The New President
Vice-President Roosevelt was in the heart of the Adirondacks
when the president’s fatal relapse came, having gone there in the
firm belief, shared by everybody, that all danger was past. Consequently,
it was afternoon of the day of the president’s death, September
14th, before Mr. Roosevelt reached Buffalo. The oath of office was
then promptly taken and a proclamation issued, setting apart Thursday,
the 19th, as a day of national mourning. Just before taking the
oath the new president made the following declaration:
“I wish to state that it shall
be my aim to continue absolutely unbroken the policy of President
McKinley for the peace, prosperity and honor of our beloved
country.”
Probably he could have
said nothing more reassur- [294][295]
ing to public sentiment and business interests, for of all things
the industrial community most dreads a sudden change. President
Roosevelt further strengthened this confidence by requesting all
the members of the McKinley cabinet to remain to the end of their
terms, which it is understood they will do.
It will be remembered that, at the
time Mr. Roosevelt was named for the vice-presidency, fear was expressed
in many quarters that he was not sufficiently conservative or “safe”
for an office which might at almost any moment transfer him to the
headship of the nation. If this feeling had any real depth in the
community, it must have been dispelled by this time; the test has
now been applied and the public has responded with every evidence
of confidence. The stock market, which of all indexes is most sensitive,
responded immediately with an encouraging upward trend of prices,
and there are no signs of industrial disturbance anywhere.
Mr. Roosevelt is the youngest president
the nation has ever had, and is of a temperament which stands somewhat
in need of sobering and perhaps steadying influences. These characteristics,
in a president of the United States, might not in themselves be
reassuring, but Mr. Roosevelt is neither stubborn, self-willed,
nor over-impressed with his own infallibility. With this combination
of qualities, it is safe to predict that the accession of great
responsibility will furnish whatever balancing and broadening influences
may yet be necessary to supplement the many admirable characteristics
now well known to the public. Because he proposes no immediate changes,
there need be no fear that Mr. Roosevelt will not be an individual
force in the government. The new president does well to follow,
for the present at least, the lines of policy already laid down,
letting his own develop gradually as the need may arise [295][296]
and as his own foothold become surer. That this is President Roosevelt’s
evident intention is primary evidence of that sound good sense so
essential to wise statesmanship. The presidency has come to him
in a way unsought and undesired, but this very fact will probably
insure the new president a more considerate public opinion and more
generous cooperation than if he had won this high post in a bitter
political struggle. The responsibilities are heavy, but the opportunities
are great.
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