<h2><SPAN name="X" id="X"></SPAN><SPAN name="Page_223" id= "Page_223"></SPAN>X</h2>
<h2>THE WAY TO RESUME IS TO RESUME</h2>
<p>One of the wonderful things about America, to my mind, is this:
that for more than a generation it has allowed itself to be
governed by persons who were not invited to govern it. A singular
thing about the people of the United States is their almost
infinite patience, their willingness to stand quietly by and see
things done which they have voted against and do not want done, and
yet never lay the hand of disorder upon any arrangement of
government.</p>
<p>There is hardly a part of the United States where men are not
aware that secret private purposes and interests have been running
the government. They have been running it through the agency of
those interesting persons whom we call political "bosses." A boss
is not so much a politician as the business agent <SPAN name=
"Page_224" id="Page_224"></SPAN>in politics of the special interests.
The boss is not a partisan; he is quite above politics! He has an
understanding with the boss of the other party, so that, whether it
is heads or tails, we lose. The two receive contributions from the
same sources, and they spend those contributions for the same
purposes.</p>
<p>Bosses are men who have worked their way by secret methods to
the place of power they occupy; men who were never elected to
anything; men who were not asked by the people to conduct their
government, and who are very much more powerful than if you had
asked them, so long as you leave them where they are, behind closed
doors, in secret conference. They are not politicians; they have no
policies,—except concealed policies of private
aggrandizement. A boss isn't a leader of a party. Parties do not
meet in back rooms; parties do not make arrangements which do not
get into the newspapers. Parties, if you reckon them by voting
strength, are great masses of men who, because they can't vote any
other ticket, vote the ticket that was prepared for them by the
<SPAN name="Page_225" id="Page_225"></SPAN>aforesaid arrangement in the
aforesaid back room in accordance with the aforesaid understanding.
A boss is the manipulator of a "machine." A "machine" is that part
of a political organization which has been taken out of the hands
of the rank and file of the party, captured by half a dozen men. It
is the part that has ceased to be political and has become an
agency for the purposes of unscrupulous business.</p>
<p>Do not lay up the sins of this kind of business to political
organizations. Organization is legitimate, is necessary, is even
distinguished, when it lends itself to the carrying out of great
causes. Only the man who uses organization to promote private
purposes is a boss. Always distinguish between a political leader
and a boss. I honor the man who makes the organization of a great
party strong and thorough, in order to use it for public service.
But he is not a boss. A boss is a man who uses this splendid, open
force for secret purposes.</p>
<p>One of the worst features of the boss system is this fact, that
it works secretly. I would <SPAN name="Page_226" id="Page_226"></SPAN>a
great deal rather live under a king whom I should at least know,
than under a boss whom I don't know. A boss is a much more
formidable master than a king, because a king is an obvious master,
whereas the hands of the boss are always where you least expect
them to be.</p>
<p>When I was in Oregon, not many months ago, I had some very
interesting conversations with Mr. U'Ren, who is the father of what
is called the Oregon System, a system by which he has put bosses
out of business. He is a member of a group of public-spirited men
who, whenever they cannot get what they want through the
legislature, draw up a bill and submit it to the people, by means
of the initiative, and generally get what they want. The day I
arrived in Portland, a morning paper happened to say, very
ironically, that there were two legislatures in Oregon, one at
Salem, the state capital, and the other going around under the hat
of Mr. U'Ren. I could not resist the temptation of saying, when I
spoke that evening, that, while I was the last man to suggest that
power should be concentrated in <SPAN name="Page_227" id="Page_227"></SPAN>any single individual or group of individuals, I
would, nevertheless, after my experience in New Jersey, rather have
a legislature that went around under the hat of somebody in
particular whom I knew I could find than a legislature that went
around under God knows who's hat; because then you could at least
put your finger on your governing force; you would know where to
find it.</p>
<p>Why do we continue to permit these things? Isn't it about time
that we grew up and took charge of our own affairs? I am tired of
being under age in politics. I don't want to be associated with
anybody except those who are politically over twenty-one. I don't
wish to sit down and let any man take care of me without my having
at least a voice in it; and if he doesn't listen to my advice, I am
going to make it as unpleasant for him as I can. Not because my
advice is necessarily good, but because no government is good in
which every man doesn't insist upon his advice being heard, at
least, whether it is heeded or not.</p>
<p>Some persons have said that representative <SPAN name="Page_228" id="Page_228"></SPAN>government has proved too indirect and clumsy an
instrument, and has broken down as a means of popular control.
