William Howard Taft.
Publié le 10/05/2013
Extrait du document
«
considered him an ideal successor.
Because Roosevelt himself was satisfied that Taft's election would ensure that his reform programs were continued, he used hisinfluence with each state's Republican Party to get Taft the nomination.
As a result, Taft became the Republican candidate on the first ballot.
He was elected president in1908 with a popular vote of 7,675,320 to 6,412,294 for Nebraska editor and Democratic candidate William Jennings Bryan, and an electoral vote of 321 to Bryan's 162.Although decisive, Taft's margin of victory was not as great as Roosevelt's had been in the previous election.
IV PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
In succeeding a president as colorful and popular as Roosevelt, Taft was at a disadvantage.
Taft had a judicial, not a political, personality.
Although Roosevelt said ofTaft that “there cannot be found in the whole country a man so well fitted to be president,” Taft was a procrastinator and a poor public speaker, and he altogetherlacked Roosevelt's flair for dramatizing the issues and his intentions.
A Relations With Congress
Taft began his term of office thinking of his administration as a “progressive development of that which has been performed by President Roosevelt.” Roosevelt was asymbol of a period of reform, called the Progressive Era, which lasted from the last decade of the 19th century into the second decade of the 20th century.
Reformers,or Progressives, were concerned about abuses of power by government and businesses.
They wanted to make the United States a better place to live, and likeRoosevelt, they believed that the government had an important role to play in change.
Taft, too, was eager to contribute to social progress by laying the legal foundation for this reform.
However, by nature, Taft was more conservative than Roosevelt.Furthermore, conditioned by his legal training and cast of mind, he conceived the role of the presidency in different terms: He expected the Congress of the UnitedStates to take the lead and refused to extend executive or federal powers without Congressional approval.
Taft soon offended Roosevelt's supporters.
Roosevelt had been able to maintain an uneasy alliance between the two wings of the Republican Party, the so-calledStandpatters (conservative Republicans) and the Progressives.
Unfortunately Taft drove the two further apart.
The Standpatters, led by Rhode Island Senator Nelson W.
Aldrich and House Speaker Joseph G.
Cannon, represented financial and industrial interests and supportedhigh tariffs (import taxes), minimal government intervention in business, and few, if any, social and economic reforms.
The Progressives, led by United States SenatorRobert M.
La Follette of Wisconsin and Nebraska Representative George William Norris, represented Midwestern and Western farming and small business interests andsupported lower tariffs, more government regulation of big businesses and social and economic reform.
B Republican Party Split
Taft chose almost all Standpatters for his Cabinet, including five corporation lawyers, and then clashed with the reformers on three major issues during hisadministration, splitting the Republican Party and alienating Roosevelt.
The issues were tariff reform, conservation, and revision of the House of Representatives' rules ofprocedure.
During the campaign, Taft had committed himself to lower tariffs.
Tariffs on imports raised money for the government and protected U.S.
businesses from foreigncompetition by increasing the cost of importing those goods.
Industries in Northern urban areas and banking interests tended to favor high tariffs because they helpeddomestic businesses; agricultural areas in the West and the South tended to oppose them because they made it harder for people to buy cheap foreign goods such asclothing.
Taft called a special session of Congress early in 1909 to fulfill his low-tariff promise, but he was not as skilled at politics as Roosevelt had been.
The Payne-Aldrich Tariff Act of 1909, which he signed reluctantly, actually raised the tariff on many products and protected special interests.
In an attempt to convince theAmerican people that it was a good law, Taft made a 20,920-km (13,000-mi) railroad tour of the United States.
In Winona, Minnesota, he said he thought it was thebest bill the Republican Party had ever passed—a statement he would long regret.
Enraged reformers were certain he had betrayed both them and the people.
The conservation controversy further widened the gap in the party.
In forming his Cabinet, Taft had replaced Roosevelt's secretary of the interior, James R.
Garfield,with Richard A.
Ballinger.
Gifford Pinchot, head of the U.S.
Forestry Service and as much a symbol of conservation as his friend Roosevelt, accused Ballinger of allowingprivate companies to obtain reserved coal lands in Alaska.
In the course of investigating the charges, Taft dismissed Pinchot.
His action further alienated Roosevelt andheightened Progressives' accusations that Taft had abandoned the Roosevelt tradition.
Revising the rules of the House of Representatives was the third major issue that divided the party.
At stake was the stranglehold maintained on the United StatesHouse of Representatives by its dictatorial speaker, Cannon, through his power to recognize speakers and appoint members of the various House committees, especiallythe powerful Rules Committee.
Using these prerogatives ruthlessly the speaker had blocked efforts to pass progressive legislation and reform.
On the private advice of Roosevelt and New York Senator Elihu Root, Taft did not support an assault on Cannon, and the reformers were defeated in 1910.
However, in1911, in coalition with the Democrats, the Progressives succeeded in restricting the speaker's powers, but they accused Taft of betraying the Roosevelt legacy andnever forgave him for failing to support them.
Having lost Progressive backing, Taft was forced increasingly to depend on conservative support for his legislative program, and by fall he was actively opposing theProgressives in Republican state conventions and primaries as well as in Congress.
As a result, in the 1910 elections the Democrats won a 50-seat majority in the Houseand an additional 8 seats in the Senate.
Roosevelt, back from his trip, campaigned for Republicans in 1910 and blamed Taft for the Democratic gains.
The gap betweenthe Republican factions was now unbridgeable.
C Reform Program
Despite the attacks on him, Taft made important contributions to reform.
He actively and consistently prosecuted monopolies (one company supplying a commodity or service, and therefore controlling its price) and trusts (one company running several companies as though they were one company to control prices).
Almost twice the number of antitrust cases were brought to the courts in Taft's four-year term than during Roosevelt's seven and a half years in office.
In 1910 Taftsigned the Mann-Elkins Act, which placed various communications companies, including telephone, telegraph, radio and cable services, under the control of theInterstate Commerce Commission (ICC), which had been created in 1887 to help regulate the economy.
This act increased the commission's powers and jurisdiction,giving it the right to set railroad rates and intervene in freight classifications, and formed a Commerce Court inside the commission to review and enforce its decisions.
During Taft's administration, Congress passed the 16th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, which gave the U.S.
government the right to collect incometaxes, and the 17th Amendment, which provided for the direct election of U.S.
senators.
His Commission on Efficiency and Economy pioneered major changes in federalfinances and cut the cost of government by making operations more efficient.
He helped to improve the U.S.
currency and banking system.
Furthermore, he signed thePublicity Act, which required political parties to divulge the sources and amounts of money they spent in federal election campaigns..
»
↓↓↓ APERÇU DU DOCUMENT ↓↓↓
Liens utiles
- Taft William Howard , 1857-1930, né à Cincinnati (Ohio), homme d'État américain.
- William Howard Taft - biography.
- William Howard Taft
- Taft William Howard
- Taft, William Howard