<h2><SPAN name="VI" id="VI"></SPAN><SPAN name="Page_111" id= "Page_111"></SPAN>VI</h2>
<h2>LET THERE BE LIGHT</h2>
<p>The concern of patriotic men is to put our government again on
its right basis, by substituting the popular will for the rule of
guardians, the processes of common counsel for those of private
arrangement. In order to do this, a first necessity is to open the
doors and let in the light on all affairs which the people have a
right to know about.</p>
<p>In the first place, it is necessary to open up all the processes
of our politics. They have been too secret, too complicated, too
roundabout; they have consisted too much of private conferences and
secret understandings, of the control of legislation by men who
were not legislators, but who stood outside and dictated,
controlling oftentimes by very questionable means, which they would
not have dreamed of allowing to become public. The whole process
<SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112"></SPAN>must be altered. We must take
the selection of candidates for office, for example, out of the
hands of small groups of men, of little coteries, out of the hands
of machines working behind closed doors, and put it into the hands
of the people themselves again by means of direct primaries and
elections to which candidates of every sort and degree may have
free access. We must substitute public for private machinery.</p>
<p>It is necessary, in the second place, to give society command of
its own economic life again by denying to those who conduct the
great modern operations of business the privacy that used to belong
properly enough to men who used only their own capital and their
individual energy in business. The processes of capital must be as
open as the processes of politics. Those who make use of the great
modern accumulations of wealth, gathered together by the dragnet
process of the sale of stocks and bonds, and piling up of reserves,
must be treated as under a public obligation; they must be made
responsible for their business methods to the great communities
which are <SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113"></SPAN>in fact their
working partners, so that the hand which makes correction shall
easily reach them and a new principle of responsibility be felt
throughout their structure and operation.</p>
<p>What are the right methods of politics? Why, the right methods
are those of public discussion: the methods of leadership open and
above board, not closeted with "boards of guardians" or anybody
else, but brought out under the sky, where honest eyes can look
upon them and honest eyes can judge of them.</p>
<p>If there is nothing to conceal, then why conceal it? If it is a
public game, why play it in private? If it is a public game, then
why not come out into the open and play it in public? You have got
to cure diseased politics as we nowadays cure tuberculosis, by
making all the people who suffer from it live out of doors; not
only spend their days out of doors and walk around, but sleep out
of doors; always remain in the open, where they will be accessible
to fresh, nourishing, and revivifying influences.</p>
<p>I, for one, have the conviction that government ought to be all
outside and no inside. I, for <SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114"></SPAN>my part, believe that there ought to be no place
where anything can be done that everybody does not know about. It
would be very inconvenient for some gentlemen, probably, if
government were all outside, but we have consulted their
susceptibilities too long already. It is barely possible that some
of these gentlemen are unjustly suspected; in that case they owe it
to themselves to come out and operate in the light. The very fact
that so much in politics is done in the dark, behind closed doors,
promotes suspicion. Everybody knows that corruption thrives in
secret places, and avoids public places, and we believe it a fair
presumption that secrecy means impropriety. So, our honest
politicians and our honorable corporation heads owe it to their
reputations to bring their activities out into the open.</p>
<p>At any rate, whether they like it or not, these affairs are
going to be dragged into the open. We are more anxious about their
reputations than they are themselves. We are too solicitous for
their morals,—if they are not,—to permit them longer to
continue subject to the temptations of secrecy. You know there is
temptation <SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115"></SPAN>in loneliness and
secrecy. Haven't you experienced it? I have. We are never so proper
in our conduct as when everybody can look and see exactly what we
are doing. If you are off in some distant part of the world and
suppose that nobody who lives within a mile of your home is
anywhere around, there are times when you adjourn your ordinary
standards. You say to yourself: "Well, I'll have a fling this time;
nobody will know anything about it." If you were on the desert of
Sahara, you would feel that you might permit yourself,—well,
say, some slight latitude in conduct; but if you saw one of your
immediate neighbors coming the other way on a camel,—you
