William McKinley.
Publié le 10/05/2013
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gold standard.
McKinley voted for it in exchange for support for his tariff bill.
His vote angered Eastern bankers and industrialists but helped lessen Western oppositionto his stand on the tariff.
D Governor of Ohio
Because he was a champion of protective tariffs, as well as an extremely popular politician, McKinley attracted the attention of a Cleveland industrialist, Marcus AlonzoHanna.
Hanna was eager to be the maker of a president and to be the man who exercised power behind the scenes.
In 1890, as a result of popular reaction against histariff and of another Democratic redistricting, McKinley lost his congressional seat.
With Hanna’s help, McKinley was elected governor of Ohio in 1891 and reelected in1893.
As governor, McKinley improved Ohio’s roads and public departments and established an arbitration board to settle labor disputes.
He showed some sympathy toworkers by carefully avoiding the use of force in breaking a labor strike.
McKinley also had the opportunity to speak out on national issues, and at the Republican National Convention of 1892, Hanna made a brief attempt to win thepresidential nomination for him.
But when the cause became hopeless, Hanna and McKinley threw their support to the moderate Republican president, BenjaminHarrison (1889-1893), who was seeking a second term.
McKinley’s political career was almost ruined in 1893 when a friend, whose bank notes he had endorsed, went bankrupt and left McKinley responsible for his debt of$130,000.
McKinley was saved from ruin only when Hanna and his wealthy friends and associates agreed to repay the debt.
As a reflection of the esteem in which hewas held, McKinley also received many donations from the public, all of which he returned.
E Election of 1896
An economic crisis called the panic of 1893, coming as it did with a Democratic president in office, made the Republicans optimistic about winning the presidency in1896.
In the congressional elections of 1894, McKinley made 371 speeches throughout the nation and was widely seen as man who could restore prosperity.
Hanna left his private business to devote full time to McKinley’s candidacy.
He did his work well, and on the first ballot (vote) at the Republican National Convention in1896, McKinley was nominated for the presidency.
Garret A.
Hobart of New Jersey received the nomination for vice president.
The reaction of the Eastern industrialists and financiers to McKinley’s nomination was not overly enthusiastic.
Used to controlling the candidates of both major parties,they were confident that the Democrats would nominate a stronger supporter of the gold standard.
E1 Nomination of Bryan
For three decades farmers in the South and West had been dissatisfied with bankers’ and industrialists’ domination of the federal government.
The gold standard hadforced prices and wages down.
Manufactured goods, favored by high tariffs and corporate practices that restricted competition, fell only slightly, but farm commodityprices declined sharply.
This meant that farming communities had less money to buy the manufactured goods for which prices had not fallen.
In the early 1890s the farmers’ revolt came to a head.
The Populist Party made great strides throughout the West with a platform of extensive social and economicreforms that would, they argued, curb the power of the wealthy and benefit agriculture.
The Populists also attempted to forge an alliance with the more radical laborunions and thus threatened to become a potent third force, following the Democrats and the Republicans, in American politics.
The most important demand of the Populists, as well as of Western Democrats and Republicans, was the free and unlimited coinage of silver at the legal ratio of 16 to 1with gold.
In 1896 the silverites gained control of the Democratic convention and, largely on the strength of his famous “cross of gold” speech, William Jennings Bryan, a36-year-old orator, journalist, and former United States congressman from Nebraska, was nominated for the presidency.
Later in the year the Populists also nominatedBryan, who proceeded to tour the country making fiery speeches for free silver and against wealth, privilege, and business control of the government.
E2 The Front Porch Campaign
Alarmed by Bryan’s attack on wealth and privilege, and urged on by Hanna, big businesses rallied in support of McKinley, contributing the unprecedented sum of $3.5million to the Republican campaign.
The money was put to good use.
The country was flooded with McKinley campaign pamphlets and posters, and Republican speakerstoured the nation to argue against bimetallism and to portray Bryan’s crusade for social justice as a rebellion of fanatics who would destroy the government.
Toreinforce these arguments, factory managers warned their workers that a victory for Bryan would mean depression and loss of their jobs.
Refusing to compete with Bryan’s around-the-country campaign, McKinley stayed at home, receiving delegates from all over the country and issuing such statements as“Good money never made times hard.” The image of the honest, upright Major McKinley contrasted favorably with that of Bryan, who was challenging many of theAmerican businesses’ most sacred beliefs.
Sweeping all the large industrial states, McKinley won the election by 271 electoral votes to Bryan’s 176.
He also won thepopular vote by 602,555 votes out of 13,620,659 votes cast.
The election also had an effect far beyond the naming of a president.
It set up coalitions of interests andpolitical alliances that lasted for the next 16 years.
The Republicans held the presidency until Democrat Woodrow Wilson was inaugurated in 1913.
IV PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
When McKinley entered Washington, D.C., for his inauguration, he was a handsome, vigorous man of 54 years.
With him was his wife, who, despite her poor health,took part in many of the social activities at the White House.
McKinley devoted much of his inaugural address to foreign affairs.
“We want no wars of conquest,” he said.
“We must avoid the temptation of territorial aggression.” Hisoriginal Cabinet, his group of advisers and department heads, consisted of businessmen and aged politicians.
But the appointment of the writer and diplomat John M.Hay as secretary of state in 1898 and New York district attorney Elihu Root as secretary of war in 1899 gave stature to his administration and greatly aided its conductof foreign and internal affairs.
Many of McKinley’s detractors believed that Hanna, who was now a United States senator, would be the real power in the administration.However, McKinley, though often vacillating, proved to be his own man and exercised strong control over his advisers.
A Return of Prosperity
McKinley’s election victory gave the business world renewed confidence, and in 1897 prosperity returned, taking much of the steam out of the demands for economicreform.
That year, McKinley pushed the Dingley Tariff Act through Congress, which levied even higher duties than had his own tariff of 1890.
The Dingley Tariff alsorecognized the increasing importance of world trade to large U.S.
industries.
It allowed the president to negotiate reciprocal trade agreements with other countries,.
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Liens utiles
- McKinley William, 1843-1901, né à Niles (Ohio), homme d'État américain du parti républicain, président des États-Unis de 1897 à 1901.
- William McKinley - biography.
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- William McKinley (HISTOIRE)
- McKinley, William