Others, looking a little deeper, have said that it was not
representative government that had broken down, but the effort to
get it. They have pointed out that, with our present methods of
machine nomination and our present methods of election, which give
us nothing more than a choice between one set of machine nominees
and another, we do not get representative government at
all,—at least not government representative of the people,
but merely government representative of political managers who
serve their own interests and the interests of those with whom they
find it profitable to establish partnerships.</p>
<p>Obviously, this is something that goes to the root of the whole
matter. Back of all reform lies the method of getting it. Back of
the question, What do you want, lies the question,—the
fundamental question of all government,—How are you going to
get it? How are you going to get public servants who will obtain
<SPAN name="Page_229" id="Page_229"></SPAN>it for you? How are you going
to get genuine representatives who will serve your interests, and
not their own or the interests of some special group or body of
your fellow-citizens whose power is of the few and not of the many?
These are the queries which have drawn the attention of the whole
country to the subject of the direct primary, the direct choice of
their officials by the people, without the intervention of the
nominating machine; to the subject of the direct election of United
States Senators; and to the question of the initiative, referendum,
and recall.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>The critical moment in the choosing of officials is that of
their nomination more often than that of their election. When two
party organizations, nominally opposing each other but actually
working in perfect understanding and co-operation, see to it that
both tickets have the same kind of men on them, it is Tweedledum or
Tweedledee, so far as the people are concerned; the political
managers have us coming and going. We may delude ourselves with
<SPAN name="Page_230" id="Page_230"></SPAN>the pleasing belief that we
are electing our own officials, but of course the fact is we are
merely making an indifferent and ineffectual choice between two
sets of men named by interests which are not ours.</p>
<p>So that what we establish the direct primary for is this: to
break up the inside and selfish determination of the question who
shall be elected to conduct the government and make the laws of our
commonwealths and our nation. Everywhere the impression is growing
stronger that there can be no means of dominating those who have
dominated us except by taking this process of the original
selection of nominees into our own hands. Does that upset any
ancient foundations? Is it not the most natural and simple thing in
the world? You say that it does not always work; that the people
are too busy or too lazy to bother about voting at primary
elections? True, sometimes the people of a state or a community do
let a direct primary go by without asserting their authority as
against the bosses. The electorate of the United States <SPAN name=
"Page_231" id="Page_231"></SPAN>is occasionally like the god Baal: it
is sometimes on a journey or it is sometimes asleep; but when it
does awake, it does not resemble the god Baal in the slightest
degree. It is a great self-possessed power which effectually takes
control of its own affairs. I am willing to wait. I am among those
who believe so firmly in the essential doctrines of democracy that
I am willing to wait on the convenience of this great sovereign,
provided I know that he has got the instrument to dominate whenever
he chooses to grasp it.</p>
<p>Then there is another thing that the conservative people are
concerned about: the direct election of United States Senators. I
have seen some thoughtful men discuss that with a sort of shiver,
as if to disturb the original constitution of the United States
Senate was to do something touched with impiety, touched with
irreverence for the Constitution itself. But the first thing
necessary to reverence for the United States Senate is respect for
United States Senators. I am not one of those who <SPAN name=
"Page_232" id="Page_232"></SPAN>condemn the United States Senate as a
body; for, no matter what has happened there, no matter how
questionable the practices or how corrupt the influences which have
filled some of the seats in that high body, it must in fairness be
said that the majority in it has all the years through been
untouched by stain, and that there has always been there a
sufficient number of men of integrity to vindicate the self-respect
and the hopefulness of America with regard to her institutions.</p>
<p>But you need not be told, and it would be painful to repeat to
you, how seats have been bought in the Senate; and you know that a
little group of Senators holding the balance of power has again and
again been able to defeat programs of reform upon which the whole
country had set its heart; and that whenever you analyzed the power
that was behind those little groups you have found that it was not
the power of public opinion, but some private influence, hardly to
be discerned by superficial scrutiny, that had put those men there
to do that thing.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_233" id="Page_233"></SPAN>Now, returning to the
original principles upon which we profess to stand, have the people
of the United States not the right to see to it that every seat in
the Senate represents the unbought United States of America? Does
the direct election of Senators touch anything except the private
control of seats in the Senate? We remember another thing: that we
have not been without our suspicions concerning some of the