would behave yourself until he got out of sight. The most dangerous
thing in the world is to get off where nobody knows you. I advise
you to stay around among the neighbors, and then you may keep out
of jail. That is the only way some of us can keep out of jail.</p>
<p>Publicity is one of the purifying elements of politics. The best
thing that you can do with anything that is crooked is to lift it
up where <SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116"></SPAN>people can see that
it is crooked, and then it will either straighten itself out or
disappear. Nothing checks all the bad practices of politics like
public exposure. You can't be crooked in the light. I don't know
whether it has ever been tried or not; but I venture to say, purely
from observation, that it can't be done.</p>
<p>And so the people of the United States have made up their minds
to do a healthy thing for both politics and big business. Permit me
to mix a few metaphors: They are going to open doors; they are
going to let up blinds; they are going to drag sick things into the
open air and into the light of the sun. They are going to organize
a great hunt, and smoke certain animals out of their burrows. They
are going to unearth the beast in the jungle in which when they
hunted they were caught by the beast instead of catching him. They
have determined, therefore, to take an axe and raze the jungle, and
then see where the beast will find cover. And I, for my part, bid
them God-speed. The jungle breeds nothing but infection and
shelters nothing but the enemies of mankind.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117"></SPAN>And nobody is going to get
caught in our hunt except the beasts that prey. Nothing is going to
be cut down or injured that anybody ought to wish preserved.</p>
<p>You know the story of the Irishman who, while digging a hole,
was asked, "Pat, what are you doing,—digging a hole?" And he
replied, "No, sir; I am digging the dirt, and laying the hole." It
was probably the same Irishman who, seen digging around the wall of
a house, was asked, "Pat, what are you doing?" And he answered,
"Faith, I am letting the dark out of the cellar." Now, that's
exactly what we want to do,—let the dark out of the
cellar.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Take, first, the relations existing between politics and
business.</p>
<p>It is perfectly legitimate, of course, that the business
interests of the country should not only enjoy the protection of
the law, but that they should be in every way furthered and
strengthened and facilitated by legislation. The country has no
jealousy of any connection between business and politics which is a
legiti<SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118"></SPAN>mate connection. It is
not in the least averse from open efforts to accommodate law to the
material development which has so strengthened the country in all
that it has undertaken by supplying its extraordinary life with its
necessary physical foundations.</p>
<p>But the illegitimate connections between business and
legislation are another matter. I would wish to speak on this
subject with soberness and circumspection. I have no desire to
excite anger against anybody. That would be easy, but it would do
no particular good. I wish, rather, to consider an unhappy
situation in a spirit that may enable us to account for it, to some
extent, and so perhaps get at the causes and the remedy. Mere
denunciation doesn't help much to clear up a matter so involved as
is the complicity of business with evil politics in America.</p>
<p>Every community is vaguely aware that the political machine upon
which it looks askance has certain very definite connections with
men who are engaged in business on a large scale, and the suspicion
which attaches to the machine <SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119"></SPAN>itself has begun to attach also to business
enterprises, just because these connections are known to exist. If
these connections were open and avowed, if everybody knew just what
they involved and just what use was being made of them, there would
be no difficulty in keeping an eye upon affairs and in controlling
them by public opinion. But, unfortunately, the whole process of
law-making in America is a very obscure one. There is no highway of
legislation, but there are many by-ways. Parties are not organized
in such a way in our legislatures as to make any one group of men
avowedly responsible for the course of legislation. The whole
process of discussion, if any discussion at all takes place, is
private and shut away from public scrutiny and knowledge. There are
so many circles within circles, there are so many indirect and
private ways of getting at legislative action, that our communities
are constantly uneasy during legislative sessions. It is this
confusion and obscurity and privacy of our legislative method that
gives the political machine its opportunity. There is no publicly
<SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120"></SPAN>responsible man or group of
men who are known to formulate legislation and to take charge of it
from the time of its introduction until the time of its enactment.
