The Subjects of the Criticism.In this outburst of invective,nothing wasspared.It was charged that each of the political parties had fallen into the hands of professional politicians who devoted their time to managing conventions,making platforms,nominating candidates,and dictating to officials;in return for their "services"they sold offices and privileges.It was alleged that mayors and councils had bargained away for private benefit street railway and other franchises.It was asserted that many powerful labor unions were dominated bymen who blackmailed employers.Some critics specialized in deions of the poverty,slums,and misery of great cities.Others took up "frenzied finance"and accused financiers of selling worthless stocks and bonds to an innocent public.Still others professed to see in the accumulations of millionaires the downfall of our republic.
The Attack on "Invisible Government."Some even maintained that the control of public affairs had passed from the people to a sinister minority called "the invisible government."So eminent and conservative a statesman as the Hon.Elihu Root lent the weight of his great name to such an imputation.Speaking of his native state,New York,he said:"What is the government of this state?What has it been during the forty years of my acquaintance with it?The government of the Constitution?Oh,no;not half the time or half way....From the days of Fenton and Conkling and Arthur and Cornell and Platt,from the days of David B.Hill down to the present time,the government of the state has presented two different lines of activity:one,of the constitutional and statutory officers of the state and the other of the party leaders;they call them party bosses.They call the systemI don't coin the phrasethe system they call 'invisible government.'For I don't know how many years Mr.Conkling was the supreme ruler in this state.The governor did not count,the legislature did not count,comptrollers and secretaries of state and what not did not count.It was what Mr.Conkling said,and in a great outburst of public rage he was pulled down.Then Mr.Platt ruled the state;for nigh upon twenty years he ruled it.It was not the governor;it was not the legislature;it was Mr.Platt.And the capital was not here [in Albany];it was at 49Broadway;Mr.Platt and his lieutenants.It makes no difference what name you give,whether you call it Fenton or Conkling or Cornell or Arthur or Platt or by the names of men now living.The ruler of the state during the greater part of the forty years of my acquaintance with the state government has not been any man authorized by the constitution or by law....The party leader is elected by no one,accountable to no one,bound by no oath of office,removable by no one."
The Nation Aroused.With the spirit of criticism came also the spirit of reform.The charges were usually exaggerated;often wholly false;but there was enough truth in them to warrant renewed vigilance on the part of American democracy.President Roosevelt doubtless summed up the sentiment of the great majority of citizens when he demanded the punishment of wrongdoers in 1907,saying:"It makes not a particle of difference whether these crimes are committed by a capitalist or by a laborer,by a leading banker or manufacturer or railroad man or by a leading representative of a labor union.Swindling in stocks,corrupting legislatures,making fortunes by the inflation of securities,by wrecking railroads,by destroying competitors through rebatesthese forms of wrongdoing in the capitalist are far more infamous than any ordinary form of embezzlement or forgery."The time had come,he added,to stop "muckraking"and proceed to the constructive work of removing the abuses that had grown up.
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