legislatures which elect Senators. Some of the suspicions which we
entertained in New Jersey about them turned out to be founded upon
very solid facts indeed. Until two years ago New Jersey had not in
half a generation been represented in the United States Senate by
the men who would have been chosen if the process of selecting them
had been free and based upon the popular will.</p>
<p>We are not to deceive ourselves by putting our heads into the
sand and saying, "Everything is all right." Mr. Gladstone declared
that the American Constitution was the most perfect instrument ever
devised by the brain of man. We have been praised all over the
world for our <SPAN name="Page_234" id="Page_234"></SPAN>singular genius
for setting up successful institutions, but a very thoughtful
Englishman, and a very witty one, said a very instructive thing
about that: he said that to show that the American Constitution had
worked well was no proof that it is an excellent constitution,
because Americans could run any constitution,—a compliment
which we laid like sweet unction to our soul; and yet a criticism
which ought to set us thinking.</p>
<p>While it is true that when American forces are awake they can
conduct American processes without serious departure from the
ideals of the Constitution, it is nevertheless true that we have
had many shameful instances of practices which we can absolutely
remove by the direct election of Senators by the people themselves.
And therefore I, for one, will not allow any man who knows his
history to say to me that I am acting inconsistently with either
the spirit or the essential form of the American government in
advocating the direct election of United States Senators.</p>
<p>Take another matter. Take the matter of <SPAN name="Page_235" id="Page_235"></SPAN>the initiative and referendum, and the recall. There
are communities, there are states in the Union, in which I am quite
ready to admit that it is perhaps premature, that perhaps it will
never be necessary, to discuss these measures. But I want to call
your attention to the fact that they have been adopted to the
general satisfaction in a number of states where the electorate had
become convinced that they did not have representative
government.</p>
<p>Why do you suppose that in the United States, the place in all
the world where the people were invited to control their own
government, we should set up such an agitation as that for the
initiative and referendum and the recall. When did this thing
begin? I have been receiving circulars and documents from little
societies of men all over the United States with regard to these
matters, for the last twenty-five years. But the circulars for a
long time kindled no fire. Men felt that they had representative
government and they were content. But about ten or fifteen years
ago the fire began to burn,—and it has been <SPAN name=
"Page_236" id="Page_236"></SPAN>sweeping over wider and wider areas of
the country, because of the growing consciousness that something
intervenes between the people and the government, and that there
must be some arm direct enough and strong enough to thrust aside
the something that comes in the way.</p>
<p>I believe that we are upon the eve of recovering some of the
most important prerogatives of a free people, and that the
initiative and referendum are playing a great part in that
recovery. I met a man the other day who thought that the referendum
was some kind of an animal, because it had a Latin name; and there
are still people in this country who have to have it explained to
them. But most of us know and are deeply interested. Why? Because
we have felt that in too many instances our government did not
represent us, and we have said: "We have got to have a key to the
door of our own house. The initiative and referendum and the recall
afford such a key to our own premises. If the people inside the
house will run the place as we want it run, they <SPAN name="Page_237" id="Page_237"></SPAN>may stay inside and we will keep the latchkeys in
our pockets. If they do not, we shall have to re-enter upon
possession."</p>
<p>Let no man be deceived by the cry that somebody is proposing to
substitute direct legislation by the people, or the direct
reference of laws passed in the legislature, to the vote of the
people, for representative government. The advocates of these
reforms have always declared, and declared in unmistakable terms,
that they were intending to recover representative government, not
supersede it; that the initiative and referendum would find no use
in places where legislatures were really representative of the
people whom they were elected to serve. The initiative is a means
of seeing to it that measures which the people want shall be
passed,—when legislatures defy or ignore public opinion. The
referendum is a means of seeing to it that the unrepresentative
measures which they do not want shall not be placed upon the
statute book.</p>
<p>When you come to the recall, the principle is that if an
administrative officer,—for we will begin with the
administrative officer,—is <SPAN name="Page_238" id="Page_238"></SPAN>corrupt or so unwise as to be doing things that are
likely to lead to all sorts of mischief, it will be possible by a
deliberate process prescribed by the law to get rid of that officer
before the end of his term. You must admit that it is a little
inconvenient sometimes to have what has been called an astronomical
system of government, in which you can't change anything until
there has been a certain number of revolutions of the seasons. In
many of our oldest states the ordinary administrative term is a
single year. The people of those states have not been willing to
trust an official out of their sight more than twelve months.