It has, therefore, been possible for an outside force,—the
political machine, the body of men who nominated the legislators
and who conducted the contest for their election,—to assume
the rôle of control. Business men who desired something done
in the way of changing the law under which they were acting, or who
wished to prevent legislation which seemed to them to threaten
their own interests, have known that there was this definite body
of persons to resort to, and they have made terms with them. They
have agreed to supply them with money for campaign expenses and to
stand by them in all other cases where money was necessary if in
return they might resort to them for protection or for assistance
in matters of legislation. Legislators looked to a certain man who
was not even a member of their body for instructions as to what
they were to do with particular bills. The machine, which was the
centre of party <SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121"></SPAN>organization,
was the natural instrument of control, and men who had business
interests to promote naturally resorted to the body which exercised
the control.</p>
<p>There need have been nothing sinister about this. If the whole
matter had been open and candid and honest, public criticism would
not have centred upon it. But the use of money always results in
demoralization, and goes beyond demoralization to actual
corruption. There are two kinds of corruption,—the crude and
obvious sort, which consists in direct bribery, and the much
subtler, more dangerous, sort, which consists in a corruption of
the will. Business men who have tried to set up a control in
politics through the machine have more and more deceived
themselves, have allowed themselves to think that the whole matter
was a necessary means of self-defence, have said that it was a
necessary outcome of our political system. Having reassured
themselves in this way, they have drifted from one thing to another
until the questions of morals involved have become hopelessly
obscured and submerged.<SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122"></SPAN> How
far away from the ideals of their youth have many of our men of
business drifted, enmeshed in the vicious system,—how far
away from the days when their fine young manhood was wrapped in
"that chastity of honor which felt a stain like a wound!"</p>
<p>It is one of the happy circumstances of our time that the most
intelligent of our business men have seen the mistake as well as
the immorality of the whole bad business. The alliance between
business and politics has been a burden to them,—an
advantage, no doubt, upon occasion, but a very questionable and
burdensome advantage. It has given them great power, but it has
also subjected them to a sort of slavery and a bitter sort of
subserviency to politicians. They are as anxious to be freed from
bondage as the country is to be rid of the influences and methods
which it represents. Leading business men are now becoming great
factors in the emancipation of the country from a system which was
leading from bad to worse. There are those, of course, who are
wedded to the old ways and who will stand out <SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123"></SPAN>for them to the last, but they will sink into a
minority and be overcome. The rest have found that their old excuse
(namely, that it was necessary to defend themselves against unfair
legislation) is no longer a good excuse; that there is a better way
of defending themselves than through the private use of money. That
better way is to take the public into their confidence, to make
absolutely open all their dealings with legislative bodies and
legislative officers, and let the public judge as between them and
those with whom they are dealing.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>This discovery on their part of what ought to have been obvious
all along points out the way of reform; for undoubtedly publicity
comes very near being the cure-all for political and economic
maladies of this sort. But publicity will continue to be very
difficult so long as our methods of legislation are so obscure and
devious and private. I think it will become more and more obvious
that the way to purify our politics is to simplify them, and that
the way to simplify them is to <SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124"></SPAN>establish responsible leadership. We now have no
leadership at all inside our legislative bodies,—at any rate,
no leadership which is definite enough to attract the attention and
watchfulness of the country. Our only leadership being that of
irresponsible persons outside the legislatures who constitute the
political machines, it is extremely difficult for even the most
watchful public opinion to keep track of the circuitous methods
pursued. This undoubtedly lies at the root of the growing demand on
the part of American communities everywhere for responsible
leadership, for putting in authority and keeping in authority those
whom they know and whom they can watch and whom they can constantly
hold to account. The business of the country ought to be served by
thoughtful and progressive legislation, but it ought to be served
openly, candidly, advantageously, with a careful regard to letting
everybody be heard and every interest be considered, the interest
which is not backed by money as well as the interest which is; and
this can be accomplished only by some simplification of our methods
<SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125"></SPAN>which will centre the public
trust in small groups of men who will lead, not by reason of legal
authority, but by reason of their contact with and amenability to
public opinion.</p>
<p>I am striving to indicate my belief that our legislative methods
may well be reformed in the direction of giving more open publicity
to every act, in the direction of setting up some form of
responsible leadership on the floor of our legislative halls so
that the people may know who is back of every bill and back of the
opposition to it, and so that it may be dealt with in the open
chamber rather than in the committee room. The light must be let in
on all processes of law-making.</p>
<p>Legislation, as we nowadays conduct it, is not conducted in the
open. It is not threshed out in open debate upon the floors of our
assemblies. It is, on the contrary, framed, digested, and concluded
in committee rooms. It is in committee rooms that legislation not
desired by the interests dies. It is in committee rooms that
legislation desired by the interests is framed and brought forth.
