Removing ‘grand’ from GOP
JOSEPH N. BELL
It warms the heart to see that our congressman, Chris Cox, has taken
time from his new duties as head of the House of Representatives
Homeland Security Committee to keep in touch with the home folks
through the Forum page in the Pilot -- twice in the past few weeks.
The first time he was upset at the suggestion that homeland security
might distract him from focusing his attention on more arcane needs
back home. And last week, he was upset by Pilot Managing Editor Steve
Cahn’s incredulity -- that I shared in this space -- over some
sweeping claims he made about the Republican Party.
They were offered up in a highly partisan document called the 2005
Republican Freedom Calendar, produced by the Republican Policy
Committee of the House of Representatives -- hopefully not with
taxpayer dollars. The statement both Cahn and I found beyond even
partisan credibility went like this: “The Republican Party became the
most effective political organization in the history of the world in
advancing the cause of freedom by staying true to its founding
principles.”
Cox suggested we click on the policy.house.gov website and have a
look at the entire calendar before we comment further.
That seemed reasonable, so I did. August was as far as I could
hang in, but it was clear long before that what to expect the rest of
the way. Far from trashing the calendar, though, I’d like to beef it
up a bit. So here are a few notes on signal contributions of the
Republican Party to American history that didn’t make the cut in the
calendar copy.
* The administration of Ulysses S. Grant was so rife with scandal
that “Grantism” became a code word for corruption in government.
Grant was blindly loyal to his cronies, including -- among others --
his private secretary, who was part of a gang stealing tax money on
whiskey; his secretary of war, who defrauded the Indian Agency; and
two high-level confidence men named Jay Gould and Jim Fisk, who used
Grant in a scheme to make a fortune speculating in gold.
* Rutherford B. Hayes lost the popular vote in 1876 -- shades of
2000 -- but got the presidency when his party promised concessions to
three former slaveholding states that then delivered their disputed
electoral votes to Hayes.
* Theodore Roosevelt was nominated for vice president in 1900
because Republican conservatives wanted to get him offstage as a
major player. When President McKinley was killed by an assassin, TR
took over a nation where unregulated industry was enjoying great
prosperity, and the poor were getting poorer and angrier. He
responded by breaking up big trusts, arbitrating the Mine Workers’
strike, toning down empire building and creating the Department of
Commerce and Labor, among similar reforms. He introduced regulated
capitalism, dragging the Republican Old Guard behind him.
* When Roosevelt’s hand-picked successor, William Howard Taft,
tacked back toward the reactionaries, TR split the Republican Party
by running against Taft as a third-party candidate in 1912, thereby
throwing the election to Woodrow Wilson.
* Wilson’s dream of a League of Nations to end wars was shot down
by the Republican Old Guard in the Senate, under the leadership of
Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge. They then nominated for president Ohio Sen.
Warren G. Harding -- who once remarked, “I know how far removed from
greatness I am.” He was absolutely right.
* The Harding administration has generally been regarded by
historians as the most corrupt in American history. Harding’s
principal virtue in “staying true to the party’s founding principles”
was his loyalty to his bandit friends. He spent much of his time as
president playing poker and drinking bootleg booze while his pals
ripped off the country with such capers as the Teapot Dome scandal,
which still holds the record for corruption. Harding died in office,
but the Republican Old Guard, which put him there, was firmly back in
charge of the party.
* When the stock market crashed in 1929, President Herbert Hoover
believed the Depression would heal itself if he cut taxes and
stimulated business. It didn’t, and when he finally decided
government needed to act and created the Reconstruction Finance
Corporation, it was too late. We were in the soup. A nice calendar
item here might be the day Hoover sent mounted federal troops under
Gen. Douglas MacArthur to roust thousands of war veterans who had
marched on Washington to demand the bonuses owed them for fighting
World War I.
* Republican Sen. Joe McCarthy discovered in 1954 that red-baiting
was a quick and sure route to power and prestige. He managed to smear
dozens of perfectly solid citizens and cow his party associates
before he was brought down, not by his Republican president, Gen.
Dwight Eisenhower, but by CBS newscaster Ed Murrow and the U.S. Army.
* In August, 1974, Richard Nixon became another Republican “first”
-- the first president in American history to resign that office. In
the wake of torturous months of cover-up at the White House that
followed a bungled burglary of Democratic headquarters and in the
face of certain impeachment, Nixon chose to resign. Although he was
given a full pardon by his successor, Gerald Ford, many of Nixon’s
cabinet members and advisors faced criminal charges and prison for
their part in the cover-up.
There is more. But there are also many examples of dedicated and
even visionary service on the part of some of the Republicans
mentioned here -- and many who aren’t. And nothing in Cox’s calendar
to explain that there was once a strong, progressive wing of the
Republican Party that has now been reduced to a powerless handful of
senators from New England.
While Cox was using selective examples to canonize all Republicans
with hyperbole that defies credibility, he repeatedly painted the
party that led this country through two world wars and a devastating
economic Depression as a bunch of guys in white sheets terrorizing
black people.
The introduction to his calendar would have been a lot more
credible if he had first pondered these words of Ulysses Grant as he
was leaving the White House: “Mistakes have been made, as all can see
-- and I admit.”
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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