Elections there are a sort of continuous performance, based on the
idea of the constant touch of the hand of the people on their own
affairs. That is exactly the principle of the recall. I don't see
how any man grounded in the traditions of American affairs can find
any valid objection to the recall of administrative officers. The
meaning of the recall is merely this,—not that we should have
unstable government, not that officials should not know how long
their power <SPAN name="Page_239" id="Page_239"></SPAN>might
last,—but that we might have government exercised by
officials who know whence their power came and that if they yield
to private influences they will presently be displaced by public
influences.</p>
<p>You will of course understand that, both in the case of the
initiative and referendum and in that of the recall, the very
existence of these powers, the very possibilities which they imply,
are half,—indeed, much more than half,—the battle. They
rarely need to be actually exercised. The fact that the people may
initiate keeps the members of the legislature awake to the
necessity of initiating themselves; the fact that the people have
the right to demand the submission of a legislative measure to
popular vote renders the members of the legislature wary of bills
that would not pass the people; the very possibility of being
recalled puts the official on his best behavior.</p>
<p>It is another matter when we come to the judiciary. I myself
have never been in favor of the recall of judges. Not because some
judges have not deserved to be recalled. That <SPAN name="Page_240" id="Page_240"></SPAN>isn't the point. The point is that the recall of
judges is treating the symptom instead of the disease. The disease
lies deeper, and sometimes it is very virulent and very dangerous.
There have been courts in the United States which were controlled
by private interests. There have been supreme courts in our states
before which plain men could not get justice. There have been
corrupt judges; there have been controlled judges; there have been
judges who acted as other men's servants and not as the servants of
the public. Ah, there are some shameful chapters in the story! The
judicial process is the ultimate safeguard of the things that we
must hold stable in this country. But suppose that that safeguard
is corrupted; suppose that it does not guard my interests and
yours, but guards merely the interests of a very small group of
individuals; and, whenever your interest clashes with theirs, yours
will have to give way, though you represent ninety per cent. of the
citizens, and they only ten per cent. Then where is your
safeguard?</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_241" id="Page_241"></SPAN>The just thought of the
people must control the judiciary, as it controls every other
instrument of government. But there are ways and ways of
controlling it. If,—mark you, I say <i>if</i>,—at one
time the Southern Pacific Railroad owned the supreme court of the
State of California, would you remedy that situation by recalling
the judges of the court? What good would that do, so long as the
Southern Pacific Railroad could substitute others for them? You
would not be cutting deep enough. Where you want to go is to the
process by which those judges were selected. And when you get
there, you will reach the moral of the whole of this discussion,
because the moral of it all is that the people of the United States
have suspected, until their suspicions have been justified by all
sorts of substantial and unanswerable evidence, that, in place
after place, at turning-points in the history of this country, we
have been controlled by private understandings and not by the
public interest; and that influences which were improper, if not
corrupt, have determined everything from the <SPAN name="Page_242" id="Page_242"></SPAN>making of laws to the administration of justice. The
disease lies in the region where these men get their nominations;
and if you can recover for the people the <i>selecting</i> of
judges, you will not have to trouble about their recall. Selection
is of more radical consequence than election.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>I am aware that those who advocate these measures which we have
been discussing are denounced as dangerous radicals. I am
particularly interested to observe that the men who cry out most
loudly against what they call radicalism are the men who find that
their private game in politics is being spoiled. Who are the
arch-conservatives nowadays? Who are the men who utter the most
fervid praise of the Constitution of the United States and the
constitutions of the states? They are the gentlemen who used to get
behind those documents to play hide-and-seek with the people whom
they pretended to serve. They are the men who entrenched themselves
in the laws which they misinterpreted and misused. If now they are
afraid that "radicalism" will <SPAN name="Page_243" id="Page_243"></SPAN>sweep them away,—and I believe it
will,—they have only themselves to thank.</p>
<p>Yet how absurd is the charge that we who are demanding that our