There is not enough <SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126"></SPAN>debate of
it in open house, in most cases, to disclose the real meaning of
the proposals made. Clauses lie quietly unexplained and
unchallenged in our statutes which contain the whole gist and
purpose of the act; qualifying phrases which escape the public
attention, casual definitions which do not attract attention,
classifications so technical as not to be generally understood, and
which every one most intimately concerned is careful not to explain
or expound, contain the whole purpose of the law. Only after it has
been enacted and has come to adjudication in the courts is its
scheme as a whole divulged. The beneficiaries are then safe behind
their bulwarks.</p>
<p>Of course, the chief triumphs of committee work, of covert
phrase and unexplained classification, are accomplished in the
framing of tariffs. Ever since the passage of the outrageous
Payne-Aldrich Tariff Act our people have been discovering the
concealed meanings and purposes which lay hidden in it. They are
discovering item by item how deeply and deliberately they were
deceived and cheated. This did <SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127"></SPAN>not happen by accident; it came about by design, by
elaborated, secret design. Questions put upon the floor in the
House and Senate were not frankly or truly answered, and an
elaborate piece of legislation was foisted on the country which
could not possibly have passed if it had been generally
comprehended.</p>
<p>And we know, those of us who handle the machinery of politics,
that the great difficulty in breaking up the control of the
political boss is that he is backed by the money and the influence
of these very people who are intrenched in these very schedules.
The tariff could never have been built up item by item by public
discussion, and it never could have passed, if item by item it had
been explained to the people of this country. It was built up by
arrangement and by the subtle management of a political
organization represented in the Senate of the United States by the
senior Senator from Rhode Island, and in the House of
Representatives by one of the Representatives from Illinois. These
gentlemen did not build that tariff upon the evidence that was
given before the Com<SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128"></SPAN>mittee on
Ways and Means as to what the manufacturer and the workingmen, the
consumers and the producers, of this country want. It was not built
upon what the interests of the country called for. It was built
upon understandings arrived at outside of the rooms where testimony
was given and debate was held.</p>
<p>I am not even now suggesting corrupt influence. That is not my
point. Corruption is a very difficult thing to manage in its
literal sense. The payment of money is very easily detected, and
men of this kind who control these interests by secret arrangement
would not consent to receive a dollar in money. They are following
their own principles,—that is to say, the principles which
they think and act upon,—and they think that they are
perfectly honorable and incorruptible men; but they believe one
thing that I do not believe and that it is evident the people of
the country do not believe: they believe that the prosperity of the
country depends upon the arrangements which certain party leaders
make with certain business <SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129"></SPAN>leaders. They believe that, but the proposition has
merely to be stated to the jury to be rejected. The prosperity of
this country depends upon the interests of all of us and cannot be
brought about by arrangement between any groups of persons. Take
any question you like out to the country,—let it be threshed
out in public debate,—and you will have made these methods
impossible.</p>
<p>This is what sometimes happens: They promise you a particular
piece of legislation. As soon as the legislature meets, a bill
embodying that legislation is introduced. It is referred to a
committee. You never hear of it again. What happened? Nobody knows
what happened.</p>
<p>I am not intimating that corruption creeps in; I do not know
what creeps in. The point is that we not only do not know, but it
is intimated, if we get inquisitive, that it is none of our
business. My reply is that it is our business, and it is the
business of every man in the state; we have a right to know all the
particulars of that bill's history. There is not any legitimate
<SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130"></SPAN>privacy about matters of
government. Government must, if it is to be pure and correct in its
processes, be absolutely public in everything that affects it. I
cannot imagine a public man with a conscience having a secret that
he would keep from the people about their own affairs.</p>
<p>I know how some of these gentlemen reason. They say that the
influences to which they are yielding are perfectly legitimate
influences, but that if they were disclosed they would not be
understood. Well, I am very sorry, but nothing is legitimate that
cannot be understood. If you cannot explain it properly, then there
is something about it that cannot <i>be</i> explained at all. I
