Publication information |
Source: Milwaukee Journal Source type: newspaper Document type: editorial Document title: “The Possibility of Mr. Roosevelt” Author(s): anonymous City of publication: Milwaukee, Wisconsin Date of publication: 7 September 1901 Volume number: 19 Issue number: none Pagination: 6 |
Citation |
“The Possibility of Mr. Roosevelt.” Milwaukee Journal 7 Sept. 1901 v19: p. 6. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
Theodore Roosevelt (assumption of presidency: personal response). |
Named persons |
Andrew Johnson; Theodore Roosevelt. |
Document |
The Possibility of Mr. Roosevelt
The possible succession of Vice-President Roosevelt
is looked forward to with some anxiety by many people. It is remarkably fortunate
that at this crisis there happens to be in the vice-president’s chair a man
deemed fit for the first place. He is no picked up make weight, but a man who
from the start was well considered for the first place. He is a man of some
power and of basic good sense. Should he come to the first place, responsibility
will do its work for him. It will steady him and force him to take cognizance
of others and other views. He is, we take it, a man who will listen to sound
advice and moderate his enthusiasm with judgment when the heavy duties come
to him. He is older than he was when governor of New York. His recent speeches
indicate more thoughtfulness and broader views than characterized his flash
after the Spanish war.
Of course a change in the head of the government
always brings along changes in many personal and political relations and some
changes of a more important bearing; but one department, immediately concerned
in the conduct of the government, remains the same, the legislative. The wide
differences exhibited in Johnson’s day are not likely ever to be repeated, though
potentially possible. The important consideration in this case is, that if Mr.
Roosevelt shall come to the office and conduct it with success and not too wide
divergence from its former lines, he will pass to his second term without serious
opposition in his party. This possibility is the most important now in sight.
This alone will have influence toward steady and conservative action against
any revolution in the general policy of the government, in case there should
be a change of executives.