government be made representative of the people and responsive to
their demands,—how fictitious and hypocritical is the charge
that we are attacking the fundamental principles of republican
institutions! These very men who hysterically profess their alarm
would declaim loudly enough on the Fourth of July of the
Declaration of Independence; they would go on and talk of those
splendid utterances in our earliest state constitutions, which have
been copied in all our later ones, taken from the Petition of
Rights, or the Declaration of Rights, those great fundamental
documents of the struggle for liberty in England; and yet in these
very documents we read such uncompromising statements as this:
that, when at any time the people of a commonwealth find that their
government is not suitable to the circumstances of their lives or
the promotion of their liberties, it is their privilege to alter it
at their pleasure, and alter <SPAN name="Page_244" id="Page_244"></SPAN>it in any degree. That is the foundation, that is
the very central doctrine, that is the ground principle, of
American institutions.</p>
<p>I want you to read a passage from the Virginia Bill of Rights,
that immortal document which has been a model for declarations of
liberty throughout the rest of the continent:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>That all power is vested in, and consequently derived from, the
people; that magistrates are their trustees and servants, and at
all times amenable to them.</p>
<p>That government is, or ought to be, instituted for the common
benefit, protection, and security of the people, nation, or
community; of all the various modes and forms of government, that
is the best which is capable of producing the greatest degree of
happiness and safety, and is most effectually secured against the
danger of mal-administration; and that, when any government shall
be found inadequate or contrary to these purposes, a majority of
the community bath an indubitable, inalienable, and indefeasible
right to reform, alter, or abolish it, in such manner as shall be
judged most conducive to the public weal.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>I have heard that read a score of times on the Fourth of July,
but I never heard it read <SPAN name="Page_245" id="Page_245"></SPAN>where actual measures were being debated. No man who
understands the principles upon which this Republic was founded has
the slightest dread of the gentle,—though very
effective,—measures by which the people are again resuming
control of their own affairs.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Nor need any lover of liberty be anxious concerning the outcome
of the struggle upon which we are now embarked. The victory is
certain, and the battle is not going to be an especially sanguinary
one. It is hardly going to be worth the name of a battle. Let me
tell the story of the emancipation of one State,—New
Jersey:</p>
<p>It has surprised the people of the United States to find New
Jersey at the front in enterprises of reform. I, who have lived in
New Jersey the greater part of my mature life, know that there is
no state in the Union which, so far as the hearts and intelligence
of its people are concerned, has more earnestly desired reform than
has New Jersey. There are men who have been prominent in the
affairs of the State who <SPAN name="Page_246" id="Page_246"></SPAN>again
and again advocated with all the earnestness that was in them the
things that we have at last been able to do. There are men in New
Jersey who have spent some of the best energies of their lives in
trying to win elections in order to get the support of the citizens
of New Jersey for programs of reform.</p>
<p>The people had voted for such things very often before the
autumn of 1910, but the interesting thing is that nothing had
happened. They were demanding the benefit of remedial measures such
as had been passed in every progressive state of the Union,
measures which had proved not only that they did not upset the life
of the communities to which they were applied but that they
quickened every force and bettered every condition in those
communities. But the people of New Jersey could not get them, and
there had come upon them a certain pessimistic despair. I used to
meet men who shrugged their shoulders and said: "What difference
does it make how we vote? Nothing ever results from our votes." The
force that is behind the new party that has recently been <SPAN name=
"Page_247" id="Page_247"></SPAN>formed, the so-called "Progressive
Party," is a force of discontent with the old parties of the United
States. It is the feeling that men have gone into blind alleys
often enough, and that somehow there must be found an open road
through which men may pass to some purpose.</p>
<p>In the year 1910 there came a day when the people of New Jersey
took heart to believe that something could be accomplished. I had
no merit as a candidate for Governor, except that I said what I
really thought, and the compliment that the people paid me was in
believing that I meant what I said. Unless they had believed in the