know from the circumstances of the case, not what is happening, but
that something private is happening, and that every time one of
these bills gets into committee, something private stops it, and it
never comes out again unless forced out by the agitation of the
press or the courage and revolt of brave men in the legislature. I
have known brave men of that sort. I could name some splendid
examples of men who, as representatives of the people, demanded
<SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131"></SPAN>to be told by the chairman of
the committee why the bill was not reported, and who, when they
could not find out from him, investigated and found out for
themselves and brought the bill out by threatening to tell the
reason on the floor of the House.</p>
<p>Those are private processes. Those are processes which stand
between the people and the things that are promised them, and I say
that until you drive all of those things into the open, you are not
connected with your government; you are not represented; you are
not participants in your government. Such a scheme of government by
private understanding deprives you of representation, deprives the
people of representative institutions. It has got to be put into
the heads of legislators that public business is public business. I
hold the opinion that there can be no confidences as against the
people with respect to their government, and that it is the duty of
every public officer to explain to his fellow-citizens whenever he
gets a chance,—explain exactly what is going on inside of his
own office.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132"></SPAN>There is no air so
wholesome as the air of utter publicity.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>There are other tracts of modern life where jungles have grown
up that must be cut down. Take, for example, the entirely
illegitimate extensions made of the idea of private property for
the benefit of modern corporations and trusts. A modern joint stock
corporation cannot in any proper sense be said to base its rights
and powers upon the principles of private property. Its powers are
wholly derived from legislation. It possesses them for the
convenience of business at the sufferance of the public. Its stock
is widely owned, passes from hand to hand, brings multitudes of men
into its shifting partnerships and connects it with the interests
and the investments of whole communities. It is a segment of the
public; bears no analogy to a partnership or to the processes by
which private property is safeguarded and managed, and should not
be suffered to afford any covert whatever to those who are managing
it. Its management is of public and general concern, <SPAN name=
"Page_133" id="Page_133"></SPAN>is in a very proper sense everybody's
business. The business of many of those corporations which we call
public-service corporations, and which are indispensable to our
daily lives and serve us with transportation and light and water
and power,—their business, for instance, is clearly public
business; and, therefore, we can and must penetrate their affairs
by the light of examination and discussion.</p>
<p>In New Jersey the people have realized this for a long time, and
a year or two ago we got our ideas on the subject enacted into
legislation. The corporations involved opposed the legislation with
all their might. They talked about ruin,—and I really believe
they did think they would be somewhat injured. But they have not
been. And I hear I cannot tell you how many men in New Jersey say:
"Governor, we were opposed to you; we did not believe in the things
you wanted to do, but now that you have done them, we take off our
hats. That was the thing to do, it did not hurt us a bit; it just
put us on a normal footing; it took away <SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134"></SPAN>suspicion from our business." New Jersey, having
taken the cold plunge, cries out to the rest of the states, "Come
on in! The water's fine!" I wonder whether these men who are
controlling the government of the United States realize how they
are creating every year a thickening atmosphere of suspicion, in
which presently they will find that business cannot breathe?</p>
<p>So I take it to be a necessity of the hour to open up all the
processes of politics and of public business,—open them wide
to public view; to make them accessible to every force that moves,
every opinion that prevails in the thought of the people; to give
society command of its own economic life again, not by
revolutionary measures, but by a steady application of the
principle that the people have a right to look into such matters
and to control them; to cut all privileges and patronage and
private advantage and secret enjoyment out of legislation.</p>
<p>Wherever any public business is transacted, wherever plans
affecting the public are laid, <SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135"></SPAN>or enterprises touching the public welfare, comfort,
or convenience go forward, wherever political programs are
formulated, or candidates agreed on,—over that place a voice
must speak, with the divine prerogative of a people's will, the
words: "Let there be light!"</p>
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