Political Machines
Henry George was well
acquainted with political machines. He ran twice for
mayor of New York City, first in 1886; he came in second
to the Tammany Hall candidate, and beat the young
Theodore Roosevelt,
who, later in his life, would run for president on a
platform that was strongly Georgist (it is said that he
learned his single tax from Bucky O'Neil, a single-taxer
who died a hero at San Juan Hill). George died a few days
before the election of 1897, the first after New York
City's boroughs were united into a single entity.
Henry George: Political
Dangers (Chapter 2 of Social
Problems, 1883)
[14] The people, of course,
continue to vote; but the people are losing their power.
Money and organization tell more and more in elections.
In some sections bribery has become chronic, and numbers
of voters expect regularly to sell their votes. In some
sections large employers regularly bulldoze their hands
into voting as they wish. In municipal, State and Federal
politics the power of the "machine" is increasing. In
many places it has become so strong that the ordinary
citizen has no more influence in the government under
which he lives than he would have in China. He is, in
reality, not one of the governing classes, but one of the
governed. He occasionally, in disgust, votes for "the
other man," or "the other party;" but, generally, to find
that he has effected only a change of masters, or secured
the same masters under different names. And he is
beginning to accept the situation, and to leave politics
to politicians, as something with which an honest,
self-respecting man cannot afford to meddle.
[15] We are steadily
differentiating a governing class, or rather a class of
Pretorians, who make a business of gaining political
power and then selling it. The type of the rising party
leader is not the orator or statesman of an earlier day,
but the shrewd manager, who knows how to handle the
workers, how to combine pecuniary interests, how to
obtain money and to spend it, how to gather to himself
followers and to secure their allegiance. One party
machine is becoming complementary to the other party
machine, the politicians, like the railroad managers,
having discovered that combination pays better than
competition. So rings are made impregnable and great
pecuniary interests secure their ends no matter how
elections go. There are sovereign States so completely in
the hands of rings and corporations that it seems as if
nothing short of a revolutionary uprising of the people
could dispossess them. Indeed, whether the General
Government has not already passed beyond popular control
may be doubted. Certain it is that possession of the
General Government has for some time past secured
possession. And for one term, at least, the Presidential
chair has been occupied by a man not elected to it. This,
of course, was largely due to the crookedness of the man
who was elected, and to the lack of principle in his
supporters. Nevertheless, it occurred. ... read the
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