Governor whom they then elected, unless they had trusted him deeply
and altogether, he could have done absolutely nothing. The force of
the public men of a nation lies in the faith and the backing of the
people of the country, rather than in any gifts of their own. In
proportion as you trust them, in proportion as you back them up, in
proportion as you lend them your strength, are they strong. The
things that have happened in New Jersey since 1910 have happened
because the seed was <SPAN name="Page_248" id="Page_248"></SPAN>planted
in this fine fertile soil of confidence, of trust, of renewed
hope.</p>
<p>The moment the forces in New Jersey that had resisted reform
realized that the people were backing new men who meant what they
had said, they realized that they dare not resist them. It was not
the personal force of the new officials; it was the moral strength
of their backing that accomplished the extraordinary result.</p>
<p>And what was accomplished? Mere justice to classes that had not
been treated justly before.</p>
<p>Every schoolboy in the State of New Jersey, if he cared to look
into the matter, could comprehend the fact that the laws applying
to laboring-men with respect of compensation when they were hurt in
their various employments had originated at a time when society was
organized very differently from the way in which it is organized
now, and that because the law had not been changed, the courts were
obliged to go blindly on administering laws which were cruelly
unsuitable to existing con<SPAN name="Page_249" id="Page_249"></SPAN>ditions, so that it was practically impossible for
the workingmen of New Jersey to get justice from the courts; the
legislature of the commonwealth had not come to their assistance
with the necessary legislation. Nobody seriously debated the
circumstances; everybody knew that the law was antiquated and
impossible; everybody knew that justice waited to be done. Very
well, then, why wasn't it done?</p>
<p>There was another thing that we wanted to do: We wanted to
regulate our public service corporations so that we could get the
proper service from them, and on reasonable terms. That had been
done elsewhere, and where it had been done it had proved just as
much for the benefit of the corporations themselves as for the
benefit of the people. Of course it was somewhat difficult to
convince the corporations. It happened that one of the men who knew
the least about the subject was the president of the Public Service
Corporation of New Jersey. I have heard speeches from that
gentleman that exhibited a total lack of acquaintance with the
circumstances of our times. I have never <SPAN name="Page_250" id="Page_250"></SPAN>known ignorance so complete in its detail; and,
being a man of force and ignorance, he naturally set all his energy
to resist the things that he did not comprehend.</p>
<p>I am not interested in questioning the motives of men in such
positions. I am only sorry that they don't know more. If they would
only join the procession they would find themselves benefited by
the healthful exercise, which, for one thing, would renew within
them the capacity to learn which I hope they possessed when they
were younger. We were not trying to do anything novel in New Jersey
in regulating the Public Service Corporation; we were simply trying
to adopt there a tested measure of public justice. We adopted it.
Has anybody gone bankrupt since? Does anybody now doubt that it was
just as much for the benefit of the Public Service Corporation as
for the people of the State?</p>
<p>Then there was another thing that we modestly desired: We wanted
fair elections; we did not want candidates to buy themselves into
office. That seemed reasonable. So we <SPAN name="Page_251" id="Page_251"></SPAN>adopted a law, unique in one particular, namely:
that if you bought an office, you didn't get it. I admit that that
is contrary to all commercial principles, but I think it is pretty
good political doctrine. It is all very well to put a man in jail
for buying an office, but it is very much better, besides putting
him in jail, to show him that if he has paid out a single dollar
for that office, he does not get it, though a huge majority voted
for him. We reversed the laws of trade; when you buy something in
politics in New Jersey, you do not get it. It seemed to us that
that was the best way to discourage improper political argument. If
your money does not produce the goods, then you are not tempted to
spend your money.</p>
<p>We adopted a Corrupt Practices Act, the reasonable foundation of
which no man could question, and an Election Act, which every man
predicted was not going to work, but which did work,—to the
emancipation of the voters of New Jersey.</p>
<p>All these things are now commonplaces with us. We like the laws
that we have passed, <SPAN name="Page_252" id="Page_252"></SPAN>and no
man ventures to suggest any material change in them. Why didn't we
get them long ago? What hindered us? Why, because we had a closed
government; not an open government. It did not belong to us. It was
managed by little groups of men whose names we knew, but whom
