed, which only a little time before had been habitually in opposition
to the policies of President McKinley were foremost in praising
President Roosevelt for adopting those very policies as his own.
And there was almost, if not quite, equal unanimity of approval
when, a few days afterward, it became known that President Roosevelt
had not only asked all the members of the McKinley cabinet to retain
their portfolios for the present, but had absolutely refused to
allow them to go through the formality of offering their resignations,
and had assured them that in so doing he meant in all sincerity
to invite and urge them to remain in office throughout the entire
term, or as long as they would have remained if there had been no
change in the Presidency.
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