somehow we didn't seem able to dislodge. When we elected men
pledged to dislodge them, they only went into partnership with
them. Apparently what was necessary was to call in an amateur who
knew so little about the game that he supposed that he was expected
to do what he had promised to do.</p>
<p>There are gentlemen who have criticised the Governor of New
Jersey because he did not do certain things,—for instance,
bring a lot of indictments. The Governor of New Jersey does not
think it necessary to defend himself; but he would like to call
attention to a very interesting thing that happened in his State:
When the people had taken over control of the government, a curious
change was wrought in the souls of a great many men; a sudden moral
awakening took place, and we simply could not <SPAN name="Page_253" id="Page_253"></SPAN>find culprits against whom to bring indictments;
it was like a Sunday school, the way they obeyed the laws.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>So I say, there is nothing very difficult about resuming our own
government. There is nothing to appall us when we make up our minds
to set about the task. "The way to resume is to resume," said
Horace Greeley, once, when the country was frightened at a prospect
which turned out to be not in the least frightful; it was at the
moment of the resumption of specie payments for Treasury notes. The
Treasury simply resumed,—there was not a ripple of danger or
excitement when the day of resumption came around.</p>
<p>It will be precisely so when the people resume control of their
own government. The men who conduct the political machines are a
small fraction of the party they pretend to represent, and the men
who exercise corrupt influences upon them are only a small fraction
of the business men of the country. What we are banded together to
fight is not a party, is not a great <SPAN name="Page_254" id="Page_254"></SPAN>body of citizens; we have to fight only little
coteries, groups of men here and there, a few men, who subsist by
deceiving us and cannot subsist a moment after they cease to
deceive us.</p>
<p>I had occasion to test the power of such a group in the State of
New Jersey, and I had the satisfaction of discovering that I had
been right in supposing that they did not possess any power at all.
It looked as if they were entrenched in a fortress; it looked as if
the embrasures of the fortress showed the muzzles of guns; but, as
I told my good fellow-citizens, all they had to do was to press a
little upon it and they would find that the fortress was a mere
cardboard fabric; that it was a piece of stage property; that just
so soon as the audience got ready to look behind the scenes they
would learn that the army which had been marching and
counter-marching in such terrifying array consisted of a single
company that had gone in one wing and around and out at the other
wing, and could have thus marched in procession for twenty-four
hours. You only need about twenty-four men to do the trick. These
men are impostors.<SPAN name="Page_255" id="Page_255"></SPAN> They are
powerful only in proportion as we are susceptible to absurd fear of
them. Their capital is our ignorance and our credulity.</p>
<p>To-day we are seeing something that some of us have waited all
of our lives to see. We are witnessing a rising of the country. We
are seeing a whole people stand up and decline any longer to be
imposed upon. The day has come when men are saying to each other:
"It doesn't make a peppercorn's difference to me what party I have
voted with. I am going to pick out the men I want and the policies
I want, and let the label take care of itself. I do not find any
great difference between my table of contents and the table of
contents of those who have voted with the other party, and who,
like me, are very much dissatisfied with the way in which their
party has rewarded their faithfulness. They want the same things
that I want, and I don't know of anything under God's heaven to
prevent our getting together. We want the same things, we have the
same faith in the old traditions of the American people, and we
have made up our minds that we are going <SPAN name="Page_256" id="Page_256"></SPAN>to have now at last the reality instead of the
shadow."</p>
<p>We Americans have been too long satisfied with merely going
through the motions of government. We have been having a mock game.
We have been going to the polls and saying: "This is the act of a
sovereign people, but we won't be the sovereign yet; we will
postpone that; we will wait until another time. The managers are
still shifting the scenes; we are not ready for the real thing
yet."</p>
<p>My proposal is that we stop going through the mimic play; that
we get out and translate the ideals of American politics into
action; so that every man, when he goes to the polls on election
day, will feel the thrill of executing an actual judgment, as he
takes again into his own hands the great matters which have been
too long left to men deputized by their own choice, and seriously
sets about carrying into accomplishment his own purposes.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />